Boba
On the Dalmatian island of Murter, Boba occupies a straightforward address on Ul. Butina, a local dining spot operating within a broader island food culture defined by the Adriatic catch landed nearby and the Kornati archipelago at its doorstep. For visitors looking to eat where the sourcing is immediate and the setting genuinely coastal, it belongs on the shortlist alongside Murter's small but serious restaurant scene.
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- Address
- Ul. Butina 22, 22243, Murter, Croatia
- Phone
- +38522434513
- Website
- konobaboba.hr

Eating on an Island Where the Archipelago Sets the Menu
Murter is a small island connected to the Croatian mainland by a drawbridge, and its position as the gateway to the Kornati National Park shapes nearly everything about how people eat here. The waters surrounding the Kornati archipelago, 89 islands and reefs spread across roughly 320 square kilometres of the northern Dalmatian coast, produce some of the Adriatic's most sought-after seafood. On an island this size, the distance between the sea and the plate is short by necessity, and local restaurants operate within that constraint whether they intend to or not. That proximity to source is not a marketing position; it is simply how coastal Dalmatian kitchens have always functioned.
Boba, addressed at Ul. Butina 22 in the town of Murter, sits inside this broader island dining context. On an island where the summer tourist season drives most restaurant decisions, the places that persist through word of mouth and repeat visitors tend to be the ones with the most direct relationship to local ingredients.
The Kornati Supply Chain and What It Means at the Table
Dalmatian seafood kitchens divide roughly into two categories: those that source from the same waters their guests can see from the terrace, and those that supplement with imported product when local supply falls short. On Murter, the former is the baseline expectation. The Kornati archipelago is a protected national park, which limits commercial fishing activity within its boundaries, but the surrounding channels, the Murtersko Sea and the passages between the outer islands, remain active fishing grounds. Bluefish, white fish, shellfish, and crustaceans from this zone carry a provenance that larger Dalmatian cities like Split or Dubrovnik cannot replicate at the same scale.
The Croatian coastal kitchen at this price and place tier typically organises around a short repertoire: grilled fish by weight, simply dressed with olive oil and lemon, alongside brodets (slow-cooked fish stews built on the bones and offcuts of the day's catch), peka preparations where meat or seafood is sealed under a bell and buried in embers, and raw preparations that let the quality of the ingredient do the editorial work. Vegetables arrive from the island's interior gardens or from the fertile agricultural belt of the nearby Šibenik hinterland. The olive oils tend to come from Dalmatian groves rather than Italian imports. This is not a cuisine of elaboration; it is a cuisine of selection, the kitchen's primary skill is in knowing what to buy that morning rather than what to do with it once it arrives.
For comparable approaches to sourcing-first cooking within Croatia's Adriatic dining scene, Pelegrini in Sibenik applies a more formal editorial lens to similar Dalmatian ingredients, while LD Restaurant in Korčula demonstrates how the island-sourcing model translates into a more structured tasting format. Boba operates at a different register, closer to the konoba tradition than to the fine-dining adaptation of it.
Murter's Restaurant Scene in Context
Murter town does not have a long roster of dining options, but what exists covers a coherent range. At the more formal end, Fine Food Murter occupies a different position in the local hierarchy, while Konoba Opat represents the traditional konoba format, the Dalmatian equivalent of a tavern, where the room is simple and the food is direct. Boba sits within this ecosystem rather than above or apart from it.
The broader Croatian coast has produced a number of kitchens that have translated this sourcing advantage into internationally recognised dining programs. Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj brought a Michelin-recognised Italian contemporary framework to the Istrian coast. Nebo by Deni Srdoč in Rijeka applies a modern Croatian tasting format to Kvarner Gulf produce. Alfred Keller in Mali Lošinj demonstrates how island-based kitchens on the Kvarner islands have built serious reputations on similar geographic advantages. Further inland, Korak in Jastrebarsko and Dubravkin Put in Zagreb show how Croatian sourcing-led cooking translates away from the coast. Boba does not compete in those formal tiers, but it shares the foundational logic: start with what the geography provides.
Planning a Visit to Murter
Murter is accessible by road from Šibenik, roughly 25 kilometres along the coastal route, or by ferry connections during the summer season. The island is quiet outside the July-to-August peak, and restaurant schedules contract significantly in the shoulder months of May, June, and September. Visitors should plan around the posted hours, especially in the quieter months. Reservations are recommended, and the restaurant opens Tuesday through Sunday for lunch and dinner, with Monday closed.
Other Adriatic and Dalmatian destinations worth pairing in a longer Croatian itinerary include Boskinac in Novalja on Pag Island, Krug in Split, and Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik. For Istrian dining at the other end of the coast, San Rocco in Brtonigla, EatIstria in Pluj, and Humska Konoba in Hum cover different registers of the same sourcing-first tradition.
Side-by-Side Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BobaThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Contemporary Adriatic Seafood | $$$ | , | |
| Fine Food Murter | Modern Mediterranean Seafood | $$ | , | Murter |
| Konoba Opat | Traditional Croatian Seafood | $$$ | , | Kornati Islands National Park |
| Taverna Bota Sare | Traditional Dalmatian Seafood & Oysters | $$$ | , | Mali Ston |
| Konoba Soleta | Traditional Croatian Seafood | $$$ | , | Kornati Islands National Park |
| Korčula | Modern Dalmatian Seafood | $$$ | , | Lower Town |
Continue exploring
More in Murter Kornati
Restaurants in Murter Kornati
Browse all →At a Glance
- Romantic
- Scenic
- Elegant
- Rustic
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Group Dining
- Waterfront
- Terrace
- Standalone
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
- Sustainable Seafood
- Waterfront
Warm and inviting atmosphere with coastal charm, blending traditional Croatian hospitality with contemporary fine-dining elegance.









