TripPick Serbia Serbia

Grand Serbia 7-Day — Belgrade, Novi Sad, Fruška Gora & the Danube

Belgrade's core + Novi Sad & Petrovaradin + Fruška Gora wine country + the Danube and Đerdap/Iron Gates + a slow final day

Seven days does Belgrade and northern Serbia properly. Days 1-2 cover the fortress, the old center, the Temple of Saint Sava, the Tesla Museum, a Skadarlija dinner, and a night out. Day 3 is Zemun and the Museum of Yugoslavia. Day 4 is a Novi Sad and Petrovaradin day trip. Day 5 explores Fruška Gora wine country and monasteries. Day 6 follows the Danube east to the Đerdap (Iron Gates) gorge and the prehistoric Lepenski Vir site. Day 7 is a slow final Belgrade day and departure. Book the Soko train ahead; the Iron Gates day is best by car or guided tour.

A full week is enough to actually understand Belgrade. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$366

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$840

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,080

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Belgrade Fortress + Knez Mihailova + Skadarlija dinner

Belgrade Fortress (Kalemegdan) - Pobednik & river confluence - Knez Mihailova - Republic Square - Skadarlija kafana

Activities

  1. 09:30 Belgrade Fortress (Kalemegdan) 2h

    Start at the city's defining sight — the hilltop fortress and Kalemegdan park where the Sava meets the Danube. Wander the ramparts and gates, see the Pobednik (Victor) statue, and take in the sweeping river-confluence views. The park and grounds are free.

    Cost: Free (Military Museum / dungeons a few hundred RSD) TIP: Go in the morning before the heat, then return at sunset another day for golden light over the rivers. The park is large — allow time to stroll. The Military Museum and the lower dungeons are optional cheap add-ons.
  2. 12:00 Knez Mihailova Street + Republic Square 1h30

    Walk the pedestrian spine of the old center — Knez Mihailova, lined with 19th-century facades, cafés, and shops — down to Republic Square, with the National Museum and the Prince Mihailo statue, the city's classic meeting point.

    Cost: Free (National Museum optional) TIP: This is the heart of old Belgrade and made for strolling and people-watching. Stop for a coffee on Knez Mihailova. The National Museum on Republic Square is worth an hour if you like art and history.
  3. 14:00 Lunch — ćevapi and grill (Walter or a central grill) 1h

    Have the quintessential Belgrade lunch: ćevapi or pljeskavica off the charcoal grill with kajmak and onion. Walter in Vračar is the reference for beef ćevapi; a central grill works if you'd rather not detour.

    Cost: RSD 500-1,300 ($5-12) per person TIP: Order ćevapi with kajmak and a side of ajvar — that's the local combination. It's casual counter food, not a sit-down meal; carry a little cash. A full, cheap, very Belgrade midday meal.
  4. 16:00 Stari Grad & Dorćol wander + a rakija stop 2h

    Explore the old town's streets, drop into Rakia Bar to taste a flight of Serbian fruit brandies, and drift into leafy Dorćol for its cafés and bars. An easy, low-key afternoon between the day's bigger sights.

    Cost: Rakija RSD 300-1,500 ($3-14) TIP: A tasting flight at Rakia Bar is the painless way to learn the national spirit — follow the staff's recommendations. Šljivovica (plum) is the benchmark. Pace yourself; rakija is strong.
  5. 20:00 Dinner — Skadarlija kafana (Tri Šešira or Dva Jelena) 2h

    Dine on Skadarlija, the cobbled 19th-century bohemian street, at a classic kafana — Tri Šešira (Three Hats, 1864) or Dva Jelena (Two Deer) — for traditional Serbian dishes and nightly live tamburica music.

    Cost: RSD 1,600-3,500 ($15-33) per person TIP: It's touristy but the music and setting are the point. Order karađorđeva šnicla or a mixed grill, and a carafe of house wine or rakija. Book ahead on summer weekends and grab a terrace table for the street atmosphere.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bakery (pekara) burek + yogurt

Stari Grad · RSD 200-400 ($2-4)

The classic Serbian breakfast — flaky burek with a drinkable yogurt.

