Belgrade to Zlatibor: A Week from White City to Wild Peaks   Recently updated!


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Belgrade to Zlatibor: A Week from White City to Wild Peaks – A Vagabond Life

Belgrade to Zlatibor: A Week from White City to Wild Peaks

Serbia is a country that rewards the patient traveller. With a full week, you can peel back layers that a long weekend would miss — tasting the Habsburg residue of Sremski Karlovci’s wine cellars, floating through the Drina canyon under limestone cliffs, and standing at the Uvac meanders watching griffon vultures ride thermals above the serpentine river. This itinerary starts in Belgrade’s bohemian kafanas, curves through Novi Sad and the monastery-dotted hills of Fruška Gora, then drives deep into western Serbia’s Dinaric wilderness — Zlatibor, Tara, and the otherworldly Uvac Reserve. Estimated budget $600–950 per person.

7-Day Itinerary Overview

Route: Belgrade (1) → Novi Sad + Danube sunset (1) → Sremski Karlovci + Fruška Gora (1) → Zlatibor (1) → Tara National Park (1) → Uvac Reserve (1) → Return to Belgrade (1)

Best for: Slow travellers wanting depth, wine and monastery lovers, nature photographers, adventurous couples

Budget: $600–950 per person (excluding international flights)

Direction: Loop from Belgrade — north through Vojvodina, west to the Dinaric Alps, return to Belgrade

Getting There & Getting Around

Arriving in Serbia

Fly into Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG), conveniently located 18 km west of the city. Direct routes from London, Paris, Berlin, Rome, Istanbul, Dubai, and many more. Air Serbia is the national carrier and offers competitive fares from major European hubs.

Visa: 90-day visa-free entry for EU/UK/US/Canadian/Australian/New Zealand passport holders. Serbia is outside Schengen — your Schengen days are untouched.

Airport to city: Bus A1 (350 RSD, ~€3). Official airport taxi from the designated stand (1,800–2,500 RSD, ~€15–22). Uber and CarGo (local ride-hailing) are 20% cheaper than taxis but pick up from the departures level.

Getting Around Serbia

Rental car: For this 7-day itinerary, a rental car is strongly recommended — especially for Day 3 (Sremski Karlovci + Fruška Gora monasteries), Day 5 (Tara), and Day 6 (Uvac). Expect €30-50/day for a small hatchback with full insurance. Roads are well-maintained on main routes; the Zlatibor–Tara–Uvac roads are winding mountain asphalt — scenic but slow.

Buses: Excellent for city-to-city links. Belgrade to Novi Sad (800 RSD, 1.5 hr), Novi Sad to Zlatibor (1,600 RSD, 4 hr). Book at the bus station, not online — online prices are higher.

Train: Belgrade to Novi Sad has a high-speed Soko line (35 min, 600 RSD / €5) — book on srbbrain.srbija or at the station.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: Belgrade — Museums, Fortress & River Nights

☀️ Morning

Start at Kalemegdan Fortress — the sprawling park-and-citadel complex where the Sava meets the Danube. Climb to the Pobednik (Victor) statue for the classic Belgrade panorama, then wander the ramparts past cannons and the Ottoman bathhouse. Allow 1.5 hours.

🌆 Afternoon

Walk to Skadarlija, the bohemian cobblestone quarter lined with 19th-century kafanas and strung lights. Grab burek and yogurt from a pekara for a quick lunch (150 RSD). Then head to the Museum of Yugoslavia in Dedinje — one of the most fascinating museums in the Balkans. It traces Tito’s Yugoslavia through artefacts, propaganda posters, and the never-completed tomb of the man himself (House of Flowers). Entry is 400 RSD (€3.5).

On your way back to the centre, walk down Knez Mihailova pedestrian street — Belgrade’s main shopping and strolling artery connecting Kalemegdan to Slavija Square.

🌙 Evening

Head to the Sava riverbank for splavovi — Belgrade’s legendary floating nightclubs and lounge bars. Try Savamala, the revamped warehouse district just below the fortress, for a mix of alternative clubs and quiet wine bars. The walk along the quay from Branko’s Bridge to the Sava Bridge is gorgeous under city lights.

