Your stay — remont
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The Property — remont
The Remont is a three-star guesthouse built into a hillside a ten-minute walk from Budva’s Old Town. Its white facade and small pool feel more like a private villa than a hotel. The lobby is modest – tiled floor, a small sofa, and a reception desk run by the same family that owns the place. It suits budget-conscious travellers who want clean rooms, a decent breakfast, and proximity to the beach without paying resort prices.
Chronicles of Budva
Budva’s Old Town dates back more than 2,500 years to Illyrian and Greek settlement, with Roman walls and medieval Venetian fortifications layered over the original grid. A catastrophic earthquake in 1979 destroyed much of the historic core, but it was meticulously rebuilt in the 1980s, reinstating its limestone piazzas and narrow alleys. Today Budva is Montenegro’s busiest seaside resort, balancing heritage tourism with nightlife, yacht marinas, and package holidays – a place where 14th-century churches sit opposite beach bars.
Best Time to Visit
Full Budva guide →Best months
June and September – reliably warm seas (24-26°C) and long sunshine hours, but with fewer tourists than July–August. May also works if you’re fine with cooler evenings (around 16°C).
Peak / festival surge
July and August – Budva’s population swells from ~15,000 to over 100,000. Hotel prices double or triple; Remont’s rates reflect that. The main drivers are beach holidays, the Sea Dance Festival (mid-July, on Jaz Beach just south) and general European school holidays.
Budget shoulder season
Mid-May to mid-June and September – prices drop 30-50% from peak, queues vanish, and the sea is still warm enough for swimming. October is also quiet but sea temperatures drop below 20°C.
Weather & packing
July in Budva averages 32°C daytime heat with occasional late-afternoon thunderstorms from the Dinaric Alps. Pack a light waterproof jacket and a pair of sandals that can handle wet pavements.
Live City Briefing — Budva
- Budva’s Old Town water supply is under renovation through summer 2026; expect occasional supply cuts between 10am and 4pm in parts of the historic centre. Hotels like Remont are not affected, but day-trippers should carry a bottle.
- The new cycle-and-pedestrian promenade from Mogren Beach to Jaz Beach opened in spring 2025, offering a 3 km coastal walk that bypasses the congested coastal road.
- Montenegro introduced an online tourist tax (boravišna taksa) payment system in 2025 – visitors must register via the e-Turista portal before check-in or pay at the hotel. Failure to do so can result in a €50 fine.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to remont, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor facing the back courtyard (away from the main street). These mid-level floors avoid ground-floor street noise and the residual heat from the roof, while the courtyard side is quieter than the front-facing side on Budva's busy roads.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms (near the lobby and breakfast area – higher foot traffic and early-morning noise) and any room directly facing the main street without a buffer zone. Also avoid top-floor rooms (4th or 5th floor if there's no lift, as schlepping luggage up stairs in July heat is grim; with a lift, top floors can be hotter and noisier from the roof machinery).
Best views
From a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor at the back, you might glimpse the hills or neighbouring buildings, but don't expect sea views (3-star in Budva centre usually means no sea view). The best 'view' is the absence of a busy street – request 'internal courtyard side' for peace.
Quietest floors
2nd and 3rd floors (mid-level, away from street and roof).
🔊 Noise notes
Budva's main street can be loud with traffic, scooters, and nightlife until late (especially summer). The hotel's front-facing rooms will catch this. Also, the lobby/breakfast area on ground floor creates early morning bustle. No bar/club noise likely from the hotel itself, but neighbouring venues might be audible from street-facing rooms.
Insider tips
1. If you're driving, ask about free or discounted street parking on arrival – Budva centre has paid parking zones and summer chaos, so the reception might know a local trick. 2. Check in early (around 2pm) to request a courtyard-facing room; if you arrive late, you'll likely get what's left (often street-facing).
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Hram Uspenja Presvete Bogorodice (297 m · ~4 min walk)
- Church: Crkva Sv. Petke (689 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: Sveti Spas (1.1 km · ~13 min walk)
- Church: Sv. Jovan (1.2 km · ~15 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Mega mall — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
La Bocca Restaurant Playground — 1.9 km · ~24 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Nearest — 728 m · ~9 min walk
Tea Medica 27 — 864 m · ~11 min walk
Maximal — 308 m · ~4 min walk
Autobuska Stanica Budva — 1.5 km · ~19 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use bank ATMs for the best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at the airport or near the Old Town where rates are poor.
Cards are widely accepted in hotels, restaurants, and supermarkets, but smaller cafes and market stalls prefer cash.
