
Zagreb
Zagreb deserves 2 days on any Croatia itinerary that includes a flight through it, even if the coast is the main event. Split your time between the Upper Town (Gornji Grad — cobbled, historic, home to St. Mark's colorful-tiled-roof church) and the Lower Town (museums, cafes, the green horseshoe of parks). Don't skip the Museum of Broken Relationships — genuinely one of Europe's best small museums. Budget roughly $50–80/day per person before accommodation; noticeably cheaper than the coast.
Zagreb gets treated by most itineraries as an airport with a city attached, which is a mistake most people who actually stop there end up regretting for the opposite reason — it's a genuinely pleasant, walkable, central-European capital that costs less and feels far less touristy than the coast.
How many days do you need in Zagreb?
Two days covers it well: one for the Upper Town's historic core and viewpoints, one for the Lower Town's museums, the central market (Dolac), and cafe-hopping. It's a compact city — most of what matters is walkable from a central hotel.
Upper Town or Lower Town — where to stay?
| Area | Best for | Vibe |
|---|---|---|
| Upper Town (Gornji Grad) | History, quiet mornings, viewpoints | Cobbled streets, church spires, fewer restaurants nearby |
| Lower Town (Donji Grad) | First-timers, restaurants, transit access | Grid layout, parks, cafes, closer to the train station |
| Tkalčićeva Street area | Nightlife and people-watching | Bar-lined pedestrian street, lively at night |
If you're visiting in late November through early January, this is the one Croatian city worth planning a trip around specifically for its Christmas market — Zagreb's Advent has been voted Europe's Best Christmas Market multiple times by European Best Destinations, and it's genuinely different from the usual mulled-wine-stall formula (ice rinks, rooftop bars, a park-wide light installation).
What's actually worth seeing
- St. Mark's Church — the colorful tiled roof (Zagreb's and Croatia's coat of arms) is one of the most photographed spots in the city, and it's free to see from outside.
- The Museum of Broken Relationships — a small, genuinely moving museum built from donated objects and stories from failed relationships worldwide. Sounds gimmicky, isn't — regularly ranked among Europe's best niche museums.
- Dolac Market — the city's main outdoor market, red umbrellas and all, good for a cheap breakfast of fresh produce and burek (savory pastry).
- Zagreb Cathedral — twin Gothic spires visible from most of the Lower Town, still being restored after 2020 earthquake damage.
What it costs
| Item | Approx. cost (USD / EUR) |
|---|---|
| Mid-range hotel, per night | $80–140 / €73–128 |
| Casual restaurant meal | $10–18 / €9–16 |
| Coffee at a cafe | $2.50–4 / €2.30–3.70 |
| Museum of Broken Relationships entry | $8–10 / €7–9 |
Mistakes worth avoiding
- Treating Zagreb as a one-night layover — most visitors who give it a real two days end up recommending it more enthusiastically than the coast to friends.
- Skipping the funicular between Lower and Upper Town because it 'looks pointless' — it's one of the shortest funiculars in the world (under a minute) and genuinely useful if you're tired from walking.
- Visiting in August expecting a lively city — many locals leave for the coast in peak summer, so late spring, early autumn, or the Advent season show off Zagreb better.
Where to stay in Zagreb — hotels
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