Where to eat: Lunch at Pekara Toma for burek (120 RSD / €1). Dinner at Mala Gavrilović for pljeskavica with kajmak (550 RSD / €5). Savamala Brewery for craft beer and zaćin (a local snack mix, 300 RSD / €2.5).

Accommodation: Dorćol hostel ($15-25) or central hotel ($40-65/night).

Entry: Kalemegdan (free), Museum of Yugoslavia (400 RSD).

Pro Tip: The Museum of Yugoslavia is walkable from the city centre (25 min) or take bus 40/41 from Zeleni Venac. It closes at 6 PM — arrive before 3 PM to have enough time. And don’t miss the outdoor sculpture park in the grounds — it’s like a sculpture graveyard of socialist realism.

Day 2: Novi Sad — Fortress, Old Town & Danube Sunset

☀️ Morning

Take the Soko high-speed train from Belgrade’s new Prokop station (officially Beograd Centar) to Novi Sad — just 35 minutes, €5, smooth and comfortable. Arrive at Novi Sad’s modern station and walk 15 minutes to the Danube.

🌆 Afternoon

Cross the Varadin Bridge to Petrovaradin Fortress, the Habsburg masterpiece that guards the city from a 40-metre cliff above the Danube. Walk the clock tower (the “drunken clock” with its reversed hands), explore the atmospheric underground military tunnels (guided tours at 11 AM and 3 PM, 300 RSD), and take the long view across the Danube to Novi Sad’s rooftops.

Descend back across the bridge to the old town. Walk Dunavska Street and Zmaj Jovina, the pedestrian heart of Novi Sad, past the Neo-Renaissance City Hall, the Cathedral, and the playful KEJ statues on the Danube quay (giant chess pieces, a red phone box, a giant bicycle).

🌙 Evening

Find a spot on the Danube quay (Šetalište) for sunset. The light hits the fortress’s western face and the river turns honey-gold — one of the great unsung sunsets in Europe. Stay for dinner along the quay or walk back through the old town.

Where to eat: Fish & Zeleniš on Dunavska for grilled fish with seasonal vegetables (700–900 RSD / €6–8). Plava Frajla for a traditional Vojvodina dinner in a converted townhouse with live jazz (800–1,200 RSD / €7–11). Try the fish paprikaš — a Carpathian basin classic.

Transport: Train Belgrade–Novi Sad (600 RSD return).

Accommodation: Stay in Novi Sad (guesthouse €30–50) for convenience.

Pro Tip: If you’re visiting in July, EXIT Festival takes over Petrovaradin Fortress — buy tickets months in advance and expect the city to be packed. Even without EXIT, Novi Sad’s summer street festivals on Zmaj Jovina are lively and free. And the Fortress tunnels can be cold (12°C) — bring a light jacket.

Day 3: Sremski Karlovci & Fruška Gora Monasteries

☀️ Morning

Take a local bus or drive 15 minutes from Novi Sad to Sremski Karlovci, one of the most beautiful small towns in Serbia. This was the spiritual and cultural centre of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the Habsburg Empire. Walk the main square with its Baroque Four Lions Fountain and the 18th-century St. Nicholas Cathedral. Visit the Patriarchal Court (the former residence of the Serbian Orthodox patriarch) and climb the bell tower of St. Peter and Paul Church for panoramic views of the town and Danube.

🌆 Afternoon

Sremski Karlovci is famous for its wine cellars, dug into the hillside by the Frangipani family centuries ago. Visit Vinarija Kiš for a tasting of Bermet (a sweet, aromatic dessert wine unique to this region — the favourite of the Habsburg court) and the local Riesling.

Then drive into Fruška Gora National Park for a monastery crawl. With 16 surviving medieval monasteries scattered across the forested hills, you can’t see them all in one afternoon. Pick two to three: Krušedol (richest frescoes, 1514), Novo Hopovo (most intact 16th-century architecture), and Velika Remeta (serene and off the tourist trail). Each is free to enter — modest dress required (cover shoulders and knees).

Where to eat: Lunch at Vila Ruža in Sremski Karlovci — serene garden setting, try the prebranac (baked beans, 450 RSD) and grilled vegetables with kajmak. For a splurge, Bermet Restaurant in the old wine cellar (full meal 1,200 RSD / €11).

