REVIEW · SPLIT
Split: Small-Group Sunset Sailing Trip
Book on Viator →Operated by Opcijatours · Bookable on Viator
Two hours can feel like a real reset. This Split sunset sailing trip keeps it intimate, with views of Split’s coastline and Diocletian’s Palace as the light turns cinematic.
I like that the group stays small (max 10), so the skipper can actually talk, not just recite. I also like that beverages are included, which means you can focus on the sunset instead of planning a snack stop.
One thing to keep in mind: food isn’t included, so if you’re the type who needs a real dinner after being out on the water, plan ahead.
In This Review
- Quick Take: What Makes This Split Sunset Sail Worth Your Time
- Meeting at the Harbour Master’s Office: Your 2-Hour Clock Starts Fast
- What You’ll See: Split’s Coast and Diocletian’s Palace from the Sea
- Beverages Included, Food Not Included: How to Plan Your Evening
- Small Group (Up to 10) Means You Actually Get Human Service
- The Route Feel: Harbor Out, Skyline In, Sunset Close-Up
- Timing at Sunset: Wind Reality and What to Do If the Boat Isn’t Perfect
- Safety and Communication: A Serious Note You Should Not Ignore
- Language, Crew, and Names You Might Hear on Board
- Accessibility and Small Comforts: What Fits, What Might Not
- Price and Value: Is Around $70 Worth It?
- Who This Split Sunset Sail Is Best For
- Should You Book This Split Sunset Sailing Trip?
- FAQ
- How long is the Split sunset sailing trip?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is food included?
- How many people are in the group?
- Is the tour guided, and what language is it in?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
Quick Take: What Makes This Split Sunset Sail Worth Your Time

- Max 10 travelers keeps the vibe personal and the boat experience less crowded
- Diocletian’s Palace views show up from the water in a way you just can’t get from the promenade
- Beverages included means you start enjoying early, not at the end
- About two hours at sunset is long enough for the lighting to shift, short enough to fit your evening
- English live guide helps you connect what you see to what it means in Split
- You meet at the Harbour Master’s Office at Obala Lazareta 1, which is central and easy to find
Meeting at the Harbour Master’s Office: Your 2-Hour Clock Starts Fast

Your tour starts back at the Harbour Master’s Office in Split (Obala Lazareta 1). That’s a good thing. You’re not dealing with a distant pickup, and you’re close to the working waterfront where boats actually run.
Plan for a quick boarding rhythm. This is a compact, short experience, so there’s less time to wander around beforehand. If you’re pairing it with dinner in the Old Town area, I’d aim for a relaxed meal plan: either eat before you go, or keep it flexible and grab food right after you return.
One more practical note: the activity lists moderate physical fitness. You don’t need to be an athlete, but you should be comfortable stepping on and off a boat and moving around on deck.
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Split
What You’ll See: Split’s Coast and Diocletian’s Palace from the Sea

The big payoff here is looking at Split the way most people don’t: from the water at the exact moment the city softens.
From the boat, you get coastal views as you slip away from the harbor and out toward the sunset. The trip is designed around the skyline angle, including views connected to Diocletian’s Palace—Split’s signature landmark. Seeing it from offshore gives you scale: the stone, the layout, and how the historic core fits right onto the modern seafront.
Sunset sailing is also about timing. Two hours is long enough to catch the sun dropping and the sky shifting color, but not so long that you’re stuck if the wind changes course. The best version of this tour is when the boat glides steadily and you can enjoy the slow reveal of the coastline.
Beverages Included, Food Not Included: How to Plan Your Evening

This experience includes beverages, which is a big part of why it feels like a true “evening tour” rather than a quick transport ride. But food isn’t included, and that affects how you should plan your day.
Here’s how I’d do it:
- If you’re sailing right before dinner, eat a light meal beforehand (something you can finish without rushing).
- If you usually need a full dinner after an activity, bring a plan for food immediately after you return.
- If you’re traveling with kids or picky eaters, treat this as a drinks-and-views experience, not a meal.
A few people in the orbit of this operator’s sailing experiences mention they can bring their own food. I can’t promise that will be offered on every sailing, so don’t count on it. The safest bet is to assume you’ll need food elsewhere.
Small Group (Up to 10) Means You Actually Get Human Service

A max group size of 10 travelers is the difference between a tour and a conversation. On many boats around Split, you end up watching from the edges while someone else reads off a script. Here, the structure is built for small-team interaction.
You can feel that in the way the crew handles questions, pacing, and the overall “do this, then that” flow. Even for a short 2-hour sail, you’ll get more back-and-forth if the skipper isn’t managing a crowd.
In some sailing experiences tied to this operator, guests describe a very host-style approach, including hands-on moments like learning basic sailing or getting a chance to steer. Again, that’s not guaranteed every time, but the small-group size makes it more possible than on larger sunset cruises.
The Route Feel: Harbor Out, Skyline In, Sunset Close-Up

Based on the way this kind of Split sunset sail is run, your time on the water usually follows a simple arc:
- Depart from the seaside area near the harbor
- Head out along the coastline
- Use the water for the views people travel to Split for
- Return as the light finishes its show
One review account specifically mentions passing sights around Marjan Hill during sunset sailing. Even if your exact route varies with conditions, the goal stays consistent: you want the city in your frame as the sun drops.
That route arc is why this trip works so well as a last-evening activity. You don’t need to study history for hours. You just need a clear sky and a bit of patience as the coastline becomes postcard material.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Split
Timing at Sunset: Wind Reality and What to Do If the Boat Isn’t Perfect

