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Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
Veliko Tarnovo

Veliko Tarnovo Province

Veliko Tarnovo

No airport here, so fly to Sofia and bus three hours north: sleep on Stefan Stambolov above the Yantra gorge, give Tsarevets a half-day with the after-dark sound-and-light show, and add Arbanasi.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

1-2 nights (as a stop on a Bulgaria loop)

Airport

None local — Sofia (SOF), ~220km / ~3h by bus

Airport to centre

Sofia bus to Veliko Tarnovo ~3-3.5h, €12-€18; or hire car ~2h45 on the A2/I-4

Best base

Gurko / Stefan Stambolov streets for the gorge view; Arbanasi for a quiet mansion stay

In short

Veliko Tarnovo at a glance

Veliko Tarnovo is a 1- or 2-night stop, not a standalone flight destination: there is no nearby airport, so you fly into Sofia and come the ~3-hour bus or drive north. Base yourself on Stefan Stambolov street or Gurko street where the tiered houses cling to the Yantra gorge, give the Tsarevets fortress a half-day and time the sound-and-light show for after dark, and add a half-day in Arbanasi 4km uphill if you have a second night.

The short version

  • There is no airport at Veliko Tarnovo: fly into Sofia (SOF) and take the ~3-hour intercity bus or hire a car north.
  • Stay on or just off Gurko street for the postcard view of houses stacked above the Yantra river bend.
  • Give Tsarevets fortress a half-day on foot, and come back after dark only on a night when the Sound and Light show actually runs.
  • Arbanasi, 4km uphill, is the half-day add-on first-timers miss: stone Revival mansions and the painted Nativity church.
  • One night covers the old town and fortress; two lets you fit Arbanasi and slow down on the craft street.

Veliko Tarnovo is a town you arrive at by road, not by plane, and getting that one fact right reshapes the whole trip. It was the capital of medieval Bulgaria, and it looks the part: timber-and-stone houses stacked in tiers straight above a tight bend in the Yantra river, with the walled Tsarevets fortress filling the hill opposite. The instinct is to treat it as a destination in its own right and search for flights that do not exist. The better plan is to fly into Sofia, ride the bus three hours north, and slot Veliko Tarnovo in as the medieval chapter of a Sofia-and-Plovdiv loop.

A single night and a full day is enough to walk the old town, browse the Samovodska Charshia craft street and give the fortress a proper half-day climb. Stretch to two nights and you can add Arbanasi on the plateau above and time your evening for the sound-and-light show projected onto the walls — worth checking the schedule for, because it does not run every night. The structured planning below — where to base yourself over the gorge, the airport-to-town logistics, what each sight is actually like, and a realistic budget in pounds and euros — picks up from here.

Plan your Veliko Tarnovo trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Veliko Tarnovo

Tsarevets Fortress

Tsarevets is the rare icon-tier sight you don't need to pre-book — entry is a flat walk-up ticket of about €5 (£4.30) and there's no timed-slot queue. The booking decision that actually matters is the Sound and Light show: it runs only on scheduled dates or for paid groups, so confirm it's on for your evening before you build a night around it. Cross the single causeway, climb the whole ridge to the rebuilt Patriarchal Church for the Yantra-gorge panorama, and allow 2–2.5 hours on the exposed, unshaded path.

2–2.5 hours €5

Tsarevets Sound and Light Show

The Sound and Light Show throws lasers, coloured floodlights and recorded bells across the walls of Tsarevets fortress to tell Veliko Tarnovo's medieval rise and fall. You watch it free from the town below. The catch: it only runs on scheduled nights or when booked by a group, so check the dates before you build an evening around it.

The show itself la…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Gurko street

£ value

The cobbled lane that gives Veliko Tarnovo its postcard: timber-and-stone houses stacked straight above the Yantra river bend. Guesthouses here have the best views in town, but the street is steep and cars cannot reach the doors, so pack light.

