🎁 Use code WELCOME3 during checkout to get discount on your first booking with us. Enjoy! ☀️

Close
cars based on your filters
No cars found

Car hire in Montenegro is the easiest way to make the country open up. Locals like to say that without a car you turn into furniture — buses do run along the coast, but reaching Lovćen, Durmitor, Lake Skadar or the hidden coves of the Luštica peninsula needs your own wheels.

The country is compact: in a single day you can drive from Herceg Novi to Ulcinj, swim in the Adriatic in the morning and watch the sun set over the mountains around Žabljak by evening. Five neighbouring countries — Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Albania and Kosovo — sit within a few hours' drive, which turns even a short holiday into a proper Balkan road trip.

Many of our guests book a car for five days and end up extending to ten. After the first drive north, it becomes obvious that a week on the coast covers only half of the country.

Prices remain among the lowest on the Adriatic. In the low season, from November to April, an economy class car starts at €17–25 per day. In the peak summer months of July and August the same class runs €30–50. For monthly hires the rate typically drops by 30–50%.

Compared with Croatia or Italy, the same car in Montenegro can be roughly half the price — and the sea, the food and the mountains lose nothing in comparison.

Montenegro uses the euro, so for most European visitors there's no exchange-rate maths to do at the pump or the toll booth.

Prices and what's included

Daily rates depend on the class, the season and the length of the booking. Economy (Polo, Fabia, Yaris, Hyundai i20) runs €17–35 depending on the month. Mid-size and compact crossovers — €30–55. Larger SUVs and automatics — from €45 per day. Two-week bookings usually drop 20–30%, monthly rates almost halve.

A standard tariff with local suppliers nearly always includes Third Party Liability, basic Collision Damage Waiver (CDW) with an excess of €800–2,000, theft protection, unlimited mileage and free delivery to Tivat and Podgorica airports. The headline daily rate from a local company is what you actually pay — not a stripped-back base price.

We include basic CDW by default — that alone removes 80% of the scenarios where a guest could end up paying for repairs out of their own pocket.

Hidden fees catch out first-timers most often. Before you book, check whether there are separate charges for cross-border travel, for drivers under 25, for an additional driver, for refuelling and for cleaning. With TakeCars, the price you see in the listing is the final price.

The worst moment is hearing about a local tax or an airport fee that wasn't in the booking. We try to put everything on the listing so that there's nothing new to discuss on collection.

May and September are widely seen as the sweet spot — the weather is still beach-friendly, prices sit 30–40% below August and the choice of available cars is far wider.

Most tourists in Montenegro start their trip here

Documents, deposit and payment

To hire a car you'll need a passport (or EU/EEA national ID), a valid driving licence with at least one or two years' experience, and a payment card. Minimum age is 21 for economy and mid-size, 23–25 for premium. Drivers aged 21–24 pay a young-driver surcharge of €8–15 per day or €80 flat.

EU, UK, EEA and Swiss licences are accepted as is — no IDP required. Licences from other countries work if they're in the Latin alphabet; Cyrillic, Arabic and non-Latin scripts need an accompanying IDP.

Most worries about whether a licence will be accepted can be resolved before booking. We confirm the document type in advance, so there are no surprises on the day.

The deposit is the main difference between local suppliers and international chains. Local companies take €100–300 in cash, returned in full at drop-off. International brands block €500–1,500 on a credit card, with release taking 10–30 working days.

On TakeCars the deposit and the way it's collected are visible in the listing before you book. We also offer no-deposit options where Full Cover with zero excess is built into the price.

Most local suppliers accept a debit or credit card for the 15–20% online prepayment, with the balance settled in cash euros at pick-up. International chains insist on a classic embossed credit card.

Showing the deposit upfront, on its own, removes most of the awkward moments at handover — the guest already knows what to expect when they arrive.

For high-season pickups in Tivat and Budva, we recommend confirming the document type a day or two before arrival — it saves a phone call at the rank.

Real reviews on TakeCars in Montenegro

Anvar Nasibullin
Anvar Nasibullin
🇷🇺

Citroen C3 in Montenegro

It's great. The car is very nice, comfortable and nimble. It seems to be the most popular model on the roads of Montenegro. Very recognizable in the traffic. The whole family has driven almost 1000 km. I was very pleased with fuel consumption and traction of the engine. For the first time I used a diesel car. I am very satisfied with impressions. I will repeat the rental. Thank you

June 2025
Vladimir Nikitenko
Vladimir Nikitenko
🇷🇺

Toyota Rav4 in Montenegro

Everything went well. The car turned out to be not the same, although it was the same model, but 2 years older.

October 2023
Dzhorzhii Dzhurachich
Dzhorzhii Dzhurachich
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 4 in Montenegro

Everything's great.

