REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Dubrovnik: Legendary Game of Thrones Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Experience Dubrovnik · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Game of Thrones meets real stone. This 2-hour walk in Dubrovnik uses a guide and a GoT screenshot booklet to tie famous moments like King’s Landing, the Walk of Shame, and the Purple Wedding to the streets you’re standing on. You get the fun of fandom, but you also leave with a clearer sense of how Dubrovnik itself became such a strong visual stand-in.
I especially like the way the tour blends Dubrovnik history with what you saw on HBO. Guides are singled out by name in reviews for connecting the TV show’s power struggles to the city’s own story, not just listing filming locations.
One thing to consider: the tour does not include the Red Keep entrance ticket, and you may want to budget extra for that St. Lawrence Fort (15 EUR) stop. In warm weather, the walking adds up too, so plan for comfortable shoes and sun protection.
In This Review
- Key moments you’ll actually get from this tour
- Why this 2-hour Game of Thrones walk is a great use of limited Dubrovnik time
- The screenshot booklet is the real star
- How the guide connects show drama to Dubrovnik’s real story
- The route: from harbour start to old-town stops in about 2 hours
- West Harbour start: get oriented before the story ramps up
- Lovrijenac: where the show’s power-room feeling shows up
- Pile Gate and Stradun: the city’s main stage for story beats
- Jesuit Stairs: shorter stop, good story payoff
- Rector’s Palace and the Dominican Monastery: power, religion, and public life
- Red Keep ticket: when the extra cost is worth it
- Pacing, group vibe, and what to expect from the walk
- What to bring so you enjoy it instead of just surviving it
- Who this tour is best for
- Final verdict: should you book this Dubrovnik Game of Thrones walking tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Dubrovnik Legendary Game of Thrones Walking Tour?
- What does the tour cover?
- Is the Red Keep entrance included in the price?
- What languages is the live guide available in?
- What should I bring?
- Can I get a refund if my plans change?
Key moments you’ll actually get from this tour

- Screenshot booklet comparisons so you can match the scene to the exact spot
- King’s Landing, Red Keep, the Walk of Shame, and the Purple Wedding as the show’s biggest hits
- Joffrey’s death location and the behind-the-scenes context that makes it make sense
- Dubrovnik vs. Game of Thrones similarities explained by a local guide, not generic trivia
- A structured 2-hour route with multiple guided stops instead of a long, aimless wander
- Private group option if you want quieter pacing and more Q&A time
Why this 2-hour Game of Thrones walk is a great use of limited Dubrovnik time

Dubrovnik can be overwhelming fast. You’ve got walls, gates, staircases, viewpoints, and a parade of photo angles all demanding attention at once. This tour gives you a simple plan: follow a guide, hit the stops you’d probably miss on your own, and understand why each scene matters.
The value is in the match-up. You’re not just told where filming happened; you’re shown screenshots from the series so you can see what the camera used and what changed for the production. That format helps even if you’re not the world’s biggest GoT expert, because it turns vague “this looks like it” memories into something concrete.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Dubrovnik
The screenshot booklet is the real star

A lot of walking tours rely on storytelling alone. This one adds a visual tool: a booklet with series screenshots that show what happened where. That means you can keep up even when the streets twist and the old town looks like it’s made of the same stone color everywhere.
I like this approach because it makes the tour feel fair. If the show is what brought you in, you still get to verify it on the ground. If Dubrovnik is what you want to learn about, you still get the connective tissue that explains why the city works so well on screen.
The reviews also point to guide flexibility. When one person’s phone died mid-tour, their guide offered photos and shared them afterward. That tells you the guides are paying attention to the small practical stuff that can otherwise ruin the experience.
How the guide connects show drama to Dubrovnik’s real story

