Sutomore sits on the southern Riviera between Bar's ferry port to Italy and Buljarica's long beach, and pickup runs alongside the rail and coast road with free delivery on most cars in town.
Cars travellers pick for Sutomore
Peak-season congestion around the beach makes a small, manoeuvrable car the least stressful choice.
Collecting your rental car in Sutomore
Sutomore is a dedicated pickup location on the Bar municipality coast. Collect here and the Adriatic Highway, the beach, and the routes north toward Buljarica and south toward Bar are immediately accessible. The location works for visitors arriving by bus from Bar or Podgorica, travellers working down the coast who need wheels for the southern section of their stay, and anyone already in the area who wants independent transport to the sights inland. For arrivals by air, the most direct option is to rent a car at Podgorica Airport, another of our pickup points, around 90 minutes inland via the Sozina tunnel motorway to Bar, or slightly longer by the older coast road that avoids the tunnel toll. Tivat Airport is the alternative, around 50 km north via the coast road through Budva.
From Bar the drive to Sutomore is 12 km along the Adriatic Highway, flat and straight along this section of coast. Keeping a vehicle for the full stay makes practical sense, because Stari Bar, the Buljarica beach north of town, and the road south toward Ulcinj are all impractical to reach without one. Parking in Sutomore is on-street and manageable outside peak August weeks, when the spaces near the beach fill by mid-morning, and the town is compact enough that parking further back and walking is five minutes at most.
Between Buljarica and Bar
Sutomore is the main beach resort in Bar Municipality, the district that runs from just south of the Buljarica bay down to the Albanian border. The town sits on a roughly 1.4 km arc of sandy beach (an unusually sandy surface for the Montenegrin coast, which is more typically pebble or shingle) between two low headlands, with the older hilltop fortification of Haj-Nehaj visible on the ridge immediately above. The Adriatic Highway passes just inland, and the centre of Bar, the country's main port and rail terminus, is 12 km to the south. The beach at Sutomore is one of the longer sandy stretches on the southern Montenegrin coast and draws a visitor profile that leans heavily toward families from Serbia, Bosnia, and inland Montenegro rather than the western European package market that fills Budva.
Sutomore got a railway station on the Bar to Belgrade line when the line opened in 1976, making it one of the few Montenegrin beach settlements accessible directly from Serbia without a car. The journey from Belgrade takes around ten hours on the overnight train, and in July and August the train fills with passengers heading for the coast, and Sutomore station (a low building set slightly back from the main road) handles a significant share of arrivals alongside the coastal bus services. For visitors planning any movement beyond Sutomore itself, however, car rental is the practical choice. The bus service connects the town to Bar and Podgorica reliably, but reaching the beaches north of Buljarica or the sights inland requires independent transport.
The Haj-Nehaj fortress
The fortress on the hill directly above Sutomore is the defining landmark of the bay. Haj-Nehaj stands at 231 metres above sea level on a steep limestone ridge, and the name is commonly translated from older South Slavic as something close to "don't care, don't fear", a phrase associated with defiance. The approach from the town is a 20 to 30 minute steady climb on foot, and the path begins at the northern edge of the settlement and is clearly worn if not formally marked for the whole ascent.
The structure dates in its current form primarily from the Venetian period of the 15th and 16th centuries, when the ridge was fortified as part of the Venetian defensive system on this coast. The design was adapted for artillery warfare, with thick walls, round rather than square towers, and a layout that includes substantial water cisterns and weapons storage areas within the enclosure. A winged lion (the emblem of the Venetian Republic) survives carved above the main entrance. Inside the walls, the Church of St. Dimitri is the best-preserved structure, and the rest of the interior is ruined but the enclosing walls stand largely intact. Historical records suggest the fortress could shelter up to 900 people in an emergency, which gives a sense of its scale relative to the small settlement below. After the end of Ottoman control in the 19th century, the fortress passed to Montenegrin authorities and gradually fell into its current state as an unmanaged but accessible ruin. A second, smaller fortification sits on a lower spur of the same ridge above the northern end of the Sutomore bay, and this lower fort is less substantial and less visited than Haj-Nehaj but can be reached in around 10 minutes from the beach.

