View of Saint Sava, orthodox church in Belgrade, Serbia.
Photograph: Shutterstock
Photograph: Shutterstock

Kebabs, fruit brandy and floating clubs: These are the best things to do in Belgrade for 2026

Looking for the best things to do in Belgrade? The Serbian capital is filled with extraordinary food, culture, and one-of-a-kind nightlife. Here are our top recommendations.

Angela Hui
Contributor: Daniela Toporek
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What’s the deal with Belgrade?

Besides producing a world tennis legend in Novak Djokovic, southeastern Europe’s landlocked Serbia has plenty to show off about. Tourism is rising thanks to its Exit Festival in second city, Novi Sad, but word is spreading about its underrated capital, Belgrade, and its status as a year-round party city. It might not be classically beautiful, but you’ll still get the views thanks to its conjoining rivers that cut across the city, the Sava and the Danube – and these rivers are home to splavovi, floating river clubs. Plus, the city has no shortage of bombed-out buildings transformed into postcommunist clubs, unusual bars and creative hubs. Before you hit the town, line your stomach with hearty Serbian cuisine and have a shot or two of national drink rakija, a fruit brandy that’s consumed like water on any occasion.

If you only do one thing

Belgrade Fortress might be the top tourist attraction, but it’s number one for a reason. Inside the former defensive outpost you’ll find Kalemegdan Park, a zoo, a dinosaur park, a military museum, a Roman well (it’s not Roman and it doesn’t have any water in it) and hidden Ružica Church, with its chandelier made from bullets.

Belgrade FortressBelgrade Fortress. Photograph: Shutterstock

Dine in style

Thanks to its riverside location, Stara Carinarnica gets some of the city’s best seafood. Try smuđ, catfish and carp in an old customs house that looks as if time has stood still since it was built in 1723. Or check out Ambar and its lunchtime menu of unlimited Balkan small plates. 

Eat on the cheap

If you're looking to eat (and ball) on a budget, Belgraders have a hankering for hearty, flavourful and affodable hangover food (probably to power through all the partying). Local delicacies include pljeskavica (the hamburger’s illegitimate brother) at Loki (cash only), ćevapi (like a Serbian kebab served with chopped onion and sour cream) from To Je To (also cash only) and a banging breakfast burek (essentially a breakfast burrito but with flaky pastry) from bakery Pekara Čarli.

Drink like a local

Head to Kafeterija: a one-stop-shop complete with a barber, a playroom for kids and a shop for beans to take home. When the sun sets, trade caffeine for rakija at Rakia Bar, where they have more than 100 flavours.

Belgrade FortressA splav in Belgrade. Photograph: Flickr / lab604

Stay up late

Pre-drink at Cetinjska, a cluster of bars, breweries and music venues surrounding a disused car park. Make your next port of call riverside clubbing hotspot Klub 20/44 (aka ‘the boat’) or the abattoir-turned-brutalist club, Drugstore.

Soak up the vibes

Wander around Belgrade’s markets and get a feel for how the locals shop. A labyrinth of stalls showcase everything from organic vegetables to street food and bric-à-brac. The biggest is Kalenić Farmers Market, but the Zeleni Venac neighbourhood’s striking architecture and views makes its market worth a look in too.

Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade, Serbia

Get cultural

The Nikola Tesla Museum explores history while honouring the late inventor, one of the region’s most important figures (just ask Elon Musk). KC Grad is a cultural powerhouse that functions as a home to workshops, exhibitions, dining and nightly music events.

Belgrade FortressExit Festival. Photograph: Wikimedia Commons / Bernard Bodo

Take a day trip

Time your trip to coincide with Exit Festival, which takes place at the start of July in Novi Sad’s Petrovaradin Fortress. Only an hour’s drive away from the capital, start at Novi Sad’s public square Trg Slobode and then amble around Dunavska Street to see pretty pastel bookshops, boutiques and cafés.

Hang out in this ’hood

One of the city’s oldest neighbourhoods, Dorćol, is one of its most exciting, with an indie, artsy vibe and a bit of that watery life since it’s split by the Danube. Start the night with cocktails at D Bar, and end a night of debauchery at one of the area’s most popular bistros, Smokvica, which doubles as a B&B (and the second ‘B’ is magnificent).

Only in Belgrade...

Make a splash at the year-round parties on floating river clubs called splavs (short for splavovi). Dance until the early hours at the likes of Shake ‘N’ Shake and Lasta.

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