The Lika is a river in Croatia which gives its name to the Lika region. It is long and it has a basin with an area of . Its average discharge at the measurement station in Bilaj (covering 225 km<sup>2</sup> of the basin) is 7.33 m<sup>3</sup>/s, and it can go completely dry.
It is known as a sinking river because at the end of its course, it flows into a series of ponors or swallow-holes and disappears from the surface. The Lika River rises near the village of Kukljiàat the foot of the Velebit Mountains, flows in a northwesterly direction past the town of GospiÃÂ, enters and leaves Lake Kruà ¡ÃÂica, and continues to the northwest until it sinks into the karst topography at ponors near Lipovo Polje.
The name is mostly likely to derive from the Proto-Indo European root *uïleikuï- âÂÂto be(come) moist, to moistenâÂÂ.