Djenovici on the northern Luštica side sits close to the Kamenari ferry crossing, so the car is delivered to your apartment with the ferry timetable explained at handover.
Popular rental cars in Đenovići
Distances are short and the lanes gentle, so a modest economy car is all the village asks for.
Djenovici between Igalo and Bijela
Tivat is the closest airport to Djenovici, around 26 km via the Kamenari to Lepetane ferry. Buses from the Herceg Novi corridor do cross on the ferry, but no service stops at the terminal, so most arrivals rent a car at Tivat Airport and drive the last leg to the village door.
The most direct route crosses the bay by the Kamenari to Lepetane ferry. Drive north from the terminal to the Kamenari quay, take the five-minute vehicle crossing to Lepetane on the northern shore, then follow the bay road west through Bijela into Djenovici. The ferry runs continuously from 6 am to midnight, so there is rarely a long wait outside peak summer weekends, and door-to-door in light traffic is around 45 minutes. Once at the waterfront, a rental car earns its keep for day runs outward, with Herceg Novi's old town 7 km west along the bay road, the Rose and Žanjice beaches on the Luštica tip a short ferry hop south, and the drive east to Kotor and Perast along the inner bay road making a solid half-day with an early start.
A working village on the bay road
Djenovici is a small settlement on the Bay of Kotor's northern shore, between Bijela to the east and Igalo to the west. The bay road, which follows the northern coast between Herceg Novi and the Kamenari to Lepetane ferry crossing, passes directly through the village, and there is no bypass. The character here is different from the old-town resorts at Herceg Novi or the medical spa atmosphere of Igalo. Djenovici is a place where people live rather than a destination in itself, with a 270-metre pebble beach, a few seasonal restaurants at the waterfront, and an easy pace that attracts return visitors who find the Herceg Novi old town a little too tourist-concentrated in August.
The village has a longer history than its current low-key character suggests. Djenovici was first recorded in writing by the Venetian Republic under the name Gionoevich. Before the present village took shape, an earlier settlement called Stolium (of Greek and Roman origin) occupied this section of the bay shore. A devastating earthquake destroyed Stolium, and fragments of the old structure are visible in the shallow water just offshore. When archaeologists investigated the site, they recovered a marble head of the Roman Emperor Domitian, which is now on display in the lapidarian museum in Kotor. The find establishes the bay at Djenovici as an inhabited site at least since the 1st century AD.
The bay at Djenovici
The main beach at Djenovici runs for approximately 270 metres along the waterfront, facing south across the bay. The surface is pebble, typical for the Bay of Kotor's northern shore, with a water entry that is straightforward, no sharp drop-off close to shore. The bay here is sheltered from the prevailing winds by the orientation of the coastline, and the water is calm on most summer days. From the beach, the views across to the opposite shore take in the Luštica Peninsula and the road climbing up toward Tivat, and on clear days the full arc of the bay is visible from Risan at the eastern end to the narrows at Kamenari. A handful of beach bars set up sun loungers and parasols during the season, and the rest of the beach is free and unmanaged. Small coves extend along the coast on either side of the main beach, some accessible only by scrambling over the rocks or by arriving by water.
Tourist boats operate from the Djenovici harbour through the summer, running trips to various parts of the Bay of Kotor, such as to the rose-coloured village of Rose at the bay entrance, to the beach at Žanjice and the island of Mamula to the west, and to the historic towns of Perast and Kotor further inside the bay. Sailing or taking a boat from Djenovici is a practical way to reach the more isolated bay beaches that are difficult to reach by road. The harbour itself is small (a concrete quay with room for a few dozen boats) and doubles as the informal social centre of the village.

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The churches and the village fabric
Djenovici has two churches of note, both modest in scale but locally significant. The Church of St. Stefan was built in 1870, and its iconostasis was painted by Hristofor Rafailović, a member of the Rafailović family of icon painters whose workshop produced significant religious art for Orthodox churches across the Bay of Kotor region in the 18th and 19th centuries. The Church of St. Simeon Stolpnika is older, dating to around 500 years ago, and stands in better condition than many comparable small bay churches of the same period. The village fabric around the waterfront includes a number of old stone houses, some of which have been converted to small hotels while remaining in family ownership. The stone architecture of the older buildings is consistent with the broader Bay of Kotor vernacular, with heavy walls, small windows, exterior staircases, and unadorned façades facing the water.
The promenade walk to Herceg Novi
One of the practical pleasures of staying in Djenovici is the promenade walk to Herceg Novi. The coastal path runs west from the Djenovici waterfront through Igalo and into the lower part of Herceg Novi, a distance of around 7 km along the Šetalište Pet Danica promenade. The walk to the Herceg Novi harbour from Djenovici takes around 35 to 40 minutes at a comfortable pace, and to Igalo beach, where the promenade begins in earnest, is around 15 minutes. The promenade is flat throughout, suitable for walking at any pace, and runs directly along the water with the bay visible the whole way. The mimosa trees that line this section of coast and give Herceg Novi its February Mimosa Festival are present along the whole route, and in winter they flower yellow against the grey water, which is one reason the Bay of Kotor's western entrance is among the least depressing sections of the Adriatic coast in the off-season. If you rent a car and spend a day exploring both sides of the bay, Djenovici's ferry-adjacent position gives easy access to Tivat, Kotor, and the full inner bay road as well.
