Current Time in Belgrade – CET / CEST Time Zone | TimeTranslator.com
Belgrade · Serbia · Southeast Europe

Current Time in Belgrade

Live NTP-synced clock · CET / CEST time zone · Weather, world city comparisons & complete guide

Belgrade Serbia — Southeast Europe
UTC
Latitude44.8176° N Longitude20.4633° E Elevation~117 m
🌡️ Current Weather in Belgrade


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UTC Offset
Daylight Saving
vs London
Population~1.7M

The exact current time in Belgrade is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers. The capital of Serbia operates on the time zone (), currently at from UTC. . Belgrade shares its time zone with Zagreb, Vienna, Budapest, Warsaw, Berlin, Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris and Rome — all on Central European Time (CET/CEST) under the IANA identifier Europe/Belgrade. Although Serbia is not a member of the European Union, it follows the same Daylight Saving Time schedule as EU countries. Belgrade is always 1 hour behind Bucharest (Romania uses EET/EEST, UTC+2/+3) and always 1 hour ahead of London.

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Belgrade Time vs World Cities – Live Comparison

CityCurrent TimeTime Zonevs Belgrade
🇷🇸 Belgrade±0
🇬🇧 London
🇭🇷 Zagreb
🇷🇴 Bucharest
🇺🇸 New York
🇺🇸 Los Angeles
🇦🇪 DubaiGST UTC+4
🇯🇵 TokyoJST UTC+9
🇦🇺 Sydney
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Daylight Saving Time in Serbia – CET & CEST Explained

☀️ Summer Time (CEST) UTC+2 CEST — Central European Summer Time
❄️ Standard Time (CET) UTC+1 CET — Central European Time

💡 How Serbia changes its clocks: Clocks spring forward on the last Sunday in March at 02:00 local CET (becoming 03:00 CEST), and fall back on the last Sunday in October at 03:00 local CEST (becoming 02:00 CET). Serbia is not an EU member but follows the same DST schedule as EU countries, staying fully synchronised with Zagreb, Vienna, Budapest, Berlin, Warsaw, Amsterdam and Paris. Belgrade is always exactly 1 hour ahead of London, always 1 hour behind Bucharest, and for most of the year ahead of New York — with brief 5-hour windows during spring and autumn transitions.

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Belgrade Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities

Enter a Belgrade time to convert
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🇷🇴Bucharest--:--
04

Belgrade – Geography & Location Facts

🌊Two RiversSava & DanubeBelgrade stands at the confluence where the Sava meets the Danube — one of the most strategically important river junctions in Europe. Kalemegdan fortress commands the ridge above both rivers at ~70 m. The Danube forms the northern boundary with Vojvodina; Ada Ciganlija island sits on the Sava to the southwest.
📌GPS Coordinates44.8176° N20.4633° E · Similar latitude to Lyon (France) · Further south than Vienna, Budapest or Zagreb · City elevation avg ~117 m asl · Kalemegdan plateau ~70 m, Avala mountain (city landmark) 511 m, ~16 km south
🌍LocationN Serbia, Pannonian Plain~200 km from Zagreb · ~110 km from Budapest · ~350 km from Bucharest · ~300 km from Sarajevo · ~450 km from Sofia · crossroads of Central and Southeast European routes since antiquity; one of the most contested strategic positions in European history
📐City area3,229 km²Belgrade City administrative area including rural municipalities · Urban area ~322 km² · 17 municipalities · New Belgrade (Novi Beograd) on the Sava’s right bank — planned socialist city, now the main business and residential district across the river
🌡️ClimateHumid continentalHot summers 28–32°C; cold winters −2 to +3°C; ~2,100 sun hrs/yr; snow Dec–Feb; spring and autumn very pleasant · Continental extremes sharper than Zagreb or Vienna due to more southerly and inland position
🌏CrossroadsPan-European CorridorsCorridor VII (Danube waterway) · Corridor X (road/rail Ljubljana–Belgrade–Athens) · E75 motorway to Budapest · This strategic position made Belgrade one of the most-besieged cities in world history (38+ times) and, today, one of its most resilient
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Population & Administrative Data