Lunch

Walter or a central grill

Vračar / center · RSD 500-1,300 ($5-12)

Beef ćevapi with kajmak and onion — Belgrade's signature cheap meal.

Dinner

Tri Šešira or Dva Jelena

Skadarlija · RSD 1,600-3,500 ($15-33)

A traditional kafana dinner with live tamburica music.

Transit:

Entirely walkable — the fortress, Knez Mihailova, Republic Square, and Skadarlija are all within 10-15 minutes of each other in the flat old center. Walter is a short ride to Vračar (use a ride app).

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $44 Mid $105 Luxury $270
DAY 2

Temple of Saint Sava + Tesla Museum + splavovi nightlife

Temple of Saint Sava - Nikola Tesla Museum - Vračar & Kalenić market - Iva lunch - splavovi river clubs / Cetinjska

Activities

  1. 09:30 Temple of Saint Sava 1h30

    Visit one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world, crowning Vračar hill. The recently completed interior — covered in gold-ground mosaics under the great dome — is the highlight; the crypt below is also worth seeing. Entry to the main church is free.

    Cost: Free TIP: Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered). The mosaic-covered dome is the photo. Go in the morning before tour groups. It's a short walk from the Tesla Museum and the Iva restaurant, so the Vračar sights chain naturally.
  2. 11:30 Nikola Tesla Museum 1h

    See Tesla's personal effects, original instruments, and his ashes (held in a golden orb) at this compact, central museum. The guided tour includes a live Tesla-coil demonstration — the part worth timing your visit around.

    Cost: ≈ RSD 800 ($7.50) TIP: Catch a guided slot for the coil demo — it's the memorable bit. The museum is small, so an hour is enough. Check current tour times when you arrive so you don't miss a demonstration.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Iva New Balkan Cuisine + Kalenić market 2h

    Have a modern-Balkan lunch at Iva (a Michelin Bib Gourmand bistro in a restored 1934 building), then browse the nearby Kalenić green market for kajmak, ajvar, cheese, and honey.

    Cost: RSD 2,700-6,400 ($25-60) at Iva; market RSD 200-1,100 TIP: Iva is excellent value for its Michelin recognition — book ahead. The Kalenić market is a great window into everyday Serbian food and good for edible souvenirs. Both are in Vračar, near the Temple.
  4. 16:30 Riverfront stroll — Beton Hala & the Sava 1h30

    Walk down to the Sava riverfront at Beton Hala below the fortress — a strip of restaurants and bars (Ambar, Toro) with river views — and along the quay. A relaxed pre-evening before the night out.

    Cost: Free (drinks extra) TIP: A good spot for a sunset drink with fortress and river views. This is also where many splavovi are moored, so you can scout the scene before committing to a club later.
  5. 22:30 Nightlife — splavovi river clubs (summer) or Cetinjska (year-round) Late

    Experience Belgrade's signature nightlife: in summer, the splavovi — floating clubs on barges along the Sava and Danube, running until dawn. Off-season, head to Cetinjska, a former brewery courtyard of indie bars and clubs that's lively year-round.

    Cost: Cover RSD 500-1,500 ($5-14) at bigger splavovi; drinks extra TIP: The night starts late — clubs don't fill until well past midnight. Music styles vary wildly (house, techno, turbo-folk), so check what's on. A guided club crawl helps on a first visit. Use ride apps home and watch your tab.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast on Knez Mihailova

Stari Grad · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

Domaća kafa (Turkish-style coffee) and a pastry.

Lunch

Iva New Balkan Cuisine

Vračar · RSD 2,700-6,400 ($25-60)

Modern Balkan cooking — Michelin Bib Gourmand value.

Dinner

Ambar (Beton Hala) or a riverside spot

Sava riverfront · RSD 3,000-6,900 ($28-65)

All-you-can-eat modern-Balkan small plates with river views.