This tour doesn’t treat Game of Thrones as a separate universe that only happens on TV. It actively looks at the similarities between Dubrovnik’s past and the series’ themes. Expect explanations that link the show’s ideas about rule, conflict, and public life to what was happening historically in the city.
You’ll hear behind-the-scenes context too. That part matters because it turns set-piece moments into production choices. Suddenly, a scene you thought was just dramatic becomes a clue about why Dubrovnik looked the way it did to the filmmakers.
What stands out in the reviews is how consistent this pairing is across different guides. Names that come up include Deśa, Sonja, Michaela, Andreja, Goran, Darko, Stella, Jelena, Mihaela, and Josif, each praised for tying GoT knowledge to Dubrovnik’s story and answering questions in a way that feels local.
The route: from harbour start to old-town stops in about 2 hours

The tour uses a tight walking loop, broken into guided segments with short walks between them. You also get two possible starting points depending on what you book, which helps you fit it into your day.
Depending on your option, you may start at:
- Go! Running Tours Dubrovnik meeting point, or
- Dubrovnik West Harbour
From there, the tour moves through a sequence of key areas:
- Dubrovnik West Harbour (about 15 minutes walking time)
- Lovrijenac (about 45 minutes walking time)
- Pile Gate, Dubrovnik (about 10 minutes)
- Stradun (about 10 minutes)
- Jesuit Stairs (about 15 minutes)
- Rector’s Palace (about 10 minutes)
- Dominican Monastery and Museum (about 15 minutes)
Each stop is guided, and each one is tied back to a scene or theme with the help of the screenshot booklet. If you’re the type who gets bored by repetitive “fact dumping,” this structure helps keep momentum.
West Harbour start: get oriented before the story ramps up
Starting at the West Harbour area makes sense because it frames the walk. You’re not thrown straight into the middle of Stradun without context. Instead, you begin in a spot that helps you understand the direction the route will take and how the city’s layout supports the show’s big visuals.
This first stretch is also a good moment to settle in. The guide sets expectations early, and you’ll get the sense that the tour is built around specific GoT beats, not just general sightseeing.
Lovrijenac: where the show’s power-room feeling shows up
Lovrijenac is the longest stop on the route (about 45 minutes walking time), and that usually means it’s doing some heavy lifting. This is one of the places the tour uses to talk about the show’s court-side drama, including King’s Landing and the idea of the Red Keep.
Even if you don’t remember every plot point, the screenshot comparisons help. You’re meant to recognize framing and location cues, then connect them back to the production choices and the city’s look.
If you’re sensitive to heat, this is the part to plan for. Long stretches in peak sun can feel tougher than the total tour length suggests, so bring what you need: hat and sunglasses are specifically recommended.
Pile Gate and Stradun: the city’s main stage for story beats
Next comes Pile Gate, then Stradun, which is one of the most recognizable parts of Dubrovnik’s old town street life. This is where the walking becomes practical and you can start matching the tour’s narrative to the urban rhythm you’re seeing around you.
The Stradun stop is only about 10 minutes, but it’s a high-impact segment. A short walk here still gives you a clear view of the street geometry the show can exploit, and it helps you understand why the series relies so much on public spaces.
This segment is also helpful if you’re visiting for only a day. You’ll get a guided pass through the most photo-heavy area, but with GoT context built in rather than generic sightseeing.
Jesuit Stairs: shorter stop, good story payoff
Jesuit Stairs come next (about 15 minutes walking time). This is the kind of stop that works well for short segments because the guide can point out specific show details and connect them to what you’re seeing right now.
I like this stop because it often breaks the routine. You’re not only moving along a street; you’re dealing with a change in elevation and perspective. That’s the kind of shift that makes the screenshot booklet feel useful instead of repetitive.
Rector’s Palace and the Dominican Monastery: power, religion, and public life
After the main street and stairs, the tour shifts into more “institution” territory:
- Rector’s Palace (about 10 minutes)
- Dominican Monastery and Museum (about 15 minutes)
This is where the Dubrovnik vs. GoT similarities get more meaningful. Reviews emphasize that guides don’t just talk show scenes; they also connect what’s on screen to Dubrovnik’s historic themes. Places like these help explain why the series’ politics and public image feel so at home in the city.
If you like history but hate long museum sessions, this tour is a nice compromise. You get guided context without turning your day into an all-day ticket line ordeal.
Red Keep ticket: when the extra cost is worth it