Transport: Car or taxi from Novi Sad.

Activities: Wine tasting (500–800 RSD per person with cheese pairing).

Pro Tip: Buy a bottle of Bermet in Sremski Karlovci (about 600–800 RSD) — it makes an excellent gift and is almost impossible to find outside Serbia. The monastery bell towers are usually accessible between 10 AM and 1 PM — ask a monk or the caretaker for access. Bring a scarf or shawl for women to cover bare arms inside the churches.

Day 4: Drive to Zlatibor — Gondola & Mountain Dinner

☀️ Morning

Drive west from Novi Sad to Zlatibor (about 3.5 hours, 200 km). The first hour is flat Vojvodina farmland; the last two hours wind through the hills of western Serbia with increasingly dramatic views. Stop in Užice for leg-stretching — climb the remains of the medieval Užice Fortress above the town for a 10-minute viewpoint over the Đetinja River gorge.

🌆 Afternoon

Arrive in Zlatibor and catch the Gold Gondola (Zlatibor Gold Gondola). At 9 km, it’s the world’s longest panoramic gondola. The 25-minute ride climbs from the town (1,000 m) across four towers to Tornik Peak (1,496 m). The view opens up over the entire Zlatibor plateau and, on clear days, stretches to Bosnia and Montenegro. Walk the ridge trail at the top — it’s a gentle 30-minute loop with benches facing the mountains.

🌙 Evening

Zlatibor’s main strip (Kraljevi Konaci) comes alive in the evening — souvenir stalls, ice cream, families walking the promenade, and the ubiquitous sound of local folk-pop. Find a konoba with a fireplace for a proper mountain dinner.

Where to eat: Restoran Zlatibor for lamb ispod sača (under the bell) — fall-apart tender, 1,000 RSD / €9. Kovač for the famous prebranac with uštipci (fried dough balls, 400 RSD). Start with rakija (lozovača — grape rakija, 150 RSD).

Transport: Car from Novi Sad to Zlatibor.

Activities: Gold Gondola round trip (1,400 RSD / €12).

Accommodation: Guesthouse or hotel in Zlatibor (€30–55/night).

Pro Tip: The gondola can close due to high winds — check the weather forecast for Zlatibor before driving up. If the gondola is closed, drive to Tornik (15 min from town) — the road goes most of the way up and the sunset view is just as good. Zlatibor gets busy in August; book accommodation at least a week in advance.

Day 5: Tara National Park — Canyons & Lake Serenity

☀️ Morning

Drive 25 minutes from Zlatibor to Tara National Park. Start early (before 8 AM) and go straight to Banjska Stena viewpoint — a 1-km trail through beech and fir forest ends at a wooden platform suspended over the Drina River canyon, 1,000 metres below. The river is a vivid emerald green, the limestone cliffs tower on both sides, and the view takes in the border between Serbia and Bosnia. This is the single most dramatic natural viewpoint in Serbia. Early morning = fewer people + mist rising from the canyon.

🌆 Afternoon

Explore more of Tara’s network of forest roads and hiking trails. Drive to Perućac Lake, the shimmering reservoir created by a hydroelectric dam on the Drina. Hire a small boat (1,500 RSD for 30 min) to cross to the opposite shore, where a hidden Orthodox chapel sits in a cave. The lake is surrounded by steep forested hills — it feels almost Canadian in its scale.

Pack a picnic or stop at the Mitrovac ranger station area, which has several marked hiking trails of varying lengths. The 3.5-km Crveni Potok trail is a good option — gentle, shady, and leads to a small waterfall where you can swim in summer.

Where to eat: Lunch at Planinarski Dom in Mitrovac for hearty mountain food — bean soup with smoked meat (400 RSD), grilled trout from the Drina (700 RSD / €6). Vikendica Tarski Čardaci near Perućac for lake-view dining — fried river fish and roasted potatoes (600–800 RSD).

Transport: Car (all within 30 min of Zlatibor).

Entry: Tara National Park (free for pedestrians; vehicle 150 RSD).

Pro Tip: Tara’s roads are narrow, winding, and often one-lane with passing bays — drive slowly and use your horn on blind corners (it’s the local custom). The Drina rafting trip from Perućac (1,800 RSD / €15, 2 hours, April–October) is the most unforgettable way to experience the canyon. Book at the lake kiosk the day before. Also, bring mosquito repellent — Tara is dense forest and mozzies are plentiful in summer.