Transit:

Vračar sights (Temple, Tesla Museum, Iva, Kalenić) are walkable as a cluster. Use a ride app between Vračar, the riverfront, and the splavovi at night — cheap and easier than flagging a taxi.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $120 Luxury $320
DAY 3

Zemun + Gardoš Tower + Museum of Yugoslavia

Zemun old town - Gardoš (Millennium) Tower - Danube quay fish lunch - Museum of Yugoslavia & House of Flowers

Activities

  1. 09:30 Zemun old town + Gardoš (Millennium) Tower 2h

    Head to Zemun, the formerly Austro-Hungarian riverside district that feels like a separate town. Wander its old streets and climb the Gardoš (Millennium) Tower on the hill for one of the best views over Belgrade and the Danube.

    Cost: Tower small fee (a few hundred RSD) TIP: Zemun's lower, Habsburg-era streets are a real contrast to the Ottoman-and-Yugoslav center. The Gardoš Tower climb is short and the view is the payoff. About 15-20 minutes from the center by ride app.
  2. 12:00 Lunch — Danube quay fish (Zemun) 1h30

    Have a long riverside lunch on the Zemun Danube promenade (Kej), where the quay is lined with fish restaurants. Grilled or fried river fish with a glass of local white is the classic Zemun meal.

    Cost: RSD 1,200-3,000 ($11-28) per person TIP: Sit on the water for the Danube views and the swans. Fish is the thing to order here. A relaxed midday meal — Zemun runs at a slower pace than the center.
  3. 15:00 Museum of Yugoslavia + House of Flowers 1h30

    For 20th-century context, visit the Museum of Yugoslavia and the adjacent House of Flowers — Tito's mausoleum. The displays trace the rise and fall of socialist Yugoslavia and the cult around Josip Broz Tito, presented as history.

    Cost: ≈ RSD 400-600 ($4-6) TIP: Genuinely interesting if you're curious about the region's recent history. The Yugoslav era and 1990s wars remain sensitive subjects — approach conversations with tact. The grounds are pleasant. Skip it if history isn't your thing and take a slow riverside afternoon instead.
  4. 18:00 Final evening — Stari Grad or a farewell rakija Evening

    Round off the trip back in the old center — a last coffee on Knez Mihailova, a farewell rakija, and a relaxed dinner, or another sunset at the fortress over the river confluence.

    Cost: Drinks/dinner varies TIP: If you didn't catch the fortress at sunset on Day 1, tonight is the time. Belgrade comes alive in the cool of the evening — a final unhurried wander through Stari Grad is a fitting send-off.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bakery (pekara) or hotel breakfast

Stari Grad · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

Burek or gibanica with yogurt before heading to Zemun.

Lunch

Zemun Danube quay fish restaurant

Zemun (Kej) · RSD 1,200-3,000 ($11-28)

Grilled river fish on the water with a local white.

Dinner

Question Mark (?) or a central kafana

Stari Grad · RSD 1,000-2,600 ($10-25)

A relaxed final dinner at Belgrade's oldest kafana (1823).

Transit:

Zemun is about 6km from the center — 15-20 minutes by ride app (RSD 500-900) or buses 15/84/704 from Zeleni Venac. The Museum of Yugoslavia is in Dedinje, an easy ride-app hop from Zemun or the center.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $42 Mid $100 Luxury $250
DAY 4

Novi Sad + Petrovaradin Fortress day trip

Soko fast train to Novi Sad - old town & Liberty Square - Petrovaradin Fortress 'Gibraltar on the Danube' - return to Belgrade

Activities

  1. 08:30 Soko fast train to Novi Sad 1h

    From Belgrade Centre (Prokop) station, the Soko high-speed train reaches Novi Sad in about 36 minutes — fast, modern, and cheap. Serbia's second city makes one of the easiest and best day trips from Belgrade.