Population (city admin.)~1.7 million
Urban population~1.25 million
Administrative divisions17 municipalities
Official languageSerbian (srpski)
CurrencySerbian dinar (RSD)
International dial code+381
Internet domain.rs
EU memberNo (candidate since 2012)
Schengen AreaNo
EurozoneNo (Serbian dinar)
06

A Brief History of Belgrade

  • ~5000 BC – 75 BC The site of Belgrade has been continuously settled since the Vinča culture (~5700–4500 BC), one of the most advanced Neolithic civilisations in Europe; the eponymous Vinča archaeological site lies only 14 km southeast of the city centre. Around the 3rd century BC, the Celtic tribe of the Scordisci founded a settlement at the river confluence. The Romans conquered the region around 75 BC and established a legionary fortress called Singidunum, an important outpost on the Danubian frontier (limes). The fortress guarded the crossing point for centuries; Emperor Constantine the Great was born at nearby Naissus (modern Niš) in 272 AD. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Singidunum was sacked by the Huns in 441 AD, beginning centuries of contested possession.
  • 441 – 1404 After the Roman period, Belgrade was contested by Byzantines, Ostrogoths, Gepids, Avars, Franks and Bulgars. Slavic peoples settled the region from the 6th century. The name Beograd (“White City” — from beo white + grad city/fortress) appears in written sources for the first time in 878 AD in a letter from Pope John VIII to Bulgarian Prince Boris I. Byzantine, Bulgarian and Hungarian rulers each controlled the fortress in succession. The fortress on the hill above the confluence was steadily reinforced; by the 13th century it had become one of the most formidable in the region. After the Battle of Kosovo (1389) weakened the Serbian state, the city’s importance as a frontier fortress grew even greater.
  • 1404 – 1521 Belgrade became capital of the Serbian Despotate in 1404 under Despot Stefan Lazarević, who rebuilt the upper town, lower town and fortress into a major fortified city. Stefan’s court made Belgrade a centre of late medieval Serbian culture. After Stefan’s death, the city passed to Hungary; under Hungarian rule, the legendary general John Hunyadi (Janos Hunyadi) organised the famous Siege of Belgrade of 1456, defeating the Ottoman army of Sultan Mehmed II — the conqueror of Constantinople — in one of the most celebrated Christian victories of the 15th century, celebrated across Western Europe with church bells. The city held out against Ottoman pressure for another 65 years before Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent finally captured it on 28 August 1521.
  • 1521 – 1830 Under Ottoman rule Belgrade became Dârül-cihad (“House of Holy War”), a major administrative and commercial city of the empire, with mosques, bazaars, hammams and a cosmopolitan population. The city changed hands dramatically between Ottomans and Habsburgs: captured by Habsburgs in 1688, 1717 (Treaty of Passarowitz, under which Austria held Belgrade for 22 years) and briefly in 1789. Each occupation brought massive destruction and population displacement. The First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813) under Karađorđe and the Second Serbian Uprising (1815) under Miloš Obrenović progressively won Serbian autonomy. Belgrade became capital of the autonomous Principality of Serbia in 1830, with the last Ottoman garrison finally withdrawing from the fortress only in 1867.
  • 1830 – 1944 As Serbia gained full independence (recognised at the Congress of Berlin, 1878), Belgrade rapidly transformed from a small Oriental town into a European capital with Grand boulevards, theatres, universities and public buildings. Serbia became a Kingdom in 1882; after the Balkan Wars (1912–13), Serbian territory doubled. The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 — a conspiracy organised partly from Belgrade — triggered World War I; Austria-Hungary bombarded Belgrade the very next day. After WWI, Belgrade became capital of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia from 1929). Nazi Germany launched Operation Punishment on 6–7 April 1941, bombing Belgrade for two days without warning, killing thousands; the city was occupied until liberation by Soviet and Yugoslav Partisan forces on 20 October 1944.
  • 1945 – Today Under Marshal Tito, Belgrade became the capital of socialist Yugoslavia and was transformed with vast New Belgrade housing projects and modernist public buildings. Yugoslavia’s independent “third way” between East and West made Belgrade host to the 1961 Non-Aligned Movement Summit. After Tito’s death (1980), growing tensions between republics culminated in the dissolution of Yugoslavia; the wars of the 1990s and international sanctions devastated the economy. The NATO bombing of 1999 (Operation Allied Force) destroyed bridges, the RTS television headquarters and other landmarks. The assassination of reformist PM Zoran Đinđić (2003) was a blow to democratic transition. Serbia declared independence from the state union with Montenegro in 2006; received EU candidate status in 2012. Today Belgrade is reinvented as one of Europe’s most dynamic and affordable cities, famous for its extraordinary nightlife (splavovi), warm hospitality, vibrant arts scene and the legendary EXIT Festival.
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Top Tourist Attractions in Belgrade

