Istria Croatia, Istria
Koversada Naturist Park
Maistra Camping Koversada Uncovered Naturist Mobile Homes sits within the sprawling Koversada naturist resort on a wooded peninsula just south of Vrsar, on Istria's west coast.
- Campground
- Mobile Home Park
- Rv Park
- Lodging
- Service
About this place
Maistra Camping Koversada Uncovered Naturist Mobile Homes sits within the sprawling Koversada naturist resort on a wooded peninsula just south of Vrsar, on Istria's west coast. Koversada itself is one of Europe's oldest purpose-built FKK destinations — opened in 1961 — and still one of the largest, covering roughly 120 hectares of Adriatic waterfront. The mobile home park offers standalone accommodation within the broader Koversada ecosystem: you check in, collect keys, and stay in a furnished unit without pitching a tent or parking an RV. You share the same beaches, restaurant terraces, sports courts, and harborside promenade as the rest of the camp. The peninsula's shoreline is a mix of pebble coves and concrete platforms; water is clean and swimmable but reef shoes help on the rocky stretches. Koversada's sheer size means you'll find both lively zones near the central marina and quieter pockets toward the northern tip. The Maistra hotel group has operated Koversada since 2006 and keeps infrastructure in good repair — showers, waste disposal, Wi-Fi, mini-markets, and evening entertainment run April through October. Expect German, Austrian, and northern-Italian regulars in high season, plus a steady Croatian contingent on weekends. Booking a mobile home means you skip the tent-stakes and bring less gear, but you're still inside a classic Yugoslav-era FKK naselje with all the retro charm and continental vibe that entails.
Visitor notes
Contributed by ClothingOptional.org Editorial Team
Who visits
Koversada draws the full cross-section of European naturists: German and Austrian couples and families dominate July–August, Italians fill weekends, and a smaller number of Dutch, Czech, and Croatian visitors round out the mix. Age range skews 40+, though you'll see younger couples and school-age kids in the mobile home sections. Solo travelers are less common but not unusual. Atmosphere is relaxed, social-by-choice, and decidedly continental — more Campingplatz than boutique hideaway.
How to find it
Koversada is two kilometres south of Vrsar on the Istrian coast, signposted from the D75 local road. If you're driving the coastal Magistrala (D21), exit at Vrsar and follow signs toward the peninsula. The mobile home park shares the main Koversada entrance gate; reception is straight ahead. Parking is included with your reservation. Pula airport is 50 km south; Trieste 90 km north. No ferry required — you drive straight onto the peninsula.
Things to watch out for
Season runs April to mid-October; outside those months the site is closed. July–August books out weeks in advance — reserve early. The peninsula's rocky shoreline and concrete platforms make reef shoes or neoprene slippers worthwhile. Koversada is clothing-optional throughout, but textiles are not welcome on the beaches or in common areas; visitors who aren't comfortable being fully nude should choose a different camp. Bura wind can kick up whitecaps and make swimming less pleasant on windy autumn days.
Last updated
Etiquette & ground rules
Nudity is welcomed throughout the FKK campsite when weather permits. Use a towel on shared seating; photo and video are not allowed without explicit consent. Quiet hours and any age or guest policies are posted at reception — check before booking.
Where you can stay
- campground
- mobile home
- apartment
- tent pitch
Know this spot?
Report an update
Beach closed? Parking price changed? Section moved? Send a short note and we'll check it.
Also in Istria
More places nearby
Istria, Croatia
Barbariga FKK beach
Barbariga FKK beach lies on Istria's southwestern shore between Pula and the larger resort towns of Fažana and Banjole. It's a free naturist beach — no gate, no attendant — that has served local and visiting nudists for decades, part of the broader constellation of Istrian clothing-optional spots that dot the rocky coastline below the D66 and smaller coastal roads. The shoreline here is typical Adriatic: flat limestone shelves and smooth stone platforms that slope gently into clear water. You won't find a manicured sunbathing lawn like you would at Valalta or Koversada, but you'll also skip the resort entry fee. Bring a towel or mat; the rock warms up quickly in high summer. The beach draws a quieter crowd than the big FKK camps — mostly regulars who prefer an unstructured day by the water without the infrastructure or animation programme. Trees offer patchy shade along the access path, but the shore itself is wide open. Reef shoes are strongly recommended; the limestone can be sharp underfoot and urchins colonize the shallows. There are no facilities on-site — no shower, no café, no rental chair — so pack everything you need for the day. Peroj village, a kilometre or so inland, has a small shop and café if you need supplies.
Istria, Croatia
FKK Beach
FKK Beach sits on the Istrian peninsula just outside Rabac, a small seaside town that transformed from a fishing village into a modest resort strip in the second half of the 20th century. The beach lies along the Golubijera area, a stretch of rocky coastline south of Rabac's main harbor. Like most Istrian FKK sites, this is a free beach rather than a purpose-built resort — no gates, no reception, no organized sunbed rental. You'll find a naturist-tolerant cove frequented by the usual Adriatic FKK crowd: German and Austrian tourists, a sprinkling of Italians, and Croatian families on summer weekends. The shoreline is typical eastern-Istrian rock and pebble; the water is clean and drops off fairly quickly. Shade is limited, so bring an umbrella if you're staying all day. The atmosphere is low-key and self-sufficient — pack in what you need and pack it out. Rabac itself offers ATMs, groceries, and a handful of restaurants within walking distance, but the beach has no on-site facilities. This is a good option if you're touring the Istrian coast by car and want a clothing-optional stop without committing to a resort stay.
Istria, Croatia
FKK beach Banjole
FKK beach Banjole is a free naturist beach tucked into the low rocky coastline south of Pula, near the small village of Banjole. The Istrian peninsula's southern tip is dotted with dozens of unofficial FKK coves, and this one sits among them—no facilities, no gate, just a quiet stretch of coast favored by locals and seasonal visitors who prefer simpler settings over the region's larger resorts like Valalta or Koversada. The shoreline here is typical Istrian rock platform: flat shelves, some with ladders or cut steps into the sea, others requiring a careful scramble. Water is clean and gradually deepens. The beach itself is informal—people spread towels on the rock, under pine shade where available, or on small pebble patches. You won't find showers, a bar, or marked boundaries; it's the kind of place regulars find by word of mouth or by walking the coastal path. Banjole village is a five-minute drive from Pula and sees summer overflow from the city's beach-goers, so weekends in July and August can draw a mixed crowd, some textile, some not. Respect and common sense sort things out. The setting is peaceful: blue water, cicadas, occasional fishing boats. If you're touring Istria's FKK sites and want a contrast to the manicured resort experience, Banjole offers that quiet, unpolished alternative.