Serbia Travel Guide (2026)
How to travel Serbia — Belgrade, Novi Sad and the fortresses of the Danube. Getting around, drive times, airports and private transfers.
Serbia centres on Belgrade, an energetic capital where the Sava meets the Danube beneath the great Kalemegdan fortress. The classic pairing is Belgrade with Novi Sad, an hour north, and its Petrovaradin fortress. Serbia uses the Dinar (not the Euro). Belgrade's Nikola Tesla Airport is about 18 km from the centre. Roads are good and distances modest, so a private transfer or car links Belgrade, Novi Sad and the border corridors easily.
Serbia wears its history hard and lives loudly: a capital fought over for two thousand years, a riverfront that never quite sleeps, and, an hour north, one of the region’s prettiest Habsburg-flavoured cities. It’s an easy country to travel — good roads, short distances — and a natural hub between the Adriatic and Central Europe. Here’s how to travel Serbia in 2026.
How to get around Serbia
Serbia has decent roads and a motorway spine linking Belgrade north to the Hungarian border and south toward North Macedonia. Trains are slow and limited for tourists, so most visitors get around by car or private transfer — comfortable given the modest distances (Belgrade to Novi Sad is only about an hour).
Belgrade — the capital
Belgrade is the heart of any trip: big, energetic, and best felt on foot in the centre. Start at Kalemegdan and the Belgrade Fortress on the bluff where the Sava meets the Danube, walk the pedestrian Knez Mihailova into the old town, and take in the vast Church of Saint Sava and the riverside district of Zemun. Our Belgrade one-day itinerary lays out a route through it all. Nikola Tesla Airport is about 18 km west.
Novi Sad & the north
The standout day trip is Novi Sad, about an hour north — Serbia’s second city, with the mighty Petrovaradin Fortress above the Danube (home to the EXIT festival each July) and a pretty Habsburg centre. Beyond it, the monasteries and wine villages of the Fruška Gora hills and the Art Nouveau town of Subotica near the border round out the region.
Airports & arriving
Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport is the main gateway, about 18 km west of the centre (25–30 minutes by car). Many travellers also arrive overland from Bosnia (Sarajevo), North Macedonia (Skopje) or Croatia.
Cross-border to neighbours
Belgrade is a natural road hub for the wider region:
- Bosnia — Sarajevo is a scenic long-haul south-west.
- North Macedonia — Skopje is south down the motorway.
- Hungary, Croatia, Montenegro — all within a comfortable drive.
Practical info
- Currency: the Serbian Dinar (RSD) — Serbia does not use the Euro, so change some cash or use cards. Euros are occasionally accepted but not reliably.
- Language: Serbian (Cyrillic and Latin scripts); English is common in Belgrade.
- Visas: EU, UK, US, Canadian and Australian citizens enter visa-free for up to 90 days.
- When to go: May–June and September are the best months — warm, with the riverside terraces at their liveliest, without peak-summer heat.
Why use a private transfer in Serbia
With slow trains and a few key sights spread between Belgrade, Novi Sad and the border corridors, a private driver keeps things simple: the fortress and Saint Sava linked without backtracking on Belgrade’s hills, an easy run up to Novi Sad, and comfortable long-haul connections to Sarajevo or Skopje with the border handled for you.
When is the best time to visit Serbia?
Late spring and early autumn (May–June, September) are ideal — warm days, long river evenings, and the outdoor scene at full tilt without the July–August heat. Belgrade is famously a year-round city, though the riverside terraces are a warm-weather pleasure.
Related articles
Belgrade to Novi Sad (2026): How to Get There + What to See
Belgrade to Novi Sad is about 80–95 km — 35 minutes on the new fast train, or an hour by road. How to travel, and what to see in Serbia's baroque second city.
Belgrade in One Day: What to See + Day Trips (2026)
A practical one-day Belgrade itinerary: Kalemegdan fortress, Knez Mihailova, the Church of Saint Sava and Zemun — plus how to get there and day-trip to Novi Sad.
Ready to explore?
Book your private transfer across the Balkans. Fixed prices, scenic stops, local drivers.
Book a Transfer →