"Blue Cave" and "Blue Lagoon" sound like cousins — and Google's autocomplete treats them as alternatives. They're not. One is a small natural sea cave on a remote island; the other is a shallow swim bay close to Split. Here's the comparison that gets brushed over in most blog posts.

What each one actually is
The Blue Cave (Modra Špilja)
A small sea cave on the island of Biševo, about 5 nautical miles south-west of Vis Island. The cave is famous for the way sunlight reflects off the white seabed and illuminates the interior with an electric blue glow — but only between roughly 11:00 and 13:00, and only on a calm sea. You enter by small rowing boat (max 4–5 guests at a time), spend 5 minutes inside, then leave. No swimming inside.
The Blue Lagoon (Krknjaši)
A sheltered bay between three small islands off the coast of Šolta, 12 nautical miles south-west of Split. Shallow sandy seabed, turquoise water, no infrastructure on the islands. You swim and snorkel for as long as you want (typically 60–90 min on a tour).
Travel time and effort
| Blue Cave | Blue Lagoon | |
|---|---|---|
| Distance from Split | ~33 nautical miles | ~12 nautical miles |
| Travel time | 2.5–4 hours each way | 60–90 minutes each way |
| Tour duration | 10–12 hours | 8–9 hours |
| How you arrive | Speedboat to Biševo + rowing boat into cave | Boat anchors near bay, you swim |
What you actually do at each
At the Blue Cave
Five to ten minutes inside the cave. That's it. The cave is small (24 meters long, 10–15 meters wide), and tour boats queue to enter. You'll wait 30–60 minutes at the dock before your turn. No swimming, no exploration — you sit in a rowing boat, the local guide rows you in, you take photos, you leave.
Most Blue Cave tours pair the cave with other stops to make the long day worthwhile: Stiniva Cove, Vis Town, and a swim stop somewhere along the way. The day is long because the destination is far.
At the Blue Lagoon
You swim. You snorkel. You float. You have lunch on the boat. Then you swim again. The whole experience is built around being in the water — there's no queueing, no time pressure, no rowing-boat logistics. Most tours stay for 60–90 minutes, then continue to a second swim stop (in our case, Nečujam Bay on Šolta).
Crowds and weather
Blue Cave: The cave's accessibility depends entirely on sea conditions. Even a 1-meter swell closes the entrance. In peak summer (July/August), the cave can be closed 1–2 days a week. When it's open, expect 30–60 minute queues. The peak hour (12:00) sees the longest waits.
Blue Lagoon: Always accessible (no enclosed-space restriction). The bay can host 20–30 boats at peak hours, but the water area is large enough to spread out. Even on busy days, finding a quiet corner takes 30 seconds.
Cost comparison
| Blue Cave tour from Split | Blue Lagoon tour from Split | |
|---|---|---|
| Group speedboat | €90–140/person | €55–110/person |
| Traditional boat | Rarely offered (too far) | €55–80/person |
| Blue Cave entrance fee | €18 extra | N/A |
| Cancellation risk | High (sea conditions) | Low |
Which one is worth your day?
Pick the Blue Cave if: You're specifically interested in the cave phenomenon, you have a full day to dedicate to one experience, and you're OK with the risk of cancellation. The experience is unique — there's nothing else like it in Croatia. But it's also brief (5–10 minutes inside) and the day is long.
Pick the Blue Lagoon if: You want to swim and relax. You want a destination where you can be for hours rather than queue for. You want lower cancellation risk. You're traveling with kids or anyone who prefers calm water over long boat rides.
Can you do both in one day?
Not really. The Blue Cave round-trip from Split is 6–8 hours of cruising plus the cave visit. Combining it with the Blue Lagoon would mean 10+ hours of boat time and 30 minutes at each destination. Theoretically possible on a private speedboat charter, but not enjoyable. Better to pick one — or split them across two days.
Our take
We run the Blue Lagoon tour, so this isn't unbiased — but most guests who originally considered the Blue Cave end up choosing the Blue Lagoon after reading the actual schedule of a Blue Cave day. The "long day for a 5-minute experience" math doesn't appeal to everyone. If the cave is your bucket list item, do it. Otherwise, the Blue Lagoon is a more enjoyable use of a day on the Adriatic.