Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons

Roman ruins and dragon scenes in one walk. This Game of Thrones tour in Split tracks filming spots around Diocletian’s Palace, then slips underground to show the cellars used on screen. You’ll connect moments from Daenerys and the Unsullied to the real streets and corridors of UNESCO-listed Split.

I like how the guide matches the story to the exact spot you’re standing in, using GoT visuals like clips and stills while you walk. I also love the balance here: the palace is explained as a real place built for real people, with local Split context woven in by guides such as Ivan and Katerina.

The tradeoff is simple: it’s a walking tour, including time in the palace cellars, so wear solid shoes and bring water for the 2-hour pace.

Key points to know before you go

  • Meet by Gregory of Nin’s statue at the 6-meter-high monument opposite the Golden Gate of Diocletian’s Palace.
  • UNESCO Diocletian’s Palace on foot for a 1700-year-old Roman setting right in the city center.
  • Cellars entrance included so you can see the halls and corridors below, including the show’s Meereenese-slave storyline.
  • Daenerys and the corridor scenes get real with filming locations tied to on-screen moments like the dragons and Sons of the Harpy/Unsullied areas.
  • 20% GoT Museum discount plus a throne photo as a bonus for fans who want an extra stop after the walk.
  • Small-group feel can happen; some groups have been as small as five, which makes questions easier.

Game of Thrones Tour Split: What You’re Really Doing for 2 Hours

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Game of Thrones Tour Split: What You’re Really Doing for 2 Hours
This tour is basically a history walk with a TV overlay. You’ll start in the center of Split, then work your way through Diocletian’s Palace—one of the best-known Roman cores in the Adriatic—using the show as a guidebook for where to look.

The value is that you don’t just get a list of spots. You’re walking a real, lived-in monument. The streets, gates, and corridors you pass are the same ones people have moved through for centuries, and the guide keeps snapping the GoT storyline onto what’s right in front of you.

At $41 per person for 2 hours, it’s also a fairly efficient way to get both: a local walking tour of Split plus filming locations tied to major story beats. If your time in Croatia is tight, this is the kind of “hit the highlights” plan that still leaves you with energy to explore on your own afterward.

You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Split

Meet at Gregory of Nin: Start Point That Keeps You From Wandering

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Meet at Gregory of Nin: Start Point That Keeps You From Wandering
You meet your guide at the 6-meter-high Gregory of Nin statue, directly opposite the Golden Gate of Diocletian’s Palace. That’s a good thing. Split can be a bit maze-like inside the old core, and having a clear landmark at a major gate makes the start stress-free.

Once you’re gathered, you’re not stuck waiting around. The tour format is built for movement: walking through the palace complex and then down to the cellars. If you want the best experience, arrive a few minutes early so you can settle in and catch the intro before you head off.

If you’re the type who likes to know where you’re headed before you start, you’re in luck. The tour’s structure means each segment has a purpose: street-level show locations up top, then the underground spaces below.

Walking Diocletian’s Palace with a Local GoT Fan Guide

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Walking Diocletian’s Palace with a Local GoT Fan Guide
Diocletian’s Palace is the anchor. It’s a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the most significant and best-preserved Roman structures from that era. That matters because it gives you something solid to compare against the show’s fictional world.

Here’s what you’ll do with the guide. You’ll walk through parts of the palace with a local guide who’s a fan of both the books and the TV series. That fan angle isn’t just trivia. It shows up in how the guide explains the scenes: where to look, what details to notice, and why that specific location made sense for filming.

In the best examples from this tour, guides explain Split’s local history and customs in between GoT references. Names you may see connected with this experience include Ivan, Katerina, Hrvoje Baricić (also spelled Horvoje Baričić), Dean, Marko, Ted, Toni, and Luka. The common thread is storytelling: facts about the palace and city, then a GoT connection that makes the location click faster.

If you’re not a die-hard fan, you’re still fine. The palace itself is the main event. The GoT angle is the fast way to learn where to look and what the spaces were used for.

Daenerys Moments and Roman Power Lines Above Ground

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Daenerys Moments and Roman Power Lines Above Ground
You’ll see classic filming-location type moments tied to Daenerys. The tour is designed to bring the show’s geography into alignment with the real palace geography, including spots where the series shows Daenerys keeping her dragons.

The practical benefit: it’s much easier to understand the show after this walk, because you’ve now walked the corridors and streets that match the on-screen sense of place. It turns the city from random stone into a set with logic.

But the guide doesn’t treat the Roman setting like a backdrop. You get context about the palace’s origins—built by Emperor Diocletian—and what it meant to design a monumental complex in this exact part of the world.

That mix is the reason so many people rate this tour so highly: you’re getting the show’s emotional hooks while learning the real structural story behind the walls.