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Kalemegdan Fortress & Park Kalemegdan is Belgrade’s soul: a dramatic hilltop fortress where the Sava meets the Danube, with over 2,000 years of layered history — Celtic, Roman, Byzantine, medieval Serbian, Ottoman and Habsburg. The complex includes the Military Museum, Belgrade Zoo (founded 1936), the Clock Tower, the Roman Well and the iconic Victor Monument (Pobednik) — Ivan Meštrović’s nude warrior with falcon and sword, standing on a tall column at the very tip of the fortress with breathtaking views over both rivers. Kalemegdan Park behind the fortress is a beloved living space of cafes, chess players and the finest sunsets in the city.
Temple of Saint Sava The Temple of Saint Sava (Hram Svetog Save) on Vračar hill is one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world by volume — its white marble Neo-Byzantine dome visible from across Belgrade. Built over the site where Ottomans burned St. Sava’s relics in 1594, construction began in 1935 and was completed in stages; the extraordinary gilded mosaic interior was largely finished by 2020. The interior mosaics, partly funded by Russia, rival the finest Byzantine churches in Europe. A city skyline landmark and spiritual heart of Serbian Orthodoxy.
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Knez Mihailova Street & Republic Square Knez Mihailova Street is Belgrade’s grand pedestrian boulevard: an elegant 19th-century Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Classical streetscape running from Republic Square toward Kalemegdan, lined with cafes, bookshops, galleries and constant social life. At its Kalemegdan end lie Zrinjanin Park and Student Square. Republic Square (Trg Republike) — anchored by the National Theatre (1869) and the equestrian statue of Prince Mihailo Obrenović — is the classical meeting point of Belgrade: locals say “meet you under the horse.”
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Nightlife & Splavovi Belgrade has a global reputation as one of Europe’s greatest nightlife cities — regularly listed alongside Berlin and Ibiza. Its signature institution: splavovi — floating clubs moored on the Sava and Danube, converting pontoon barges into bars and clubs that pulse from spring to autumn. Inland, the Savamala district (former warehouses beneath the old bridges) is Belgrade’s creative hub: KC Grad, Mikser House, galleries and craft bars. The EXIT Festival at Petrovaradin Fortress in Novi Sad (80 km, July) regularly ranks among Europe’s best music events.
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Skadarlija – Bohemian Quarter Skadarlija is Belgrade’s cobblestone Bohemian quarter — a pedestrianised street of 19th-century kafanas (traditional Serbian restaurants with live music) that has been the heart of the city’s artistic and literary life for over 150 years. Its three famous kafanas — Tri Šešira (Three Hats), Đuro Jaksić and Dva Jelena (Two Deer) — serve traditional Serbian food with live starogradska muzika (old-city songs). Best visited in the evening when gas lamps light up and the 19th-century atmosphere becomes fully tangible.
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Ada Ciganlija – Belgrade’s Sea Ada Ciganlija is Belgrade’s extraordinary urban river beach: a 4 km-long island on the Sava, connected to both banks by dams creating a clean artificial lake with 7 km of sand and pebble beaches. In summer, hundreds of thousands of Belgraders swim, sunbathe, cycle, play beach volleyball and kayak here daily. Locals call it beogradsko more — “Belgrade’s sea” — with only gentle irony. Twelve sports courts, restaurants, cafes, a bungee tower and Serbia’s only Olympic rowing course make Ada one of the world’s finest urban beach experiences, completely free.

