What to do in Rovinj

Photo gallery

1. Explore Rovinj Old Town

Rovinj’s Old Town once sat on its own island; the channel was back-filled in 1763, but it still feels water‑bound. Visitors step through the 17th‑century Balbi Arch and into a swirl of Venetian‑Gothic balconies, Renaissance portals and seaside aromas.

  • History in 3‑D – Façades wear centuries of stone carvings, ironwork and pastel paint.
  • No cars allowed – Only footsteps, seagull cries and the occasional church bell.

60‑to‑90‑Minute Walk Plan

  1. Balbi Arch: Start and snap a quick photo.
  2. Grisia Street: Browse canvases — artists hang new works daily.
  3. Piazza Matteotti: Coffee pause.
  4. Harbour promenade: End at the seaside with a scoop of fig‑honey gelato.

Tip for smooth footing: Polished limestone shines like glass after rain; sneakers grip better than flip‑flops.

Read more about Rovinj’s Old Town.

2. Discover St. Euphemia Church & Climb the Bell Tower

At 62 m (203 ft), the campanile of St. Euphemia dominates Rovinj’s skyline.

  • Steps: Approx. 192 — irregular but sturdy.
  • Best timing: 30–45 minutes before sunset; silhouettes of sailboats drift below.
  • Reward: A 360‑degree panorama encompassing the islands, Lim Bay cliffs and — on crystalline days — the Italian Apennines.

Inside the baroque church, art buffs linger over 15 th‑century altarpieces; outside, the copper statue of St. Euphemia turns with every gust, forever surveying her town.

Read more about St. Euphemia Church.

3. Enjoy Nature in Golden Cape Forest Park (Zlatni rt)

A 15‑minute seaside stroll drops travellers into 120 ha (300 acres) of Aleppo pines, cedars and hidden coves planted mostly in the 1890s that modern visitors treat as a backyard playground.

Pick‑and‑Mix Activities

  • Cycle along the coast — Rent a bike in the city centre.
  • Swim at Lone Bay — Family‑friendly, snack kiosks nearby.
  • Cliff‑jump at Punta Corrente — Check depth before leaping.
  • Hammock between cedars — Morning birdsong competes only with soft wave slaps, making dawn jogs popular with locals.

Read more about Golden Cape Forest Park.

4. Join a Boat Excursion Around the Archipelago & Lim Bay

Book a cruise

Fourteen islands and six reefs ring Rovinj; a half‑day cruise threads them together and usually detours into Lim Bay, a 12 km inlet that looks more Norwegian fjord than Mediterranean channel.

Must‑See Stops

  • St. Andrew (Red Island): Amazing patches, Benedictine monastery, and a relaxed environment.
  • St. Katarina: 15‑minute walk to Rovinj’s best photo angle.
  • Dolphin corridor: Evening sorties boast a high percentage of sighting success.
  • Lim Bay mussel farm: Where fresh oysters meet local Malvasia.

Weather watch: A strong jugo (south wind) whips whitecaps; most operators reschedule over 20 knots.

5. Learn Tradition at the Batana Eco‑Museum

Plan the visit

UNESCO lists Rovinj’s batana — a flat‑bottomed oak boat — as intangible heritage. This compact museum explains why. Soundscapes of gulls and creaking rigging play while interactive displays show visitors how to hammer planks and knot nets.

Highlights

  • Immersive storytelling: Dialect recordings, fishing‑song videos.
  • Interactive stories: Through model making, children will learn how to build a batana.
  • Dinners in Spacio Matika: A taste of the past – the catch of the day on your plate, the smell of fish in the air.

In the port, full‑size batana boats in kaleidoscopic colours, each one named for a woman—tradition dictates it.