Going Underground: The Palace Cellars and the Meereenese Storyline

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Going Underground: The Palace Cellars and the Meereenese Storyline
The biggest “wow” portion is the underground section. You’ll go into the underground complex of halls and corridors connected to the palace cellars. The tour includes the entrance fee for the cellars, and you also get skip-the-ticket-line convenience.

On screen, these spaces link to the Meereenese slaves storyline. In this tour, the guide points out the corridors and halls in a way that matches the show’s darker mood. Seeing the scale of the stone below street level adds a lot. It’s one thing to watch a scene on TV. It’s another to stand in a real corridor and feel how enclosed the space is.

This is also where your GoT fan side gets the best fuel. One part of the story you’ll hear about is tied to the Sons of the Harpy and the Unsullied—including the corridor where the Sons of the Harpy waited and the streets where the Unsullied patrolled.

Practical note: cellars can feel cooler and dimmer than the street. Bring water, and don’t wear anything slippery. You’ll be moving as a group, and you’ll want to keep your footing.

Museum Perk: 20% Off and a GoT Throne Photo

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Museum Perk: 20% Off and a GoT Throne Photo
The tour doesn’t end at the palace wall. You also get a 20% discount on the Game of Thrones Museum and a free photo on the GoT throne.

This is a smart add-on because it helps you extend the experience without forcing another guided hour. You can turn your GoT memories into a souvenir moment right after your walk, and the discount makes it easier to justify.

If you’re planning your day around photos, the throne stop is the kind of easy win that’s worth it after you’ve already seen the real settings. Your eyes will connect the museum’s display to what you walked through earlier.

Price and Logistics: Why $41 Actually Works

Let’s talk value in real terms. At $41 per person for 2 hours, you’re paying for four things at once:

  • a Game of Thrones expert guide
  • a walking tour of Split’s center around the palace
  • entrance to the palace cellars
  • museum perks (the 20% discount plus the free throne photo)

If you tried to DIY it—finding the palace spots and figuring out which underground areas mattered—you’d likely spend time, lose context, and still end up paying for cellars entry separately. Here, those pieces are bundled, and the guide helps you move through the complex efficiently.

Two more practical wins: it’s English, and it’s 2 hours, which fits well into a day when you want to keep room for lunch, beaches, or another activity in Split.

A possible consideration: if you’re hoping for a slow, sit-and-stare pace, this isn’t that. It’s built for an active walk, and it packs a lot into a short time window.

What to Wear and Bring for a Comfortable Walk

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - What to Wear and Bring for a Comfortable Walk
This experience is simple but physical: it’s a 2-hour walking tour with palace streets and underground corridors. So your choices matter more than you’d think.

Bring water. That’s the one item they explicitly suggest, and it’s a good habit in Dalmatia’s heat. Wear comfortable shoes with grip. Even if you’re not sprinting, you’ll be on stone and stairs at times.

For photos, keep your phone charged. The tour includes chances to see GoT visuals and shooting-location context, and once you’re in the right spots, you’ll want to capture them while the guide is explaining what you’re looking at.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
I’d put this tour high on the list if you want:

  • Game of Thrones filming locations in Split, connected to real architecture
  • a city walking experience that’s more than a boring checklist
  • a short tour that doesn’t swallow half your day

It’s also a great fit for people who care about history but get impatient with tours that ignore pop culture. The palace is the foundation, but the GoT connections help you pay attention.

If you’re visiting Split for only a quick stop and want your bearings fast, this can work well. Just remember it’s not a private “ask anything for hours” format; you’re following a timed path through the palace and cellars.

Should You Book: Split Game of Thrones Tour City of Dragons?

Split Game of Thrones Tour: City of Dragons - Should You Book: Split Game of Thrones Tour City of Dragons?
Book it if you want the best of both worlds in a tight time frame: Diocletian’s Palace plus Game of Thrones shooting locations, with the underground cellars as the main payoff.

Skip it if you want a purely historical deep dive with minimal GoT references, or if you dislike walking tours and don’t want to spend time underground. The tour’s whole point is the show-to-place connection.

If you do book, I’d plan your day so you can enjoy Split after. This tour gives you context fast, and then you can wander with better instincts—like you know where you are and why it matters.

FAQ

How long is the City of Dragons Game of Thrones tour in Split?

The tour lasts 2 hours.

How much does the tour cost?

It costs $41 per person.

Where do I meet the guide?

Meet your guide at the 6-meter-high Gregory of Nin statue opposite the Golden Gate of Diocletian’s Palace.

Is the tour offered in English?

Yes, the live tour guide language is English.

What’s included with the tour ticket?

You get a Game of Thrones expert tour guide, a 2-hour walking tour, entrance fee to the cellars of the palace, and a discount on entrance fee to the Game of Thrones Museum.

Do I need to buy tickets for the cellars?

No. Entrance to the cellars is included, and the tour also offers skip-the-ticket-line.

What should I bring?

Bring water.

Can I cancel for free, and can I reserve without paying yet?

Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now and pay later (you pay nothing today).

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