Guide

Bečići & Sveti Stefan: the Budva Riviera's best pebble beaches

Two kilometres of polished pebble, a photogenic island fortress, and a full range of beach bars — here is everything you need to plan a day at Bečići or Sveti Stefan in 2026.

Why Bečići and Sveti Stefan deserve their own guide

Most first-timers to Montenegro book into Budva and spend their beach days at Mogren or Jaz. That is a fine choice, but it leaves two of the Riviera's most rewarding stretches of coast just a short drive to the south. Bečići and Sveti Stefan sit roughly 6 km and 9 km from Budva respectively, and their combination of clear water, polished pebble, and genuine character makes them worth a dedicated day — or a deliberate base.

Bečići: the Riviera's longest beach

Bečići stretches for roughly two kilometres, making it the longest continuous pebble beach on the Montenegrin coast. The shoreline faces south-west, which means it catches afternoon sun well and is usually sheltered from the northerly Bora wind. Water clarity is consistently good: the pebble bottom drops gradually, so wading in is comfortable even if a pair of water shoes makes the first few steps easier.

The beach is divided into a public section and several private beach-bar concessions. In the public zone you lay your own towel for free. In the private sections sunbeds run roughly EUR 5–12 per day for a single lounger, while a set (two sunbeds plus a parasol) typically costs EUR 15–25. The price rises towards the centre of the beach and in peak July–August; arriving before 09:00 in high season will secure you a better position and sometimes a lower early-bird rate.

Food and drink is genuinely good along Bečići. Most beach bars grill fresh fish and serve cold drinks; a plate of grilled sea bass or a mixed seafood platter will cost in the EUR 15–25 range per person. The atmosphere peaks in late afternoon when the light turns golden and DJs at the more animated spots ease into their evening sets.

Getting to Bečići

From Budva the simplest option is the coastal road — a taxi takes around ten minutes and costs a few euros. In high season a shuttle minibus runs between Budva bus station and Bečići. If you are driving from Tivat Airport (the nearest airport, roughly 20 km away) or from Podgorica (about 65 km), the road is straightforward; parking is available on the hill above the beach but fills quickly after 10:00 in July and August.

Sveti Stefan: the island backdrop

Four kilometres south of Bečići lies one of the most photographed spots on the entire Adriatic coast. Sveti Stefan is a small fortified island connected to the mainland by a narrow causeway, and since 2009 the island itself has operated as a luxury hotel. The public beach sits on either side of the causeway — two smaller coves of coarse pebble that together feel more intimate and village-like than the broad sweep of Bečići.

The framing alone makes Sveti Stefan worth a visit. The terracotta-roofed buildings of the island rise directly from the water, and the views from the beach looking back across the causeway are the ones you have seen on countless travel posters. Sunrise and late afternoon light are both spectacular; if you can manage an early start, the water is calmer and the beach nearly empty.

Sunbed prices at the private sections around Sveti Stefan tend to sit at the upper end of the Riviera range — expect EUR 10–15 for a lounger and EUR 40–80 or more for a baldahin or cabana with full shade and table service. There are also sections of public beach where you pay nothing. The sea here is among the clearest on the coast, partly because the bay is relatively shallow and the pebble bottom does not stir up sediment.

When to go: season and conditions

The swim season runs from mid-June through late September. Sea temperature reaches roughly 25–26 °C in August, which is the warmest and also the busiest month. June and September offer a compelling trade-off: the water is cooler (around 22–23 °C in June, still very comfortable by late September) but the beaches are noticeably quieter, sunbed prices often dip, and the light for photography is softer. If a relaxed beach day matters more than a party atmosphere, early June or the first two weeks of September are the sweet spot.

July and August bring the full high-season experience: DJs, cocktail menus, organised watersports, and considerable crowds by midday. Book a baldahin at a popular Sveti Stefan spot a day ahead if you want guaranteed shade in peak season.

Practical tips

Water shoes are worth packing for both beaches — the pebble is rounded and comfortable underfoot once you are in, but the entry point can be slippery. Most beach bars rent them for a euro or two if you forget.

From Budva, taxis between Bečići and Sveti Stefan are cheap and run all day. Agree the fare before you get in, or use a metered cab from a reputable firm. The coastal road is scenic enough that the short drive is part of the experience.

Combining both beaches in a single day is entirely practical. Spend the morning at Sveti Stefan — quieter, cooler, stunning for photos — and move to Bečići in the afternoon for a livelier scene and more beach-bar choice. The drive between them takes under ten minutes.

Both villages have hotels and apartments ranging from budget to high-end. Staying in Bečići puts you within walking distance of Budva and gives you easy access to both beaches without needing a car every day. If you want to minimise transfers, the position is hard to beat on this stretch of coast.

The bottom line

Bečići and Sveti Stefan cover the two ends of the Riviera-day spectrum — one long, social, and lively; one intimate, scenically extraordinary, and well suited to a slower pace. Neither requires an expensive package or a high budget to enjoy, and both are accessible from Budva in minutes. They are the most underrated stops on a coast that already has a lot of competition.

Featured beach bars

Frequently asked questions

Is Bečići Beach pebble or sand?

Bečići is a pebble beach — polished smooth by the sea, so it is comfortable underfoot once you are in the water, but the entry point can be slippery. Most visitors bring or rent water shoes for the first few steps.

Unlike sandy beaches such as Velika Plaža in Ulcinj or the central section of Jaz, Bečići has no significant sandy stretches. The upside is that the water stays exceptionally clear because pebble does not cloud the shallows the way fine sand does. A beach mat or padded lounger is more useful here than at a sandy beach.

Can you swim at Sveti Stefan Beach for free?

Yes. The public beach areas on either side of the Sveti Stefan causeway are accessible without charge. You are not obliged to hire a sunbed or spend anything at a beach bar to swim here.

The private concessions — which offer sunbeds from around EUR 10–15 per lounger, and baldahins from roughly EUR 40–80 — occupy sections of the coves, but free patches of pebble remain accessible to the right and left. In peak July and August the free sections fill by mid-morning, so arriving before 09:00 is advisable if you want a decent spot without paying for a sunbed.

How far is Bečići from Budva, and how do I get there?

Bečići is about 6 km south of Budva along the coastal road, a drive of roughly ten minutes. Taxis are the most convenient option and cost only a few euros each way. In high season, minibus shuttles (kombi) run from Budva bus station to Bečići and continue further south toward Sveti Stefan.

Sveti Stefan is a further 3–4 km from Bečići, around five minutes by car. If you want to visit both beaches in one day, a morning at Sveti Stefan followed by an afternoon at the longer Bečići beach works well. You can flag down passing taxis on the coastal road between the two.

What is the best month to visit Bečići and Sveti Stefan for fewer crowds?

Early June and the first half of September are the ideal windows. Sea temperatures are comfortable — around 22–23 °C in June and 23–25 °C in early September — beach bars and sunbed operations are fully open, and the beaches are noticeably quieter than in peak July and August.

July and particularly August are the busiest months: Bečići can be packed by 10:00 am and the Sveti Stefan coves fill even faster. Prices for sunbeds and baldahins are at their highest then too. If you have flexibility, a late-June or early-September trip gives you almost identical conditions to high summer at a fraction of the density — and the sea stays warm enough for comfortable swimming well into late September.