What is the Cheapest European City I can visit this summer?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Check out the second and third cities instead of the major ones.


This.

My husband (who literally keeps a running tally for all expenses in his head) thought most of the places we visited in Italy and Croatia were relatively cheap (in terms of food and drinks).

The trick is to avoid the areas you know are overpriced and avoid the tourist traps. You’ll find better food and better prices 5 blocks off the beaten path.

While I’ve heard Albania is cheap, the Albanians I know living in the dc metro area don’t go back unless there’s a funeral (and some have even skipped those).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:11:14 PP here. Another PP was right to call me out on my characterization of Bucharest as a hellhole - I was mainly basing that on memories of growing up in Romania in the 80s. Bucharest is sprawling and drab to me - curious whether others found it charming. Mostly, the point is that there are so many other beautiful places to visit in Romania. It's safe, great culture and history, and people are friendly. There's a little bit of a language barrier (many people speak French as a second language, though English is more prevalent among the younger generation). Totally worth visiting!!


I think it sounds lovely. Of course you will have mixed feelings growing up there, especially under communism.
I really want to visit someday.
Anonymous
Lisbon, Portugal is reasonable.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Central or Eastern Europe. Krakow and Bucharest are both lovely in summer.


Yes, Krakow ( Cracow) is lovely, but keep in mind that there is no direct flight to Poland from Washington D.C.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Check out the second and third cities instead of the major ones.


This.

My husband (who literally keeps a running tally for all expenses in his head) thought most of the places we visited in Italy and Croatia were relatively cheap (in terms of food and drinks).

The trick is to avoid the areas you know are overpriced and avoid the tourist traps. You’ll find better food and better prices 5 blocks off the beaten path.

While I’ve heard Albania is cheap, the Albanians I know living in the dc metro area don’t go back unless there’s a funeral (and some have even skipped those).


Italy can be very affordable if you know what you're doing and where you go. And so rewarding.

I'd also throw in Romania as a great undervalued travel destination.
Anonymous
Eastern Europe is right.

But if you mean traditional Europe, Porto or Lisbon.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:11:14 PP here. Another PP was right to call me out on my characterization of Bucharest as a hellhole - I was mainly basing that on memories of growing up in Romania in the 80s. Bucharest is sprawling and drab to me - curious whether others found it charming. Mostly, the point is that there are so many other beautiful places to visit in Romania. It's safe, great culture and history, and people are friendly. There's a little bit of a language barrier (many people speak French as a second language, though English is more prevalent among the younger generation). Totally worth visiting!!


I think it sounds lovely. Of course you will have mixed feelings growing up there, especially under communism.
I really want to visit someday.


This is a good example of why “act like a local when you travel” doesn’t totally work -/ locals experience cities in very different ways. As someone who grew up in Arizona; I views Phoenix as a hell hole, but I do understand some people llle to vacation there!
Anonymous
Where was Hostel?
Anonymous
Iceland. Was cheap at the time for us. And an amazing lifetime experience.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:11:14 PP here. Another PP was right to call me out on my characterization of Bucharest as a hellhole - I was mainly basing that on memories of growing up in Romania in the 80s. Bucharest is sprawling and drab to me - curious whether others found it charming. Mostly, the point is that there are so many other beautiful places to visit in Romania. It's safe, great culture and history, and people are friendly. There's a little bit of a language barrier (many people speak French as a second language, though English is more prevalent among the younger generation). Totally worth visiting!!


I think it sounds lovely. Of course you will have mixed feelings growing up there, especially under communism.
I really want to visit someday.


This is a good example of why “act like a local when you travel” doesn’t totally work -/ locals experience cities in very different ways. As someone who grew up in Arizona; I views Phoenix as a hell hole, but I do understand some people llle to vacation there!


Nah. I think Phoenix is a hellhole—even when I was a tourist. We have food friends that live there. It was 110 when we visited in late October.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Where was Hostel?


I think it was Bratislava but I could be wrong.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Iceland. Was cheap at the time for us. And an amazing lifetime experience.


When was Iceland cheap? Besides the flights everything else is expensive. Unless you didn't do any activities and just saw the falls and drove around.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Check out the second and third cities instead of the major ones.


This.

My husband (who literally keeps a running tally for all expenses in his head) thought most of the places we visited in Italy and Croatia were relatively cheap (in terms of food and drinks).

The trick is to avoid the areas you know are overpriced and avoid the tourist traps. You’ll find better food and better prices 5 blocks off the beaten path.

While I’ve heard Albania is cheap, the Albanians I know living in the dc metro area don’t go back unless there’s a funeral (and some have even skipped those).


Understandably since they lived under an insane dictator for decades! But, I loved the beach in Dhermi and the mountains and mountain towns in the north are stunning. Bonus: very few tourists. And, sooooo cheap everywhere. We had 3 course dinners with a bottle of wine every night for $40 (2 people)
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:11:14 PP here. Another PP was right to call me out on my characterization of Bucharest as a hellhole - I was mainly basing that on memories of growing up in Romania in the 80s. Bucharest is sprawling and drab to me - curious whether others found it charming. Mostly, the point is that there are so many other beautiful places to visit in Romania. It's safe, great culture and history, and people are friendly. There's a little bit of a language barrier (many people speak French as a second language, though English is more prevalent among the younger generation). Totally worth visiting!!


Interesting perspective; makes sense. I lived in Kiev for awhile and liked Bucharest a lot but it was because I had friends there and we had a great time. I think it also can be interesting for Americans to see/experience a place like Bucharest (or Sofia or Kiev [not right now]).

But what Bucharest was also great for was getting out to the Romanian Carpathians, which are stunning. I loved Sighisoara and Brasov, and I stayed in a tiny town outside of Brasov that is one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been. It was just gorgeous.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:11:14 PP here. Another PP was right to call me out on my characterization of Bucharest as a hellhole - I was mainly basing that on memories of growing up in Romania in the 80s. Bucharest is sprawling and drab to me - curious whether others found it charming. Mostly, the point is that there are so many other beautiful places to visit in Romania. It's safe, great culture and history, and people are friendly. There's a little bit of a language barrier (many people speak French as a second language, though English is more prevalent among the younger generation). Totally worth visiting!!


Interesting perspective; makes sense. I lived in Kiev for awhile and liked Bucharest a lot but it was because I had friends there and we had a great time. I think it also can be interesting for Americans to see/experience a place like Bucharest (or Sofia or Kiev [not right now]).

But what Bucharest was also great for was getting out to the Romanian Carpathians, which are stunning. I loved Sighisoara and Brasov, and I stayed in a tiny town outside of Brasov that is one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been. It was just gorgeous.


Just booked tickets to Romania. What was the tiny town outside of Brasov?
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