Current Time in Sofia – EET / EEST Time Zone | TimeTranslator.com
Sofia · Bulgaria · South-East Europe

Current Time in Sofia

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

Sofia Bulgaria — South-East Europe
UTC
Latitude42.6977° N Longitude23.3219° E Elevation~550 m
🌡️ Current Weather in Sofia


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UTC Offset
Daylight Saving
vs London
Population~1.3M metro

The exact current time in Sofia is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers. The capital of Bulgaria operates on the time zone (), currently from UTC. . Sofia uses the Eastern European Time zone under the IANA identifier Europe/Sofia, shared with Athens, Bucharest, Helsinki, Tallinn, Riga, Vilnius, Nicosia and Kyiv. Sofia is always 2 hours ahead of London (GMT/BST) and always 1 hour ahead of Belgrade, Vienna, Rome and Warsaw (CET/CEST) throughout the year — the difference is constant because all countries change clocks on the same dates.

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Sofia Time vs World Cities – Live Comparison

CityCurrent TimeTime Zonevs Sofia
🇧🇬 Sofia±0
🇬🇧 London
🇬🇷 Athens
🇷🇴 Bucharest
🇺🇸 New York
🇺🇸 Los Angeles
🇦🇪 DubaiGST UTC+4
🇯🇵 TokyoJST UTC+9
🇦🇺 Sydney
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Daylight Saving Time in Bulgaria – EET & EEST Explained

☀️ Summer Time (EEST) UTC+3 EEST — Eastern European Summer Time
❄️ Standard Time (EET) UTC+2 EET — Eastern European Time

💡 How Bulgaria changes its clocks: As an EU member, Bulgaria follows the EU DST directive. Clocks spring forward on the last Sunday in March at 03:00 EET (becoming 04:00 EEST). Clocks fall back on the last Sunday in October at 04:00 EEST (becoming 03:00 EET). Sofia is always 2 hours ahead of London and always 1 hour ahead of Rome, Berlin, Vienna, Paris, Warsaw and Belgrade year-round. For most of the year Sofia is ahead of New York, with brief windows during the US–Europe spring and autumn transitions. The EU Parliament voted in 2019 to abolish seasonal clock changes; as of 2026, Bulgaria and all EU states continue to observe DST.

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Sofia Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities

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Sofia – Geography & Location Facts

⛰️Vitosha MountainSofia BasinSofia sits in the Sofia Basin at approximately 550 m elevation, making it one of the highest capital cities in Europe. The basin is flanked on the south by Vitosha Mountain (2,290 m), a unique natural park visible from nearly every street in the city. To the north-west rise the Balkan Mountains (Stara Planina). The basin has a continental climate with cold winters and warm summers, moderated by altitude.
📌GPS Coordinates42.6977° N23.3219° E · Western Bulgaria, at the crossroads of Europe · ~45 km from the Serbian border · ~150 km north of the Greek border · ~330 km from the Black Sea · ~550 km from Istanbul · Positioned on ancient Via Militaris / Via Diagonalis, the Roman road linking Belgrade to Constantinople
🌡️ClimateHumid ContinentalKöppen Dfb · Warm summers: July avg 21°C; hot days can reach 35°C · Cold winters: January avg 0°C; snow common Dec–Feb · Spring and autumn are mild and pleasant · ~2,100 sunshine hours/year · One of the cloudiest Balkan capitals in winter due to basin position trapping fog · The gorski (mountain) breeze from Vitosha provides natural air conditioning on summer evenings
🌍Central LocationBalkan Crossroads~2,000 km from London · ~1,300 km from Berlin · ~1,100 km from Rome · ~520 km from Bucharest · ~350 km from Athens · ~550 km from Istanbul · ~500 km from Belgrade · Sofia’s strategic position made it one of the most important crossroads of the ancient world, on the road from the Adriatic to the Black Sea and from the Danube to the Aegean
🌊RiversIskar & VladaiskaThe Iskar River, Bulgaria’s longest river entirely within the country (368 km), rises on Rila Mountain south of Sofia and flows north through the city before turning east to join the Danube. The Vladaiska and Perlovska rivers cross the urban area; both were largely channelled underground during Soviet-era urban development. Sofia’s water supply comes from the Iskar Reservoir in the Balkan Mountains.
📐Urban Area~1,385 km²City of Sofia municipality: ~1,385 km² · City pop: ~1.3 million · Metro area: ~1.5 million · ~20% of Bulgaria’s total population lives in the Sofia metro area · Bulgaria’s political, economic, cultural, educational and transport hub · Fastest growing city in Bulgaria; tech and business services sector expanding rapidly
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Population & Administrative Data

