🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina · Places to discover
What to see in Mostar ?
18 places curated by Hozy - landmarks, nature, hidden restaurants and activities. Click to discover each address in detail.

Landmarks & heritage (9)
Landmark
War and Genocide Museum 1941-1945
Small independent museum housed in a building pocked with shrapnel, run by a former combatant who recounts the history himself. An honest and moving account of 20th-century conflicts in Herzegovina.
Landmark
Stari Most (Old Bridge)
A masterpiece of 16th-century Ottoman architecture, reconstructed after its destruction in 1993, it spans the Neretva with a single arch of 29 metres. Essential, but visit early in the morning to avoid crowds and catch the reflection in the water.
Landmark
Museum of the Bosnian War (Muzej rata)
Museum dedicated to the siege of Mostar (1992–1995), housed in a building that still bears the scars of combat. Photographs, personal objects and testimonies convey the civilian experience of the conflict with striking restraint.
Landmark
Čejvan-Ćehajin Ottoman Hammam
One of the rare Ottoman hammams from the 16th century still standing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, recently restored. Now transformed into a cultural space, it preserves its domed ceilings pierced with oculi and an atmosphere of mineral serenity.
Landmark
Saints Peter and Paul Church (Franjevačka crkva)
Franciscan church with twin towers dominating the west of Mostar, a symbol of the city's Catholic Croat community. Its bell tower offers an unobstructed view over the entire Neretva valley.
Landmark
Lučki Bridge (Lucki Most)
A discreet suspension bridge downstream from Stari Most, frequented by locals for their daily walks. Offers a superb angle on the Old Bridge and minarets without the commercial pressure of the tourist centre.
Landmark
Bišćević House
Perfectly preserved 17th-century Ottoman dwelling with an inner garden overlooking the Neretva. One of the rare traditional houses open to the public that reveals the Ottoman bourgeois way of life in Herzegovina.
Landmark
Karadžozbeg Mosque
The largest and oldest mosque in Mostar, built in 1557 by Sinan, architect to Suleiman the Magnificent. Its interior adorned with calligraphy and classical proportions make it an architectural jewel often overlooked by visitors.
Landmark
Koski Mehmed-Paša Mosque
17th-century Ottoman mosque offering from its minaret the most authentic panorama over the Stari Most and the rooftops of Mostar. Less visited than the Karadžozbeg mosque, the minaret climb is well worth the effort.
Nature & parks (1)
Viewpoints (3)
Viewpoint
Tima-Irma Café Terrace
Café perched on rocks overlooking the Neretva, with a wooden terrace giving directly onto the Stari Most. Locals come here for cold beer and an unobstructed view, away from the bustle of Kujundžiluk.
Viewpoint
Left Bank of the Neretva (Bulevar)
The promenade along the western boulevard reveals buildings still riddled with bullet holes, silent witnesses to the front line of 1993. An open-air museum that residents traverse daily without paying it much heed.
Viewpoint
Hum Mountain Cross
A 33-metre cross visible from across the city, erected on the summit of Mount Hum at 430 m altitude. The 45-minute walk up from the western quarter is rewarded with a 360° view over Mostar and its surroundings.
Activities (3)
Wikipedia (en) - CC BY-SAActivity
Ars Aevi Gallery Mostar
A branch of the Sarajevo contemporary art museum housed in a building in the old town, featuring works by international artists acquired during the siege. A powerful cultural gesture born from war, largely unknown to visitors.
Activity
Kujundžiluk Bazaar
The historic Ottoman bazaar in Mostar, with copper craftspeople's shops and stalls of local produce: dried lavender, Žilavka wines, figs and Herzegovinian olive oil. Arrive before 9am to see shopkeepers opening their shutters.
Activity
Stari Most Diving (Mostari Diving Club)
Divers launch from the parapet of Stari Most (21 metres) into the glacial Neretva – a local tradition codified over centuries. The club offers training and jumps are organised in summer during official competitions.
More to discover (2)
Place
Partizansko Groblje War Cemetery
Antifascist cemetery designed by Bogdan Bogdanović in 1965, a masterpiece of Yugoslav brutalism overtaken by vegetation. Its stelae in the shape of giant stone flowers have been vandalised but retain rare formal power.
Place
Old Bazaar of Mostar (Stara Čaršija) – Eastern Side
Beyond the souvenir shops of Kujundžiluk, the adjacent alleyways still harbour shoemakers, blacksmiths and grocers serving local residents. A fifteen-minute wander is enough to step beyond the postcard scenery.