✈️ Belgrade Airport

AirportIATADistanceTransport to centreNotes
Nikola Tesla AirportBEG~18 km WA1 bus to Slavija Square: ~30–40 min; taxi ~25–35 min; Uber/Car:Go available🛫 Serbia’s main hub · Air Serbia, Ryanair, Wizz Air, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines, flydubai, Qatar Airways · Terminal 2 opened 2023 · Direct flights to major European, Middle Eastern and select intercontinental destinations
08

Serbian Food Culture – What to Eat & Drink in Belgrade

🍖 Ćevapčići & Roštilj Ćevapčići (grilled minced-meat cylinders of beef and pork or lamb, spiced with garlic and paprika) are Serbia’s quintessential street food, served with flatbread (lepinja), raw onion, kajmak and ajvar. Pljeskavica (massive grilled patty, the “Serbian hamburger”) and roštilj (mixed grill) complete the canon. The whole culture of Serbian grilled meat has been nominated for UNESCO recognition. Best ćevapi in Belgrade: debate is fierce, but the kafanas near Kalemegdan are a reliable start.
🧀 Kajmak, Ajvar & Dairy Kajmak — thick, slightly fermented clotted cream aged from days to months — accompanies virtually everything in Serbian cuisine. Fresh kajmak is mild and spreadable; aged kajmak is sharp and intensely flavoured. Ajvar is Serbia’s great autumn condiment: roasted red pepper and aubergine relish, jarred in huge family batches each October. Urnebes (spiced fresh cheese spread) and sir (brined white cheese) complete the essential dairy landscape served at every proper meal.
🍲 Čorba, Sarma & Slow Food Riblja čorba (spicy Danube fish soup of carp, catfish and other freshwater fish, cooked in a kazanac over open fire) is considered one of the Balkans’ finest soups. Pasulj (bean soup with smoked meats) is the great winter staple. Sarma (stuffed cabbage rolls with minced meat and rice in tomato-sour cream sauce) is Christmas Eve essential. Meze — an array of charcuterie, kajmak, ajvar, pickles, cheese and bread — is the ideal way to graze through Serbian flavours in a traditional kafana.
🍰 Burek & Pastries Burek — flaky spiral pastry filled with meat, cheese or spinach — is the indispensable Belgrade breakfast, sold at pećare bakeries from early morning. Gibanica is the baked layered cheese-and-egg pastry eaten at home. Krempita (custard and cream between puff pastry) and reforma torta (layered walnut-cream cake) are classic Belgrade café desserts. Tufahija (poached apple stuffed with walnut paste, an Ottoman legacy) is the most elegant traditional dessert and a must-try at a kafana.
🍷 Rakija & Drinks Rakija is Serbia’s national spirit: a fruit brandy drunk as a welcome, a toast and at every celebration. Šljiva (plum, šljivovica / slivovitz) is the most revered — Serbia is the world’s largest plum producer. Dunja (quince), kajsija (apricot) and lozovača (grape marc) are beloved varieties. Jelen and Lav are dominant domestic lagers; craft beer has expanded strongly. Serbian wine from Fruška Gora and Župa regions is worth seeking out. Toast: Živeli!
Kafana Culture The kafana — Serbian traditional restaurant-bar-social club — is a UNESCO-recognised intangible cultural heritage institution, and Belgrade is its capital. A kafana is where business deals, births, deaths, elections and breakups are processed, accompanied by starogradska muzika (nostalgic old-city songs) and live accordion or guitar. Coffee is drunk slowly — Turkish-style domaća kafa boiled in a džezva, served with water — and two hours over one coffee is perfectly normal. Skadarlija is the epicentre; every neighbourhood has its own kafana.
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Practical Travel Information – Belgrade