Herceg Novi and the drive west
Djenovici is approximately 7 km from the centre of Herceg Novi, around 10 minutes by car along the bay road. The drive follows the waterfront road through Igalo without needing to go up into the hillside old town. For the old town fortresses (Forte Mare at the harbour, Kanli Kula above the old town, and the Španjola higher on the hill) the most practical access is to park at the lower town near the harbour and walk up. The old town staircase streets are pedestrian-only and the main landmarks are all reachable on foot from the harbour square.
In the other direction, east of Djenovici toward Bijela and the ferry at Kamenari, the character of the bay road changes. Bijela, 4 km east, is dominated by the Ship Repair Yard on the waterfront, a functional industrial operation that marks the transition from the Herceg Novi resort corridor to the working-bay towns of the northern shore. The two villages share the same delivery suppliers, so if your apartment sits closer to the yard you can rent a car in Bijela on the same terms. Beyond Bijela, the bay road continues to the Kamenari terminal for the ferry to Lepetane and onward to Tivat.
Winter character and off-season
Djenovici is quieter than Herceg Novi in winter but not abandoned. The Bay of Kotor's western entrance benefits from one of the milder microclimates in Montenegro, and the Bora wind that can make the inner bay cold and rough in winter rarely penetrates as far as the Herceg Novi area with full force, with the January average temperature hovering around 9 to 10 degrees Celsius. Some of the waterfront restaurants remain open year-round, while the beach bars and seasonal concessions close after October. The promenade between Djenovici and Herceg Novi is used by local walkers and runners throughout the year. For visitors considering the Bay of Kotor in the shoulder seasons of April, May, October, or November, Djenovici offers a significantly quieter and cheaper base than Herceg Novi old town while remaining close enough to everything the area offers.
Common routes from Đenovići
Herceg Novi old town and harbour (short hop)
Seven kilometres west along the bay road reaches the Herceg Novi harbour and old town, around ten minutes by car. The flat Šetalište Pet Danica promenade covers the same route on foot in about 35 to 40 minutes through Igalo.
Igalo spa beach and promenade (under 15 minutes)
Eight kilometres west along the bay road reaches Igalo, with its sheltered beach and the start of the long coastal promenade. The drive sits on a two-lane bay road throughout.
Kamenari ferry to Tivat and the airport (around an hour)
East past Bijela to the Kamenari ferry terminal, where the five-minute vehicle crossing to Lepetane drops you on the southern shore. Tivat Airport sits roughly forty-five minutes from the village door to door, and the ferry runs continuously from 6 am to midnight.
Perast and the inner bay (half day)
East along the bay road past Bijela and Risan to Perast, with the boat jetty for Our Lady of the Rocks a short walk from the village quay. Boats also leave from the small Đenovići harbour through summer for trips to Rose, Žanjice and Mamula at the bay entrance.
Insurance cover around Đenovići
Đenovići sits on the bay road between Herceg Novi and Bijela, ten minutes from one and under an hour from Kotor. It is a quiet settlement, so the driving is gentle, but the same coastal road surface throws up loose stone that chips windscreens, and that is the single most common claim on this stretch of the bay.
Windscreen chips and cracks fall outside ordinary collision cover, which matters on a stretch where loose stone is the main hazard, and the glass-inclusive tiers close that gap.
When does Đenovići make sense as your base?
Settle on Đenovići if you like a low-key shorefront with bigger places within reach, with a quiet waterfront, the bay road running through the middle of the village, and neighbours on either side filling any gaps. The cafes and harbour of Herceg Novi are minutes west, and the spa promenade at Igalo sits just beyond it; with a rental car parked outside the apartment, both count as evening options rather than excursions.
What travellers ask about Djenovici car rental
Tucked between Herceg Novi and Bijela, Đenovići raises a question of scale before anything else. It is small enough that visitors wonder whether they even need a car, then realise the next town, the airport, and the border all sit a short drive apart. Pickup logistics and parking are the usual follow-ups.
Can I pay by card for a Montenegro rental?
Card payment for the rental is accepted on most of the fleet, covering both credit and debit. Some cars accept cash or crypto only. Filter by payment method when searching to narrow down options.
Is the second driver free on a Montenegro rental?
No. The supplier charges an extra-driver fee at pickup; the amount varies by supplier. The second driver must meet the same requirements as the lead driver, including age, driving experience, and presenting their licence and passport.
How fast is a Montenegro rental booking confirmed?
Instant-booking cars (those marked with the lightning-bolt icon) are confirmed at the moment of booking. On-request cars are processed automatically and typically confirmed by email within minutes of the request being submitted.
Where does the rental car handover take place in Djenovici?
Djenovici is a small bay village, so the supplier will confirm the handover spot after booking; typically a nearby car park or petrol station rather than a dedicated office.
How far is Djenovici from Herceg Novi?
Djenovici is about 7 to 10 km from Herceg Novi along the bay road, roughly a 10-minute drive. It is a quiet village with good access to the Herceg Novi area and the wider Bay of Kotor.
Why rent a car if staying in Djenovici?
The village has very limited local amenities and no regular public transport to speak of. A rental car makes it practical to reach Herceg Novi, the spa area of Igalo, and Kotor without lengthy waits for buses.
Is one-way drop-off allowed from Đenovići?
Yes. Đenovići sits on the western Bay of Kotor just east of Herceg Novi, and joins the one-way network. What you pay reflects the distance and supplier, and is displayed before you confirm. See one-way pickups and drop-offs for routes and typical fees.
Make this bay-side spot your base, with the promenade into Herceg Novi and the ferry close.
Handover along the bay