REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Family Friendly Dubrovnik Private City Tour
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Dubrovnik gets easier when someone plays tour guide and game master. This family friendly private city walk mixes big-name sights with quiz-style fun, so kids stay involved while adults get the why behind the walls, squares, and landmarks. You’ll also get a host who’s mindful about the planet, with the experience described as carbon neutral and backed by Certified B Corporation values.
I love two things most: the way the guide can tailor the pace for kids, and the included ice cream that keeps morale high even when the Old Town crowds feel relentless. The other big plus is that you’re not just sightseeing—you’re learning how to read Dubrovnik, so you can keep exploring after the tour.
One possible drawback: a few key stops have entry tickets that are not included, so you’ll want to decide on the day whether you’ll pay for those inside visits. Also, there’s no hotel pickup, so you’ll meet your guide at the Old Town edge and start walking from there.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Why This 90-Minute Dubrovnik Family Tour Feels Like a Shortcut
- Start at Babić Pekara and Vrata od Ploča (P22)
- Stradun and the Luža Square Clock: The Main Stage in 20 Minutes
- Rector’s Palace: Touch the Statue and Hear Why
- Dominican Monastery and the Fun of Learning in Place
- Church of the Holy Annunciation: The Cat Story That Works
- Convent of St. Claire: Old Orphanage Stories
- Onophrian Fountain: A Refresh Break at a Must-See Landmark
- Monument of Poet Ivan Gundulić: Practice Local Words
- Pile Gate: Finish Back Where You Started (and Get a Plan)
- Price and Value: What $83 Buys in Dubrovnik
- How Guides Keep Families Comfortable: Tailoring in Real Time
- Stop-by-Stop Timing: What 10 Minutes Feels Like
- Tickets, Entry Decisions, and How to Avoid Regrets
- Practical Tips for a Smooth Dubrovnik Family Walk
- Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Might Skip)
- Should You Book This Family-Friendly Dubrovnik Private City Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Dubrovnik private city tour for families?
- Where do we meet, and where does the tour end?
- Is this tour private?
- Are entrance tickets included for all the stops?
- What’s included in the price besides the private guide?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key things to know before you go

- Kid-focused quizzes and games keep attention from drifting, even with shy kids
- Private guide flexibility means you can adjust to stroller needs and family energy levels
- A tight 90-minute loop hits the major highlights without turning into a full-day grind
- Some sights require separate tickets, so budget for a couple paid entries if you want them
- Ice cream for everyone is included, not an optional treat
- Carbon neutral, Certified B Corporation approach adds an extra layer of values to the trip
Why This 90-Minute Dubrovnik Family Tour Feels Like a Shortcut
Dubrovnik’s Old Town is stunning, but it can also be mentally loud. In just about 1.5 hours, this tour helps you get oriented fast: where things are, what matters, and how to stitch the highlights into a plan you can repeat later. If your family has limited time—or kids who melt down when you ask them to stand still too long—this format is a smart move.
Because it’s private, the guide isn’t stuck with a rigid script. You can shape the experience around your kids’ moods and questions as you go. And yes, that includes a playful approach—games, quizzes, and stories that make the walking feel less like homework and more like a mission.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Dubrovnik
Start at Babić Pekara and Vrata od Ploča (P22)

You meet at Babić pekara – Vrata od Ploča (P22), at Ul. Frana Supila 2. This location works well because it’s right at the Old Town arrival point, so you get your bearings immediately and don’t waste time on extra transit.
Stop one is short—around five minutes—so it’s less about “tour briefing” and more about getting everyone synced up: hi, introduce your family, and set expectations for the loop ahead. If you’ve got a stroller, guides have clearly handled it before, and the private nature makes it easier to move at your pace without the group herding effect.
Stradun and the Luža Square Clock: The Main Stage in 20 Minutes

After you get moving, the tour brings you to Stradun (also called Placa), the main pedestrian street of Dubrovnik. It’s roughly 300 meters long and runs through the Old Town, surrounded by the Walls of Dubrovnik. That stretch is perfect for a family tour because it’s simple to follow: walk, look, and reset as needed without complicated detours.
Then you move to Luza Square, a lively local hangout. The big draw here is the clock—something kids can spot quickly, and adults can appreciate as a recognizable city landmark. This is where the guide’s game style really helps: when a child is looking for something specific, they’re less likely to wander off into “I’m bored” territory.
Quick reality check: this part of the Old Town can be busy. The private guide can’t change the fact that Dubrovnik is popular, but they can help you time your attention so your group isn’t stuck staring at the same wall while everyone else streams past.
Rector’s Palace: Touch the Statue and Hear Why
Next comes Rector’s Palace, a stop that’s more story than stop-and-pose. One of the tour’s specific moments here is being encouraged to touch a statue and then hearing the tale of why that gesture is said to bring good luck. It turns a usually-static monument moment into something interactive—exactly the sort of detail kids remember later.
This stop is also one of the clearest “check the ticket situation first” moments. The entry is listed as not included, so you’ll likely need to decide on the day whether you want the inside experience. If your kids are the type who can handle a sit-down visit, it can add a lot. If not, you can still use the outdoor approach to pick up the context for what you’ll see elsewhere.
Dominican Monastery and the Fun of Learning in Place

