Plaža Borik Mali Lošinj: Pebble Shore in Sunčana Uvala
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Plaža Borik, Mali Lošinj: Pebble Shore and Flat Rocks in Sunčana Uvala
Croatia | Mali Lošinj | Kvarner Gulf
The western orientation of Plaža Borik is the detail that shapes the entire day there. The beach faces directly toward the island of Susak — the low, sandy island visible on the horizon across the open water — and that alignment means the sun is on the shore from early morning through to the last light of the evening, when the flat rocks that extend across much of the upper beach hold the warmth long after the water has cooled. That particular quality of late-afternoon light on west-facing Adriatic rock, with the silhouette of Susak on the horizon, is the image most associated with Borik among the people who return to it year after year.
Plaža Borik sits in Sunčana Uvala — Sunny Bay — approximately two kilometres from the centre of Mali Lošinj along the western shore of the island. It is a pebble beach with natural stone plateaus — flat rock surfaces that have been smoothed over centuries by tide and weather — and it sits within the broader arc of beaches that runs from Čikat Bay to the north through Sunčana Uvala and connects the town’s beach offer along a continuous coastal promenade backed by the Čikat pine forest. The beach holds the Blue Flag for water quality — a consistent marker of the clean, well-circulated conditions that the open western exposure to the Adriatic maintains in this bay.
Getting There: The Čikat Forest Promenade from Mali Lošinj Harbour
From Mali Lošinj harbour, the promenade runs south and west through the Čikat pine forest — one of the most distinctive stretches of coastal walking on the island, with the forest canopy overhead and the sea visible through the trees to the right. The walk to Plaža Borik takes approximately twenty minutes at an easy pace, passing through the Čikat bay area and continuing into Sunčana Uvala. The path is paved, well-maintained, and flat for the majority of its length, which makes it accessible on foot for most visitors without requiring particular fitness or footwear.
By bicycle, the island’s marked bike paths follow the same coastal terrain and connect Mali Lošinj centre to Sunčana Uvala without requiring road cycling. The island’s cycling network is genuinely useful for reaching the Sunčana Uvala beaches — the distance from town is short enough to be practical and the terrain is well-suited to leisure cycling rather than technical riding.
By car, the Sunčana Uvala area is accessible from the main road through Mali Lošinj with organised parking facilities a short walk from the shore. The same promenade that connects Borik to the town also links it to Veli Žal Beach Mali Lošinj — the Blue Flag pebble beach 100 metres from Hotel Aurora that sits slightly closer to the town centre within the same Sunčana Uvala bay — making it easy to move between the two beaches along the shore without returning to the road.
The Shore: Pebble, Flat Rocks, and a West-Facing Bay
The shore at Plaža Borik combines two surface types that define different ways of spending time on it. The pebble sections provide the gradual, accessible entry into the sea that makes the beach practical for families with children — the stones worn smooth, the slope gentle, the transition from shore to shallow water straightforward without the abrupt depth changes that some of the island’s rockier locations carry. The flat natural rock plateaus that extend across sections of the upper beach provide the alternative: broad, stable surfaces that face the western sun directly and that are, in the late afternoon and evening, among the most pleasant places to sit on the entire Lošinj western coast.
The rocks face Susak — the inhabited sandy island approximately fifteen kilometres to the west — and the sunset that develops over that island from the Borik shore is the specific daily event that the beach’s orientation makes available. The light moves across the water toward Susak in the early evening, the island’s low profile catching the colour as the sun drops behind it, and the flat rocks at Borik are positioned to receive that view without obstruction. It is worth timing a visit to still be on the beach when it happens.
The Čikat pine forest backs the shore above the beach, providing natural shade across the upper area and the specific aromatic quality — Aleppo pine resin in the heat, the salt air off the water — that is the sensory signature of the Mali Lošinj western shore wherever the forest and the sea meet.
Water Quality and Swimming at Plaža Borik
The water quality at Plaža Borik is maintained to Blue Flag standard — the same certification that Veli Žal in the same bay holds, and that the broader Sunčana Uvala beach area consistently achieves. The beach faces the open western Adriatic toward Susak and the open sea beyond, and that exposure to circulation keeps the water at Borik clean and constantly refreshed in a way that more enclosed inlets, however calm, do not always match.
The visibility is exceptional — the seabed clearly legible from the surface through the clear water column, the colour the pale turquoise that the combination of clean water and the rocky and pebbly bottom produces in direct Mediterranean light. The water deepens relatively quickly from the pebble shoreline, which makes Borik particularly suited to swimmers who prefer open, deep water over the extended shallows of a gradually shelving sandy beach. Snorkelling along the rocky margins of the bay is productive — the rock formations carry the marine life typical of clean Kvarner waters, and the visibility is sufficient to follow it at depth without diving equipment.