October 2023
Dmitrii Ryzhkov
Dmitrii Ryzhkov
🇷🇺

Skoda Fabia in Montenegro

Everything went great.

May 2023
Dmitrii Grigorev
Dmitrii Grigorev
🇷🇺

Skoda Fabia in Montenegro

Everything went smoothly with the car rental. Despite its size, the car is quite frisky, climbs very well, fuel consumption is low, and handling is excellent. The registration of the car also went well - everything was done quickly and the keys were given. In general, the impressions are only positive.

February 2023
Artem Vorobev
Artem Vorobev
🇷🇺

Skoda Fabia Combi in Montenegro

I am your regular customer and recommend to everyone Thank you! Everything went well! Vladan always in touch brought the car to the house and took it himself. In the photo, one headlight does not shine, I took a picture to show Vladan, he promptly replaced

November 2022
Kirill Fedorov
Kirill Fedorov
🇷🇺

Volkswagen Golf Variant in Montenegro

Everything went well, we took the Golf 7 twice and were very pleased with it.

January 2023
Siarhei Tratsiuk
Siarhei Tratsiuk
🇧🇾

Opel Corsa in Montenegro

Everything went very well!

July 2022
Artem Gorokhov
Artem Gorokhov
🇺🇦

Skoda Fabia in Montenegro

Everything that was agreed upon was done on your part.

July 2021
Anatolii Velkov
Anatolii Velkov
🇺🇦

Skoda Fabia in Montenegro

Everything was wonderful. Thank you for the high level of service and pleasant communication! Moreover, we have recommended your company to our friends who are now vacationing in Montenegro. And they also took the car. Very pleased.

Yana Talyzina
Yana Talyzina
🇺🇦

Renault Fluence in Montenegro

Everything is fine! Since there were no free cars in Kotor, the delivery of a car from Budva helped a lot

July 2021
Evgeniy Kosovanov
Evgeniy Kosovanov
🇷🇺

Mercedes-Benz A180 cdi in Montenegro

Instead, the A180 drove a fresh i30 Hyundai. Good machine in perfect condition. Cabin clean for 5+ The car was delivered to the hotel minute in minute. 3 minutes took the pickup, and when returning the car it took 2 minutes) I recommend this provider !!!!

October 2019
Pavel Varov
Pavel Varov
🇷🇺

Audi A3 in Montenegro

Took on localcarhires.com Audi A3 diesel automatic. When booking, we paid 10% prepayment. We were met at the airport, we quickly issued everything, we gave the keys. The car was served clean. Casco was included in the price. Only a minor side - we asked for a navigator, but they forgot to bring it. But this, rather, from the principle I indicate, because no problem using a phone with gps. 90% of the remaining amount after prepayment was paid in cash upon receipt of the car. And, most importantly, it was not a risk to leave any depositis at all. Which was very cool. Loved the car. Just a superb feeling. Even revised his attitude to the manual transimission. Traveled all over Montenegro, all serpentines, parks, etc. (Fortunately, there were no restrictions on mileage and trips to border countries). We returned the car at the airport. Everything went somehow swiftly and easily - they met us, accepted the keys and, quickly examined the car, said thanks and left. In short, the experience turned out to be extremely positive; in general, no problems arose at any stage. Many thanks to Milan and his partner, as well as to the localcarhires.com team (a very convenient and useful service)!

September 2019

Take Cars in Montenegro

Transparent terms aren't a marketing line — they save you three hours at handover. If the listing says €150 deposit in cash, that's exactly what you'll leave and exactly what you'll get back when you return the keys. Every supplier listed below is on the same terms, so the only thing that changes between cars is the car itself.

Goran

Bar
4.7
Goran

Milan

Budva
4.8
Milan

Sinisa

Budva
4.8
Sinisa

Filip

Budva
4.9
Filip
RENT A CAR
  • Real reviews on every specific car

    Not just an overall supplier rating, but feedback from guests who hired the very same Octavia or Duster.

  • Deposit and terms shown before you book

    The amount, payment method and excess sit in the car listing, so the handover holds no surprises.

  • Free cancellation up to 7 days before pick-up

    Plans change — booking should feel risk-free, not a commitment carved in stone.

Routes worth the petrol

Coastal road and Kamenari–Lepetane ferry

The main coastal road links Herceg Novi to Ulcinj. In summer it crawls, and car hire in Kotor pays off with the Kamenari–Lepetane ferry: crossing the Bay of Kotor saves 30 km and an hour. A car with passengers — €4.50, ferry runs 24/7, every 15–30 minutes in season.

Kamenari–Lepetane is the standard tip we give guests. Driving from Budva to Herceg Novi at midday in August, you'll lose an hour without it and ten minutes with it.