Population (city)~1.3 million
Official languageBulgarian (Български)
ScriptCyrillic alphabet
CurrencyBulgarian Lev (BGN, лв) — pegged to euro at 1.95583 BGN/EUR
EU member since1 January 2007
EurozoneNot yet (target 2025–2026 under review)
Schengen AreaYes (land borders since 1 Jan 2025; air/sea since 31 Mar 2024)
International dial code+359
Internet domain.bg
NATO memberYes (since 29 March 2004)
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A Brief History of Sofia

  • 5000–500 BC The Sofia Basin has been continuously inhabited for at least 7,000 years. Neolithic settlements (c. 5000 BC) existed in the area around present-day Sofia, and Bronze Age Thracian tribes inhabited the region from around 2000 BC. The ancient settlement was founded by the Serdi, a Thracian tribe, whose name the city would bear for over a thousand years: the Roman name Serdica (and later Ulpia Serdica) derives directly from this tribe. The Serdi controlled a strategically vital crossroads where the major road from the Adriatic coast to the Black Sea met the route from the Danube to the Aegean — a position that would determine Sofia’s importance through every subsequent era of its history.
  • 29 BC – 447 AD The Romans conquered the region in 29 BC, transforming the Thracian settlement into the thriving Roman city of Ulpia Serdica. Under Emperor Trajan (early 2nd century AD) the city received urban status, impressive public buildings, baths, forums and its distinctive grid street plan — fragments of which survive today. The Rotunda of St George, Sofia’s oldest surviving building (4th century AD), was constructed as a Roman rotunda-bath complex during this period. Serdica reached its greatest importance under Emperor Constantine the Great (306–337 AD), who reportedly said “Serdica is my Rome” — he held the Council of Serdica here in 343–344 AD, one of the most important early Christian councils. Constantine seriously considered making Serdica the capital of the Roman Empire before ultimately choosing Constantinople. The Edict of Serdica (311 AD) by Emperor Galerius, issued here, was the first imperial edict of tolerance toward Christians. The Huns under Attila devastated the city in 447 AD.
  • 447–1018 After Attila’s destruction, Serdica was rebuilt by the Byzantine Empire and renamed Triaditsa (or Sredets by Bulgarians). Bulgaria’s first great medieval empire was founded in 681 AD, and Sofia was captured by the First Bulgarian Empire several times, passing repeatedly between Bulgarian and Byzantine control. The city played a major role in the bloody Bulgarian-Byzantine wars of the 9th–10th centuries: Khan Krum (803–814) and later Tsar Simeon I the Great (893–927 AD), under whom the First Bulgarian Empire reached its greatest territorial and cultural extent — briefly the most powerful state in Europe — fought for control of Sredets. The Boyar Rebellion of 969 and the campaigns of Basil II “Bulgar-Slayer” ended Bulgarian independence in 1018, reincorporating the region into Byzantium.
  • 1018–1393 The Second Bulgarian Empire (1185–1396), re-established after the Asen Rebellion against Byzantine rule, incorporated Sofia (by then regularly called Sredets) within its territory. The city became an important episcopal seat and craft centre. The name Sofia appears for the first time in a document from 1376, derived from the Cathedral of Saint Sophia (Holy Wisdom), a 6th-century Byzantine church built over the Roman rotunda, which gave the city its enduring name. The Second Bulgarian Empire experienced a golden age under Tsar Ivan Asen II (1218–1241), whose realm stretched from the Adriatic to the Black Sea, but subsequently fragmented under dynastic struggles and Mongol pressure. By the late 14th century Bulgaria faced a new and ultimately more devastating threat from the south-east.
