Dein Aufenthalt — Marvie Hotel
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Das Eigentum — Marvie Hotel
A clean, no-frills three-star in Split's city centre, a five-minute walk from the Riva promenade and Diocletian's Palace. The lobby is small, brightly lit, and functional, staffed by friendly receptionists who hand out local tips as quickly as keys. The USP is location and price: you don't come here for boutique style, you come for a solid base with modern rooms, air conditioning, and a breakfast buffet that gets you out the door by 8am. It suits independent travellers and couples who want a practical, central place to sleep rather than a resort experience.
Chroniken von Split
Split was born in the 4th century AD when the Roman emperor Diocletian built his massive retirement palace on the Dalmatian coast. After the Romans left, locals moved inside the palace walls for protection, slowly turning its corridors and courtyards into a living city. By the Middle Ages Split was a key Venetian trading port, and later part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, each era layering Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque architecture on top of the Roman core. The old town is now a UNESCO World Heritage site, the palace walls still form its centre, and the Riva waterfront is the city's living room. Today Split is a buzzing Mediterranean hub, mixing 1,700 years of history with a modern café culture and ferry connections to the islands.
Beste Zeit zu besuchen
Vollständiger Split-Guide →Die besten Monate
May and September: warm weather (mid-20s°C), long daylight, and tourist crowds that are busy but not overwhelming, plus cheaper accommodation than July or August. June also works well if you want to catch the start of the outdoor festival season.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August are peak season, driven by the Ultra Europe electronic music festival (typically early July) and the general European summer holiday rush. Hotel prices can double or triple compared to spring, and the old town heaves with foot traffic from cruise ship passengers and island-goers. The main events are Ultra Europe (July) and the Split Summer Festival of theatre and music (July-August).
Budget Schulter Saison
April and October offer the best budget deals, with hotel rates dropping 30–50% below peak. The weather is milder (15–20°C in April, similar in October) and sunny, but evenings can be cool, and some ferry routes run reduced schedules. Crowds are thin enough to explore the palace without queuing.
Wetter & Verpackung
Split's climate is Mediterranean but the Bora wind can suddenly drop temperatures by 10°C even in July, so pack a windbreaker or light jacket. Packing rule: always bring a pair of comfortable walking shoes for the polished stone streets of the old town — they get brutally slippery when wet.
Live City Briefing veröffentlicht — Split
- The Split city council has pedestrianised more of the Riva waterfront during summer 2025, extending the car-free area – expect the promenade to be even busier but much more pleasant for walking and dining outdoors.
- A new direct ferry route from Split to Vis (the Blue Cave island) launched in late 2025, running three times daily in July and August – book tickets in advance as they sell out by mid-morning.
- The Diocletian's Palace basement, closed for structural reinforcements in spring 2025, has fully reopened since June – the newly installed lighting highlights the Roman vaults much better than before.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Marvie Hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the rear courtyard (away from Bože Peričića). Upper floors reduce street noise and get better light, while the courtyard side avoids traffic rumble and the tram line along the main road.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor overlooking the street. The hotel entrance and ground-floor bar are here, and Bože Peričića carries pedestrian chatter and occasional scooters. Rooms above the bar may pick up bass hum until late.
Best views
South-facing rooms on floor 4 may glimpse the Adriatic over rooftops. North-facing rooms get only the courtyard or neighbouring walls. The view is modest; prioritise calm over panorama.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4. The building is a mid-rise block typical of 3-star hotels in Split – ground plus 3-4 floors – so the upper half is consistently quieter.
🔊 Noise notes
Bože Peričića is a secondary street but feeds into the main waterfront promenade (50m away). Expect tourist footfall from 8am–11pm, and occasional delivery trucks to area hotels. Rooms above the side alley may hear kitchen extractor fans during breakfast and dinner service.
Insider tips
1. There’s no on-site parking – use the ‘Jadrolinija’ public car park 300m east (€12/day) or the municipal garage under Riva harbour (€15/day). Pre-book at Split Airport at most car rental desks. 2. For a quieter stay, request a top-floor room at check-in – they’re often unassigned until 10am, and staff may upgrade you if the hotel is quiet.
