
Driving Montenegro from a Kotor Base
Montenegro is roughly the size of Northern Ireland yet contains a coast, a deep fjord-like bay, a 2,500-year-old walled town, a 1,300-metre-deep canyon, and alpine peaks above 2,500 metres. Driving distances look short on a map. In practice, the roads twist, climb, tunnel, and ferry-cross their way between these extremes, and journey times rarely match what Google predicts. Accept that, and the driving itself becomes part of the holiday.
Kotor sits at the geographical heart of the action. Perast is fifteen minutes north. Budva is thirty minutes south. Lovćen's summit is an hour of switchbacks above. Lake Skadar is ninety minutes inland. Only Durmitor, in the far north, requires a genuine road trip. Everything else radiates outward from the fortress walls like spokes from a hub.
Picking Up Your Car
Tivat Airport, 8 km from Kotor, is the obvious collection point — fifteen minutes from landing to the Old Town. Podgorica Airport offers wider winter schedules and a scenic 90-minute drive through the mountains. Dubrovnik Airport in Croatia has the most international routes and connects to Kotor via a two-hour coastal road with one border crossing. All three have meet-and-greet handovers.
Realistic Drive Times from Kotor
Perast: 15 min. Tivat: 20 min. Budva: 30 min. Herceg Novi: 45 min. Cetinje: 60 min. Podgorica: 90 min. Dubrovnik: 2 h. Žabljak (Durmitor): 3.5–4 h.
The Kotor–Lovćen serpentine alone contains 25 documented hairpin bends in less than 20 km. Navigation apps routinely underestimate mountain stretches by 20–30%. Plan accordingly and carry water.
What the Police Will Check
Random roadside checks are common, especially on the bay road and near border crossings. Officers will ask for:
- A valid driving licence (international driving permit accepted alongside it)
- The original rental contract (photocopies are not sufficient)
- Proof of insurance (the rental company provides this in the vehicle)
- A Green Card if crossing any border (approximately 15 euros for 15 days)
Non-Negotiable Rules
- Seat belts: mandatory for every occupant, front and rear
- Mobile phones: hands-free only, and even then police may stop you
- Alcohol: zero-tolerance policy — any detectable blood alcohol means an on-the-spot fine or worse
- Speed cameras: fixed units on the bay road and mobile traps on the highway. Fines are issued to the rental company and charged back to your card

What the Roads Are Actually Like
The bay road between Kotor and Perast is paved and maintained but barely two cars wide in places, with stone walls on one side and the water on the other. Mountain roads above 800 metres may lack guard rails entirely. The Sozina tunnel to Budva is modern and well-lit. The Lovćen road is narrow, steep, and has limited passing places — honk before blind bends. In winter, chains or winter tyres are legally required above the snow line.
Two Arterial Roads
E65 / E80: The Bay Circuit
This route traces the entire Bay of Kotor from Herceg Novi around the northern arm through Perast and Kotor, then south via Tivat toward Budva. Alternatively, the Kamenari–Lepetane car ferry shortcuts the loop, saving 45 minutes. The bay road is where most visitors spend their driving time, and for good reason — the views change with every headland.
E762: Coast to Interior
Cuts inland from the Adriatic through the Montenegrin heartland toward the Serbian and eastern Bosnian borders. This is the route to Nikšić, the Piva canyon, and eventually Durmitor. Less scenic near the coast but increasingly dramatic as it climbs.
Crossing Into Neighbouring Countries
Cross-border driving is permitted with a Green Card. The Croatia crossing at Debeli Brijeg is the busiest — in July and August, waits of one to two hours are normal. Weekday mornings before 08:00 or evenings after 20:00 cut the queue significantly. Other crossings (Albania, Bosnia, Serbia, Kosovo) are generally faster.
Why Montenegro Rewards Drivers
Independent only since 2006, Montenegro remains lightly visited compared to Croatia or Greece. The roads are quieter, the parking easier, and the landscapes more concentrated. A single tank of fuel can take you from Kotor's Venetian alleyways to a glacial mountain lake and back. Few countries this small pack this much into their borders.