  • 1382–1878 The Ottoman conquest of Sofia in 1382 inaugurated nearly five centuries of Ottoman rule — among the longest of any European capital. Under the Ottomans, Sofia became an important administrative centre for the Rumelia Eyalet (the European provinces). The city was transformed: mosques (several of which survive today, including the Banya Bashi Mosque, 1576), hans (caravanserais), covered bazaars and public baths replaced or were built alongside older structures. The Rotunda of St George was converted to a mosque. Despite periodic oppression, a Bulgarian merchant class persisted, and Bulgarian culture survived in rural monasteries, most famously Rila Monastery (72 km south of Sofia), founded in the 10th century and rebuilt magnificently in the 18th–19th centuries, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the spiritual heart of Bulgaria. The Bulgarian National Revival (18th–19th centuries) brought a cultural flowering: new schools, churches in a distinctive Bulgarian style, and growing national consciousness. The April Uprising of 1876 — brutally suppressed by Ottoman irregular forces (the “Bulgarian Horrors”) with approximately 15,000–30,000 dead — provoked international outrage and led directly to the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78.
  • 1878–1944 The Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78 liberated Bulgaria from Ottoman rule. Russian troops entered Sofia on 4 January 1878, a date celebrated as Sofia City Day. The Treaty of San Stefano (March 1878) created a large Bulgarian state; the subsequent Treaty of Berlin (July 1878) reduced it dramatically, dividing the Bulgarian lands — a source of national grievance that would dominate Bulgarian foreign policy for generations. Sofia was chosen as the capital of the newly established Principality of Bulgaria in April 1879 (upgraded to Kingdom of Bulgaria in 1908). The choice of Sofia over Tarnovo (the medieval capital) reflected its central position. Within decades the city was transformed from a small Ottoman town (~11,000 people in 1878) into a modern European capital with boulevards, palaces, government buildings and a cathedral. The magnificent Alexander Nevsky Cathedral (begun 1882, consecrated 1912) — a gift from the Russian people to the Bulgarian people in gratitude for liberation — became the defining symbol of modern Bulgaria. Bulgaria was involved in the Balkan Wars (1912–13) and both World Wars; World War II saw Sofia bombed by Allied air forces in 1943–44 before Soviet forces entered on 9 September 1944.
  • 1944–Today The communist takeover in September 1944 established the People’s Republic of Bulgaria, one of the Soviet Union’s most loyal satellites. Under Todor Zhivkov (1954–1989), the longest-serving leader in the Eastern Bloc, Sofia was extensively rebuilt: the historic centre was partially demolished and replaced with monumental Stalinist and later Modernist structures, including the enormous National Palace of Culture (NDK, 1981) and wide socialist boulevards. The forcible assimilation campaign against Bulgaria’s Turkish minority in the 1980s (“Revival Process”) caused an exodus of 300,000 ethnic Turks. Communism collapsed peacefully in November 1989: Zhivkov resigned on 10 November 1989, the day after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Bulgaria transitioned to democracy and a market economy through the 1990s, a turbulent period marked by hyperinflation (1997) and economic crisis. The currency was stabilised by a currency board pegging the lev to the Deutsche Mark (and later the Euro). Bulgaria joined NATO in 2004 and the European Union on 1 January 2007. The city has undergone substantial transformation since EU accession: infrastructure investment, urban renovation, a growing IT sector and increasing tourism have given Sofia a new energy. The opening of the Sofia Metro (first line 1998, now 3 lines) transformed urban mobility; the ongoing renovation of Sofia’s historic centre (Largo, Vitosha Boulevard — the city’s main pedestrian street) and the popularity of Vitosha Nature Park for weekend hiking make Sofia a distinctive destination that rewards the visitor willing to look beyond its post-communist surface.
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Top Tourist Attractions in Sofia