Day 6: Uvac Special Nature Reserve — Griffons & River Meanders

☀️ Morning

Drive east from Zlatibor (about 1.5 hours) to the Uvac Special Nature Reserve — a protected area centred on the Uvac River’s astonishing meanders. The main viewpoint, Molitva (Prayer), offers a dizzying panorama of the river forming a near-complete circle around a limestone hill, emerald water 100 metres below. This is one of those landscapes that doesn’t look real — like a geographic anomaly from a textbook.

🌆 Afternoon

The real magic of Uvac is the griffon vultures. The reserve is home to the largest griffon vulture colony in the Balkans — around 500 birds. Take the boat tour on the Uvac reservoir (1,500–2,000 RSD / €13–17, 1.5 hours). The boat glides through the meanders as the cliffs tower above, and the vultures soar on the thermals right above you. The guides know where the nests are and will stop for photo opportunities. The vultures have a 2.5-metre wingspan — watching them cruise the canyon is a primal experience.

Return to the visitor centre, where there’s a small exhibition on the reserve’s wildlife. If you have time and energy, there’s a 2-km hiking trail from the centre to a secondary viewpoint (Veliki Krš) with yet another staggering angle on the meanders.

Where to eat: The restaurant at Vikend Naselje Zlatar (near the reserve entrance) does grilled meats and trout (500–800 RSD). Bring lunch provisions from Zlatibor — there are no proper restaurants inside the reserve. There are picnic tables at the Molitva viewpoint area — pack sandwiches, ajvar, and cheese.

Transport: Car from Zlatibor (1.5 hr each way).

Activities: Boat tour (€13–17), visitor centre (free).

Accommodation: Return to Zlatibor guesthouse (€30–55).

Pro Tip: The boat tours run on demand — call +381 31 847 266 the day before to book. The best time for vulture spotting is 11 AM–2 PM when the thermals are strongest. Binoculars make a huge difference. And the road to Uvac is the worst on this itinerary — gravel sections, potholes, steep drop-offs — drive a car with decent ground clearance if possible.

Day 7: Return to Belgrade — Last Shopping & Departure

☀️ Morning

Drive from Zlatibor back to Belgrade (about 4 hours, 200 km). The road is mostly highway after Užice, so it’s a straightforward journey. Arrive in Belgrade by early afternoon.

🌆 Afternoon

Head to Knez Mihailova Street for last souvenirs. The Zelena Pijaca (Green Market) at Zeleni Venac is the best place for food souvenirs — ajvar, ajvar spreads, dried plums, homemade rakija in decorative bottles. The Gnezdo design shop in Dorćol sells contemporary Serbian crafts — ceramic rakija sets, wool scarves, enamel mugs.

If you have time for one more cultural stop, visit St. Sava Temple in Vračar — the largest Orthodox church in the Balkans, with its enormous white marble dome and the crypt with its dazzling mosaic programme. It’s free and the crypt alone is worth 30 minutes.

Head to the airport 2 hours before your international flight. The A1 bus runs every 30 minutes from Slavija Square.

Where to eat: Farewell lunch at Zavicaj near Knez Mihailova — Serbian home cooking with cevapi in kajmak (650 RSD) and a complimentary rakija to finish. Grab a final piece of burek from Pekara Trpković (80 RSD!) for the road. The airport food court has passable cevapi at inflatable prices (800 RSD for a portion that costs 250 in town) — eat in the city before you go.

Transport: Return drive from Zlatibor to Belgrade. Bus A1 to airport (350 RSD).

Entry: St. Sava Temple (free).

Pro Tip: Book an evening flight (after 7 PM) to give yourself a full last day. The Belgrade airport lounge (Air Serbia Premium Lounge) accepts Priority Pass and has decent rakija — a fitting farewell. If you’re driving the rental car, return it at the city-centre location (Kneza Miloša) rather than the airport — it’s cheaper and saves backtracking.

Practical Information for Serbia

Visas & Entry

Most Western nationalities (US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Israel) get 90-day visa-free access within a 180-day period. Serbia is not part of the Schengen zone, so your stays here don’t count toward the Schengen 90/180 rule. Your passport must be valid for at least 90 days beyond your exit. Always confirm with the Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs before travelling.

