Luxury hotel holiday The Chedi Lustica Bay Lustica Peninsula

Set on Montenegro's Luštica Peninsula, The Chedi Luštica Bay is a five-star hotel overlooking the marina and the Adriatic Sea, with 111 rooms and suites, four restaurants and bars, a Forbes-recognised spa, a heated infinity pool, and a private beach. With such picturesque seafront on your doorstep and the UNESCO-listed Bay of Kotor just 25 minutes away, this is an ideal base for a luxury coastal holiday that balances relaxation with cultural exploration.
Included in your Expressions holiday
  • Accommodation in a Superior room on bed and breakfast
  • Flights to and from Tivat and hire car
  • Concierge service and Expressions Holidays regional helpful hints
  • Choice of upgrades available – rooms and transport

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to The Chedi Lustica Bay, Montenegro

The Chedi Luštica Bay is a five-star hotel on the Adriatic coast of Montenegro, set within a marina village on the Luštica Peninsula. With 111 rooms and suites, three restaurants, a Forbes-recognised spa, and Montenegro's most beautiful coastline on the doorstep, it is a superb base for exploring the Bay of Kotor.

Facts in brief

Official star rating 5

Location On the Luštica Peninsula, 19 minutes from Tivat Airport, overlooking the marina and Trašte Bay.

Annual opening All year

Closest airport Tivat

Distance from airport 20 minutes by car

Hotel facilities and services

The Restaurant, The Spot, The Japanese, The Lobby Bar, The Rok Beach Bar & Lounge, heated outdoor infinity pool, indoor spa pool, The Chedi Spa and wellness centre, sauna, steam room, experience shower, relaxation lounge, fully equipped gym with personal trainers, private sand-and-pebble beach, 115-berth marina, 2 outdoor tennis courts, golf driving range and Golf Academy, kids' club, outdoor playground, games room, yoga classes, hiking, cycling, birdwatching, free parking, pet-friendly on request.

Complimentary

Wi-Fi

Chargeable watersports

Kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, and sailing.

Land sports

Tennis, cycling, hiking, golf, and yoga,

Out and about nearby

The UNESCO-listed Old Town of Kotor lies around 25 minutes drive away, with its imposing mediaeval walls, St Tryphon Cathedral, Maritime Museum, and the Fortress of San Giovanni, which rewards the climb with sweeping views across the Bay. The baroque town of Perast, around 35 minutes drive away, sits on the water's edge and offers boat trips to the man-made island of Our Lady of the Rocks, home to a 17th century church filled with centuries of votive offerings. Just 15 to 20 minutes from the hotel, Tivat's Porto Montenegro is a stylish marina hub lined with superyachts, waterfront restaurants, and boutiques, alongside the Nautical Heritage Museum. The Solila Nature Reserve, a former saltpan and protected wetland, is only 5 minutes away and is one of the most significant birdwatching sites on the Adriatic Flyway. Closer to the hotel, the traditional fishing villages of Rose and Klinci on the Luštica Peninsula reward exploration with stone churches, olive groves, and waterfront dining. Lovćen National Park, reachable via a scenic road of 25 hairpin bends above Kotor, offers Montenegro's most celebrated mountain views and the Njegoš Mausoleum at 1,657m.

Sports nearby

Hiking, sailing, watersports, and golf.

I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH4679

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to The Chedi Lustica Bay, Montenegro

Room descriptions

The Chedi Luštica Bay in Montenegro has 111 rooms and suites, each with Wi-Fi, a Simmons Sweet Sleeper bed, balcony, ceramic and marble bathroom with underfloor heating, Hansgrohe rain shower, double vanity sink, Acqua di Parma toiletries, minibar, wine selection, 55" interactive LED flat-screen TV, media hub with HDMI and Bluetooth, in-room safe, bedside USB chargers, and turn-down service.