Alexander Nevsky Cathedral The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral (Hram-pametnik “Sveti Aleksandar Nevski”) is the spiritual heart of Bulgaria and one of the largest Eastern Orthodox cathedrals in the world, with a capacity of 10,000 worshippers. Built between 1882 and 1912 in Neo-Byzantine style to designs by the Russian architect Alexander Pomerantsev, the cathedral was a gift from the Bulgarian people to Russia in gratitude for liberation from Ottoman rule. Its golden domes and green copper roofs dominate Sofia’s skyline. The interior is breathtaking: soaring marble columns, ornate chandeliers, and a comprehensive cycle of frescoes and mosaics by Bulgarian and Russian artists. The Crypt Museum beneath houses Bulgaria’s finest collection of medieval icons and religious art. The cathedral square doubles as Sofia’s most atmospheric antiques and icon market on weekends.
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Rotunda of St George & the Largo The Rotunda of Saint George is Sofia’s oldest surviving building: a perfectly proportioned Roman brick rotunda constructed in the early 4th century AD under Constantine the Great as a public bath complex. It was subsequently converted to a Christian church (still functioning today), then to a mosque under the Ottomans (the surrounding arcade preserves traces of all three phases). Within this extraordinary palimpsest of Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman history lies the Largo — Sofia’s grand Stalinist ensemble of government buildings (the Presidency, Council of Ministers and former Communist Party headquarters) that frame a public square. Below the Largo, discovered during the 2010s metro extension, lie extensive Roman ruins of Serdica: streets, colonnades and baths that can be viewed in an open-air archaeological zone and a dedicated underground museum, giving a vivid sense of the Roman city beneath the modern capital.
St Sofia Basilica & the National History Museum The St Sofia Basilica (6th century AD), one of the oldest surviving Christian churches in the Balkans, gave the city its name. Built during the reign of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I, it stands near the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral. Below its floor lies one of the largest early Christian necropoleis in South-East Europe, with hundreds of graves and floor mosaics visible through glass panels. A short tram or taxi ride from the centre, the National History Museum (housed in Todor Zhivkov’s former residence) holds Bulgaria’s most comprehensive collection: the legendary Panagyurishte Gold Treasure (3rd century BC Thracian gold rhytons), the Valchitran Treasure (Bronze Age gold), mediaeval icons, Ottoman-era artefacts and the remarkable Trud Treasure (Roman silver).
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Vitosha Mountain & National Park Vitosha Mountain (2,290 m at Cherni Vrah peak) is the defining backdrop and playground of Sofia. One of the symbols of Bulgaria and the oldest nature park in the Balkans (founded 1934), Vitosha is unique among European capital cities in offering genuine alpine wilderness within 30 minutes of the city centre. In winter, the mountain has two ski areas (Aleko and Dragalevtsi) and a gondola lift. In summer and autumn, well-marked trails lead through beech and pine forests to the summit plateau, past the extraordinary stone rivers (sitengi) — rivers of boulders formed by ancient glaciation. The Boyana Waterfall is a popular easy hike. On clear days the summit offers views of the Rila and Rhodope mountains to the south and the Balkans to the north. The Boyana Church (UNESCO World Heritage Site, 1979), at the foot of Vitosha, contains the finest cycle of medieval Bulgarian frescoes (c. 1259 AD).
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Boyana Church (UNESCO World Heritage) The Boyana Church, at the foot of Vitosha Mountain in the Boyana district, is one of the best-preserved examples of medieval Bulgarian art and is recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1979). The church consists of three buildings constructed between the 10th and 19th centuries. The frescoes of 1259 AD in the middle church are the work of an unknown Bulgarian master of exceptional skill: 89 scenes with 240 figures that show a remarkable naturalism, realism and expressiveness far ahead of their time — contemporaries of the Boyana frescoes include Duccio and Cimabue; many art historians consider the Boyana painter a peer of Giotto. The portraits of the medieval Bulgarian ruler Sebastokrator Kaloyan and his wife Desislava, and of Tsar Constantine Tikh and Empress Irina, are masterpieces of individual portraiture unique in 13th-century European art. Entry is by timed ticket in small groups to protect the frescoes.
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Vitosha Boulevard & the City Centre Vitosha Boulevard (Bulevard Vitosha) is Sofia’s main pedestrian shopping street, running south from the Presidency to the National Palace of Culture (NDK) with Vitosha Mountain filling the southern horizon. The adjacent Zhenski Pazar (Women’s Market) is Sofia’s most vibrant and atmospheric market, selling fresh produce, herbs, spices and household goods in a tradition unchanged for centuries. The Banya Bashi Mosque (1576, still active) stands near the Central Mineral Baths (1913, restored 2015, now housing the Sofia History Museum), fed by the same hot mineral springs (40°C) that drew first the Romans, then the Ottomans, then the citizens of modern Sofia. The charming Kapana neighbourhood (“The Trap”) behind the Central Market Hall has been transformed into Sofia’s artisan quarter, with craft shops, studios, bars and independent restaurants in a pedestrianized maze of Victorian-era streets.

