• Overview
  • Trip Outline
  • Trip Includes
  • Trip Excludes
  • Price

Sail to lands rich in traditions

See Bucharest’s 3,000-room Palace of Parliament. Make banitsa bread with a home cook in Vidin. Explore Belgrade’s Ottoman and European treasures, including the 6th-century Kalemegdan Fortress. View the Danube’s towering Iron Gate. Witness Hungary’s daredevil Puszta horsemen. Behold Budapest’s grandeur. Once hidden behind the Iron Curtain, the eastern Danube still has secrets to reveal on this enriching cruise tour.
 
Details: 
  • 10 nights 
  • Selected dates in March - November 2026 
  • 5 countries, 8 guided tours 
  • From £3,395 pp
    • Based on March 2026 departure. Alternative dates available however price will vary. 

Price correct at time of publication (01/09/2025) 

Ports of Call: Bucharest, Romania – Ruse, Bulgaria – Vidin, Bulgaria – Belgrade, Serbia – Osijek, Croatia – Kalocsa, Hungary – Budapest, Hungary

Itineraries

Days 1 & 2

Bucharest, Romania

Day 1: Arrive and check in to your hotel. Bucharest is Romania’s cultural capital. Its original fortress, the first of many, was built to protect the Walachian state from the Turks. Today, it is a city of elegant French-style boulevards, lush gardens and green expanses, including the tranquil Bucharest Botanical Garden. The historic Lipscani district exudes the old-world charms of cobblestone alleys, inns and shops. The sprawling Palace of Parliament is the world’s largest civilian building, said to contain 3,000 rooms.

Day 2: Check out of your hotel and explore more of the city. Communism changed the face of Bucharest and has left in its wake a city brimming with imposing socialist architecture. Dotted among today’s cityscape are wonderful art nouveau buildings, ancient churches and monasteries that were rescued from the bulldozer. From the 18th-century church Schitul Maicilor to the 16th-century Mihai Vodă Church, it is best to discover these treasures on foot. Bucharest is also home to an array of world-class museums, including the George Enescu National Museum, which features a beautiful oyster-shaped glass awning. Transfer to your ship and settle into your stateroom.

Day 3

Ruse, Bulgaria

The most integral Danube city in Bulgaria, Ruse enjoys a setting amid a rolling countryside blanketed in sunflower and wheat fields. Once an outpost of the Roman Empire, it was known as Sexaginta Prista, or Sixty Ships, for the fleet that once docked here. Today, it is more known for its colorful atmosphere and as a gateway to Romania’s fabled Transylvania region. Best explored on foot, the city features many fine examples of 19th- and 20th-century neobaroque and neorococo architecture.

Day 4

Vidin, Bulgaria

Day 5

Scenic Sailing

The Iron Gate

Golubac, Serbia

Day 6

Belgrade, Serbia

The Serbian capital and former capital of the state of Yugoslavia, Belgrade is one of the oldest cities in Europe. Its location at the confluence of the Sava and Danube Rivers has long made it a contested region. Throughout its history, the “White City,” as its Serbian name translates, has been destroyed and rebuilt 20 times. Fortunately, the wide-reaching citadel remains, housing the Kalemegdan Fortress, Orthodox churches, Turkish baths and green parkland. Its Church of St. Sava is one of the largest Orthodox buildings in the world.

Day 7

Osijek, Croatia

Day 8

Kalocsa, Hungary

Days 9 - 11

Budapest, Hungary

  • One complimentary shore excursion in every port of call

  • Free Wi-Fi (connection speed may vary)

  • All onboard meals, featuring regional specialties & always available classics

  • Beer, wine & soft drinks with onboard lunch & dinner

  • 24-hour specialty coffees, teas  & bottled water

  • Port taxes & fees

  • Ground transfers with Viking Air purchase

  • Visits to UNESCO Sites

  • Enrichment lectures & Destination Performances

  • Onboard gratuities

  • Flights to UK 
  • Transfers 

 From £3,995 pp 

Price correct at time of publication (01/09/2025)  

Price subject to change depending on dates selected. Price based on March 2026 departure.