Best for: First-timers, photographers, short stays

Browse hotels Old town, above the river

Stefan Stambolov street

£ value

The main spine of the old town, lined with cafes, bakeries and the craft street turn-off. Central and walkable to everything including the fortress causeway, with more hotel choice than Gurko and easier luggage access.

Best for: Convenience, dining, walking to the fortress

Browse hotels Central, ~15 min walk to Tsarevets

Asenevtsi / Marno Pole

£ value

The flatter, newer area around the Asenevtsi monument and the city park, away from the steep old-town lanes. Better for drivers and anyone who wants parking and level streets, but you trade the gorge atmosphere for it.

Best for: Drivers, families, easier walking

Browse hotels ~10-15 min walk to the old town

Arbanasi

££ mid-range

The plateau village 4km uphill, where converted stone mansions make characterful, quiet boutique stays with valley views. You need a car or a taxi to come and go, so it suits a second night rather than a one-night fortress dash.

Best for: Quiet, boutique stays, couples

Browse hotels 4km / ~10 min drive uphill

Airport to city centre

Veliko Tarnovo airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Sofia (SOF) → Veliko Tarnovo by intercity bus ~3-3.5h about €12-€18 Buses run from Sofia Central Bus Station; book a day ahead in summer
Sofia → Veliko Tarnovo by hire car ~2h45 fuel + hire, A2 then I-4 Best if continuing a Bulgaria loop
Sofia → Veliko Tarnovo private transfer ~2h45-3h roughly €120-€180 per car Door to door; worth it for groups or late arrivals
Train from Gorna Oryahovitsa (rail junction ~9km north) ~5-6h total from Sofia plus a taxi in train ~€10 + taxi ~€8 Slower and clunkier than the bus; only for rail fans
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May-June and September are the sweet spot: 18-26C, dry enough for the steep cobbles and the fortress climb, and the gorge looks its greenest. The old town stays photogenic in autumn when the Yantra valley turns.

July-August is hot and the exposed fortress walk has little shade, so go early or late in the day. Winter is cold and quiet inland, with some guesthouses and the sound-and-light schedule scaling back, though a crisp clear day over the snow-dusted gorge is striking. Spring and autumn are the most comfortable for walking the old town.

What it costs

There are no flights to Veliko Tarnovo. You fly to Sofia (SOF) instead: UK return fares run from about £30-£70 off-peak on Wizz from Luton or Ryanair from Stansted booked ahead, £90-£180 in school holidays or at short notice. Budget the ~3-hour onward bus (€12-€18) on top.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range stop for one person, added onto a Sofia trip, is roughly £140-£200 before the Sofia flight: ~£25-£35 return bus from Sofia, £70-£110 for two nights in a gorge-view guesthouse, £35-£55 on food and drink, and about £12 for Tsarevets entry plus the Arbanasi church and a taxi up there.

Veliko Tarnovo is cheaper than Sofia or Plovdiv for both rooms and meals, so the temptation is to over-eat on the tourist stretch of Stefan Stambolov near the fortress turn. Drop a couple of streets back for the same mehana food at local prices.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Bulgaria

See the full Bulgaria guide

Veliko Tarnovo FAQs

How do you get to Veliko Tarnovo from the UK?
There is no airport at Veliko Tarnovo. Fly into Sofia (SOF) from the UK — around 3h10 direct — then take the intercity bus north, roughly 3 to 3.5 hours for €12-€18, or hire a car for about 2h45. Many UK travellers fold it into a wider Sofia-Plovdiv-Veliko Tarnovo loop rather than coming just for it.
How long do you need in Veliko Tarnovo?
One night and one full day covers the old town, the craft street and a half-day at Tsarevets fortress. A second night lets you add Arbanasi 4km uphill and catch the fortress sound-and-light show after dark without rushing, which is the better-paced version.
Is the Tsarevets sound-and-light show worth planning around?
It is worth seeing, but it does not run every night — it is staged on scheduled dates or booked for groups. Check whether it is on for your dates before you build an evening around it, because the most common disappointment here is waiting in the dark for a show that was never scheduled. You can watch it free from the town below.

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