✈️ Sofia Airport

AirportIATADistanceTransport to centreNotes
Sofia Airport (Sofia International Airport)SOF~10 km E (Vrazhdebn)Metro Line 2 (since 2020): ~20 min to central stations · Bus 84 and airport express buses · Taxi: ~15–25 min, €7–15 (beware unlicensed taxis; use metered OK Supertrans or Taxi S) · Uber available🛫 Bulgaria’s main international hub · Terminal 1 (charter/budget) & Terminal 2 (main, opened 2006) · Bulgaria Air (flag carrier), Ryanair, Wizz Air, easyJet, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines, Qatar Airways · ~6.5 million passengers/year · Major expansion and renovation project underway
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Bulgarian Food Culture – What to Eat & Drink in Sofia

🫕 Tarator & Cold Soups Bulgaria’s most famous dish may be tarator: a cold yoghurt-based soup with cucumber, walnuts, dill and garlic — refreshing and distinctive, served ice-cold in summer. Bulgarian yoghurt (kiselo mlyako) is world-famous: the probiotic bacterium Lactobacillus bulgaricus, first identified in Bulgarian yoghurt by the Nobel laureate Ilíya Mechnikov, is a Bulgarian national treasure. Bulgarian yoghurt is thicker, tangier and richer in probiotics than most Western equivalents. It appears in soups, sauces, as a side, and eaten plain for breakfast with honey and walnuts. Shkembe chorba (tripe soup with vinegar and garlic, a traditional hangover cure), bob chorba (bean soup with smoked paprika, Bulgaria’s most beloved winter dish), and zeleva chorba (sauerkraut soup) are classic Bulgarian soups served in every traditional restaurant (mehana).
🧀 Sirene, Kashkaval & Dairy Sirene (Bulgarian white brine cheese, similar to feta but made from a mixture of cow, sheep and goat milk) is the cornerstone of Bulgarian cuisine: it appears in salads, pastries, fried, baked, and crumbled over nearly everything. The classic Shopska salata (tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, onion, topped with grated sirene) is Bulgaria’s national salad and one of the most perfect salads in European cuisine in its simplicity and balance. Kashkaval (yellow semi-hard cheese, typically sheep or cow, with a buttery flavour) is ubiquitous: fried kashkaval pane is a beloved starter. Banitsa (filo pastry filled with sirene and egg, baked until golden and flaky) is the quintessential Bulgarian breakfast and snack, eaten warm from banitsa shops that open at dawn throughout Sofia. Holiday variants include banitsa with spinach (spanachena banitsa) and sweet tikvenik (pumpkin and walnut filo).
🥩 Grills & Mains Kebapche (grilled minced pork and beef sausages with cumin and black pepper) and kyufte (grilled meatballs) are the archetypal Bulgarian grill items, served with chips, sirene and lyutenitsa. Kavarma (slow-cooked pork or chicken with vegetables in a clay pot, finished in a wood-fired oven) is the finest expression of Bulgarian comfort food. Meshana skara (mixed grill) is the full Bulgarian barbecue experience. Sarmi (stuffed cabbage or vine leaves with minced meat and rice, simmered in tomato sauce) are central to every Bulgarian celebration feast. Musaka (Bulgarian variant: minced pork, potatoes, egg and yoghurt topping, quite different from the Greek version) is a mehana classic. Lyutenitsa (roasted pepper, tomato and aubergine relish with garlic) — homemade or from a jar — accompanies almost every dish.
🍷 Bulgarian Wine & Rakia Bulgaria was, during the 1970s–80s, one of the world’s largest wine exporters. Today it is experiencing a renaissance of quality: indigenous varieties like Mavrud (powerful, tannic red — Bulgaria’s answer to Syrah), Melnik 55 (from Bulgaria’s south-west, with a unique sandy-soil character), Rubin (a local crossing of Nebbiolo and Syrah) and Dimyat (crisp aromatic white) are gaining international recognition. International varieties Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Chardonnay thrive in the Thracian Valley. Rakia (fruit brandy, typically grape or plum) is Bulgaria’s national spirit: homemade domashna rakia is a point of great pride, and every visit to a Bulgarian home involves a glass. Commercial brands like Tarnovska and Peshterska are excellent. Rakia is drunk neat, room temperature, as an aperitif with meze. Mastika (anise liqueur, similar to ouzo) and Boza (mildly fermented wheat drink, an acquired taste) are traditional Bulgarian drinks.
🍯 Sweets & Pastries Bulgarian sweets reflect Ottoman, Greek and Central European influences. Halva (sesame-based, in countless variants: plain, with cocoa, pistachios, walnut) — Bulgarian halva from producers in Shumen and Rusе is exceptionally good. Garash torte (a distinctively Bulgarian chocolate and walnut cake covered in dark chocolate ganache, invented in 1885 by Kosta Garash in Ruse) is one of the great European cakes: dense, intense and unforgettable. Baklava (here typically made with walnuts rather than pistachios, drenched in sugar syrup) is found in every pastry shop. Mekitsi (deep-fried dough balls, dusted with powdered sugar and eaten with jam or sirene for breakfast) are Sofia’s beloved street breakfast, especially on weekends. Tutmanik (a soft braided bread with sirene and butter) is a beloved home-baking tradition. Bulgarian rose water — from the Rose Valley between the Balkan Mountains and the Rhodopes — flavours many sweets and is perhaps the world’s finest.
🍵 Coffee & Tea Culture Bulgarians are serious coffee drinkers: the kafene (coffee house) tradition, inherited partly from the Ottoman period, is central to Sofia’s social life. Espresso and double espresso are the standard daily orders; freddo espresso and freddo cappuccino (Greek-influenced cold coffee drinks) have become enormously popular. Traditional Turkish coffee (tursko kafe, boiled in a dzhezve, served unfiltered) is still widely drunk especially among older Bulgarians. Sofia’s cafe scene ranges from old-school kafeneta (with outdoor tables, backgammon and newspapers) to specialist third-wave coffee bars in the Kapana district. Herbal teas from the Rhodope and Rila mountains (linden/lime-blossom, thyme, rose hip, chamomile) are a Bulgarian wellness tradition; ayran (chilled yoghurt drink with salt) is the Bulgarian equivalent of a cold drink in summer.
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Practical Travel Information – Sofia

