From Sarajevo to Vlašić — Bosnia’s largest mountain plateau and a full-service ski resort above Travnik. Skiing December–March, alpine hiking and the famous Vlašić cheese farms in summer. The road winds up via Travnik’s Ottoman old town.
Drive from Sarajevo to Vlašić in approximately 2h 10m. Private transfer from €155 per vehicle, all-inclusive — fuel, tolls, English-speaking driver, door-to-door.
Your driver picks you up anywhere in Sarajevo. The road heads west through the Lašva valley toward Travnik and the Central Bosnian mountains.
The Ottoman vizier capital of Bosnia — hilltop fortress, Coloured Mosque, and birthplace of Nobel laureate Ivo Andrić. Worth a 30-minute break before the mountain climb.
Arrive at your hotel on Babanovac — the main Vlašić resort. Ski lifts, mountain chalets, and the signature Vlašić cheese farms are all within walking distance.
Per vehicle, not per person. All prices include tolls, fuel, luggage, water, and child seats on request.
Picked up from Sarajevo, dropped at your mountain chalet
Winter tyres Dec–Mar, experienced mountain drivers
Quick photo stop at the Ottoman fortress included
Professional, local, English-speaking driver
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Vlašić is Bosnia’s largest mountain plateau — a 1,930-metre massif above Travnik in Central Bosnia (summit Opaljenik 1,933 m). The main resort is Babanovac at 1,260 m altitude, with 6 ski lifts and 14 km of runs across 11 trails covering beginner blues to black-rated downhill. Ski season typically runs from mid-December to late March with consistently reliable snow; Babanovac is 40-60% cheaper than European equivalents and has become the go-to winter weekend for Bosnians, Croats and Slovenes. Summer transforms the plateau into a hiking and mountain-biking destination where grass pastures have been used for sheep transhumance continuously since the Middle Ages. Vlašić sheep-cheese (aged in sheepskin, unique in the Balkans) is the region’s signature product.
From Sarajevo the M-5 heads north-west via Kiseljak and the Kakanj-Zenica industrial corridor to Travnik (90 km, 90 minutes). From Travnik the road turns sharply uphill, climbing 1,000 m in 20 km via hairpin switchbacks to Babanovac on the plateau. Total drive: 2h 10m in good conditions; add 10-15 minutes in snow. Chains or winter tyres mandatory November-March.
Travnik is worth a 45-60 minute stop even if you’re pressing on to the mountain. It was the seat of the Ottoman Grand Vizier of Bosnia from 1697 to 1850, and Nobel Prize winner Ivo Andrić’s novel “Bosnian Chronicle” (Travnička hronika) is set in its 19th-century consular quarter. The two-tower medieval fortress rises above the town, and the painted 16th-century Šarena (Colourful) Mosque is unique in Bosnia for its interior floral frescoes. The famous Travnik cheese tastings happen at shops along Bosanska street.
Babanovac has the main ski infrastructure (hotels Blanka, Pahuljica, Central). Ski pass prices are well under €25/day. The longest run is 2.8 km. Off-piste ski-touring on the plateau is excellent. Summer activities: paragliding from the Opaljenik summit, mountain biking on waymarked trails, and hiking to the Ugar canyon (45-minute walk from Babanovac). The plateau villages of Han-Bila, Galica and Međuvode sell cheese, honey and lamb directly from shepherd families.
Ski season: mid-December to late March, peak at New Year and Orthodox Christmas. Summer: June-September for hiking, paragliding and cheese-touring. Shoulder seasons (April-May, October-November) are quiet with limited infrastructure. Weekends are busier than weekdays year-round; Friday-afternoon arrivals avoid the Saturday-morning rush on the switchback road.
There is no direct bus to Babanovac — you would need a Sarajevo–Travnik bus and then a local onward transfer, which doesn’t always run. In winter with ski gear and family, private transfer door-to-door with a driver who handles the mountain switchbacks is the only realistic option. Many ski groups book return transfers for day or weekend trips.
Approximately 2 hours 10 minutes covering 120 km. The last 20 km is a mountain road with switchbacks — factor in 10–15 minutes extra in snowy conditions.
Typically December to mid-March. The main runs at Babanovac rely on natural snow plus snow-making. Equipment rental and ski schools operate at the base.
Hiking, mountain biking, horse riding, paragliding, and cheese farm visits. Temperatures are 10–15°C cooler than Sarajevo — pack a sweater even in July.
Yes. The plateau has dozens of traditional farms that sell direct. Ask your driver — many of them know specific farms for best quality. Cash only on the plateau.
Yes. A minivan comfortably fits skis, boots, and winter luggage for up to 7 people. Ski bags in the boot, gear in the cabin.
Yes. Most guests stop in Travnik for 30–60 minutes on the way up. Fortress climb, Blue Mosque, and Plava Voda spring in the old town.
“Ski weekend on Vlašić was brilliant. Driver handled the snowy roads professionally, winter tyres were on. Much easier than renting a 4x4.”
“Summer hike on Vlašić — driver stopped at a farm where we bought the best cheese we’ve ever tasted. Worth the transfer alone.”
Fixed price €155 sedan, €186 minivan. Free cancellation up to 24 hours before.