Krka National Park, as stated on their website, is going to be inviting visitors to enter the Park on foot and get a 20 percent discount on their individual ticket price for doing so. This offer is part of the ”Go and Walk” action, which starts on Saturday, May the 1st, and is set to continue throughout the whole month.
”The ”Go and Walk” promotional action implies that people must enter and exit the park on foot in order to get the Krka National Park ticket discount of 20%. All of the park’s other services, as well as tickets for visitors who will enter the park by boat or a bus, will be charged by as normal,” according to Krka National Park’s official website.
The discount varies pending on where you intend to go. If you decide to go to the main spectacle of the park, The Skradinski Buk waterfall by taking the hitchhiker trail, either from Lozovac or Skradinski Bridge, the promotional price is 80 kuna. Apart from Skradinski Buk, all other land localities in the park are set to be included in that price. Kids aged 7-18 accompanied by parents or guardians will have to pay only 64 kuna for their ticket, while for kids up to the age of 7, entrance to the park is free of charge.
If you decide to walk only until Roski Slap, an adult ticket will cost 40 kunas and for kids (7-18-year-olds), only 32 kuna.
The third option is also the Krka Monastary and Burnum archaeological site. An adult ticket price for that path is 32 kuna, while the children’s ticket costs a mere 24 kuna.
”With the ”Go and Walk” action, the Public Institute of Krka National Park wants to encourage the active visiting of the park, and the usage of educational-hitchhiking trails too, by reducing the usage of public transport by bus and boats and having a direct impact on lowering CO2 emissions,” said Nella Slavica of the Public Institute of Krka National Park.
© Krka National Park
Krka National Park is also a holder of the ”Stay Safe in Croatia” badge, and the park is being very careful in ensuring epidemical measures are respected by both the visitors and employees while informing the public about the benefits of being out in the open air during these challenging times.
Back in the former Yugoslavia, on January the 24th, 1985, the Parliament of the Socialist Republic of Croatia declared Krka a National Park, and it has enjoyed an enormous amount of popularity ever since. This gorgeous park remains a place of natural and cultural heritage, a place to learn, a place to rest, and a place to enjoy a lovely escape from the stress of modern life.
Learn more about Krka National Park on our TC page.
For more about travel in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.