At the Dominican Monastery, the guide keeps it moving while sharing the kind of stories that make older buildings feel human. Monasteries can be intimidating for kids because they sound “quiet and boring,” but the tour format here is built to keep minds engaged with interesting talk and on-the-go explanations.
As with some other stops, entry tickets are not included, so you may want to treat this as a choose-your-own-adventure part. If you do go inside, plan for short attention spans and expect the guide to manage that by pacing and questions.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Dubrovnik
Church of the Holy Annunciation: The Cat Story That Works

One of Dubrovnik’s most family-friendly ideas is that the guide doesn’t just list facts—they connects them to everyday life. At the Church of the Holy Annunciation, the stop is framed around the reason Dubrovnik has so many cats. That’s the kind of topic that instantly hooks kids. Even adults who didn’t come for animal lore usually end up listening.
This stop again has tickets listed as not included, so it’s an easy one to keep flexible. If you want a quick look and a story, you can do that. If your group is itching to keep moving to the next viewpoint, this stop won’t trap you in a long indoor session.
Convent of St. Claire: Old Orphanage Stories

The tour moves to the Convent of St. Claire, described as an old orphanage. This adds a different tone to the day. It’s not just architecture and famous rulers; it’s the lived reality of people who passed through these spaces.
If your kids are old enough to ask questions about how people lived centuries ago, this is a strong stop. The guide’s job here is to make it age-appropriate—honest without being heavy, curious without being confusing. Entry tickets are listed as not included, so you can decide based on your family’s stamina.
Onophrian Fountain: A Refresh Break at a Must-See Landmark