The tour includes a local professional guide, but the Red Keep entrance ticket is not included. You may see this referred to as St. Lawrence Fort, with an entrance cost of 15 EUR.
Whether it’s worth paying depends on what you’re chasing:
- If you came for the biggest Red Keep moments, the paid stop can feel like finishing the circuit.
- If you’re more interested in the walking narrative and the screenshot comparisons outside the entrance areas, you might be comfortable skipping it.
Either way, the tour’s value doesn’t vanish if you don’t pay extra. The guide still ties key scenes to where you stand, including moments like the Walk of Shame and the Purple Wedding.
Pacing, group vibe, and what to expect from the walk

This is a 2-hour tour at a moderate pace. It’s long enough to cover multiple standout locations and still short enough to keep your energy for the rest of your Dubrovnik day. Reviews also mention that guides are attentive to questions and pictures, which matters a lot on a route where everyone wants to stop, compare, and shoot photos.
Group size can vary, but you can absolutely plan for a standard walking-tour experience. If you want quieter pacing, a private group option is available. That’s a smart choice if you’re traveling with friends, want more time for questions, or just don’t want to wait your turn at each screenshot stop.
What to bring so you enjoy it instead of just surviving it

The tour explicitly recommends:
- Comfortable shoes
- Sunglasses
- Sun hat
I’d add one practical reality: Dubrovnik sun can hit hard, even when the tour feels short on paper. If you hate being hot and tired, treat this like a midday workout. Water helps, even if it isn’t listed; you’ll appreciate it during the longer segment.
Who this tour is best for

This is perfect if you fit at least one of these profiles:
- You’re a GoT fan who wants the scenes explained at the locations you’re actually walking through
- You like history but want it woven into a story, not presented as a lecture
- You’re on a tight schedule and want a route that’s efficient and guided
- You’re traveling with someone who loves the show too, and you want a shared experience that still includes real city context
If you’re the kind of visitor who prefers silent wandering and hates structured routes, you might feel the tour is too planned. The tradeoff is that you’ll miss the specific “what happened where” connections the guide is built to deliver.
Final verdict: should you book this Dubrovnik Game of Thrones walking tour?

If you’re choosing between a self-guided wander and a guided GoT route, I’d book this one. The screenshot booklet format is the deciding factor for me because it turns the city into a clear, trackable storyline.
It’s also strong value at $29 for 2 hours, especially since you’re paying for a local guide who connects the show’s set pieces to Dubrovnik’s real themes. Just decide early whether you want the Red Keep (St. Lawrence Fort) add-on—15 EUR—based on how central those moments are to your own GoT memories.
You’ll probably have the best experience if you come with curiosity rather than perfection. You don’t need to recite every episode. You just need good walking shoes, a willingness to compare screenshots to streets, and a bit of patience for the questions you’ll want to ask once the guide starts connecting the dots.
FAQ
How long is the Dubrovnik Legendary Game of Thrones Walking Tour?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
What does the tour cover?
You’ll visit places tied to major Game of Thrones moments, including King’s Landing, Red Keep, the Walk of Shame, and the Purple Wedding, and you’ll also hear about what was going on behind the scenes (including where Joffrey died).
Is the Red Keep entrance included in the price?
No. The Red Keep (St. Lawrence Fort) entrance ticket costs 15 EUR and is not included.
What languages is the live guide available in?
The tour guide speaks German and English.
What should I bring?
Bring comfortable shoes, sunglasses, and a sun hat.
Can I get a refund if my plans change?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.





