The Lošinj archipelago’s resident bottlenose dolphin population ranges along the western coast of the island, and early morning hours at Borik — before the boat traffic from Mali Lošinj harbour builds — occasionally produce sightings from the shore or from the water. This is a feature of the island environment as a whole rather than specific to Borik, but the open western exposure of the bay gives it a better line of sight to the open water where dolphin activity is most commonly observed.
Facilities at Plaža Borik
The facilities at Plaža Borik are well-matched to a beach of its scale and visitor profile. Freshwater showers and changing cabins are integrated into the site without overwhelming the natural character of the shore. Sunbed and umbrella rental is available across both the pebble and platform sections — the pine forest shade above the upper beach provides a natural alternative for those who prefer to position themselves back from the waterline.
Pedal boat and sea kayak rental supports the water-based activity option, and the calm open-bay conditions at Borik make both practical for the morning hours when the surface is at its most settled. Lifeguards are on duty during the peak summer season in the designated swimming zones. The paths leading to the beach from the promenade are paved and accessible for prams and pushchairs, which matters for families arriving on foot from the town centre or from the accommodation in the Čikat and Sunčana Uvala hotel zone.
Plaža Borik with Families and Children
The combination of gradual pebble entry, calm open-bay water, pine shade above the upper shore, and the flat rock platforms for supervised play makes Plaža Borik one of the more complete family beach environments in the Sunčana Uvala area. The gradual entry is the key practical advantage for parents with young children — the pebble slope allows toddlers to move into the shallows at their own pace without the stepped or abrupt entry that some of the island’s more developed concrete platforms carry.
The flat rock sections provide natural rock pool exploration for older children — the small crabs, fish, and invertebrates that inhabit the shallow rock surfaces at the edges of the bay are the kind of discovery that occupies children between swims without requiring any provision beyond what the beach itself contains. The proximity of the pine forest paths behind the shore gives a shaded alternative when the midday sun on the open rocks is too direct, and the promenade connection to Latino Beach Mali Lošinj in Velopin — accessible along the coastal path in the opposite direction from the town — extends the day’s range for families who want to explore more of the western shore.
The Borik Beach Bar and the Sunset Rocks
The Borik Beach Bar is positioned directly above the shore, with a terrace that faces the open water toward Susak and the western horizon. It serves coffee and drinks through the day — the practical provision of any well-positioned beach bar — but its specific value at Borik is its position relative to the evening light. The terrace faces directly into the sunset that the beach’s western orientation produces, and spending the transition from afternoon to evening on that terrace, with the flat rocks below still catching the last direct sun and Susak silhouetted against the fading light across the water, is the particular and repeatable pleasure that Borik offers above its basic beach provision.
For a full meal, the town centre a twenty-minute walk along the Čikat promenade carries the full range of Lošinj regional cooking — local lamb seasoned with the island’s wild sage and rosemary, fresh Adriatic fish, and the olive oil from the island’s surviving groves. The walk back through the Čikat forest in the early evening, with the light through the pine canopy from the west and the sound of the sea below the path, is one of the more quietly satisfying conclusions to a beach day that the island offers.
Plaža Borik in the Sunčana Uvala Beach Area
Sunčana Uvala — Sunny Bay — contains several distinct beach locations within a short distance of each other, all sharing the same Blue Flag water quality and the same Čikat forest backdrop while differing in surface, infrastructure, and character. Veli Žal sits slightly closer to the town centre with a promenade and hotel infrastructure around it. Borik sits further along the bay with its flat rock platforms and the more open western exposure that makes the sunset view particularly direct. The two beaches are connected by the coastal path and complement rather than duplicate each other — the choice between them on any given day is a question of preference for surface type and distance from the town centre rather than any meaningful difference in water quality or setting.
The broader Mali Lošinj beach offer extends from Kadin Beach at the town’s northern entrance through Čikat, Sunčana Uvala, and south toward Srebrna and Zlatna bays — a continuous coastal arc that the island’s promenade network makes walkable in sections and that gives Mali Lošinj a depth of beach provision that few towns of its size on the Croatian coast can match.
Plaža Borik in Mali Lošinj is a beach defined by two things: the gradual pebble entry that makes it one of the more accessible shores for families in the Sunčana Uvala area, and the west-facing flat rocks that make the evening hour there specific to this bay and no other.
Come in the afternoon. Stay for the rocks and the light on Susak.
The walk back through the Čikat forest in the dusk is the right ending.
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