- 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
Hotel Einrichtungen — Marvie Hotel
Free WiFi for all guests, typical speed ~30 Mbps download. No login needed – just accept terms on captive portal.
Single lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections.
No physical newspapers. On request, reception can provide digital access to local daily (Slobodna Dalmacija) via tablet.
Standard check-in from 14:00, check-out by 11:00. Early bag-drop allowed from 10:00. Late check-out until 14:00 costs 30 EUR (subject to availability).
Complimentary luggage storage at reception on check-in day and after check-out.
Step-free access via ramp at main entrance. Lift to all floors. One accessible guest room on ground floor, but no roll-in shower – walk-in shower with grab bars. No adapted parking.
No on-site parking. Nearest public car park: 'Garaža Split' at Ulica slobode 1, ~500m walk, 20 EUR per 24h. No EV charging on site; nearest public charger at shopping centre Joker, 10 min walk.
Gebühren, Steuern & Einlagen
City / tourist tax: Tourist tax: 1.87 EUR per person per night (covers residents aged 12+)
Deposit & card hold: Advance deposit of 30% of total stay required at booking. At check-in, a 50 EUR credit card hold for incidentals.
Faith & Diät in der Nähe
- Place of worship: Duhovni centar Bogumila (691 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: crkva Gospe od Pojišana (742 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: Crkva Presvetog Otkupitelja (846 m · ~11 min walk)
- Church: kapelica (881 m · ~11 min walk)
Lokaler Lebensstil & Erholung
Prima 3 — 1.4 km · ~18 min walk
Park Lazarica — 394 m · ~5 min walk
Hrvatski Pomorski muzej — 1.4 km · ~17 min walk
Gradsko kazalište mladih — 2.3 km · ~29 min walk
Vrtić — 644 m · ~8 min walk
5 Minuten Radius Essentials
OTP Bank — 358 m · ~4 min walk
Ljek. jedinica 2 - Lazarica — 327 m · ~4 min walk
Market Zenta — 85 m · ~1 min walk
Autobusni kolodvor Split — 1.5 km · ~18 min walk
Geld & Währung
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs (bank ones like PBZ, Erste) for best rates; avoid exchange bureaux in the old town and at the ferry port — they give poor rates.
Cards widely accepted in supermarkets, restaurants and shops; contactless works fine. Smaller bakeries and market stalls may want cash.
Round up the bill or leave 10% for good service in restaurants; not expected in taxis but you can tip the driver. Hotel porters get €1-2.
Essen, Einkaufen und Reisen auf einem Budget
Cheap car hire →A standing espresso at a bar near the market or university — about €1.50.
A slice of pizza or burek from a bakery — around €3-4.
Grilled fish or meat with salad and chips at a konoba outside the Riva — about €10-12 for a main.
Bakery and fast-food places along Marmontova and near the Green Market — grab a cevapi in a bun for €4-5.
Konzum, Tommy, and Lidl are the main chains; Lidl has the best value for basics.
The Poljud area has a shopping centre (Joker) and there are high-street stores along Marmontova; a cheap market at the Green Market sells basic clothing.
Single bus ticket €2.50 from driver; a day pass (24h) costs about €4.50. From the airport take the Shuttle bus to the bus station (€6-8) rather than a taxi (€30+).
Buy groceries at Lidl and eat at bakeries for breakfast/lunch. Walk everywhere in the old town — it's compact. Fill a water bottle at the public drinking fountains (free) instead of buying bottled water.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Split, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Marvie Hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · OTP Bank — 358 m · ~4 min walk — pharmacy · Ljek. jedinica 2 - Lazarica — 327 m · ~4 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Umher zu kommen
Split Bus Station → Kopilica (stop: Kopilica 2)
💡 Buy a 90-minute ticket from kiosks for €1.60—it covers transfer to bus 1 from the station. Validate it in the yellow machine on board.