Old Bar, Ulcinj and Lake Skadar

South, the coast quietens. Day loop: car hire in Bar or Sutomore → Old Bar → Ulcinj's sandy beaches → Lake Skadar on the way back.

For families with younger children we usually suggest Bečići or Petrovac — gentle entry into the sea, no mountain roads and easy parking.

The north: Lovćen, Durmitor, Kolašin

If you have two or three days beyond the coast, the north is worth it. The climb from Kotor to Lovćen on the road of 25 hairpins is a route in its own right. Beyond it lie Kolašin, the Tara canyon and Durmitor.

The north is unforgiving on tired cars and worn tyres. For winter trips to Žabljak or Kolašin we fit a winter set in advance — without it there's no point heading up there.

Most travellers skip Podgorica, yet car hire in Podgorica is usually 10–20% cheaper than Tivat.

Flying into Podgorica? Take the car straight from arrivals — the bus to the coast is slow, and a taxi costs more than a day's hire.

The drive from TGD down to Budva or Kotor takes around 90 minutes through the Sozina tunnel — straightforward in any season.

Driving to Croatia, Bosnia, Albania and beyond

Montenegro's biggest advantage as a base is its five neighbours within a few hours by car. From here you can reach Dubrovnik, Mostar, Shkodër, Belgrade or Prizren in a single day.

Croatia (Dubrovnik)

Cross-border fee €30–85. The contract must explicitly allow exit from Montenegro, and a Green Card has to be issued. Debeli Brijeg crossing queues 1–2 hours during midday in summer — leave early or after eight in the evening.

Dubrovnik in a day is realistic. From Budva it's roughly 2.5 hours each way along a steady road, with no serious mountain passes.

Albania (Shkodër, Tirana, Berat)

€30–50 surcharge, and most local suppliers allow it without fuss. The Božaj crossing near Lake Skadar is normally quieter than Sukobin or Murićani. Food and accommodation are below Montenegrin prices.

Before driving into Albania we'd top the tank up at home — Montenegrin 95 petrol is generally more reliable and a touch cheaper.

Bosnia (Mostar, Sarajevo, Trebinje)

€30–50 surcharge applies. Since 2021 the Green Card isn't technically required for Montenegrin-plated cars entering Bosnia, but suppliers still issue it. Neat day trip: Tivat → Trebinje → Mostar via the pass, back through Nikšić.

Multi-country trips are often the reason guests hire a car in the first place. Croatia and Bosnia in one five-day loop is a typical August itinerary.

Serbia and Kosovo open under the same terms; North Macedonia is slightly higher at €40–60.

Montenegro with locals

Road rules, fines, parking and winter

Speed, alcohol, headlights

50 km/h in towns, 80 outside, 100 on the motorway and in the Sozina tunnel. No "+20" tolerance. Blood-alcohol limit 0.3‰, effectively zero for under-24s. Dipped headlights mandatory year-round.

The alcohol limit is stricter than in most of the EU. The simplest rule is not to drink at all if you'll be driving — random checks are common after dark, especially in Budva.

Fines — police don't take cash

Officers don't take cash. They issue a slip you settle at any bank or post office. Ignore it and the supplier is later notified, charging your card plus €10–25 admin fee.

Parking in Kotor and Budva

Parking is forbidden inside the Kotor Old Town — use the paid lots near the Sea Gate, the Jadran centre, or park in Dobrota and walk in. Budva and Sveti Stefan are similar: free spaces fill by breakfast, paid bays €1–2.40 per hour.

The catch with parking is that pay-by-SMS only works with a Montenegrin SIM (+382 67/68/69). A foreign number won't register — use the meter or a paper ticket from a duvan kiosk.

Winter tyres and chains

From 15 November to 1 April, M+S winter tyres are compulsory on most regional and mountain roads. Suppliers fit them free of charge, chains must sit in the boot. Fine from €60; without the winter kit your insurance can be voided after an accident.

In Kolašin, Žabljak and along the Durmitor passes, winter tyres and chains aren't a formality — they're basic safety on snow-covered hairpins.

If your route stays on the coast between Herceg Novi and Bar, summer tyres are fine right through the winter — the snow rarely reaches sea level.

Rates in Montenegro vary throughout the year depending on the season and the rental length in days.

40
40
39
42
51
58
63
64
59
45
43
41
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec
chartHow expensive is renting a car in Montenegro: average daily rates for a one-week car rental, across all car classes. Delivery across Montenegro not included.

Frequently asked questions about car hire in Montenegro

How much does it cost to hire a car in Montenegro per day?

