Raduča delivers the full Dalmatian experience without requiring a boat. The beach arcs along the southern side of Primošten's famous peninsula, where the old town—a knot of stone houses and a baroque church—rises on its rocky perch just meters from the shore. The water is absurdly clear, the kind of visibility that lets you count pebbles at chest depth, and the color shifts with the sun: mint green in morning shallows, deep sapphire where the bottom drops away.
“The peninsula's dramatic promontory creates a natural amphitheater where architecture and Adriatic merge into Croatia's most photographed shoreline.”
Crashing wave at sunset
Pebbles here are small and pale, manageable underfoot once you adjust. Pines provide scattered shade along the upper beach, and a concrete walkway makes access easy. In peak season, the beach fills with Croatian families, German and Austrian visitors, and couples who discovered Primošten through Instagram but stay because the water is genuinely this beautiful. Paddleboards glide past, kids snorkel in the shallows, and beach bars keep the rakija flowing.
The peninsula itself frames every view—whichever direction you face, you see either the old town stacked on its rock or the coastline curving away toward vineyards and smaller coves. This is the beach Primošten built its reputation on, and it earns that status daily. The water doesn't lie, the color doesn't need filters, and the setting remains as photogenic as any Adriatic postcard promised.