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Visiting Trogir in September

Visiting Trogir in September

Weather in September: Average high 25.1°C, 89.2mm rainfall.

# Trogir in September: The Sweet Spot Nobody Talks About Enough

September in Trogir is genuinely one of the better times to visit this tiny UNESCO-listed town, and I say that as someone who’s seen it absolutely heaving in July when you can barely move through the old town gates without inhaling someone else’s sunscreen.

The weather sits around 25°C, which sounds like a modest downgrade from August’s furnace-blast heat but honestly feels like a relief. You can actually walk the marble streets without feeling like you’re being slowly cooked. The Adriatic is still warm enough for swimming – it holds its heat well into autumn – so you’re not sacrificing beach time. That 89mm of rainfall sounds alarming written down, but it typically arrives as occasional afternoon thunderstorms rather than grey drizzle ruining everything. Mornings are usually gorgeous. Pack a light layer and don’t plan boat trips for late afternoon.

Crowds thin out noticeably after the first week of September. The Croatian school year restarts, families disappear, and the peak-season frenzy settles into something far more pleasant. You’ll actually get a table at Konoba Trs without a reservation, and you can photograph Katedrala Sv. Lovre without seventeen selfie sticks photobombing you. The old town feels like a place people actually live in again rather than a theme park.

Everything stays open in early September. Restaurants, boat tour operators, the island bars on Čiovo across the bridge – all still running. By late September some smaller outfits start winding down, but the core of what makes Trogir worth visiting remains fully operational.

Who is this month perfect for? Couples, solo travellers, anyone who hates crowds, food-focused visitors, photographers. If you’re travelling with young kids who need guaranteed beach sunshine every single day, maybe push for early September specifically.

**One practical tip:** Stay in the old town itself if your budget allows, even one night. Once the day-trippers from Split leave in the evening, the atmosphere completely transforms into something quieter and genuinely lovely. That’s the version of Trogir worth experiencing.

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