REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Private Transfer from Dubrovnik to Split
Book on Viator →Operated by Super Transfer Services · Bookable on Viator
Leaving Dubrovnik without fuss is the goal. This private ride gets you to Split fast, with hotel pickup and an air-conditioned car, so you can skip the logistics of renting or wrestling with public transport.
I love how the driver handles the driving with an English-speaking approach, which makes the long route feel easier. I also like that the transfer is shared only with your group, so the trip stays relaxed.
One consideration: it costs $537.01 per person, and extra stops aren’t listed as included, so if you want lots of flexibility, you’ll need to plan for that.
In This Review
- Key things I’d bet on
- Dubrovnik to Split with the low-stress kind of planning
- Your English-speaking driver and air-conditioned comfort
- Pickup details that make the route actually easy
- Drive timing: 7:00 am departure and an about-3-hours ride
- What’s included—and what’s not—so there are no surprises
- Price and value: is $537.01 per person worth it?
- Who this transfer suits (and who should rethink it)
- Quick decision: should you book this Dubrovnik–Split transfer?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the private transfer?
- What time does the transfer start?
- Is this transfer one-way?
- Does it include pickup and drop-off from my hotel?
- Is the vehicle air-conditioned?
- Do I need to provide flight details?
- Is the driver English-speaking?
- Are extra stops included?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- How does cancellation work?
Key things I’d bet on

- Private-only experience: shared only with your group
- Hotel pickup and drop-off: convenient if you’re staying central
- Air-conditioned transportation: easier in warmer months
- English-speaking driver: helpful for wayfinding and context
- Designed for one-way transfers: good for airport timing and onward plans
- Most people can join: listed as broadly suitable for travelers
Dubrovnik to Split with the low-stress kind of planning

The Dubrovnik to Split transfer is one of those trips that can either feel like a chore or feel like a reset. This one leans hard into the second option: you get a private, 1-way ride with door-to-door pickup from your hotel or residence and drop-off in Split. Instead of building a mini itinerary around buses, schedules, and ticket machines, you just show up where your driver can find you.
What makes this route especially worth doing privately is simple. Croatia’s coast is scenic, but it’s also a place where travel time adds up quickly when you’re coordinating connections. A private car means you’re not stuck waiting at transfer points while everyone argues about which stop is correct. You also avoid the head-scratching of navigating unfamiliar roads and signage.
I also appreciate the practical pitch behind this option: it’s marketed as a way to reduce your air travel carbon footprint. If you’re trying to move through the region with fewer flights and less backtracking, a ground transfer like this fits nicely into a smarter travel flow.
There’s also a big “trust factor” built into the format. When you’re dealing with a company that focuses on private transfers only, the day usually runs cleaner: fewer handoffs, fewer crowd-management issues, and one driver who stays with your group from pickup to drop-off.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Dubrovnik
Your English-speaking driver and air-conditioned comfort
The whole point of paying for a private transfer is the human part. You’re not just buying a seat in a vehicle—you’re buying someone who can actually drive, time the route, and communicate with you. This service includes an English-speaking driver, and multiple visitors highlight that the driver showed up on time and drove safely. That matters more than people think, especially when you’re tired from sightseeing or you’ve got bags to get through.
The vehicle is also air-conditioned, which is a real quality-of-life upgrade on a warm day. You feel it immediately once you’re out of Dubrovnik’s old-town streets and into the longer road ahead. Even if you don’t care about comfort much, climate control helps you arrive feeling ready to walk, eat, and get oriented instead of sweaty and fractionally miserable.
One more detail worth noting: this is described as a comfortable ride in a professional setup, not a shared shuttle with strangers, frequent stops, and shifting pickup times. Your group stays together, so you don’t end up watching your timing get dragged around by other people’s accommodations.
Could you get a similar ride by taxi? Sure. But the advantage here is consistency: your pickup is arranged, your drop-off is arranged, and you’re not negotiating from scratch while you’re trying to catch the rest of your day. That kind of certainty is hard to put a price on when you’re already on the move.
Pickup details that make the route actually easy

This service includes pickup and drop-off from your hotel, plus transportation by air-conditioned vehicle for the entire one-way journey. The practical takeaway is that you should be ready to give clear location info when you book.
If you’re staying at a hotel or private residence in the Dubrovnik area, you’ll need to advise your preferred pickup location. If you’re arriving by plane, the key details they ask for are the exact time and your flight number, along with information about your accommodation in Split. That combination tells you they’re designed for real-world arrival patterns—delayed flights, last-minute changes, and the classic problem of arriving in a new city with zero local context.
Once you’ve given them the right pickup and destination details, your job gets simple: confirm the time, be at the pickup point, and enjoy the ride. The transfer is also listed as near public transportation, which is a subtle benefit. If anything goes slightly off schedule, you usually have an easier backup plan to keep the day from collapsing.
Also pay attention to the “private transportation” wording. This is not a free-for-all shared bus. The setup is only shared with your group, which helps keep things calm and reduces the stress of coordinating multiple unknown pickups.
Drive timing: 7:00 am departure and an about-3-hours ride

