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Visiting Perast in August

Visiting Perast in August

Weather in August: Average high 31°C, 43.6mm rainfall.

# Visiting Perast in August

Let me be straight with you: August in Perast is hot, busy, and kind of magical, depending entirely on what you’re looking for.

The heat hits differently here than in a regular city. Perast sits tucked along the Bay of Kotor, surrounded by mountains that trap the warmth and reflect it off the water. Thirty-one degrees feels like more when you’re walking the single main street at noon with nowhere to hide. The humidity coming off the bay makes it sticky rather than dry, and that 43mm of rain usually arrives as dramatic afternoon thunderstorms that roll in fast, cool everything down for about forty minutes, then leave as suddenly as they appeared. Actually quite spectacular to watch from a café terrace if you’re not caught out on a boat.

Crowds are real. August is peak season and Perast is genuinely small — a few hundred metres of waterfront, basically. Day-trippers pour in from Kotor and Dubrovnik, and between about 10am and 4pm the main street feels genuinely congested for what is essentially a village. The two island churches are accessible all day by water taxi, but expect queues for Our Lady of the Rocks, especially midmorning.

Everything is open, which is the upside. Restaurants, boat rentals, the small museum in Palazzo Bujović — all running full hours and fully staffed. You won’t arrive somewhere shuttered.

Is it worth visiting in August? For people who want a complete experience with maximum access and don’t mind paying peak prices alongside crowds, yes absolutely. For people wanting quiet contemplation of baroque stone streets reflected in still water, honestly consider late September instead. The place has a completely different personality then.

**One practical tip:** arrive by 8:30am or after 5pm. The morning light on the bay is genuinely stunning and you’ll have the waterfront almost to yourself before the tour boats arrive. Dinner here watching the sun drop behind the mountains while the islands glow — that’s the version of Perast worth travelling for.

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