Dubrovnik on a Budget (2026): Local Tips, Cheap & Free Things
Marenda (Daily Lunch Special)
Between ~12:00–16:00 many local spots offer set lunch plates (often €7–€17). Look for boards advertising “Marenda”.
Marenda is a daily menu that is often cheaper than other meals on the menu. You’ll often get a generous main + salad for less than dinnertime prices. It is meant for locals who are on their lunch break but you can certainly get it too.
Some of the restaurants that offer marenda are Academia, Mezzanave and Urban&Veggie. An example of marenda would be Sardines with potatoes and chard or Beef stew with potatoes and tomato salsa, accompanied by a salad and ice cream. 
Bakery (Pekara)
Burek, sandwiches, and pastries are tasty + cheap. Certain bakeries (like Mlinar) have their apps that allow you to buy baked goods with a discount (up to 40%).
The most popular baked good is burek, a flakey savoury pastry with meat or cheese (there are also other options such as potatoes, cabbage and spinach). All of these goods are significantly cheaper than dishes in restaurants, and they can fill you up with no problem!
Grocery-Store Deli
Supermarkets often have hot meals & salads. Pick up some fruit, cheese, bread and head to a viewpoint for a perfect picnic —we recommend Srđ or Lapad.
The three most common markets you will run into are Konzum, Tommy and Studenac. Out of these three Konzum is usually perceived as the cheapest. Studenac is the most expensive.
Fast Food
The most affordable restaurants in the Old Town are mainly fast food or street food restaurants. Ones that stand out the most to us are Tutto bene and Preša.
Budget Friendly Areas
Step outside of Old Town (Lapad/Gruž), menus typically drop b . The price-to-portion ratio improves fast.
Tap Water is Safe
Refill at fountains in the Old Town or ask restaurants kindly – skip the 3 Euro bottled water.
Dubrovnik really has some epic viewpoints from where you can enjoy mesmerising sunsets and surrounding nature. Make sure to bring a bottle of wine (or beer!) and some snacks, come earlier to avoid crowds & soak it all in !
- Srđ mountain: sunset from the top.

The cable car is cool, but free views are even cooler: hike the trail (~45–60 min up) or split a taxi/Uber with friends. Pack a small picnic, see the old town from birds perspective, and see the most beautiful sunset in Dubrovnik – the sun going to sleep over the Elaphiti islands.
Tip: wear good shoes (some scree is possible on the path), bring water & jacket (can be chilly at top), bring a headlight for your way down. If you go for a wine picnic, better take an Uber down 😉
- Petka – quiet, pine-forest sunsets.
From Lapad Promenade, it’s 20–35 minutes to the top via two options: the wide gravel path (easier) or the forest trail (prettier, a bit rugged). The reward is a sweeping view over Lapad Bay and the Elaphiti Islands—perfect for a low-cost sunset picnic on your Dubrovnik-on-a-budget trip.
Tip: wear comfy shoes, bring water (and bug spray in summer), then stroll back to the promenade for gelato
Just 5–10 minutes from Pile Gate, this clifftop pine park faces mighty Fort Lovrijenac and the Adriatic. You won’t see the sun “drop” into the sea here, but the golden hour light on the fortress and Old Town walls is stunning—and it’s totally free. Easy benches, flat paths, and quick access make it a great budget stop before or after exploring the Old Town.
- Park Orsula – amphitheatre above the sea.
A lesser-known gem 30–45 minutes on foot uphill from Ploče Gate (or a short taxi ride), Park Orsula offers a dramatic, open-air amphitheatre viewpoint with panoramic shots of Lokrum and the Old Town. It’s quieter than Srđ, epic for photos, and free—ideal for travelers keeping costs down. Bring a layer (breezy up there), snacks, and a phone light for the walk down. In summer, it sometimes hosts concerts, making it a uniquely Dubrovnik spot to catch sunset.
Use this interactive map to find free sunset spots, affordable food, bus kiosks, DIY ferries to islands, and our top value indoor activity in Lapad