
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

On Belgrade’s oldest avenue, whispers from royal ballrooms still echo beneath the rush of traffic. Look beyond the shimmering glass of Palace Albanija and secrets slink through every shadow. Set out on a self-guided audio adventure that skips the tourist surface. Each stop uncovers daring rebellions, quiet scandals, and legends hidden in plain sight. Find stories even locals hurry past. Who plotted at Terazije with midnight conspirators watching every move? What strange object disappeared from the grand Stari dvor, changing the fate of a dynasty forever? Why do pigeons always gather atop one mysterious cornice as twilight falls? Move through boulevards where crowds once surged in protest and alleys that hid spies and runaway lovers. Each turn spins you deeper into intrigue and forgotten drama. Plug in, press play, and walk where legends wait just outside the noise—let Belgrade’s true stories guide your steps now.

Belgrade stands as a fractured mirror of empires where bullet holes still decorate the facades of crumbling dreams. You are walking through a battlefield disguised as a modern capital. Uncover the secrets of the city with this self-guided audio tour. Navigate the layers of history at the Cathedral Church and Studentski Trg while peeling back the veneer of the Bajrakli Mosque. Find the buried stories that casual travelers overlook. Why did a silent rebellion ignite in the shadows of the university district? Which artifact hidden inside the holy walls holds a curse for anyone who dares to touch it? How did a single night of scandal force an emperor to flee his own palace? Surrender to the rhythm of the cobblestones. Feel the weight of past uprisings and forgotten scandals as the city breathes its secrets into your ears. Start your journey into the heart of Belgrade now.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Belgrade sits at the confluence of the Danube and the Sava rivers, a geographical position that made it one of the most contested places in European history. The city has been razed 44 times and earned the nickname the White Phoenix not out of vanity but out of hard necessity. Kalemegdan, the great fortress on the limestone bluff above the two rivers, has Roman foundations, medieval Serbian towers, Ottoman walls, and Austrian-era additions, and walking its ramparts on a clear day you can see far into what was, for centuries, always someone else's territory approaching.
Modern Belgrade was shaped by radical reinvention.
After the Second World War, the city became the capital of Yugoslavia and the host of the first Non-Aligned Movement summit in 1961, cementing its position as a city that refused to take either side of the Cold War. The bohemian restaurant district of Skadarlija, with its cobblestones and traditional kafanas serving rakija and roasted meats, preserves a Balkan 19th-century atmosphere that the rest of the city did not hold onto. The Church of Saint Sava, one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world, took over a century to build and still dominates the Vračar plateau skyline.

Before you walk.
Most tour start points around Kalemegdan or Knez Mihailova Street are easily reached from anywhere in the city center on foot. Taxis and Uber are cheap by European standards, and the bus network is extensive. Belgrade does not have a metro, so buses and rideshares handle longer distances.
Belgrade is generally safe for tourists in the central areas including Kalemegdan, Knez Mihailova, Skadarlija, and Zemun. The city center is walkable day and night. Keep your belongings secure in crowded public spaces, as pickpocketing occurs near popular tourist areas as in any European capital.
Comfortable shoes are essential as many of the most interesting streets in Belgrade are cobblestone, particularly in Skadarlija and Zemun. Spring and autumn require layers as mornings can be cool. In summer, light clothing and sun protection are necessary for the long open stretches along the fortress walls.
Easily. Skadarlija is lined with kafanas offering burek, cevapi, pljeskavica, and grilled meats at very affordable prices. Knez Mihailova pedestrian street has cafes for coffee stops. Belgrade takes meals seriously and late: dinner starts around 9pm, and no one rushes you out.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.