Now you hit Onophrian Fountain, which is listed as free. This stop is a practical win for families because it’s a landmark that naturally invites a break. It’s the sort of place kids can gather around without needing a ticket or rules about where to stand.
Also, fountains are memorable. They’re easy to locate later because they’re visually distinctive. If you want to keep exploring after the tour, Onophrian is a helpful reference point.
Monument of Poet Ivan Gundulić: Practice Local Words
Next up is Monument of Poet Ivan Gundulić in an ancient square. This is where the tour adds something fun and usable: you get a dose of history, plus learning some local words. That’s a small detail that can pay off later when you’re trying to read menus or ask simple questions.
The stop also includes a clue about one of the city’s infamous former residents. Without turning it into a gossip session, it adds an edge of real human story to what might otherwise feel like a statue-and-name moment. Kids like the “infamous” factor, and adults appreciate that it’s not just dates and titles.
Pile Gate: Finish Back Where You Started (and Get a Plan)
Your tour wraps at Pile Gate, another free stop. This is the kind of ending that works well for families because it gives a clear “we’re done here” marker without the stress of finding your way out alone.
One of the strongest parts of a good city orientation tour is what happens after: the guide offers advice for where to go next. Here, that’s part of the package. You’re leaving with a better sense of how to keep your day moving—whether that means grabbing a snack, aiming for another viewpoint, or planning the next Old Town loop with less guesswork.
Price and Value: What $83 Buys in Dubrovnik
At around $83 for a private tour running about 1 hour 30 minutes, the value depends on what you care about most: time, convenience, or kid-friendly attention.
Here’s what you’re paying for in practical terms:
- A private guide (not a big-group tour format)
- A structured route through major highlights
- Kid-focused games and storytelling
- Ice cream for kids and adults included
- A tour described as carbon neutral
Some costs are not bundled. Several stops list entry tickets as not included, so if you choose to go inside those locations, you’ll likely add a few more euros on top. Still, for families, paying a guided fee can be cheaper than spending extra time “wandering” the Old Town without a plan—especially when you’re trying to keep kids engaged.
Also, if you’re traveling with a small group, group discounts are noted as available. That can make the per-person math feel more comfortable.
How Guides Keep Families Comfortable: Tailoring in Real Time
A recurring theme from this tour’s family-friendly approach is that your guide reacts to the family in front of them. In the past, guides like Karmen and Eliana have customized the tour for younger children, using questions and challenges to pull shy kids into the conversation. Igor has also been praised for keeping a six-year-old engaged.
You might hear jokes, wordplay, or quick “spot it” challenges. You might also see real flexibility. One parent described how a guide helped manage stroller needs, which is huge—nothing kills a city tour faster than everyone trying to squeeze around each other.
My advice: before you meet up, think about what your kids can handle. Are you aiming for a history-heavy day, or a highlights day with short learning moments? This tour is set up to adjust, so telling your guide what works for your family makes the biggest difference.
Stop-by-Stop Timing: What 10 Minutes Feels Like
The tour moves in chunks—many stops are around 10 minutes. That time box matters. It prevents the “we’ve been here for 45 minutes and nobody cares anymore” problem.
Here’s how that timing plays for families:
- Quick landmark stops (free outdoor areas) keep energy up.
- Ticketed stops (where entry is not included) give you a choice to go deeper or move on.
- Story stops are designed to be short and memorable—touch a statue here, learn a cat fact there, pick up a couple local words along the way.
The whole loop is about keeping momentum. Kids often accept a walk better when it comes with clear pauses and mini-missions.
Tickets, Entry Decisions, and How to Avoid Regrets
Because several stops are listed with tickets not included, your planning matters. If you buy too many entries, your kids may tire out before you finish the route. If you skip too many, you might miss what your guide thinks is the best part.
A good strategy is to treat the paid entry stops as “decision points”:
- If your child is still engaged, consider paying to go inside.
- If they’re fading, you can often enjoy the outdoor context and move to the next free landmark.
This is exactly why a private guide helps. You’re not locked into a single fixed schedule for the whole group.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Dubrovnik Family Walk
Dubrovnik’s Old Town is walkable but not “effortless.” To make the tour feel easy, I’d do three things:
First, plan to start right at the meeting point and expect walking. There’s no hotel pick-up or drop-off, so you’ll want to be ready to arrive with enough buffer time.
Second, wear shoes that handle cobblestones and lots of turning corners. You’re going to be moving constantly through squares and streets.
Third, use the tour’s structure. The guide’s games and quizzes work best when you’re not rushing to “tick off” the stops. Let the guide slow the group for the moments that matter—statue stories, cat facts, fountain breaks.
If you’re hoping for the best photo results, go with the natural rhythm. Many key viewpoints are tied to specific stops like Stradun, Onophrian Fountain, and Pile Gate, so your guide’s timing can help you avoid the worst crush.
Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Might Skip)
This is a strong fit for:
- Families with kids who need interaction, not lectures
- Travelers doing a short stay and wanting a clean orientation
- People who want to explore the Old Town afterward with less trial and error
It may be less ideal if:
- You want only free, outdoor highlights and don’t want to think about separate entry tickets
- Your group hates walking in historic centers or prefers a very relaxed pace with long stops
Still, because the tour is private and the guide can adjust, many families can make it work—even when kids aren’t in their best mood. That flexibility is part of the value.
Should You Book This Family-Friendly Dubrovnik Private City Tour?
If you’re visiting Dubrovnik with kids, I think this is one of the smartest ways to spend 90 minutes. You get a built-in plan, major highlights, and a guide who knows how to keep kids engaged with stories, quizzes, and hands-on moments. The included ice cream is not just a cute perk—it helps when you’re trying to maintain good spirits in a walk-heavy Old Town.
Book it especially if:
- This is your first day in the city and you want to get oriented quickly
- You’d rather pay for a guide than spend hours guessing your route
- You want kid-friendly energy without losing adult interest
Skip it or pair it with a different strategy if:
- You strongly prefer self-guided walking and free sights only
- Your family doesn’t want any additional entry ticket decisions mid-tour
FAQ
How long is the Dubrovnik private city tour for families?
It’s about 1 hour 30 minutes.
Where do we meet, and where does the tour end?
You meet at Babić pekara – Vrata od Ploča (P22), Ul. Frana Supila 2, Dubrovnik. The tour ends back at the meeting point.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, so only your group participates.
Are entrance tickets included for all the stops?
No. Some stops list admission as not included, while others are free (for example Stradun, Luza Square, Onophrian Fountain, and Pile Gate).
What’s included in the price besides the private guide?
The tour includes ice cream for kids and adults, it uses a mobile ticket, and the experience is described as carbon neutral.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance of the experience start time. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.




































