Why Romania?
Romania is Europe's best-kept secret. While tourists crowd the Mediterranean coast, a country of breathtaking diversity slumbers in the southeast of the continent — medieval fortified churches, wild Carpathian peaks, a Danube Delta of biblical biodiversity, and hospitality that leaves you speechless. Romania is not trendy, not polished, and that's exactly why it's so authentic.
- The Carpathians — Europe's last great wilderness stretches in a mighty arc through the country. In the Romanian Carpathians live 6,000 brown bears, more than in the rest of Europe combined. Plus wolves, lynxes, and untouched primeval forests that are part of the UNESCO World Heritage.
- Transylvania (Siebenbürgen) — Forget the Dracula clichés: Transylvania is a fairytale land of Saxon fortified churches (7 UNESCO World Heritage sites), shepherd culture, flower meadows, and villages that look as if nothing has changed for 200 years. Because it hasn't.
- The Danube Delta — The second-largest river delta in Europe (UNESCO Biosphere Reserve) is a paradise for bird watchers: 360 bird species, pelicans, cormorants, little egrets. A boat trip through the labyrinthine channels is one of the continent's most impressive nature experiences.
- The Moldavian Monasteries — In northeastern Romania stand monasteries whose exterior frescoes are among the most significant artworks of Christianity. The painted monasteries of Bukovina (UNESCO) are unique in their colorfulness worldwide.
- Bucharest — The capital is wild, chaotic, contradictory, and fascinating. Belle Époque palaces next to communist concrete blocks, an exploding gastronomy scene, legendary nightlife, and the second-largest administrative building in the world (Palace of the Parliament). Bucharest is not a beauty contest — it's an adventure.
- Unbeatable value for money — Romania is one of the cheapest travel destinations in the EU. An excellent dinner costs 12–20€, a double room in a good hotel 40–70€, a beer in the bar 2€. Your budget goes twice as far here as in Western Europe.
- Hospitality — Romanians are legendary for their hospitality. In rural areas, you will be invited to meals, offered homemade spirits (Țuică), and experience a warmth that has become rare in Western Europe.
- Vibrant Traditions — In Maramureș and Bukovina, the peasant culture is not an open-air museum but a lived reality. Horse-drawn carts on the roads, haymaking by hand, carved wooden gates, folk festivals in traditional costumes — Romania preserves a Europe that has disappeared elsewhere.
Romania is the counter-program to mass tourism: wild instead of manicured, real instead of staged, affordable instead of overpriced. Those seeking authentic Europe will find it here — before the rest discover it.