    Cost: ≈ RSD 600-1,000 ($6-9) each way TIP: Book in advance on the Srbija Voz site/app for the cheapest fare and a guaranteed seat. Catch an early train to maximize the day. Novi Sad's station is a short ride or 25-minute walk from the old town.
  2. 10:00 Novi Sad old town + Liberty Square 2h

    Explore Novi Sad's walkable old core — Liberty Square (Trg Slobode) with the neo-Gothic Name of Mary Church and the city hall, the pedestrian streets, and cafés. Calmer and prettier than central Belgrade.

    Cost: Free TIP: Everything is within easy walking distance. Stop for coffee on the main square. Novi Sad is the cultural capital of Vojvodina and has a relaxed, Central-European feel.
  3. 13:00 Lunch in Novi Sad (Vojvodina cuisine) 1h30

    Lunch on Vojvodina specialties — the region has a strong Austro-Hungarian influence, so expect heartier, paprika-rich dishes alongside the Serbian grill standards. Plenty of options around the old town.

    Cost: RSD 1,000-2,500 ($10-24) per person TIP: Vojvodina cooking leans Central-European — try a paprikaš or a regional fish stew. The old-town restaurants are good value. A relaxed midday meal before the fortress climb.
  4. 15:00 Petrovaradin Fortress — 'Gibraltar on the Danube' 2h

    Cross the bridge to the Petrovaradin Fortress, the great 18th-century artillery fortress on a bluff over the Danube — host of the EXIT festival, with the iconic clock tower and over 16km of underground tunnels open for guided tours.

    Cost: Free to walk; tunnel tour small fee TIP: The 20-minute walk across the bridge gives great views back to Novi Sad. The clock tower (with reversed hands so boatmen could read it from the river) is the icon. The underground-tunnel tour is the highlight if it's running.
  5. 18:00 Return Soko train to Belgrade 1h30

    Take the ~36-minute Soko train back to Belgrade for the evening — time for a relaxed dinner or another night out in the capital.

    Cost: Train included TIP: Confirm your return train time before lunch — book it when you book the outbound. Back in Belgrade, the evening is open for a Cetinjska bar night or a final fortress sunset.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bakery or café before the train

Belgrade · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

Burek and coffee before the early Soko train.

Lunch

Novi Sad old-town restaurant

Novi Sad · RSD 1,000-2,500 ($10-24)

Vojvodina cuisine — paprika-rich, Central-European-influenced.

Dinner

Belgrade kafana or riverside

Belgrade · RSD 1,500-3,500 ($14-33)

A relaxed dinner back in the capital.

Transit:

Soko high-speed train Belgrade (Prokop) ↔ Novi Sad, about 36 minutes each way (≈ RSD 600-1,000 / $6-9 each way). Walking within Novi Sad; the fortress is a 20-minute walk over the bridge.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $125 Luxury $300
DAY 5

Fruška Gora wine country & monasteries

Fruška Gora national park - Orthodox monasteries - wine villages & tasting (Sremski Karlovci) - return to Belgrade

Activities

  1. 09:30 Fruška Gora — monasteries & national park 2h30

    Head into Fruška Gora, the wooded hill range near Novi Sad and Serbia's oldest national park, dotted with historic Orthodox monasteries (Krušedol, Novo Hopovo, and others) set among vineyards and forest.

    Cost: Tour or car (monastery entry small/donation) TIP: Best reached by car or a guided day tour from Belgrade or Novi Sad — public transit is sparse here. Visit one or two monasteries rather than rushing all of them. Dress modestly inside.
  2. 13:00 Sremski Karlovci — town & wine tasting 2h30

    Stop in Sremski Karlovci, a handsome baroque town below Fruška Gora known for its wine heritage — including the sweet Bermet — with a lovely main square, a seminary, and family wineries for tastings.

    Cost: Tasting RSD 1,000-2,500 ($10-24) TIP: Bermet, a spiced dessert wine local to the area, is the specialty to try. The town's baroque square is worth a wander. A relaxed lunch plus a winery tasting is the ideal Fruška Gora afternoon.
  3. 17:30 Return to Belgrade + farewell evening Evening

    Drive or ride back to Belgrade (about 1-1.5 hours) for a final evening — a last Skadarlija dinner with live music, a rakija, or a quiet riverside walk.