💧 Tap waterSafe to drink ✅ — Belgrade’s tap water meets EU standards and is safe to drink. Locals drink it without concern. Ask for voda iz slavine in restaurants.
🚌 Getting aroundTrams, trolleybuses and buses (GSP Belgrade) cover the city; tickets cheaper at kiosks. City centre from Kalemegdan to Skadarlija to Republic Square is very walkable. Uber and Car:Go (local rideshare) are cheap and widely used. Licensed taxis are reliable; use metered fare or an app. The Sava riverfront promenade and Ada Ciganlija are best explored on foot or by rented bike.
⚡ Power outletsType C / F (Europlug / Schuko) — 230 V / 50 Hz. UK visitors need an adaptor; US visitors need adaptor + voltage converter for non-dual-voltage devices.
🗣️ LanguageSerbian (srpski), written in both Cyrillic and Latin scripts. English is widely spoken by younger generations and hospitality workers. Useful Serbian: hvala (thanks), molim (please), dobar dan (good day), živeli (cheers), račun molim (bill please), izvini (excuse me).
💰 Currency & costsSerbian dinar (RSD). Belgrade is very affordable: coffee ~150–250 RSD (≈€1.30–2.15), restaurant main ~800–1,500 RSD (≈€7–13), beer ~200–400 RSD. Cards widely accepted centrally; markets and smaller shops prefer cash. ATMs abundant; exchange offices (menjačnica) better rates than airport.
🛂 TippingAppreciated, not obligatory. Round up or leave ~10% for good service in restaurants. Tip musicians directly in kafanas. Rounding up in cafes is common.
🌍 Day tripsNovi Sad (~80 km, 45 min by train — Petrovaradin Fortress, old town, EXIT Festival July); Smederevo (~50 km — massive medieval riverside fortress); Vinča (14 km — Neolithic archaeological site); Oplenac (~80 km — King Peter I mausoleum with mosaic interior); Fruška Gora (~80 km — wine region, 16 Orthodox monasteries); Golubac Fortress (~120 km — spectacular medieval Danube fortress).
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Frequently Asked Questions – Belgrade Time Zone & CET/CEST

Belgrade uses CET (Central European Time, UTC+1) in winter and CEST (Central European Summer Time, UTC+2) in summer. The IANA timezone identifier is Europe/Belgrade. Belgrade shares its time zone with Zagreb, Vienna, Budapest, Warsaw, Berlin, Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris and Rome.
Yes. Serbia advances clocks on the last Sunday of March at 02:00 CET (to 03:00 CEST), and falls back on the last Sunday of October at 03:00 CEST (to 02:00 CET). Although Serbia is not an EU member, it follows the same DST schedule as EU countries, maintaining full synchronisation with all CET/CEST neighbours.
Belgrade is always exactly 1 hour ahead of London throughout the year. In winter: Belgrade CET (UTC+1), London GMT (UTC+0). In summer: Belgrade CEST (UTC+2), London BST (UTC+1). Because both countries change clocks on exactly the same dates, the 1-hour difference is constant year-round.
Bucharest is always 1 hour ahead of Belgrade. Romania uses EET (UTC+2) in winter and EEST (UTC+3) in summer, while Serbia uses CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2). Both countries change clocks on the same dates, keeping the 1-hour gap constant all year.
For most of the year, Belgrade is 6 hours ahead of New York. The US changes its clocks ~3 weeks before Europe in spring, and Europe falls back ~1 week before the US in autumn, creating brief windows where the difference is temporarily 5 hours.
Yes. Belgrade, Zagreb and Vienna all use CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) and change clocks on identical dates. There is never any time difference between them. All share Central European Time with Budapest, Berlin, Warsaw, Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris and Rome.
No on both counts. Serbia is not an EU member — it received EU candidate status in 2012 and negotiations continue. Serbia uses the Serbian dinar (RSD). The euro is not legal tender, though informally accepted in some tourist and property contexts. Cards are accepted in most Belgrade establishments; cash is useful in markets and smaller shops.
Belgrade’s international airport is Nikola Tesla Airport (IATA: BEG), ~18 km west of the city. The A1 airport bus reaches Slavija Square in 30–40 min; taxis and rideshares take 25–35 min. Terminal 2 opened in 2023. Air Serbia, Ryanair, Wizz Air, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines and others operate from BEG.