Economy starts at €17–25 in the low season (November–April) and €30–50 in July and August. Mid-size sits at €30–55, automatics and SUVs from €45. Two-week bookings drop 20–30% and monthly hires almost halve. May and September are 30–40% below August with the same weather and a far wider choice of available cars.

How much is the deposit on a Montenegrin hire car?

Local suppliers take €100–300 in cash euros, returned in full at drop-off. International chains block €500–1,500 on a credit card, with release taking 10–30 working days. Premium classes can reach €3,000. On TakeCars the amount and the way it's collected appear in the listing before you book.

Can I hire a car in Montenegro with no deposit?

Yes. Some cars on TakeCars are listed with a no-deposit tariff that already includes Full Cover with zero excess on the body. Tyres, rims, glass and underbody are usually covered too, or available as add-ons. It's the most relaxed option for travellers who don't want money frozen on a card.

Do I need a credit card to hire a car?

With most local suppliers, no. A debit card is enough for the 15–20% online prepayment, and the balance and deposit are typically settled in cash euros at pick-up. International chains are stricter — they require an embossed credit card in the main driver's name.

Do I need an International Driving Permit?

EU, UK, EEA and Swiss licences are accepted as is — no IDP required. Licences from other countries work as long as they're in the Latin alphabet. Cyrillic, Arabic or other non-Latin scripts need an accompanying IDP. A passport (or EU national ID) is also required at pick-up.

What's the minimum age to hire a car in Montenegro?

21 with one to two years' driving experience for economy and mid-size cars, 23–25 for premium. Drivers aged 21–24 normally pay a young-driver surcharge of €8–15 per day or a flat €80 per booking. Most local suppliers don't apply an upper age limit.

What insurance is included and is Super CDW worth it?

Standard cover includes Third Party Liability, Collision Damage Waiver with an excess of €800–2,000, and theft protection. Tyres, rims, glass, underbody and interior are not covered. Super CDW at €4–10 a day cuts or removes the excess — sensible for first-timers, mountain roads and winter trips. A police report is required for any claim.

Can I drive a Montenegrin hire car to Croatia?

Yes, with a Green Card and the supplier's written permission. The cross-border fee is €30–85 and the contract must explicitly allow exit from Montenegro. The Debeli Brijeg crossing queues 1–2 hours during midday in summer — leave early or after eight in the evening. Dubrovnik is around 2.5 hours from Budva.

Can I drive into Albania or Bosnia on a hire car?

Yes. Each country adds €30–50 to the booking and a Green Card is required. The Božaj crossing into Albania is normally quieter than Sukobin or Murićani. A useful Bosnian crossing is Klobuk, on the road from Nikšić, especially when heading for Mostar or Sarajevo.

Can I take the rental car on the Kamenari–Lepetane ferry?

Yes — no separate permission from the supplier is needed. A car with passengers costs €4.50 one way, paid by card or cash at the booth. The ferry runs 24/7 and leaves every 15–30 minutes in season. The crossing takes about ten minutes and saves roughly 30 km of road.

Are there toll roads or vignettes in Montenegro?

There is no national vignette. Only two paid sections exist: the Sozina tunnel (€2.50 for cars) on the Bar–Podgorica route and the A1 motorway Podgorica–Mateševo (€4.50). The Kamenari–Lepetane ferry adds €4.50. All other roads, including mountain passes and the coastal route, are free.

How do I pay for parking in Kotor or Budva as a foreigner?

Use a parking meter (cards or coins) or a paper "parking karta" ticket from a duvan kiosk. Pay-by-SMS only works with a Montenegrin SIM (+382), so a foreign number will not register. Parking is forbidden inside the Kotor Old Town — use the paid lots near the Sea Gate or by the Jadran shopping centre.

What should I do if I have an accident?

Call 112 immediately — a police report is mandatory; without it neither CDW nor Super CDW will pay out. Photograph everything from several angles, sign nothing without a translation and notify the supplier within 48 hours. Don't move the car before the police arrive, even if it's partially blocking traffic.

Are winter tyres and chains required in Montenegro?

From 15 November to 1 April, M+S winter tyres are compulsory on most regional and mountain roads. Suppliers fit them free of charge during the season. Snow chains must sit in the boot — the fine for not having them starts at €60. For Kolašin, Žabljak and Durmitor in winter this is a practical necessity, not a formality.

When is car hire cheapest in Montenegro?

Rates from November through April sit 40–60% below the summer peak. July and August are the most expensive months. May and September are the sweet spot — pleasant weather, prices 30–40% below August and a noticeably wider choice of cars in stock.

Got questions?

Feel free to ask and we'll reply within 2 hours.

0/240

PRICE PER DAY

Transmission

Deposit types

OPTIONS

Seats

INSURANCE

Car types

Crossing borders

Supplier