    Cost: Transport + dinner varies TIP: If you took a guided tour, it usually returns to central Belgrade by early evening. Save a final kafana dinner or rakija for tonight as a send-off.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Belgrade café/bakery breakfast

Belgrade · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

Coffee and a pastry before heading out.

Lunch

Sremski Karlovci / Fruška Gora

Sremski Karlovci · RSD 1,000-2,500 ($10-24)

Local food with a Fruška Gora wine tasting (try Bermet).

Dinner

Farewell Skadarlija kafana

Skadarlija · RSD 1,600-3,500 ($15-33)

A final traditional dinner with live tamburica music.

Transit:

Fruška Gora and Sremski Karlovci are best by car or guided day tour (public transit is sparse). About 1-1.5 hours from Belgrade; tours typically include monastery stops and a winery tasting.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $135 Luxury $320
DAY 6

The Danube east — Đerdap (Iron Gates) gorge

Danube drive - Đerdap (Iron Gates) national park & gorge - Golubac Fortress - Lepenski Vir prehistoric site - return to Belgrade

Activities

  1. 08:00 Drive east along the Danube to Golubac Fortress 3h

    Head east from Belgrade along the Danube (about 2 hours) to Golubac Fortress, a dramatically restored medieval fortress guarding the entrance to the Đerdap gorge where the river narrows between Serbia and Romania.

    Cost: Tour €50-80 / car; fortress small fee TIP: A guided day tour is the easiest way to combine the gorge sights; self-driving gives flexibility. The restored Golubac Fortress is impressive and walkable. The drive itself, hugging the Danube, is part of the appeal.
  2. 12:00 Đerdap (Iron Gates) gorge + lunch 2h30

    Continue into Đerdap National Park, the Iron Gates — the spectacular gorge where the Danube cuts through the Carpathian-Balkan mountains, the deepest and one of the most scenic stretches of the river in Europe. Lunch at a riverside spot.

    Cost: Lunch RSD 1,200-3,000 ($11-28) TIP: The narrowest, deepest section of the gorge is the scenic highlight. A short boat trip on the river (where offered) is worth it for the cliffs. Look out for the giant Decebalus rock sculpture on the Romanian side.
  3. 15:00 Lepenski Vir prehistoric site 1h30

    Visit Lepenski Vir, an important Mesolithic-Neolithic archaeological site on the Danube (8,000+ years old), with its distinctive trapezoidal dwellings and carved sandstone figures, now housed under a protective shelter overlooking the river.

    Cost: Entry small fee TIP: One of Europe's oldest settlements — the carved fish-like figures are remarkable. The shelter frames the Danube nicely. A fascinating, often-overlooked stop that rounds out the Iron Gates day.
  4. 17:30 Return to Belgrade 3h

    Drive or ride back to Belgrade (about 2.5-3 hours), arriving for a relaxed final-stretch evening in the capital.

    Cost: Included in tour / car TIP: It's a long day with a fair amount of driving — a guided tour spares you the navigation. Back in Belgrade, keep the evening easy with a kafana dinner or a quiet drink.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early Belgrade café/bakery

Belgrade · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

Burek and coffee before the early start east.

Lunch

Danube/Iron Gates riverside restaurant

Đerdap · RSD 1,200-3,000 ($11-28)

River fish with a gorge view.

Dinner

Belgrade kafana

Stari Grad / Skadarlija · RSD 1,500-3,500 ($14-33)

A relaxed dinner back in the capital.

Transit:

The Đerdap/Iron Gates is about 2-3 hours east of Belgrade each way. A guided day tour (€50-80) or a one-day rental car is by far the easiest way to combine Golubac, the gorge, and Lepenski Vir; public transit is impractical.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $150 Luxury $360
DAY 7

Slow Belgrade morning + departure

A missed sight or a slow morning - Beton Hala / riverside - last ćevapi - BEG departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 A final Belgrade sight or a slow morning 2h

    Catch anything missed — the National Museum on Republic Square, the Bohemian shops of Knez Mihailova, the Ada Ciganlija river-island park, or simply a relaxed café morning in Dorćol.

