
Sofia or Plovdiv: Which Bulgarian City Should You Visit First?
You don't really have to choose โ Sofia and Plovdiv are 2 hours apart by train, and most itineraries include both. If you can only pick one: choose Sofia for a bigger city with a genuine mountain at its edge, better nightlife, and the main international airport. Choose Plovdiv for a smaller, older-feeling, cheaper city built around one of Europe's best-preserved historic cores, with a working Roman amphitheater at its center.
This question comes up constantly, and the honest answer is 'do both, they're two hours apart' โ but if you're genuinely tight on time, here's a direct comparison instead of a shrug.
| Sofia | Plovdiv | |
|---|---|---|
| Size | Capital, ~1.3 million people | Second-largest city, ~340,000 people |
| Vibe | Modern capital energy with a mountain backdrop | Older-feeling, layered history, more relaxed |
| Headline sight | Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Vitosha Mountain | The Roman amphitheater and Old Town |
| Cost | Slightly higher, still very affordable | Slightly cheaper than Sofia |
| Nightlife | More extensive โ bigger city, more options | Present but smaller-scale, centered on Kapana |
| Getting there | Main international airport | 2 hours from Sofia by train or bus, own small airport |
| Best for | First-timers, city-and-mountain combo | History-focused travelers, a slower pace |
If you only have 2โ3 days in Bulgaria, Sofia edges ahead purely because it's where your flight lands and it has Vitosha Mountain built right in. If you have 5+ days, add Plovdiv without hesitation โ it's a short, cheap train ride away and offers a genuinely different, older-feeling experience that most visitors end up preferring.
The case for Sofia

Sofia wins on sheer range โ a real capital-city restaurant and nightlife scene, more museums, and Vitosha Mountain rising right at the city's edge for a hike or ski day without leaving town. It's also where nearly everyone's flight lands, so it's the natural starting point regardless of preference.
The case for Plovdiv
Plovdiv wins on atmosphere and value. Its Old Town is one of the best-preserved historic cores in the Balkans, its Roman amphitheater is still an active concert venue two thousand years after it was built, and prices for food and hotels run a touch lower than Sofia's. It also feels calmer and less rushed โ a genuine change of pace after a couple of busier days in the capital.
If budget is the deciding factor
Plovdiv is modestly cheaper across the board โ restaurant meals and hotel rooms both trend a little lower than Sofia's, though neither city is expensive by Western European standards.
Can you do both?
Easily โ that's what most visitors do. Direct trains and buses connect the two cities in about 2โ2.5 hours, frequently and cheaply, so splitting a week as 3 days in Sofia and 2โ3 in Plovdiv is a very natural, low-effort itinerary.












































