Krasici is a small bayfront village on the Luštica peninsula with no rental counter in the village itself, so the car is delivered to your apartment or villa from Tivat Airport.
Popular rental cars in Krašići
The hedged, blind-bend lane is a case for a narrow hatchback rather than a wide body.
Village at the peninsula junction
Pick up a rental car at Krasici and the peninsula roads open in three directions, with one down to the beach and harbour below the village, one southwest along the ridge to Rose at the tip 8 km away, and one east to the Luštica Bay resort 4 km along the access road. Most stays start by renting a car at Tivat Airport, 14 km north: drive south through Tivat to the Radovici junction, then southwest along the peninsula road to the Krasici fork, takes around 20 to 25 minutes in light traffic. The road from Radovici to Krasici is two lanes for most of its length and narrows at a few points around passing bends, and the surface is patchy in sections but entirely manageable in a standard car. The road continues beyond the village junction another 8 km to Rose at the peninsula tip, becoming single-track with passing places on the final approach.
Mid-peninsula on the Luštica road
Krasici sits roughly at the midpoint of the Luštica Peninsula road, between the junction at Radovici to the north and the village of Rose at the tip, 8 km further southwest. The Luštica Peninsula is the long tongue of land that separates the outer Bay of Kotor from the open Adriatic, and Krasici is the largest tourist settlement on it. The village sits on the southern slope of the central ridge, with views down to the outer bay and the Herceg Novi coastline visible across the water to the north, so if your stay starts on that shore instead, renting a car in Herceg Novi is the better pickup, and the drive between the two runs right around the bay entrance.
The peninsula road through Krasici is the only land route to Rose at the tip. From the village junction, one branch descends to the beach and harbour, another continues southwest along the ridge toward Rose, and a third leads 4 km east to the Luštica Bay resort. This junction character makes Krasici a natural pause point on any peninsula drive, and the presence of restaurants and a beach gives people a reason to stop rather than simply pass through. The village has grown somewhat as a tourist destination since the Luštica Bay development opened nearby, with more apartments available for weekly rental than there were a decade ago, but the older stone buildings on the upper lanes still define the settlement's character.
The beaches
The main beach at Krasici is a small pebble and concrete-pier affair at the base of the village, sheltered from the western wind by the headland. The water here looks south across the outer bay and is generally calm. A few seasonal beach bars operate in July and August, and sun beds are available for hire. The beach is suitable for families, with the entry from the concrete sections predictable, and the water deepens gradually in the sheltered cove. It is not a large beach, and on August weekends it can feel crowded by late morning.
The better-known beach in the wider Krasici area is Plavi Horizont, roughly 2 km east of the village toward the Luštica Bay resort. This is one of the few genuinely sandy beaches on the peninsula, around 300 metres of pale sand, backed by Mediterranean pines, with a very shallow entry that makes it popular with families. The beach was awarded a Blue Flag in 2004. It has a beach bar and restaurant and offers sun-bed rental. Getting there requires a car or a short drive from Krasici along the resort access road. The peninsula also has a number of smaller unmarked coves reachable on foot from various points on the road, and most require a scramble down through scrub or olive trees to reach the water, and few have any facilities.

Check live prices and availability for the drive out along the Luštica shore.
Free cancellation on most rates · airport and village delivery
The olive groves
The Luštica Peninsula is known throughout Montenegro for its olive groves, and the slopes above Krasici are some of the best examples. The trees here are old, with centuries-old specimens common, their trunks twisted and silvered, the canopy spreading wide over the terraced ground. The groves are not ornamental, and families in the peninsula villages still harvest from them each autumn, pressing the oil locally. The Moric Farm, an olive estate on the peninsula accessible by a narrow road through the groves from Krasici, operates occasional tours and tastings by appointment, giving visitors a view of the traditional extraction process. The quality of the oil from old-growth Luštica trees is considered among the best in Montenegro.
The olive landscape is at its most photogenic in early morning light, when the silver-green leaves catch the low sun and the bay glints below the trees. Walking the lanes through the groves between Krasici and the higher ridge road takes 30 to 45 minutes on foot and gives a completely different perspective on the peninsula than the main road drive. In autumn, after the harvest, the groves smell of pressed oil and cut grass. The contrast between the ancient agricultural landscape of the olive terraces and the modern marina architecture of Luštica Bay 4 km east is one of the more instructive things about visiting this part of Montenegro.
Local character and restaurants
Krasici has a handful of family-run restaurants that serve the standard peninsula menu, with fish grilled over charcoal, lamb and veal cooked under the peka, local cheese and prosciutto from the higher villages, and the peninsula's own olive oil. Wine from the southern slopes, lighter than the inland Vranac, is sometimes sold from farmhouses on the approach road. The village is quieter than anything on the main Bay of Kotor road and it operates at a different pace, where restaurants may not open before noon, menus are handwritten, and service runs to Montenegrin time. In peak season the better-known restaurants fill early for lunch, so arriving by 12.30 pm avoids waiting.