💧 Tap waterSafe to drink ✅ — Sofia’s tap water comes from the Iskar Reservoir in the Balkan Mountains and is clean and safe to drink. Many locals drink tap water daily. Bottled water is universally available. The city’s many mineral water springs (including the hot springs at Pancharevo and the Central Mineral Baths) provide naturally mineralized water free of charge from public fountains.
🚌 Getting aroundSofia has an integrated public transport network: Metro (3 lines; clean, modern, very cheap; Line 2 connects the airport; Line 1 goes to the western districts and stadium), trams (extensive network, some historic pre-war lines still running), trolleybuses and buses. Single tickets (~0.90 BGN, ~€0.46) are among Europe’s cheapest. The historic centre is walkable; Vitosha Boulevard is fully pedestrianized. Taxis are inexpensive: major companies OK Supertrans, Yellow Taxi — always use a metered licensed taxi or Uber. Ridesharing apps (Bolt, Uber) work well throughout the city.
⚡ Power outletsType C / F (Europlug / Schuko) — 230 V / 50 Hz. UK visitors need an adaptor; US/Canada visitors need adaptor plus voltage converter for non-dual-voltage devices.
🗣️ LanguageBulgarian (Bâlgarski) uses the Cyrillic script — invented in Bulgaria in the 9th century AD by Saints Cyril and Methodius (Glagolitic script) and their disciples (Cyrillic). English is widely spoken in central Sofia, hotels, restaurants and tourist areas, especially by younger people. Russian is widely understood among the older generation. Learning a few Bulgarian phrases is appreciated: dobro utro (good morning), mersi / blagodarya (thank you), molya (please/you’re welcome), naz drave (cheers!), kolko struva (how much does it cost?). Note: the Bulgarian head-shake convention is reversed from Western norms — nodding the head means “no” and shaking it means “yes” (though younger urban Bulgarians increasingly use the Western convention).
💰 Currency & costsBulgarian Lev (BGN, lev), pegged to the Euro at a fixed rate of 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN. Sofia is one of the most affordable capital cities in the EU. Coffee ~2–3 BGN (~1–1.50 €); banitsa ~1.50 BGN; mehana meal 15–30 BGN (8–15 €); good restaurant dinner 30–60 BGN (15–30 €). ATMs everywhere; cards widely accepted in hotels and restaurants but cash still preferred in traditional mehanas, markets and taxis. The Euro is not yet officially in use, but prices are often quoted in both leva and euros.
🛂 TippingTipping is appreciated in Sofia though not as strictly expected as in Western Europe. 10% at restaurants for good service is standard; rounding up the bill is fine for cafés. Taxi drivers: rounding up. Hotel porters: 1–2 BGN per bag. A tip at a mehana (traditional restaurant) of 10% is warmly appreciated and makes a big difference at Bulgarian wage levels.
🌍 Day tripsRila Monastery (120 km, 2h by bus/car — UNESCO WHS, spiritual heart of Bulgaria, stunning 14th-century frescoes in a mountain valley); Plovdiv (150 km, 2h — Bulgaria’s second city with a magnificent Ottoman old town and ancient Thracian, Roman and Byzantine layers; 2019 European Capital of Culture); Koprivshtitsa (110 km, 2h — museum-village of Bulgarian National Revival architecture and the site of the 1876 April Uprising); Borovets (75 km, 1h30min — oldest Bulgarian ski resort on Rila Mountain); Melnik (155 km, 2.5h — smallest town in Bulgaria, surrounded by extraordinary sand pyramids and the Rozhen Monastery); Belogradchik Rocks (210 km — dramatic naturally sculpted rock formations with a medieval fortress).
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Frequently Asked Questions – Sofia Time Zone & EET/EEST

