Getting to Brela

Getting to / Brela

It is in Northern Dalmatia, Croatia, in the center of the Adriatic. Find out about the exact location and the ways to arrive!

We organize private transportation from all airports to apartments. For more information please contact.

BY CAR

By motorway, direction Zagreb-Šestanovac or direction Rijeka-Šestanovac.

From the exit Šestanovac to Brela there are cca 10 kilometres.

More information on Croatian motorway: www.hac.hr

Line RIJEKA – SPLIT
Line SPLIT-ANCONA-SPLIT

BY BUS

From Split to Brela the bus leaves every 1⁄2 hour. Simply get on the bus, direction Makarska or Dubrovnik.

Autobusni kolodvor Split www.ak-split.hr

Promet Makarska www.promet-makarska.hr

BY TRAIN

By train you can come from Zagreb or Rijeka to Split, then by bus or taxi to Brela. More information is available on Croatian Railways http://www.hznet.hr

BY PLANE

The nearest airport is Split airport, then you should take a bus or taxi to Brela. The possibility of transfer from the airport to the apartment D & D.

www.croatiaairlines.hr

www.split-airport.hr

From the Split airport you can take a bus (after each flight) to the ferry port, as well as the tax or rent-a-car. You can use the regular bus line number 37 which takes you from the Split airport to Trogir (leaves every 20 minutes). It takes only 30 minutes to get to Split.

Then, from the Split bus station you take the bus to Brela. It takes 1 hour to get from Split to Brela.

CROATIA

The municipality of Brela is located in the far west of the Makarska Riviera. It consists of several hamlets on both sides of the highway, the largest of which are Soline and the Lower Village. years. In 2004, the beaches of Brela were ranked among the most beautiful beaches in the world by the choice of Forbes magazine.

Croatia was first mentioned in Brela under the name "Beroyllia" around 950, in Greek, in the work of the Byzantine emperor Constantine Porphyrogenetus "On the management of the empire", as one of the four fortified towns of the old Neretva principality of Pagania. The "Brolanenses" are mentioned in a charter in 1315, by which the Croatian prince Juraj Subic of the town of Klis confers the Breljans, Rogozhdans, Swinishans and Kucicians with the same privileges as other members of the then commune of Omis.