Superior Room 44 sqm, one king or twin beds, balcony with village views
Deluxe Room Sea View 44 sqm, one king or twin beds, balcony with sea views
Grand Superior Room 47 sqm, one king bed, kitchenette, freestanding Laufen bath, Lavazza espresso machine, and balcony with mountain views
Grand Deluxe Room Sea View 47 sqm, one king bed, kitchenette, freestanding Laufen bath, Lavazza espresso machine, and balcony with sea views
Grand Poolside Room 47 sqm, one king bed, kitchenette, freestanding Laufen bath, Lavazza espresso machine, and balcony with pool and marina views
Deluxe Suite 65 sqm, one king bed, separate living area, kitchenette, and balcony with sea views
Junior Suite 77 sqm, one king bed, open-plan lounge and bedroom, kitchenette, Lavazza espresso machine, and balcony with partial marina views
Grand Deluxe Suite Sea View 94.5 sqm, one king bed, separate living room, kitchenette, dressing room with walk-in wardrobe, two bathrooms, one with sea-view freestanding Laufen bath, Lavazza espresso machine, and balcony with sea views
Grand Deluxe Corner Suite Sea View 110.5 sqm, two bedrooms, one with king bed and one with twin beds, dressing room, additional powder room and wc, large living room, kitchenette, freestanding Laufen bath with a view, Lavazza espresso machine, and two balconies with sea views
Luštica Bay Penthouse Sea View 165 sqm, two bedrooms, one with king bed and one with twin beds, two bathrooms, one with freestanding Laufen bath, living room with sofa bed, kitchenette, dressing room, additional powder room and wc, private terrace with dining area and sun recliners, outdoor rain shower, Lavazza espresso machine, and sea views.
I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH4679

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to The Chedi Lustica Bay, Montenegro

The journey and how you get there

For a holiday to The Chedi Luštica Bay, fly to Tivat Airport, approximately 20 minutes from the hotel, where hire cars are available — or the hotel can arrange transfers by Mercedes E-class limousine on request. We recommend hiring a car to make the most of the stunning coastline, the Bay of Kotor, and the wider Luštica Peninsula.

Additional information

Children: The Chedi Luštica Bay is well suited to families, with several room types accommodating children and options for additional beds and cots on request. The hotel has a dedicated kids' club, an outdoor playground, and a games room with Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, pool table, table tennis, and table hockey. The Spot restaurant offers a children's menu.

I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH4679

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to The Chedi Lustica Bay, Montenegro

Highlights of Montenegro

The Bay of Kotor is Montenegro's most magnificent asset, and one of the most dramatic coastal landscapes in the whole of Europe. This great inland sea — carved by ancient rivers and enclosed by limestone mountains that plunge sheer to the water's edge — rewards exploration by boat, revealing a succession of medieval villages, Venetian watchtowers, and small stone churches that appear to rise directly from the bay itself. At its heart lies Kotor, a walled city of exceptional preservation, where Romanesque cathedrals, noble palaces, and winding marble lanes speak of centuries under Venetian and Byzantine influence. The town's famous walls climb 1,350 steps to the fortress of St John above, and those who make the ascent are rewarded with a panorama of quite breathtaking beauty. Perast, a short drive along the bay's northern shore, is perhaps Montenegro's most quietly beguiling town — a single elegant street of baroque palaces and campaniles facing two small islands, one of which shelters the beloved church of Our Lady of the Rocks, built by sailors on an artificial foundation of stones and captured ships. The silence here, broken only by the sound of oars on still water, is profound. On the open Adriatic coast, the former royal resort of Sveti Stefan presents one of the most iconic images in all of European travel — a fortified island village, connected to the mainland by a narrow causeway, its medieval stone houses now forming one of the region's most celebrated luxury retreats. The beaches either side of the causeway are among the finest on the Montenegrin riviera, and the neighbouring village of Miločer retains a quiet, aristocratic charm that recalls Montenegro's days as an independent kingdom. Inland, the character of the country changes entirely. The Durmitor National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage wilderness in the north, offers a landscape of glacial lakes, ancient black pine forests, and soaring karst peaks. The Tara River Canyon, which cuts through this high plateau to a depth of over 1,300 metres, is one of the natural wonders of the European continent. Žabljak, the highest town in the Balkans, provides an excellent base for walking in summer and skiing in winter. The old royal capital of Cetinje, set on a high plateau beneath the stark grey mass of Mount Lovćen, completes Montenegro's remarkable portrait — a town of diplomatic palaces and monastic treasures that preserves, with quiet dignity, the memory of a proud and independent mountain nation.