Sofia uses EET (Eastern European Time, UTC+2) in winter and EEST (Eastern European Summer Time, UTC+3) in summer. The IANA timezone identifier is Europe/Sofia. Sofia shares its time zone with Athens, Bucharest, Helsinki, Tallinn, Riga, Vilnius, Nicosia and Kyiv.
Yes. As an EU member, Bulgaria advances clocks on the last Sunday of March at 03:00 EET (to 04:00 EEST), and falls back on the last Sunday of October at 04:00 EEST (to 03:00 EET). The EU Parliament voted in 2019 to abolish seasonal time changes; as of 2026, Bulgaria and all EU states continue to observe DST.
Sofia is always exactly 2 hours ahead of London throughout the year. In winter Sofia is on EET (UTC+2) and London on GMT (UTC+0); in summer Sofia moves to EEST (UTC+3) and London to BST (UTC+1). Both countries change clocks on exactly the same dates, so the 2-hour gap never changes.
For most of the year, Sofia is 7 hours ahead of New York. The US changes its clocks about 3 weeks before Europe in spring, and Europe falls back about 1 week before the US in autumn, creating brief windows where the difference is temporarily 6 hours.
Yes. Sofia, Athens, Bucharest, Helsinki, Tallinn, Riga, Vilnius and Nicosia all use EET/EEST (UTC+2/+3) and change clocks on the same dates — so they are always at identical times. Kyiv (Ukraine) uses the same UTC offsets (EET UTC+2 / EEST UTC+3) but a different IANA zone identifier: Europe/Kyiv (formerly Europe/Kiev). Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 there have been discussions about Ukraine permanently adopting UTC+3, but as of 2026 Kyiv remains on EET/EEST.
In summer, Sofia and Istanbul are at the same UTC+3 offset. However, Turkey does not observe DST — it permanently adopted UTC+3 (TRT, Turkey Time) in 2016. In winter, Sofia is at UTC+2 while Istanbul remains at UTC+3, making Istanbul 1 hour ahead of Sofia in winter and the same time in summer.
Bulgaria uses the Bulgarian Lev (BGN), pegged to the Euro at a fixed rate of 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN through a currency board established in 1997. Bulgaria has been on the path to Eurozone membership; it adopted the euro-convergence criteria and was targeting 2025–2026 for introduction of the euro, though this timeline has been subject to ongoing review. Cards and ATMs are widely available; many businesses quote prices in both BGN and EUR.
Sofia Airport has the IATA code SOF. It is located approximately 10 km east of central Sofia in the Vrazhdebn area. Metro Line 2 connects the airport directly to central Sofia in approximately 20 minutes. The airport handles approximately 6.5 million passengers per year.
The best times to visit Sofia are spring (April–June) and autumn (September–October). Temperatures are pleasant (15–25°C), and the city and Vitosha Mountain are at their most beautiful. Summer (July–August) is warm and lively with outdoor events, but can be hot (28–35°C). Winter (December–February) is cold (0 to −5°C at night), often snowy, and ideal for ski trips to Vitosha, Borovets or Bansko. Sofia’s Christmas market in December is charming. The city’s museums, churches and the Largo area can be visited year-round.