
Inside VVIP · Destinations
Croatia
Three Dalmatian ports, one route: Split's palace bars, Hvar's island clubs, Dubrovnik's walled-city nights.
Why Croatia
A Croatia bachelor party works because the nightlife moves with you down the coast. Split opens in the bars inside Diocletian's Palace and along the Riva before clubs like Vanilla take over after midnight. Hvar Town's port stacks cocktail and beach bars, with Hula Hula a walk away and Carpe Diem a short boat-hop offshore. Dubrovnik closes it out: Old Town bars and Revelin, built into the medieval walls. Handle the route and doors, and the coast does the rest.
Choose your night
One way to take on Croatia.
Pick the occasion and your concierge builds the rest — venues, tables, transport and hosts, night by night.
Good to know
Planning Croatia — the basics.
Why is Croatia (Split, Hvar, Dubrovnik) good for a group party trip?
You get three distinct nights in one trip, linked by the same coastline: Split's Old Town and Bačvice beach clubs, Hvar's island club scene, and Dubrovnik's walled-city bars. Split is also the main launch point for daytime island cruises, so a group can divide its days between sea and its nights between clubs. We handle the nightclub side, lining up entry and tables so a moving group of ten or twelve isn't negotiating doors on the night.
When is the best time for a Croatia bachelor party?
July and August are the peak, when Hvar Town and Dubrovnik run at full tilt and every bar and club is open nightly. June and September are the smart shoulder weeks: still warm, still busy, but easier on availability and crowds. Worth knowing that tighter late-night rules in Hvar Town have calmed the old wild scene, so the action there now leans toward the port bars and the island beach clubs.
Where is the nightlife actually located across the three cities?
In Split it runs from the Riva waterfront and the bars inside Diocletian's Palace, then moves to clubs like Vanilla and the open-air spots around Bačvice beach after 1am. Hvar's nightlife centres on the Old Town port, with island clubs such as Carpe Diem on Marinkovac and Hula Hula a walk or boat-hop from town. Dubrovnik is more bar-led inside the Old Town, with Revelin Club built into the medieval walls as the main proper club.
How do groups get there and get around?
Most groups fly into Split Airport (SPU) at Kaštela, about 25km west of the centre, with Dubrovnik Airport as the other entry point. From Split the ferry terminal sits right in the centre next to the bus station, and Jadrolinija plus catamaran operators run the island and coastal routes, including Hvar and on to Dubrovnik. Book the Hvar and Dubrovnik crossings ahead in July and August, since the popular routes sell out.
What should groups know about safety, payment, and club entry?
Croatia is in the EU and Schengen and uses the euro, so cards are accepted almost everywhere, though it's worth carrying some cash for taxi boats and smaller bars. The clubs are relaxed on dress, but a put-together look helps for table service and the busy island venues. We arrange nightclub entry and tables in advance, so a large stag group lands a confirmed booking rather than risking the door on a peak summer night.