Rounding up the bill or leaving 10% is appreciated in restaurants; small change for taxis and hotel staff is fine.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Espresso from a local bakery or cafe-bar; about €1.50–2.
Burek or pizza slice from a bakery; about €3–5.
Grilled meat plate or pasta at a simple konoba; main about €10–15.
Cevapi stands and bakeries along the main pedestrian street near the marina offer quick, cheap eats.
Voli and Idea are the common budget supermarket chains in Budva.
The small shopping centres on the main road (e.g. near the bus station) sell affordable high-street brands.
Walking is easiest in Budva; local buses cost about €1 per ride. From the airport, take the shuttle bus to the main bus station (€3–4).
Eat at bakeries for breakfast and lunch; buy wine from supermarkets rather than restaurants; use walking to skip taxi fares.
Emergency Contacts
BudvaWhere to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Budva, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at remont
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 728 m · ~9 min walk — pharmacy · Tea Medica 27 — 864 m · ~11 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Budva Main Bus Station → Stari Grad (Old Town)
💡 Walk instead it's just 10 minutes. But if you have luggage or a long day, the bus passes right near the hotel.
Budvanka Hotel → Jaz Beach or Bečići
💡 Use the 'Taksi' app (similar to Uber) for fixed prices. Avoid taxi touts near the marina; they charge double.
Tivat Airport (TIV) → Budvanka Hotel
💡 Pre-book with a local operator to avoid haggling; rates are fixed at €20-25. Your hotel can arrange one in advance.
Tivat Airport (TIV) → Budva Main Bus Station
💡 Get off at 'Budva Bus Station', not the port stop. From there it's a 10-minute walk to Budvanka. Bus runs roughly hourly; check local timetable at the airport stand.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at remont?
Request a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor facing the back courtyard (away from the main street). These mid-level floors avoid ground-floor street noise and the residual heat from the roof, while the courtyard side is quieter than the front-facing side on Budva's busy roads.
Which rooms should I avoid at remont?
Avoid ground-floor rooms (near the lobby and breakfast area – higher foot traffic and early-morning noise) and any room directly facing the main street without a buffer zone. Also avoid top-floor rooms (4th or 5th floor if there's no lift, as schlepping luggage up stairs in July heat is grim; with a lift, top floors can be hotter and noisier from the roof machinery).
Is remont noisy?
Budva's main street can be loud with traffic, scooters, and nightlife until late (especially summer). The hotel's front-facing rooms will catch this. Also, the lobby/breakfast area on ground floor creates early morning bustle. No bar/club noise likely from the hotel itself, but neighbouring venues might be audible from street-facing rooms.
Which rooms have the best views at remont?
From a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor at the back, you might glimpse the hills or neighbouring buildings, but don't expect sea views (3-star in Budva centre usually means no sea view). The best 'view' is the absence of a busy street – request 'internal courtyard side' for peace.
What are insider tips for staying at remont?
1. If you're driving, ask about free or discounted street parking on arrival – Budva centre has paid parking zones and summer chaos, so the reception might know a local trick. 2. Check in early (around 2pm) to request a courtyard-facing room; if you arrive late, you'll likely get what's left (often street-facing).
What time is check-in at remont?
Check-in at remont is from null. Check-out is by null.
Where can I eat cheaply near remont?
Burek or pizza slice from a bakery; about €3–5.
What is the cheapest way to get around from remont?
Walking is easiest in Budva; local buses cost about €1 per ride. From the airport, take the shuttle bus to the main bus station (€3–4).
When is the best time to visit Budva?
June and September – reliably warm seas (24-26°C) and long sunshine hours, but with fewer tourists than July–August. May also works if you’re fine with cooler evenings (around 16°C).
Top Attractions in Budva
💡 Free to enter but donations welcome. Go during daily Mass at 11am (weekdays) for a short peaceful visit – otherwise it can be locked. The treasury costs a euro, skip it unless you're into artefacts.
💡 Walk from the Old Town past the small marina to the raised section by the Hotel Avala – best photo spot of the Old Town walls with the sea. Bring a bottle of water; no public fountains nearby.
💡 Snorkel the rocks at the far right end for small fish and occasional starfish. Bring a mat or towel with padding – the pebbles hurt. Avoid midday in peak season; the sun bounces off the wall and gets intense.
💡 Walk past the first cove – the second one (Mogren II) is quieter and has a small bar with reasonable beer prices. Bring water shoes: the rocks near the water are sharp.
💡 Visit early morning or after 8pm to dodge cruise-ship crowds. Climb the citadel walls for panoramic views of the coast and island of Sveti Stefan – it costs a few euros, but worth it if budget allows.