Cultural highlights of Montenegro

Montenegro's culture is a rich tapestry woven from Orthodox Christianity, Venetian maritime heritage, and the fierce independent spirit of a mountain people who resisted Ottoman rule for centuries. This proud history permeates every aspect of Montenegrin life, from the epic oral poetry — the gusle tradition, in which a single-stringed instrument accompanies heroic verse — to the elaborate clan loyalties that still quietly shape society today. The Orthodox monasteries are Montenegro's great cultural treasures. Ostrog, built improbably into a sheer white cliff face, draws pilgrims from across the Orthodox world and ranks among the most visually arresting religious sites in Europe. Morača, set in a river canyon of great beauty, shelters remarkable 13th-century frescoes of considerable artistic importance. Montenegrin hospitality is legendary and entirely genuine. Guests are received with rakija — a fruit brandy of considerable potency — and a generosity of spirit that reflects deep cultural values of honour and welcome. Lamb roasted on the spit, njeguški smoked ham from the villages above Kotor, and the pungent local cheese of the same name remain the cornerstones of a cuisine shaped by mountain frugality and pastoral plenty. Traditional kolo folk dancing, performed at festivals and celebrations throughout the country, connects modern Montenegrins to a cultural inheritance stretching back many centuries.

Festivals of Montenegro

Sea Dance Festival (Budva, July/August) — a major international electronic and pop music festival held on Jaz Beach, one of the largest music events in the Balkans Sunčane Skale (Herceg Novi, June) — a long-established festival of popular music, often described as Montenegro's equivalent of a national song contest KotorArt (Kotor, July/August) — a prestigious classical music and arts festival held within the medieval walls of Kotor, featuring international performers Montenegrin Film Festival (Herceg Novi) — celebrating domestic and regional cinema City Theatre Festival (Nikšić) — one of the country's leading theatrical events Mimosa Festival (Herceg Novi, February) — celebrating the arrival of spring with parades, concerts, and the famous mimosa blossom that flowers earlier here than almost anywhere else in Europe Carnival of Kotor (Kotor, February/March) — a traditional masked carnival with roots stretching back to Venetian times Boka Night (Kotor Bay, August) — a spectacular nocturnal procession of illuminated boats across the bay, one of Montenegro's most cherished and visually beautiful traditions

Gastronomy of Montenegro

Montenegrin cuisine reflects the country's dual identity — a coastal tradition of Adriatic seafood, where grilled fish, octopus salad, and black risotto echo the flavours of the Venetian world that shaped this shoreline for centuries, and a heartier mountain tradition of smoked meats, aged cheeses, and slow-cooked stews that sustained a pastoral people through hard winters. The villages of Njeguši, high on the plateau above Kotor, produce Montenegro's most celebrated delicacies — a cold-smoked ham and a sharp, crumbling cheese that appear on every discerning table in the country. Kacamak, a rich cornmeal dish folded with potato, cheese, and butter, is the definitive comfort food of the Montenegrin highlands, whilst fresh trout from the cold rivers of Durmitor provides one of the simplest and most satisfying pleasures the interior has to offer.

Facts in brief

Capital Podgorica
Airport Podgorica and Tivat
Size 5,333 square miles
Population 620,000
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