When to Go
Best Time to Visit
April–June, September–October. Mild temperatures, patio-cafe weather, thinner crowds than the summer festival season.
Daily Spend in USD
Budget
Budget
$40/day
Mid-range
$90/day
Luxury
$220/day
One of the EU’s cheapest capitals — mid-range hotels near the Old Town run $70, restaurant dinners under $20.
With Kids
Family Travel
The Village Museum (open-air, real relocated houses) is the standout family stop; Herăstrău Park has boat rentals and playgrounds.
Together
Couples Travel
Old Town wine bars, dinner at Caru’ cu Bere (belle-époque interior), and a weekend detour to Peleș Castle in Sinaia.
On Your Own
Solo Travel
Great backpacker infrastructure — hostel walking tours (many free) are the standard on-arrival move. Excellent café-work scene.
Food
What to Eat
- Sarmale. Sour cabbage rolls stuffed with pork and rice — the Romanian holiday-table classic.
- Mici. Grilled meat rolls (no casing) — spiced beef/lamb/pork, eaten with mustard and beer.
- Ciorbă de burtă. Sour tripe soup — Bucharest breakfast classic, better than it sounds.
- Papanași. Cottage-cheese doughnuts topped with sour cream and jam — every restaurant’s dessert star.
Transportation
Getting Around
Metro (4 lines) is fast, cheap, and reaches airport (M6). Uber/Bolt everywhere; taxis cheap but insist on the meter.
Skip the airport taxi mafia — Bolt/Uber for the 40-minute ride into town. Trains to Sinaia (Peleș Castle) run hourly.
Where to Base Yourself
Neighborhoods
- Old Town (Lipscani). Cobblestone bar district — restaurants, clubs, historic churches.
- Cotroceni. Leafy residential streets near the Botanical Garden — belle-époque villas.
- Piata Universitatii. The commercial center — bookshops, cafes, the intellectual heart of the city.
What to Know
Safety
Safer than most Western capitals. Watch for aggressive stray dogs in outer districts and card-skimming ATMs — use bank machines only.