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Blue Lagoon snorkeling guide: what you'll actually see

7 min de lectura

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The Blue Lagoon's turquoise water shows up well in photos, but a lot of visitors don't realise it's also one of the better snorkel spots in the Split area. The sheltered bay, sandy bottom, and rocky edges create a small ecosystem you can explore in a couple of hours without specialist gear.

Snorkeler swimming over the sandy bottom of the Blue Lagoon Krknjaši near Šolta Island, Croatia
Snorkeling the sandy-bottomed Lagoon — the white patches and sea-grass meadows are what give the water its colour.

Why the Blue Lagoon snorkels well

Three things make it a good snorkel destination:

  • Visibility — typically 12–18 meters in summer, better than most spots near Split
  • Variety — sandy bottom (sea-grass meadows, flatfish) plus rocky edges (reef fish)
  • Shallow — most of the bay is 1–3 meters, accessible even for beginner swimmers

It's not a "deep dive" location — there are no caves, no large fish, no shipwrecks. But for casual snorkelers and families, the combination is hard to beat.

What you'll see underwater

The sandy bottom and sea-grass meadows

The white sand patches that give the Lagoon its turquoise glow are surrounded by meadows of Posidonia oceanica sea-grass — a protected Mediterranean habitat. The grass is home to small bream, gobies, and the occasional pipefish (a thin, twiggy relative of the seahorse). On a calm day you'll also spot rays and flatfish (mostly turbot or sand-coloured plaice) buried in the sand patches.

The rocky edges

The south-east shore of Veli Krknjaš (the largest islet) is where the snorkeling gets interesting. The rocks drop from the shoreline into 5–8 meters of water, creating a small wall covered in:

  • Schools of saddled bream (oblada) — silver fish with a black saddle, sociable, will approach you
  • Damselfish (castanjola) — small, dark, territorial, hover above the rocks
  • Wrasses (lapina, knez) — colourful, curious, change colour as they age
  • The occasional octopus — hides in rock crevices, look for shell debris piled at the entrance
  • Sea urchins — black and spiny, mostly harmless if you don't step on one

If you're lucky, you might see a grouper (kirnja) — slow, brown, can grow to a meter long. They're not common but they exist.

Sea cucumbers and starfish

The shallow flat areas have sea cucumbers (looks like fat dark slugs on the sand — totally harmless, don't pick them up) and small red-orange starfish. Kids love finding these.

The best snorkel route

Most tours anchor on the north side of Veli Krknjaš near the sandy bay. From there:

  1. Start in the shallow sandy area and warm up (water is calmer here, easier to find your breathing rhythm with the snorkel)
  2. Swim east-southeast along the rocky shoreline of Veli Krknjaš — keep the rocks on your left, 2–4 meters depth
  3. You'll round a small point — slow down here, this is the most fish-active section
  4. Continue another 50 meters then turn back the same way

Total route is about 200–300 meters out and back; 30 minutes at a relaxed pace.

What gear to bring

We provide masks, snorkels, and fins on board in adult and child sizes. They're standard quality — fine for the typical 30–60 minute snorkel session.

If you snorkel often, bring your own:

  • Anti-fog spray (or use baby shampoo as a backup) — the loaner masks fog faster than personal masks
  • Prescription mask if you need glasses — borrowed masks won't have the right correction
  • UV rash guard / long-sleeve swim shirt — your back gets fried while looking down
  • Underwater camera or phone pouch — visibility is good enough for proper photos

Snorkeling at Nečujam (the second stop)

Nečujam is different — deeper (10+ meters in the center), more open to wind, with a rocky shoreline rather than a sandy bay. Snorkeling there is more about the cooler-water fish — you'll see larger sargo, the occasional barracuda passing through, and dense colonies of mussels along the submerged rocks.

Most guests prefer the Blue Lagoon for swimming-with-snorkel and Nečujam for the deeper-water feel.

Safety notes

  • Don't snorkel alone in the deeper water around Veli Krknjaš — stay where the boat can see you
  • Sea urchins are concentrated on shallow rocks — water shoes optional but smart
  • Jellyfish (Pelagia noctiluca) blooms happen occasionally in August — usually short-lived, the crew will warn you
  • Touch nothing — Posidonia sea-grass is protected; corals here are not the tropical kind but they're still fragile

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About the author

Written by , captain, blue lagoon croatia. Captain of our traditional 20-metre Dalmatian wooden boat — the same vessel he ran as a commercial fishing captain for 15 years before converting it for passenger tours. 20 years of experience on the Adriatic — 15 years fishing followed by 5 years running daily tourist tours to the Blue Lagoon.

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Full-day tours from Stobreč Harbor and Split Port. Free cancellation, daily departures May–October.

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