Korkyra Info Travel Agency has been based in Korčula Town since 2006, twenty years on this island, sailing these waters, with local winds. We know the Maestral by name and the Jugo by mood. We know which cove is sheltered when the weather turns and which reef is clearest after a calm night. We are not a booking platform or a call centre. We are a team of people who live here, sail here, and genuinely believe that the best way to experience Korčula is from the water or with someone who knows where to look on land. Our head office is on Trg Petra Šegedina 3a in Korčula Town. Whatever you need on this island — a tour, a rental, a transfer, or just honest local advice — we are here to help you make the most of your time here.
Special note: if you’ve already booked one tour or service with us, you get a 10% discount on your next booked experience.
Majsan Island
The oldest inhabited islet in the archipelago. A Roman villa from the 1st century AD. A 4th-century early Christian church — the oldest evidence of Christianity in this region. Overgrown, largely unvisited, and extraordinary.
Gubavac
Korčula’s medieval quarantine island — where Venetian-era ships were held before being permitted to enter the city. The name means leper. Today it is flat white rocks, pine shade, and some of the clearest snorkeling water in the inner archipelago.
Mokalo Shipwreck
A 100-metre cargo vessel has been resting on the seabed near the Pelješac shore since the 1980s. Accessible by snorkel from the surface. Sea bream, octopus, and grouper have made it their own.
Sestrice — Vela and Mala Sestrica
Two small sister islands — the Big Sister and the Small Sister — sit nearly four nautical miles from Korčula Town, at the outermost edge of the archipelago. Vela Sestrica is home to a lighthouse built in 1871 by the Austrian authorities — one of sixty-two lighthouses constructed along the Adriatic to illuminate the Habsburg empire’s liquid frontier. The lighthouse keeper and his family once lived here, tending the light through every storm the Pelješac channel could produce. Mala Sestrica, a short swim away, is smaller and more barren — mostly craggy rocks that make a good target to swim to, with good snorkeling opportunities thanks to its distance from the mainland. The furthest stop on the tour. The one that earns its place.
Stupe Island
Wild, pine-covered, and unhurried. Stop for a swim and, if the mood calls for it, a drink at the Moro Beach Bar on shore.
Vrnik Island
The only inhabited island in the archipelago. An ancient limestone quarry dating back to Roman times, whose stone built the city walls of Dubrovnik and the Cathedral of Hvar. Walk the island, swim in its secluded coves, or sit down to lunch at the Vrnik Art Restaurant on the water’s edge.
Badija Island
The largest island in the archipelago. A 15th-century Franciscan monastery in a pine forest, and a small herd of deer that roam the shoreline as if the island belongs to them. It mostly does.
We offer a wide range of tours that showcase the beauty and culture of Korcula Island. Our tours include visits to charming medieval towns, wine tasting in local vineyards, adventurous buggy rides, and boat excursions to stunning nearby islands. With experienced guides and carefully curated itineraries, Korkyra Info Travel Agency ensures an unforgettable experience for all travelers.