Live prices for the south-coast beaches.
Free cancellation 24h before pickup
The beach and the town
Sutomore beach runs along the full length of the settlement, with the sand gradually giving way to pebble and shingle toward the northern end of the bay. The beach is shallow for a long stretch out from the shore, which suits families with young children and accounts for part of its appeal to the domestic market. The water entry is straightforward along most of the central section. Sun loungers and parasols are available for hire along the beachfront, concentrated in the central stretch near the promenade.
The town behind the beach is a mix of older Yugoslav-era apartment blocks, newer private villas built in the post-2000 construction wave, and a promenade of cafes, seasonal restaurants, and small shops running parallel to the beach. The atmosphere is more working-class resort than anything on the Budva Riviera, with prices for food, accommodation, and beach facilities noticeably lower, a clientele that is predominantly domestic, and architecture that makes no attempt at the Adriatic resort aesthetic. In August the beach fills from mid-morning, the cafes run into the early hours, and the town has a lively if unpretentious character. Outside the peak weeks of July and August, and particularly in May, June, and September, the pace drops considerably and the beach is largely uncrowded.
Buljarica and the coast north
North of Sutomore, the Adriatic Highway climbs over a low headland before dropping to Buljarica, around 10 km by road, the longest beach on the Bar Riviera at 2.25 km of largely undeveloped coastline backed by a freshwater lagoon. The Buljarica beach has no significant hotel development behind it, which keeps it quieter than its size would suggest. Beyond Buljarica, Petrovac is another 4 km, with its Venetian fortress, the Lastva mosaic floor from the Roman period, and a small fishing harbour with seasonal restaurants at the water's edge. The road north through this stretch stays two-lane throughout and slows down significantly on summer weekends between the Buljarica turn and the Petrovac junction.
Bar and what's south
Bar, 12 km south, is the most useful service base for visitors with a hire car staying in Sutomore. The main supermarkets (Voli and Idea among them), fuel stations, the ferry terminal serving Bar to Bari and Bar to Ancona crossings to Italy, and the railway station are all there. The old walled city of Stari Bar sits 4 km inland from the modern port, a 10-minute drive from the coast, and the medieval ruins are substantial, covering several hectares of collapsed towers, churches, and residential structures within the old walls, with an entrance fee that applies. A short distance from Stari Bar on the road toward Ulcinj, the Old Olive Tree at Mirovica (a single olive tree claimed to be over 2,000 years old) is a minor roadside stop worth five minutes if you are driving south.
With a hire car, the coast south of Bar opens into one of the better day-drive routes in southern Montenegro. The first stop worth making is Dobre Vode, around 10 km from Bar, where a side road drops from the highway to a quiet bay that has no bus service and is effectively accessible only by car, and the beach is unhurried even in peak season. Another 10 km south, the Valdanos olive grove is reached by a signed turn off the coast road. Park at the entrance and walk through around 18,000 old olive trees to a sheltered cove with a seasonal restaurant at the water. Beyond Valdanos, the road delivers you to Ulcinj and the start of Velika Plaža, the 12 km sandy beach running south to the Albanian border. The full run from Sutomore to Ulcinj covers around 40 km and takes under an hour on the road, and with stops at Dobre Vode and Valdanos it becomes a half-day loop that works well with a morning start and a late lunch in Ulcinj before driving back.

Sutomore car rental
Car hire is the key to Bar municipality, because everything worth visiting beyond the town beach needs independent wheels. South takes 15 minutes to Bar, with Stari Bar 4 km further inland, the main supermarkets on the approach road, and the ferry terminal for Italy crossings at the port. North, the coast road through Buljarica and on to Petrovac covers 15 km and gives you the lagoon, the Petrovac harbour, and a Venetian fortress within half a day. The drive south of Bar, past Dobre Vode and the Valdanos olive grove to Ulcinj and the 12 km Velika Plaža, runs around 65 km from Sutomore and takes under an hour. A standard vehicle handles everything on this stretch, with tarmac roads throughout and a southern coastal route that is one of the more rewarding drives in Montenegro.
