Map of Plitvice Lakes National Park: A Complete Guide to Navigating the Park

Map of Plitvice Lakes National park.

Map of Plitvice Lakes National Park: A Complete Guide to Navigating the Park Plitvice Lakes National Park is divided into two main sections: the Upper Lakes (12 lakes, accessed from Entrance 2 in the south) and the Lower Lakes (4 lakes, accessed from Entrance 1 in the north). The two sections are connected by electric … Read more

Plitvice Lakes Wildlife — Bears, Wolves, Birds & What to Look For (2026)

Tourists are taking picture with bear statue at the wildlife in Plitvice Lakes.

Wildlife at Plitvice Lakes: Bears, Wolves & What You Might See Plitvice Lakes National Park is home to approximately 50 brown bears, a healthy grey wolf population, Eurasian lynx, red deer, roe deer, wild boar, and over 120 species of birds. The park’s 16 lakes teem with brown trout clearly visible through the crystal-clear water. … Read more

Veliki Slap — Croatia’s Tallest Waterfall at Plitvice Lakes (2026)

Veliki Slap (the Great Waterfall) is Croatia’s tallest waterfall at 78 metres. It is located in the Lower Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park.

Veliki Slap: Plitvice’s Great Waterfall Veliki Slap (the Great Waterfall) is Croatia’s tallest waterfall at 78 metres. It is located in the Lower Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park, accessible from Entrance 1 in approximately 10–15 minutes. Unlike the park’s other waterfalls — which are formed by water spilling between the terraced lakes — … Read more

Veliki Prštavac at Plitvice Lakes — The Upper Lakes Waterfall Guide

Veliki Prštavac is the most impressive waterfall in the Upper Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park.

Veliki Prštavac: The Upper Lakes’ Most Beautiful Waterfall Veliki Prštavac is the most impressive waterfall in the Upper Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park. It drops approximately 28 metres at the edge of Galovac Lake, flowing into Gradinsko jezero below in a wide, spreading fan of water. Its name comes from the Croatian word … Read more

Plitvice Lakes Upper Lakes — What to See, Character & Routes (2026)

The Upper Lakes at Plitvice Lakes National Park consist of 12 lakes.

The Upper Lakes of Plitvice: What to See & How Long It Takes The Upper Lakes at Plitvice Lakes National Park consist of 12 lakes — Prošćansko jezero, Ciginovac, Okrugljak, Batinovac, Veliko jezero, Malo jezero, Vir, Galovac, Milino jezero, Gradinsko jezero, Burgeti, and Kozjak — formed on dolomite rock in a more open, forested landscape … Read more

Šupljara Cave at Plitvice Lakes — What It Is & How to Visit

Supljara Cave is a natural cave located in the Lower Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park.

Šupljara Cave at Plitvice Lakes Šupljara Cave is a natural cave located in the Lower Lakes section of Plitvice Lakes National Park, near Veliki Slap waterfall. It is accessible via a short path from the main Lower Lakes boardwalk. The cave was formed by limestone erosion and contains stalactites and stalagmites formed over thousands of … Read more

Sastavci Waterfalls at Plitvice Lakes — Guide to the Park’s Exit Cascades

The Sastavci waterfalls are located at the lowest point of the Lower Lakes at Plitvice Lakes National Park.

Sastavci Waterfalls at Plitvice Lakes The Sastavci waterfalls are located at the lowest point of the Lower Lakes at Plitvice Lakes National Park, where the final lake — Novaković Brod — drains into the Korana River. The word sastavci means “confluence” in Croatian, referring to the meeting point of the lake system and the river. … Read more

Rastoke Village — The Watermill Village Near Plitvice Lakes (2026)

Rastoke sits on the route between Zagreb and Plitvice Lakes.

Rastoke Village: The Watermills Near Plitvice Lakes Rastoke is a small historic village in the town of Slunj, approximately 25 km north of Plitvice Lakes on the D1 national road. It sits at the confluence of the Slunjčica and Korana rivers, where traditional Croatian stone and wooden millhouses were built directly over and around a … Read more

Plitvice Lakes in Autumn — Fall Colours, Crowds & Tips (2026)

Autumn is widely considered the best overall season to visit Plitvice Lakes National Park.

Plitvice Lakes in Autumn: Colours, Crowds & What to Expect Autumn is widely considered the best overall season to visit Plitvice Lakes National Park. The beech and maple forests surrounding the 16 lakes turn vivid red, orange, and gold from mid-October, creating reflections in the turquoise lake surfaces that are impossible in any other season. … Read more

Plitvice Lakes Lower Lakes — What to See, Routes & Tips (2026)

The Lower Lakes are where most visitors first encounter Plitvice’s extraordinary landscape — the canyon, the turquoise water, the boardwalks inches above the surface.

The Lower Lakes of Plitvice: What to See & How Long It Takes The Lower Lakes at Plitvice Lakes National Park consist of four lakes — Milanovac, Gavanovac, Kaluđerovac, and Novakovića Brod — cut into a narrow limestone canyon. They contain the park’s most dramatic waterfall (Veliki Slap, 78 metres), the famous boardwalks directly above … Read more