The village accommodation is private apartments and rooms, most let weekly through the summer rental market. There are no hotels in Krasici itself. Visitors wanting hotel infrastructure use the Luštica Bay resort 4 km east, and The Chedi, the five-star property on the marina waterfront, is the most substantial hotel on this part of the peninsula. A rental car is necessary for either option, as the peninsula has a bus service from Tivat to the Krasici area, but the frequency is limited and the final stretch to Rose is not served at all.
The walk toward Rose
The peninsula road beyond Krasici continues to Rose in around 10 minutes by car, but the route is also walkable in a couple of hours if the day is cool. The walk from the Krasici junction to the Rose viewpoint climbs briefly to the ridge, crossing the high point from which both coastlines are visible simultaneously, then descends through pine and scrub to the village at the tip. The path is along the road (there is no dedicated trail) and the walking is straightforward but exposed in the summer heat. Most people drive and leave the car at Rose, walking the village headland on foot. The full round trip on foot from Krasici to Rose and back takes three to four hours at a comfortable pace.
Car rental in Krasici
There is no practical way to use Krasici as a base without a rental car. The bus from Tivat runs to the peninsula but not reliably to Krasici itself, and the road to Rose beyond is not served at all. Tivat Airport is 14 km north, around 20 minutes by car. Plavi Horizont beach, the Luštica Bay marina, and the Rose headland are all short drives from the village but unreachable on foot from Krasici without significant effort. Collecting a rental car at Tivat Airport and driving directly to Krasici is the standard approach, and the peninsula road from Radovići takes around 15 minutes once off the main Tivat road.
Common routes from Krašići
Plavi Horizont Blue Flag beach (short hop)
Two kilometres east along the resort access road reaches Plavi Horizont, one of the few genuinely sandy beaches on the peninsula at around 300 metres backed by Mediterranean pines. Awarded a Blue Flag in 2004, with shallow entry and a beach bar.
Luštica Bay resort and The Chedi (short hop)
Four kilometres east along the peninsula road reaches the Luštica Bay marina and The Chedi, the five-star hotel on the waterfront. The road is two-lane and well surfaced through the olive landscape.
Rose village at the peninsula tip (under 20 minutes)
Eight kilometres southwest along the ridge road reaches Rose at the peninsula tip, becoming single-track with passing places on the final approach. The walk on the same route takes around two hours one way and crosses the high point with both coastlines visible.
Tivat town and the airport (around 25 minutes)
North via the Radovici junction to Tivat and the airport, around 14 km in light traffic. The peninsula road is two lanes for most of its length and narrows at a few passing bends but is manageable in a standard car.
Insurance on the Luštica road
Krašići is reached by a single road that winds across the Luštica peninsula through olive groves and small farms. It is a narrow, hedged route with blind bends and passing places, so mirror and side-panel scrapes are the realistic risk here, not high-speed collisions. The panels you are most likely to catch are the ones at the edges of the car, which is worth bearing in mind when you choose a cover level.
Side mirrors and lower panels can fall into the grey area of standard CDW, so know where standard CDW stops before taking the peninsula road.
When does Krašići make sense as your base?
Krašići suits a slow, shorefront stay on the Luštica side of the bay, where olive terraces back the village, the front-row houses drop straight to the sea, and it stays calmer than the Riviera resorts even in peak season. When you want a town with more going on, Tivat and its marina are a short drive back along the shore, while the open-Adriatic outlook at Rose waits at the peninsula's far tip, a short, slow drive in the rental.
Frequently asked questions about Krasici car rental
Anyone weighing up Krašići soon notices the road tells the story, with a single winding lane threading the Luštica shore past olive groves, so visitors want to know how long the drive in really takes, what the surface is like, and where a car can sit once they reach the village.
How can I pay the deposit on a Montenegro rental?
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How do I check if a Montenegro rental car has a mileage limit?
Listings either show the unlimited mileage badge or state a mileage cap clearly on the page. Any cap and excess charge are visible before you confirm the booking. Filter by unlimited mileage to see only the 370+ unrestricted cars.
Can I drive a Montenegro rental car to Albania?
Yes, with the cross-border tier that covers Albania and Kosovo added at booking. This tier includes the green card required for those countries. The lower-priced tier covering Croatia, Bosnia, and Serbia does not extend to Albania.
Is Krasici on the Lustica Peninsula?
Yes, Krasici is a small village on the Lustica Peninsula near Tivat. The peninsula has winding scenic roads and the village sits close to some of the quieter bay beaches in the area.
How far is Krasici from Tivat Airport?
Krasici is around 12 to 13 km from Tivat Airport via Radovici and the peninsula road, roughly a 20-minute drive. A rental car is the practical choice for reaching Krasici, as public transport to the peninsula is very limited.
What can I explore from Krasici with a rental car?
With a rental car you can reach Tivat in around 15 minutes, Kotor via the tunnel in around 25 minutes, and Budva in around 35 minutes. The peninsula itself has quiet coves that are difficult to reach without your own transport.
Can I pick up or drop the car off in Krašići?
Yes. Krašići is a village on the Luštica peninsula 12 km from Tivat town, and joins the one-way network. Fees on these short bay routes are usually low and show at checkout. See one-way rentals in Montenegro for the full network and fee brackets.
Settle on the peninsula and its coves and pebble beaches sit minutes from the village.
Brought across Luštica