Common routes from Sutomore
Haj-Nehaj fortress on foot (half day)
The 231-metre limestone ridge above the town carries the Venetian-era Haj-Nehaj fortress, with a 20 to 30-minute steady climb on foot from the northern edge of the settlement. The walled enclosure shelters the Church of St Dimitri and a winged-lion emblem above the entrance.
Bar town, Stari Bar and the Italy ferry (short hop)
Twelve kilometres south on the Adriatic Highway reaches Bar, with the Voli and Idea supermarkets, fuel, and the Bar to Bari and Bar to Ancona ferry terminal. The medieval ruins at Stari Bar sit 4 km inland from the modern port.
Buljarica and Petrovac (half day)
North over a low headland reaches the 2.25 km Buljarica strand and the harbour at Petrovac with its Roman mosaic. Around 15 km in total each way on a two-lane road that slows on summer weekends.
Valdanos olive grove and Ulcinj (half day)
South through Bar and past Dobre Vode, then on through the Valdanos cove with its roughly 18,000 old olive trees to Ulcinj and the start of the 12 km Velika Plaža. Around 65 km to Ulcinj and under an hour on the road.
Insurance for your Sutomore car rental
Sutomore has one of the longer sandy beaches on the south coast and fills heavily in summer, when the compact centre and beach approach get congested. There is a rail link, but most visitors drive for the flexibility, so peak-season parking and slow beach-road traffic are where the routine bumps happen, all of them ordinary collision-cover territory.
Wheels, glass and underbody all stay excluded at the base level, and only the upper tiers bring them in, and the coverage breakdown sets out what each one adds.
When does a Sutomore car rental make sense as your base?
Sutomore earns its place when a sandy beach matters more than a pretty old town, with the longest strand close to Bar, the Haj-Nehaj fortress watching over it from the ridge, and a train station that makes the odd car-free day trip possible too. For city services and the ferry, Bar is ten minutes south, while the walled bay at Petrovac is a short run north for a change of scene once the rental keys are in hand.
What travellers ask about Sutomore car rental
A sandy beach this close to Bar means Sutomore fills fast in July and August, so most questions are about parking near the strand, how the train station fits a car-free day, and which way to turn for the quieter beaches.
What does the free Minimum insurance on a Montenegro rental cover?
The free Minimum tier covers third-party liability, meaning damage caused to other vehicles in the event of a collision. It does not include collision damage to your own rental, glass, or wheels. The standard deposit on this tier is around 100 euro.
Can I rent a van or minibus in Montenegro?
Yes. 55+ vans are in the fleet for larger groups and luggage-heavy trips. Filter by Van when searching to see only this category. Sizes range from compact 7-seaters upward.
What is Personal Accident Insurance on a Montenegro rental?
Personal Accident Insurance is a separate optional add-on that covers damage to the health of passengers in case of an accident while driving the rental car. It is distinct from the collision/damage tiers and is selected separately at checkout.
How far is Sutomore from Bar?
Sutomore is about 9 km north of Bar, roughly a 10 to 12-minute drive on the main coastal road. The two are easy to combine; Bar has more services and the historical Stari Bar ruins, while Sutomore has the long sandy beach.
Is Virpazar and Skadar Lake accessible from Sutomore by car?
Virpazar on Skadar Lake is around 16 km from Sutomore, roughly a 20-minute drive inland. The lake is one of the major natural attractions in Montenegro and much easier to explore with your own car.
What draws visitors to Sutomore?
Sutomore is known for its long sandy beach and lively summer atmosphere, popular with Montenegrin families and visitors from the region. It is a more relaxed alternative to Budva with good road connections to Bar, Ulcinj, and the Skadar Lake area.
Can I rent a car one-way starting or ending in Sutomore?
Yes. Sutomore sits on the south coast between Bar and Petrovac, so it slots naturally into a coast-to-airport one-way. The drop-off fee depends on distance and supplier and is shown at checkout. See one-way rental drop-offs for popular routes and typical fees.
Stay on the family beach and keep Bar and the open coast a few minutes off.
Beach or door delivery