Square Nine Hotel Belgrade
★★★★★Belgrade's design benchmark on Studentski Square — mid-century furniture, a 25-metre indoor pool and a rooftop Japanese restaurant.
Gritty, warm-hearted and wide awake at 3 a.m. — the Balkans' big city
Belgrade sits where the Sava River meets the Danube, guarded by the Kalemegdan fortress, and it delivers big-city energy at prices Western Europe forgot decades ago: a stylish 4-star room in the pedestrianised Stari Grad typically costs €70–120 per night, even on summer weekends. The old town around Knez Mihailova street is the natural first-timer base, bohemian Skadarlija and riverside Dorćol add cobbled charm and Belgrade's best café scene, while Vračar climbs toward the vast Church of Saint Sava. According to HaveNaGo's selection, the city's boutique hotels routinely outscore its big chains on service — Serbian hospitality is not a cliché. Belgrade has no real high season, but book ahead for September's events calendar and warm-weather weekends, when the floating river clubs (splavovi) draw party crowds from across Europe.
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Belgrade's design benchmark on Studentski Square — mid-century furniture, a 25-metre indoor pool and a rooftop Japanese restaurant.
An intimate luxury house in a restored 1929 mansion near the Church of Saint Sava — Vračar calm, marble bathrooms and polished service.
The restored 1957 modernist landmark facing Tašmajdan park — Tito hosted state guests here; today it pairs heritage glamour with a top-floor pool.
The reliable international flagship in Novi Beograd — big rooms, a proper gym and pool, and quick taxi rides across the Sava to the old town.
The Art Nouveau icon on Terazije square, open since 1908 — Einstein and Hitchcock stayed here, and the ground-floor café's Moskva schnitt cake is a city ritual.
Playful design rooms above a shopping arcade on Knez Mihailova — the huge rooftop bar has one of the best fortress-and-river views in town.
A calm garni boutique on a leafy Dorćol street — generous breakfasts, helpful staff and Skadarlija's kafanas three minutes away on foot.
Directly on the Knez Mihailova pedestrian street — compact modern rooms where everything worth seeing in old Belgrade starts at your door.
A full-service tower next to the Sava Centar — large spa and pool, weekend rates that undercut the old town, and easy airport access.
A no-frills socialist-era tower on Slavija roundabout — dated but clean, with rock-bottom prices and trams to everywhere from the door.
A legendary backpacker house with a vine-shaded courtyard just off Skadarlija — family dinners, rakija evenings and instant friends.
From Adriatic cliffside villas to Belgrade rooftop bars — the best hotels across the Balkans for every style and budget.
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Read more →Stari Grad, within walking distance of Knez Mihailova street. You can reach the Kalemegdan fortress, Republic Square and Skadarlija on foot, and taxis or the bus network cover everything else cheaply.
By European capital standards, very. Boutique 4-stars in the centre run €70–120 per night, true five-star luxury rarely exceeds €250, and excellent dinners cost €15–25 per person. Prices stay stable year-round.
Two nights covers Kalemegdan, Saint Sava and a kafana evening in Skadarlija. Stay three to add the Nikola Tesla Museum, Zemun's riverside and a night out on the splavovi — Belgrade's floating clubs.
Yes — violent crime against visitors is rare, and the centre feels lively and watched-over late into the night. Use registered taxis or ride-hailing apps rather than street cabs at the airport and station, and watch for pickpockets in crowded buses.