SIM Card & Internet

Buy a tourist SIM at the airport or any VIP Mobile / Telekom Srbija shop. A 15-day plan with 15-20 GB costs 800–1,200 RSD (€7-11). Coverage is excellent across the entire route — Belgrade, Novi Sad, Zlatibor, and even Tara have strong 4G/5G. Uvac Reserve has patchy coverage but all viewpoints have signal. Free WiFi is near-universal in cafés, restaurants, and accommodation.

Money & ATMs

The Serbian Dinar (RSD) is the local currency. €1 ≈ 117 RSD. ATMs are abundant in all cities and Zlatibor town. Credit cards (Visa/Mastercard) are widely accepted in hotels, larger restaurants, and supermarkets. Cash is necessary for: taxis, bus station tickets, monastery donations, small konoba restaurants, and the Uvac boat tour. Bring some euros as backup — exchange offices (menjačnica) in cities give good rates; avoid airport exchange counters.

Language & Communication

Serbian is the official language, written in both Cyrillic (official) and Latin (common usage) scripts. English is widely spoken by younger Serbians in Belgrade and Novi Sad, and at hotels and tourist sites nationwide. In rural areas (Sremski Karlovci wineries, Fruška Gora monasteries, Tara konobe), English is limited. A few Serbian phrases earn genuine warmth: Dobar dan (hello), Hvala (thanks), Izvolite (here you go / can I help you — used constantly), Prijatno (enjoy your meal — say this before eating), Živeli (cheers!).

Best Time to Visit

April–October is the ideal window. May and June: green hills, wildflowers, mild temperatures (22–28°C), and the Fruška Gora monasteries are surrounded by blooming lilacs. July–August: Peak season, hot in Belgrade (35°C+) but the mountains (Zlatibor, Tara) are 10°C cooler — perfect escape. September is the sweet spot: harvest season in Šumadija, grape festivals, golden light, fewer crowds. October brings autumn colours in Tara — the beech forests turn copper.

Winter (Dec–Mar): Zlatibor is a ski resort, Tara is snowy and quiet, but Uvac boat tours may not run and some mountain roads close in heavy snow.

Health & Safety

No mandatory vaccinations for Serbia. Tap water is safe to drink nationwide — the country has abundant mountain springs. Serbia is one of the safest countries in Europe for travellers — violent crime targeting tourists is extremely rare. The main risks are: traffic accidents (drive defensively; Serbian mountain roads are narrow and winding), summer heat (Belgrade regularly hits 38°C in July — carry water and a sun hat), and mosquitoes in Tara (bring DEET-based repellent). Pharmacies (apoteka) are plentiful and sell most over-the-counter medications without prescription.

Budget Summary: 7-Day Serbia Itinerary

Estimated Total: $600–950 per person

  • Accommodation (6 nights): $150–260
  • Car rental (6 days, shared): $130–220
  • Fuel & tolls: $60–90
  • Meals (all restaurants & bakery breakfasts): $130–180
  • Activities (museums, gondola, boat tours, wine tasting, Uvac): $55–80
  • SIM card & miscellaneous: $15–30
  • Contingency: $50–90

Best Season: April to October

Recommended For: Slow travellers, nature and wine lovers, anyone wanting the full Serbia — cities, monasteries, mountains, and wildlife

Money-Saving Tip: The car rental is the biggest variable — book through local Serbian agencies (Avis Serbia, Alamo Serbia) rather than international comparison sites for 20-30% savings. Breakfast at pekara (burek + yogurt = 120 RSD / €1) saves you at least €5 a day compared to hotel breakfasts. And bring a reusable water bottle — public drinking fountains (česma) are everywhere and the water is excellent.

Disclaimer: Prices are estimates in US dollars or local currency (RSD) as indicated. Exchange rates fluctuate; €1 ≈ 117 RSD is approximate. Rental cars and summer accommodation should be booked at least two weeks in advance. Monastery opening hours are irregular — check on the day. The Uvac boat tour should be pre-booked by phone. This itinerary is for general reference only. Always check current visa requirements and travel advisories before booking.