Nida (German: Nidden) is a town in Lithuania located on the Curonian Spit. The town was first settled by Germans in the 15th century AD and was part of Prussia before 1945. It is very popular with German tourists because the German writer Thomas Mann had a summer house here which he regularly visited in the early 1930s.
Bus times:
The bus takes 50 min for the full distance, depending on whether the bus does side tours to the smaller villages. It cost €3.40 between Smiltynė and Nida, €1.40 between Smiltynė and Juodkrantė, and €2.30 between Juodkrantė and Nida.
Most travellers arrive via ferry from Klaipeda:
A car or a motorbike entering Neringa municipality that contains most of the spit on the Lithuanian side is charged an ecological fee of €5, and campers are charged €15 (2017 rates).
The land border to Russian province Kaliningrad at Nida - Morskoje has a 24-hr service. Ecological fee - . This border cannot be crossed on foot, but is permitted by bicycle (August 2019).
If you are leaving from Lithuania and wish to travel into Kaliningrad Oblast, bear in mind that travel to Russia requires a valid Russian visa. An easy to obtain E-Visa for Kaliningrad Oblast is available for citizens of 51 states including most of Europe.
You can rent a bicycle and ride all the way to Juodkrante (about 30 km), visiting Preila and Pervalka en route. The bicycle track goes by the Curonian Lagoon for about 15 km, then through a pine forest and finally by the sea, letting you to see lots of beautiful sceneries. Don't forget to stop by the Vecekrugas dune (~1 km before Preila) and the Dead Dunes (Negyvosios kopos) near Pervalka.
First of all - fish. Try some smoke-dried eel or bream.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division