Split Airport (SPU) → Royal Rooms (Kopilica area)
💡 Uber and Bolt work here too—often €5 cheaper than official taxis. Check both apps before grabbing a cab.
Split Airport (SPU) → Split Bus Station (Sukoišanska)
💡 Buy ticket from the driver or red machine at airport exit; keep it for the return trip—it's valid both ways.
Royal Rooms (Kopilica) → Diocletian's Palace / Riva
💡 Walk 5 mins to Kopilica tram stop if you're going to the centre—tram 7 runs every 20 mins and costs €1.60. Taxi only worth it for late nights or heavy bags.
Über Split
Wikipedia ↗Split (; Croatian: [splît] , see other names) is the second-largest city of Croatia after the capital Zagreb. It is the largest city in Dalmatia, largest city on the Croatian coast, and the seat of the Split-Dalmatia County. The Split metropolitan area is home to about 330,000 people. It lies on the...
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What are the best rooms at Marvie Hotel?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the rear courtyard (away from Bože Peričića). Upper floors reduce street noise and get better light, while the courtyard side avoids traffic rumble and the tram line along the main road.
Which rooms should I avoid at Marvie Hotel?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor overlooking the street. The hotel entrance and ground-floor bar are here, and Bože Peričića carries pedestrian chatter and occasional scooters. Rooms above the bar may pick up bass hum until late.
Is Marvie Hotel noisy?
Bože Peričića is a secondary street but feeds into the main waterfront promenade (50m away). Expect tourist footfall from 8am–11pm, and occasional delivery trucks to area hotels. Rooms above the side alley may hear kitchen extractor fans during breakfast and dinner service.
Which rooms have the best views at Marvie Hotel?
South-facing rooms on floor 4 may glimpse the Adriatic over rooftops. North-facing rooms get only the courtyard or neighbouring walls. The view is modest; prioritise calm over panorama.
What are insider tips for staying at Marvie Hotel?
1. There’s no on-site parking – use the ‘Jadrolinija’ public car park 300m east (€12/day) or the municipal garage under Riva harbour (€15/day). Pre-book at Split Airport at most car rental desks. 2. For a quieter stay, request a top-floor room at check-in – they’re often unassigned until 10am, and staff may upgrade you if the hotel is quiet.
What time is check-in at Marvie Hotel?
Check-in at Marvie Hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Marvie Hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free WiFi for all guests, typical speed ~30 Mbps download. No login needed – just accept terms on captive portal.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Marvie Hotel?
Tourist tax: 1.87 EUR per person per night (covers residents aged 12+)
Where can I eat cheaply near Marvie Hotel?
A slice of pizza or burek from a bakery — around €3-4.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Marvie Hotel?
Single bus ticket €2.50 from driver; a day pass (24h) costs about €4.50. From the airport take the Shuttle bus to the bus station (€6-8) rather than a taxi (€30+).
When is the best time to visit Split?
May and September: warm weather (mid-20s°C), long daylight, and tourist crowds that are busy but not overwhelming, plus cheaper accommodation than July or August. June also works well if you want to catch the start of the outdoor festival season.
Top-Attraktionen in Split
💡 Bring a book or picnic from Pazar and sit on the far eastern end near the fish market, where locals outnumber tourists. Avoid paying 30 kuna for a coffee at front-row cafes—walk one street inland for half the price.
💡 Buy a bag of sour plums (višnje) and almonds for a cheap snack. Haggle only if buying in bulk—locals pay listed prices. Best visited before 11am when produce is freshest.
💡 Enter through the Bronze Gate from the waterfront for a dramatic view under the vaults. Go early (before 9am) to avoid crowds.
💡 Walk up the 500 steps from Sustipan for a quieter route than the main road. Take a swim at Kašjuni beach on the western side—free and less busy than Bačvice.
💡 From the fortress, walk downhill slightly to a restaurant above the quarry to see the dragon skulls left from filming. Take bus 22 from the main station (10 kuna).