Sarajevo to Mostar
Private transfer from Sarajevo to Mostar via the stunning Neretva valley. Optional stops in Konjic & Jablanica. EUR 160 fixed price. Book now!
Sarajevo to Mostar transfer
We run the Sarajevo to Mostar transfer almost daily. It is our most-booked route: 130 kilometres south through the Neretva canyon, and the drive we know by heart. Our drivers average seven years on this road, so they know which service station has the cleanest restroom, which roadside cafe makes the real Bosnian coffee, and exactly where the view over the canyon photographs best.
Most guests choose one of two options. The direct run takes 2 hours 15 minutes door-to-door — Sarajevo hotel pickup to Mostar Old Town. The extended version adds stops at Konjic (Ottoman bridge, 30 min), Jablanica (the WWII Battle of the Neretva museum, 30 min), and Blagaj (the Dervish tekija built into the cliff, 30 min). All three add about an hour and a half and turn a simple A-to-B drive into the kind of introduction to Herzegovina you remember.
This is not shared bus or hotel-desk taxi territory. Your transfer is pre-assigned, fixed-price, and flexible. If weather turns and you want to skip a stop, we skip it. If you want to linger at Blagaj spring an extra twenty minutes, we linger. Many of our Sarajevo-Mostar bookings are travellers continuing to Dubrovnik the next day — we can hand you off directly to that transfer if you want to keep going.
Add to your transfer
Optional extras — all prices per vehicle, added to the base fare.
Konjic
Historic Ottoman bridge spanning the emerald-green Neretva River, with a charming old town and traditional woodcarving workshops.
Jablanica
Home to the Battle of the Neretva WWII museum, featuring the remains of the destroyed railway bridge and a memorial to the famous 1943 partisan river crossing.
Blagaj (Dervish Monastery)
Stunning 16th-century Dervish monastery (tekija) built into a cliff face where the Buna River emerges from an underground cave. One of the most photographed spots in Bosnia, just 12 km from Mostar.
Vehicles for this route
All prices per vehicle. Choose the class that fits your group.
Economy
Best ValueStandard
Most PopularMinivan
First Class Van
PremiumWhat the road looks like
We leave Sarajevo on the M-17 southwest through Ilidza, past the Bosna river springs, and up over Ivan Sedlo at 960 metres. That pass is the stretch we pay attention to. In winter we run chained tyres October through April, and on a bad snow day we add 20 minutes for caution rather than risk a hurry. In summer it is an easy climb through pine forest with mist in the valleys below.
From the pass, the road drops into the Neretva valley near Konjic and then hugs the river for the next 90 kilometres. This is the stretch guests remember — tight canyon walls, green-blue water that changes colour with the season, short tunnels cut straight into rock. Around Jablanica the valley widens for the hydro lake, then narrows again through the final gorges before Mostar.
Mostar itself is where we earn our living as drivers. The Old Town is pedestrian-only, so we drop close to Stari Most — usually at the Hotel Eden turnaround or the Hotel Bristol lay-by, depending on your accommodation. If your hotel is up the hill or across the river, we adjust. We know the narrow streets; you do not want a rental car in there if you do not know the city.
What to expect
We pick up from any Sarajevo address. For airport arrivals, we meet at SJJ arrivals with your name board (see our SJJ airport transfer page for arrivals mechanics, luggage delays, and child seat coordination). For hotel pickups, we confirm the exact time by WhatsApp the evening before. Morning pickups between 7 and 9 am are the most comfortable because we beat the Mostar day-trip bus traffic on the return. Afternoon pickups work too but can be slower through the canyon tunnels.
Standard vehicle is a comfortable air-conditioned sedan for up to four passengers with full luggage (two large suitcases, two carry-ons). For five to seven people we switch to a minivan (Mercedes V-Class or equivalent) at a small supplement. Child seats are free on request — just tell us at booking.
No border crossings. Sarajevo and Mostar are both in Bosnia and Herzegovina, though you will pass the unmarked Republika Srpska entity boundary en route. No documents needed. For restroom stops we recommend the Jablanica service station (clean, with a decent pita bakery next door) rather than the one closer to Konjic. If it is Ramadan month, we carry extra water for guests — cafes with daytime food service are thin on parts of this route during fasting hours.
Sarajevo to Mostar FAQ
Direct, it is 2 hours 15 minutes pickup-to-drop. With all three stops (Konjic + Jablanica + Blagaj), about 3 hours 30. You tell us when you want to be in Mostar; we set the pickup time accordingly.
M-17 is the main Bosnia north-south route, two-lane highway the entire way, well maintained. In winter we run chained tyres for the Ivan Sedlo pass October through April. We have not cancelled a Sarajevo-Mostar transfer over weather in eight years. Summer sometimes brings roadworks around Konjic — we route around when needed.
Yes. Three viewpoints we always offer: the Ivan Sedlo crest just after the pass, the Jablanica canyon narrows about 30 km south, and the spur above Mostar just before descent. Five-minute stops, no extra charge. If you see a spot we did not mention, just ask — we pull over.
30 minutes is enough for the Stara Cuprija (six-arch Ottoman bridge), a Bosnian coffee at one of the bridge-side cafes, and a quick look at the old quarter. For longer, there is the D-0 bunker (Tito's Cold War command post) which is a 40-minute guided tour — you need to book it in advance; ask us and we arrange.
Both work, same price. Descending south from Sarajevo is slightly more dramatic — you finish the drive in Mostar warmth after the canyon mist. Most guests do it in this direction on the Bosnia leg of a Balkans trip. Return direction is better if you are flying out of SJJ airport.
Bring some BAM (Bosnian convertible mark) — 30 to 50 BAM per person is enough for coffees and snacks. Euros work in Mostar and most tourist spots but at poor exchange (usually 1 EUR to 1.90 BAM, street rate is 1.95). ATMs at Jablanica and Mostar both work fine with international cards.
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