
Novi Sad
Serbia's cultural capital with vibrant festivals and Danube charm
Look, Novi Sad isn't trying to be Belgrade. And that's exactly why you should go. Serbia's second city sits pretty on the Danube, where cobblestone streets meet world-class festivals and €2 beers flow as freely as the river itself. This is where students from the university mix with artists in converted warehouses, where you can catch a concert at EXIT Festival one night and explore 18th-century Habsburg architecture the next morning. The Petrovaradin Fortress watches over it all like a stern but benevolent grandfather, while down below, the city hums with an energy that feels both ancient and impossibly young.
Best Months
MAY – SEP
~26°C · high crowds
Culture & Context
DANUBE TECH MEETS TRADITION
Novi Sad is Serbia's second-largest city and the capital of Vojvodina, the northern autonomous province. It sits on the Danube, right below Fruška Gora, a low mountain range dotted with medieval monasteries. The city held the title of European Capital of Culture in 2022, and that legacy still echoes in its arts scene, gallery openings, and theater calendar.
It has over 900 tech companies and 10,000+ IT professionals, so you'll find a younger, internationally minded crowd alongside the old-school Vojvodinian culture. English fluency is high, especially among anyone under 40. That said, learning a few words of Serbian earns you immediate goodwill.
Here's the thing about Serbian hospitality: it's not just politeness. Your first "no thank you" to offered food or rakija (fruit brandy) will be completely ignored. Only after refusing three times will your host believe you mean it.
Indoor smoking remains common in restaurants and cafes, which catches a lot of Western visitors off guard. It's not rare, it's the norm. Plan accordingly if you're smoke-sensitive.
Local Customs
THIRD REFUSAL WINS
Serbians don't expect you to speak their language fluently — but they absolutely notice when you try. Saying 'Zdravo' or 'Hvala' gets a warm response every single time.. A 'quick coffee' is not quick.
Coffee culture here means sitting, talking, and letting time pass. A kafa at a kafana (traditional Serbian cafe) routinely takes 2–3 hours. Don't book anything tight around a social coffee invitation..
Toasting is a serious ritual. Make eye contact with every person at the table when you clink glasses. Breaking eye contact during a toast supposedly brings seven years of bad luck — and even young Serbians who laugh about it still follow the rule..
Never bring an even number of flowers as a gift. Even numbers are for funerals. Any florist will warn you before you make the mistake, but good to know anyway..
Refusing rakija or food offered by a host will be ignored the first two times. Only your third refusal signals you're serious. This isn't rudeness — it's hospitality..
Indoor smoking is widespread in restaurants and cafes. This is not a niche thing. If smoke bothers you, sit outside or choose venues explicitly labeled smoke-free..
Avoid bringing up Kosovo or comparing Serbia to other former Yugoslav countries. These are sensitive topics. Listen more than you speak if the conversation goes there..
Local drivers in Novi Sad don't particularly follow road rules. Cross carefully, and if you're renting a car, drive defensively.
Safety
SAFE, WATCH PICKPOCKETS
Novi Sad is genuinely safe by any reasonable standard. Serious crime targeting tourists is rare. The things to actually watch out for are practical and unglamorous.
Petty theft and pickpocketing happen in crowded places, especially during festivals and busy market days. Keep your phone in a front pocket. Taxi overcharging is a real nuisance — always agree on a price upfront or confirm the meter is running before you get in.
Don't hail random taxis off the street if you can avoid it; use CarGo or Pink Taxi apps instead. Currency exchange scams exist around touristy areas, so use bank ATMs and always choose to be charged in local currency (dinars) to avoid dynamic currency conversion fees. Fake tour guides occasionally approach tourists near the fortress.
Buy museum and festival tickets only from official sources. The area around some outer neighborhoods has drug-related activity, but tourists won't encounter this if they're sticking to normal areas. Road safety is a separate issue — local drivers are unpredictable and traffic rules are treated as approximate.
Cross carefully. Solo female travelers consistently rate Novi Sad as safe, with low rates of harassment and a generally welcoming atmosphere. Tap water is safe to drink in Novi Sad.
Getting Around
WALKABLE CITY CENTER
Getting to Novi Sad: fly into Belgrade's Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG), then take a direct bus (€4–6, around 60 minutes) or high-speed train (36 minutes) to the city. The train is faster and more comfortable. No commercial flights land in Novi Sad itself.
Getting around locally: the bus network is good and cheap at ~$0.53 a ride, paid to the driver in cash. But honestly, the city center is compact enough that you can walk almost everywhere you'd actually want to go.
Taxis work fine but negotiate or verify the meter first. CarGo and Pink Taxi apps are the smarter choice — reliable, trackable, and no haggling. Renting a car makes sense if you want to explore Fruška Gora or head to nearby wine villages, but driving in the city itself is more stress than it's worth.
For day trips, the Belgrade bus is frequent and easy. Sremski Karlovci, a charming wine town, is just a short bus ride south.
Useful Phrases
Novi Sad Itineraries
View all
7 Days in Novi Sad: Fortress Views & Forest Vibes
Week · $$$

Novi Sad Jungle Vibes: Fortress, River, and Hidden Corners
Weekend · $$$

Novi Sad for Two: Rivers, Fortresses, and Green Hideaways
Week · $$$

Romantic Novi Sad: Fortress Views & Danube Green Escapes
Weekend · $$$

7 Relaxed Days in Leafy, Laid-Back Novi Sad
Week · $$$

Family-Friendly Novi Sad with Forts, Parks, and Riverside Calm
Weekend · $$$
Things to Do in Novi Sad

Dunavska Street and City Center Walk
Old Town / Center · 90 min
Petrovaradin Fortress
Petrovaradin · 120 min
Danube Park
Old Town / Center · 60 minMoney-Saving Tips
- 1.Buy groceries at Maxi or Idea supermarkets - restaurant meals cost 3-4x more than cooking yourself
- 2.Happy hour at most bars runs 5-7pm with 30% off cocktails and beer
- 3.The city museum offers free entry on Sundays for students and seniors
- 4.Tram day passes cost less than two single rides - get one if you're moving around
- 5.Street food from trucks in Danube Park costs half what restaurants charge for similar items
- 6.Many kafanas offer lunch specials (dnevno menu) for 400-600 dinars including soup and main course
Travel Tips
- •Learn basic Serbian greetings - locals appreciate the effort and English isn't universal outside tourist areas
- •Carry cash - many smaller establishments don't accept cards, especially kafanas and markets
- •The Petrovaradin Fortress has multiple levels and entrances - grab a map at the tourist info to avoid getting lost
- •Tram tickets must be validated when you board - inspectors fine heavily for unstamped tickets
- •Restaurant service can be slow by Western standards - this isn't rudeness, it's the local pace
- •Summer festivals beyond EXIT happen regularly - check event calendars as they're often free or very cheap