This is a sailing trip, which means the sea controls some parts of your experience. Wind can be stronger or lighter depending on the evening. That can affect how much you feel the sail doing the work versus using the motor for smooth progress.
The upside of a 2-hour format is that it’s not all-or-nothing. If wind is moderate and the sail work is limited, you still get the best part: skyline views during the sunset window.
If you’re the type who wants maximum sailing action, set your expectation around flexibility. The tour’s value is mostly in the evening on the water and the Split panorama, not in a guaranteed long sail under full sail power.
Safety and Communication: A Serious Note You Should Not Ignore

I’m going to be blunt, because your evening should not come with stress.
I found an extremely negative account describing a no-show and poor communication. That same set of concerns included waiting at the meeting point and not receiving the message the captain claimed to send.
I also found another alarming safety-related account describing a mechanical trouble scenario out at sea at night, including claims about missing or non-working lights and trouble with engine function. That account also described an inexperienced skipper and a lack of confidence in how the situation was managed.
Now the important part: most sailing operators aim for safe, professional operation, and most trips likely run fine. But when there are safety and communication red flags in the published record, you should respond like an adult planning a critical activity, not like it’s just drama.
My practical advice before you book:
- Choose a date with good weather forecasts and calmer seas.
- After you receive confirmation, check your message trail and arrive early at the meeting point so you can confirm boarding details.
- If you have any doubts on the day-of at the dock (lateness, confusion, unclear staff presence), trust your gut and ask direct questions.
For a sunset trip, you’re paying for an experience, but you’re also stepping onto a small vessel. Safety is not a small detail.
Language, Crew, and Names You Might Hear on Board

The tour runs with a live guide in English. That matters here because sailing is more enjoyable when you understand what you’re seeing: what part of the coastline you’re near, how Split’s harbor functions, and why Diocletian’s Palace is such a dominant visual anchor.
In accounts connected to this operator, hosts and skippers you might hear named include Jerry and Damir Djerek (also mentioned as the owner in one reply). These names show up in guest comments about hospitality, hosting style, and the sailing approach.
You shouldn’t expect the exact same crew every time, but it’s helpful to know the operation is run by people described as personable and engaged, at least in many experiences.
Accessibility and Small Comforts: What Fits, What Might Not
This activity states service animals are allowed. It also says it’s near public transportation, which helps if you’re using taxis or walking from another part of town before boarding.
Because it’s a short sail, you’ll mostly care about comfort on deck:
- wear layers (even in summer, evenings cool off fast)
- bring something for breeze on deck
- keep your phone secured (water + sunset photos are worth it, but plan for motion)
Since it’s only about two hours, you don’t need a whole day kit. But you do want to be comfortable for enough time to enjoy the sunset without thinking about your body.
Price and Value: Is Around $70 Worth It?
At about $70.98 per person (and sometimes listed in the same neighborhood), you’re paying for three core things:
- Time on the water in Split during the best light
- A small group experience (max 10), which usually means more personal attention
- Beverages included, which adds real value for a sunset outing
The value equation improves if:
- you’re staying in Split and you want an easy evening plan without extra transfers
- you care about skyline views and want a more memorable perspective than the harbor walkway
- you’re okay handling food separately since it’s not included
The value equation gets worse if:
- you want a full meal included
- you’re sensitive to weather and need everything to go exactly as planned
- you can’t accept any risk around schedule disruptions, given the negative accounts I mentioned earlier
For most people who treat this like a two-hour drinks-and-views sail, the price can feel fair. For anyone who expects a meal-and-party cruise, it won’t.
Who This Split Sunset Sail Is Best For
This tour tends to fit best if you want:
- a romantic or scenic evening plan
- a low-stress activity that’s only about two hours
- small-group attention rather than a large-boat crowd
- English guidance so the views feel connected, not just pretty
It’s also a good fit for couples and friends who are already eating and drinking before sailing, since the trip supplies beverages and the rest of your evening plan can be flexible.
Should You Book This Split Sunset Sailing Trip?
I think you should book only if you’re comfortable with two realities: short-but-scenic timing, and the need to vet safety and communication carefully.
Book it if:
- you want a small-group sunset sail with beverages included
- Diocletian’s Palace and the coastline views from the sea are a priority for you
- you plan food elsewhere and treat this as an evening on the water, not dinner
Skip it or be extra cautious if:
- you hate uncertainty and you need guaranteed, professional execution
- you’re traveling with someone who would be stressed by any mechanical or schedule confusion
- you want a “set menu” experience with food included
If you do book, the best move is to arrive early, double-check who you’re meeting, and keep your expectations anchored to what this trip truly sells: a short sunset sail off Split with included drinks and a small crew.
FAQ
How long is the Split sunset sailing trip?
It’s about 2 hours.
What’s included in the price?
The trip includes beverages.
Is food included?
No, food is not included.
How many people are in the group?
The group is capped at a maximum of 10 travelers.
Is the tour guided, and what language is it in?
Yes, there is a live guide in English.
Where do I meet for the tour?
You meet at the Harbour Master’s Office Split, Obala Lazareta 1, 21000, Split, Croatia. The activity ends back at the meeting point.