The service lists a start time of 7:00 am and an approximate duration of 3 hours. In plain terms: you’re planning your Split day around a morning departure, and you should treat 3 hours as a workable planning estimate rather than a guaranteed minute-by-minute promise.
That matters because the value of a transfer like this depends on what you do after you arrive. If you’re heading to lunch, a check-in, or an attraction with a morning window, an early ride gives you more usable time in Split. If you’re planning a late start day, a 7:00 am pickup might feel too early. So before you book, line it up with how your first full day in Split usually goes.
One nice thing about a private transfer is you don’t have to build your schedule around multiple public-transport legs. Even with the same total drive time, you gain back energy because there’s no waiting and no repeated ticketing. The day feels smoother even if the “on-road” time isn’t dramatically shorter than other options.
You should also consider the local rhythm of travel days. If you’re arriving from Dubrovnik after a packed morning, an early departure can still be a win because you arrive earlier, settle in, and avoid a late-day travel slump. If you’re the type who needs a slow start, you might want to build in buffer time at the end of the ride, since the rest of your itinerary will depend on your exact arrival timing.
What’s included—and what’s not—so there are no surprises

Here’s where this service is refreshingly clear. Included:
- all fees and taxes
- pickup and drop-off from your hotel
- transportation by air-conditioned vehicle
- English-speaking driver
- private transportation
- one-way transfer
Not included:
- extra stops
That “not included” line is important. It doesn’t mean stops never happen; it means they aren’t part of the standard offering. In practice, some drivers may offer a brief pause en route, and people have described an extra stop at a small town during the journey. But don’t count on it. If a stop matters to your plan—bathroom break, quick coffee, photos—ask in advance so you’re not trying to renegotiate mid-drive.
Another practical included detail is the mobile ticket. You’ll have a digital way to access your transfer, which helps if you’re juggling phone storage, last-minute messages, and changing plans. The confirmation is also provided at the time of booking, so you’re not left wondering if everything is set.
For carbon-conscious planning, this is also a straightforward option. A ground transfer swaps out flight segments and keeps you moving through the region. If you’re building a trip that favors fewer flights and more time on the ground, this fits that style without turning your day into a complicated logistics puzzle.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Dubrovnik
Price and value: is $537.01 per person worth it?

Let’s talk money honestly. At $537.01 per person, this isn’t a budget transfer. This is a convenience purchase: your time, your comfort, and your stress reduction.
So when does it make sense? It usually works best when at least one of these is true:
- you’re arriving with limited time and want a reliable handoff to Split
- you don’t want to manage rental cars, parking, or navigation
- you’d rather spend your energy exploring than solving transportation problems
- you’re traveling as a group and can make the private format work for your schedule
- you value an English-speaking driver who can keep things easy
The private element is the key to the value argument. A shared transfer may look cheaper, but it often comes with hidden costs: extra waiting, pickup timing uncertainty, and the frustration of coordinating with other guests. With this service, the format is one-way, private, and built around pickup and drop-off. That’s the kind of “boring” setup that pays off when you want your itinerary to behave.
Also note that the service lists group discounts. If your party size makes that available, the per-person value can improve in a way that a standard private car rental might not. Even if you don’t get a discount, the comparison often isn’t private vs public. It’s private vs the time cost of figuring out public options plus the stress of being late.
One more value angle: safety and punctuality matter more on longer transfer days. The ride’s reputation includes on-time service and careful driving, and that kind of reliability helps you protect the rest of your schedule.
Who this transfer suits (and who should rethink it)

This private transfer is a good match for travelers who want their morning to stay calm. Think couples, small groups, and anyone who has more important things to do in Split than compare bus times.
It also suits people who need airport-level coordination without the airport-level hassle. If you’re arriving by plane, the provider asks for flight number and timing, which signals that they plan for arrival realities rather than forcing you into rigid schedules.
If you’re the type who loves to explore on your own terms and you’re already comfortable driving or taking buses, you may decide you don’t need the private premium. In that case, you might choose a cheaper option and accept the added friction. But if your goal is to reduce decision fatigue and land in Split ready to move, this one fits.
There’s also a benefit for travelers who hate the logistics of car rentals: where to pick up the car, where to park, what traffic looks like, and what happens if you’re arriving late. This transfer removes those unknowns and gives you a clear pickup point and an air-conditioned ride.
Finally, the “most travelers can participate” line is a signal that this isn’t a niche activity with special requirements. If you can handle a morning departure and a few hours of travel, you’re probably in the right category.
Quick decision: should you book this Dubrovnik–Split transfer?

If you’re weighing convenience against cost, I’d book this when schedule certainty and comfort matter more than saving a bit of money. The included hotel pickup and drop-off, the English-speaking driver, and the private-only group setup are exactly the features that make a transfer feel like part of your trip instead of a distraction from it.
I’d think twice if your priority is flexibility for extra stops or a lower price. Extra stops aren’t included, and at this rate, you want to be sure you’ll actually use the private format to protect your time.
If you want a simple, early-morning plan that gets you to Split with less stress, this is the kind of transfer that earns its fee.
FAQ
What is the duration of the private transfer?
The transfer duration is approximately 3 hours.
What time does the transfer start?
The start time listed is 7:00 am.
Is this transfer one-way?
Yes. It’s a one-way transfer from Dubrovnik to Split.
Does it include pickup and drop-off from my hotel?
Yes. Pickup and drop-off from your hotel are included.
Is the vehicle air-conditioned?
Yes. Transportation is provided in an air-conditioned vehicle.
Do I need to provide flight details?
If you are arriving by plane, you need to provide the exact time and flight number, plus your accommodation details in Split.
Is the driver English-speaking?
Yes. An English-speaking driver is included.
Are extra stops included?
No. Extra stops are not included.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes. A mobile ticket is listed as a feature.
How does cancellation work?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, you won’t receive a refund.


































