Bucharest
City Guide

Bucharest

Rumanía · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget RON45.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language English
Currency RON
Time zone Europe/Bucharest
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Bucharest in One Breath — Down the Grand Axis to the Heaviest Building on Earth

09:00

Arcul de Triumf

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Take a taxi or walk 10 minutes west from Aviatorilor metro through the leafy embassy quarter. Romania's 27-meter triumphal arch stands alone in a traffic roundabout, its carved reliefs narrating the nation's story from Dacian wars to World War I — morning sun strikes the eastern face cleanly for a sharp, shadowless photograph. Circle to the garden island on the northeast side for the only full-frame angle free of passing traffic.

Tip: The interior staircase opens only on December 1st (National Day) — don't waste time looking for an entrance. All the sculptural detail worth seeing is on the exterior panels facing Kiseleff Boulevard.

Open in Google Maps →
10:45

Romanian Athenaeum & Revolution Square

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 50 minutes south along Șoseaua Kiseleff into Calea Victoriei, Bucharest's grandest axis — past the art-nouveau Cantacuzino Palace, faded belle-époque mansions, and elegant shopfronts that make the walk itself prime sightseeing. The Athenaeum appears behind a rose garden: a neoclassical dome with Ionic columns so perfect Romania printed it on the 50-lei banknote. Continue 200 meters south to Revolution Square, where Ceaușescu delivered his final speech from the Communist Party balcony in December 1989 — bullet holes still scar the stone facade.

Tip: Shoot upward from the base of the Athenaeum steps for a vertical frame capturing both the colonnade and dome. At Revolution Square, face the former Party headquarters and look right of the balcony — the bullet scars from 1989 are still there, and most visitors walk past without noticing.

Open in Google Maps →
12:00

Old Town Lipscani & Stavropoleos Monastery

Neighborhood
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Walk 12 minutes south on Calea Victoriei — pause at the CEC Palace for one shot of its ornate glass-and-iron dome — then turn left into the cobblestoned pedestrian streets of the Old Town. Strada Lipscani and Strada Covaci form the medieval merchant core: crumbling art-deco facades patched with street art, wine bars spilling onto the cobbles. Halfway through, duck into Stavropoleos Monastery (1724) on the street of the same name — its intricately carved stone loggia and silent courtyard are the most beautiful architectural moment in Bucharest, hidden two steps from the bar noise.

Tip: The monastery courtyard is through the gate to the left of the church entrance — most visitors miss it entirely. Inside, 18th-century tombstones and stone fragments line the walls like a secret open-air museum. Photograph the carved columns from the far corner for the best symmetry.

Open in Google Maps →
13:00

Hanu' lui Manuc

Food
Duration: 40min Estimated cost: €8

Exit Old Town at its southern end and you're standing in the courtyard of Bucharest's oldest inn (1808), with two-story wooden galleries wrapped around an open-air terrace. Order mici — Romania's signature grilled skinless sausages, smoky and fiercely garlicky, served with mustard and fresh bread (25 RON / €5). Add a bowl of ciorbă de burtă, the tangy tripe soup with sour cream and hot chili that locals swear by (22 RON / €4.50). Fifteen minutes from order to plate.

Tip: Eat in the courtyard, not inside — the wooden galleries are the real attraction. Mici lose their magic once they cool, so eat them the moment they hit the table. Budget 30 minutes, photograph the galleries, and move.

Open in Google Maps →
14:30

Palace of the Parliament

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south through Piața Unirii and west along Bulevardul Unirii — the boulevard Ceaușescu demolished 7,000 homes to build, deliberately one meter longer than the Champs-Élysées — 20 minutes total. The Parliament materializes at the western end: 350,000 square meters, 1,100 rooms, twelve stories above ground and eight below — the heaviest building on the planet at 4.1 billion kilograms. Afternoon light rakes across the neoclassical facade at an angle that reveals the building's absurd scale in a way flat midday sun never could.

Tip: The best exterior shot is from the center median of Bulevardul Unirii, about 200 meters east, where the fountains and lampposts frame the full facade. Walk around to the southwest corner via Strada Izvor to grasp the building's terrifying depth from the side — the perspective shift is genuinely disorienting.

Open in Google Maps →
19:00

Caru' cu Bere

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €20

Walk 20 minutes back north through Izvor Park to Old Town — the afternoon gap is perfect for a terrace beer on Strada Lipscani or browsing vintage shops on Strada Covaci. At 19:00, head to Strada Stavropoleos 5, where a carved wooden doorway opens into Bucharest's most legendary beer hall, pouring since 1879 — Neo-Gothic stained glass, painted ceilings, carved wood columns. Order the sarmale: cabbage rolls stuffed with spiced pork on a bed of mămăligă polenta crowned with sour cream (48 RON / €10). Finish with papanași — fried doughnuts the size of your fist, drenched in sour cream and wild berry jam (32 RON / €6.50).

Tip: Reserve ahead — walk-ins after 19:00 on weekends face a 30-minute wait. Ask for a ground-floor table near the central column for the best ceiling view. The tourist trap to avoid in this area: any Strada Lipscani terrace where someone stands outside waving a laminated photo menu at you — those places charge double for half the quality.

Open in Google Maps →
Trip builder

Plan this trip around Bucharest

Turn this guide into a bookable rail itinerary with FlipEarth.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Bucharest?

Most travelers enjoy Bucharest in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Bucharest?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Bucharest?

A practical starting point is about €45 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Bucharest?

A good first shortlist for Bucharest includes Arcul de Triumf, Romanian Athenaeum & Revolution Square, Palace of the Parliament.