    Cost: Museum RSD 300-600 or free wandering TIP: Ada Ciganlija (the city's river-beach 'sea') is a nice low-key option in warm months. Or just enjoy a final domaća kafa in a quiet plaza. Keep it light on a departure day.
  2. 12:00 Final lunch — ćevapi or a riverside bite 1h30

    Have one last Belgrade meal — ćevapi and kajmak at a grill, or a relaxed lunch on the Sava riverfront at Beton Hala with fortress views.

    Cost: RSD 500-2,500 ($5-24) per person TIP: If you've grown fond of ćevapi, this is the meal to repeat. The riverfront is a pleasant, easy last lunch. Leave time to collect luggage and get to the airport.
  3. 14:00 Last shopping (rakija, ajvar, souvenirs) 1h

    Pick up edible souvenirs that travel well — a bottle of craft rakija from BUD or a shop, jars of ajvar and kajmak from a market, or local sweets. Knez Mihailova has the souvenir and bookshops.

    Cost: Shopping extra TIP: Rakija and ajvar are characterful, affordable gifts. Pack liquids in checked luggage. The green markets and central shops cover most of what you'll want.
  4. 16:00 Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG) departure 2h

    Head to the airport, about 18km west of the center — 25-35 minutes by registered taxi (≈ RSD 2,000-2,800 / $19-26 fixed fare) or the A1 minibus from Slavija.

    Cost: Taxi ≈ RSD 2,000-2,800 / A1 bus ≈ RSD 400 TIP: Use the official airport taxi desk in arrivals for a set fare and to avoid touts (and the same applies on the way out — agree the fare). Arrive about 2 hours before your flight. BEG has good European connections and some long-haul via hubs.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Dorćol café breakfast

Dorćol · RSD 200-500 ($2-5)

A final domaća kafa and a pastry.

Lunch

Grill or Beton Hala riverside

Center / Sava riverfront · RSD 500-2,500 ($5-24)

Last ćevapi, or a relaxed riverside lunch.

Dinner

In-flight or airport dining

BEG / en route · RSD 800-1,500 ($8-14)

A light bite at the airport before departure.

Transit:

On foot in the center; registered taxi (≈ RSD 2,000-2,800 fixed) or the A1 minibus from Slavija to Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG), about 25-35 minutes.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $105 Luxury $260

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Belgrade 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long for Belgrade?
Not if you use it for the wider region — Belgrade's core fills 2-3 days, and the rest goes to Novi Sad and Petrovaradin, Fruška Gora wine country, and the Đerdap (Iron Gates) Danube gorge. It's the sweet spot for seeing northern and eastern Serbia from a single Belgrade base. If you only want the city and one day trip, 4-5 days is plenty.
What is the Đerdap (Iron Gates) and is it worth the day?
The Iron Gates is the spectacular gorge where the Danube cuts between Serbia and Romania — the deepest, narrowest stretch of the river — within Đerdap National Park. The day combines the restored Golubac Fortress, the gorge scenery, and the 8,000-year-old Lepenski Vir archaeological site. It's a long day (2-3 hours each way) but a memorable one, best by guided tour or car.
Can I do all the day trips by public transport?
Only partly. Novi Sad and Petrovaradin are easy by the Soko fast train (about 36 minutes). But Fruška Gora and the Iron Gates have sparse public transit and are far easier by car or guided day tour. Plan those two days around a tour or a rental car.
How much does a 7-day Serbia trip cost?
Excluding flights, roughly $366 budget, $840 mid-range, or $2,080 luxury per person — still very low for a week in Europe. The main extras over a city-only trip are the guided tours or rental car for Fruška Gora and the Iron Gates; the Soko train to Novi Sad is just $6-9 each way.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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