
Two hundred metres to the water
The path to the shore runs downhill in the shade and reaches the pebbles in about three minutes. The bay is shallow and clear, and the mornings belong to whoever gets there first.

Primošten · Dalmatia
Three bedrooms, a pool on the lower terrace, and an open view of the water. Diana sits on the quiet side of Primošten.
The house
Primošten is a small town on its own peninsula, an old stone quarter at the tip and pine slopes behind it. Diana stands on one of those slopes, set back from the road, looking west.
The water is a few minutes downhill on foot, past low garden walls and a stand of pines. The house is modern and plainly finished: stone, glass, pale wood. Nothing in it asks for attention except the view.


The path to the shore runs downhill in the shade and reaches the pebbles in about three minutes. The bay is shallow and clear, and the mornings belong to whoever gets there first.

The terrace faces the open channel. Boats cross it through the day, the old town sits on the headland to the south, and the light turns the water copper before it drops behind the islands.

Each bedroom has its own bathroom. A long kitchen opens onto the terrace, the table seats everyone at once, and the pool sits a few steps down on its own level.
A look around
The house, the pool, and the stretch of coast it looks onto.






The stay
One price for the entire villa, up to six guests. No per-head charge, no booking fee.
Availability
Choose a check-in and check-out below. We hold no card here — send the dates and we reply, usually the same day, to confirm and arrange the rest.
Choose a check-in and check-out and the enquiry form opens here.

Primošten
The town keeps its old shape: a church at the top, narrow lanes down to the harbour, and restaurants that still pour Babić from the vineyards on the slopes above. The coast here is pebble and pine, not promenade.