REVIEW · BELGRADE
Belgrade Local Serbian Wine Tasting Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Belgrade Nightlife Tours · Bookable on Viator
Wine on foot through Belgrade feels surprisingly easy. This guided tasting pairs Serbian wine with a real city walk, stopping in central spots for samples, snacks, and plenty of local wine talk.
What I like most is that you actually get to taste the range: up to 6 glasses covering local commercial wines, house wines, and some of Serbia’s most famous bottles. The second big win is the food support—cheese and aperitif platters make sure you’re not drinking on an empty stomach. One consideration: it’s a weather-dependent walking tour, so plan for the outdoors part of a 3.5-hour experience.
In This Review
- Key things that make this tour worth your time
- A Belgrade wine stroll that actually feels like Belgrade
- Price and value: what $88.76 buys you in real life
- Timing and logistics: a walking plan that fits a single evening
- Start at Prince Mihailo Monument: the tour’s classic Belgrade opening
- Knez Mihailova: sipping while you stroll one of the city’s key streets
- Skadarlija: where the night mood gets real (and you may find a hidden pub stop)
- What you taste: Serbian wines in three categories
- Food pairing: why the cheese and platters are more than an afterthought
- The guide and the small-group advantage (this is where the fun really happens)
- Photos and atmosphere: turning a tasting into a night you can keep
- Who should book the Belgrade Local Serbian Wine Tasting Tour
- Should you book this Belgrade wine tasting tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Belgrade Local Serbian Wine Tasting Tour?
- How many wines will I taste?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- How big is the group?
- What if the weather is bad or I need to cancel?
Key things that make this tour worth your time

- Up to six glasses of Serbian wine, so you’re not stuck with tiny sips
- A mix of wine styles: commercial, house, and well-known Serbian picks
- Gourmet bites and cheese designed to keep the tasting comfortable
- Small group size (max 20) for real conversation with the guide and host
- Photo coverage all day so you can enjoy the moment without playing photographer
A Belgrade wine stroll that actually feels like Belgrade

This isn’t a sit-and-sip event. You walk through central Belgrade, stopping at special places along the way, and you taste Serbian wine in context—smack in the streets and neighborhoods that shape local nightlife and restaurant culture.
The format is friendly and social. You’re moving, you’re sampling, and you’re chatting. That matters because wine tours can turn stiff fast. Here, the goal is conversation plus tasting, with snacks built in so the night stays fun instead of awkward.
Also, the tour is in English, which helps if you want to understand what you’re drinking without guessing. And the group cap of 20 keeps things from turning into a loud conveyor belt of strangers.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Belgrade
Price and value: what $88.76 buys you in real life

At $88.76 per person for about 3 hours 30 minutes, you’re paying for a structured tasting with multiple stops, not just a single bar visit. The value is in three places:
First, you get up to six glasses. That’s enough variety to notice differences—lighter vs. fuller styles, grape character, and how each wine pairs with food. Second, the tour includes snacks and plats (cheese and aperitif-style bites), so you get the full rhythm of wine-and-food, not wine alone. Third, you get photo coverage all day long, which is unusual for a walking tasting.
Is it the cheapest night out? No. But it’s closer to a curated experience than a casual drink ticket. If you want a fun evening that also teaches you what to order next time, the price starts to make sense fast.
Timing and logistics: a walking plan that fits a single evening
The tour runs about 3.5 hours and loops back to the same starting point at Studentski trg, Belgrade. That’s practical: you don’t have to figure out how to get back after your last pour.
It also says it’s near public transportation. Translation: you won’t need a taxi just to start, and you can usually work your way to the meeting spot without major hassle.
One more thing to respect: it requires good weather. Since you’re walking between venues, rainy or miserable weather can change the vibe. If the tour gets canceled due to poor weather, you should get offered a different date or a full refund.
Start at Prince Mihailo Monument: the tour’s classic Belgrade opening

Your first stop is at Prince Mihailo Monument—a strong way to begin because it puts you right in central Belgrade. This kind of landmark start helps you get oriented quickly. You’re not just “going to bars.” You’re learning the geography of the evening as you go.
From there, the tasting begins with the idea that you’ll understand Serbian wine through variety. The guide and host help you connect what you’re tasting to what Serbian wine culture is like—commercial wines you can recognize as everyday options, plus other selections that show how local producers think.
Potential drawback here: if you show up late or want to linger, the walking part won’t wait. The experience works best when you treat it like a set evening plan and keep pace.
Knez Mihailova: sipping while you stroll one of the city’s key streets

Next up is Knez Mihailova, one of the best-known pedestrian-style corridors in central Belgrade. This is where the tour feels like a real walk: you’re between stops, you see the city’s energy, and you keep your sense of direction.
This stretch matters for the tasting too. Moving between venues helps you avoid the “all at once” feeling. You get time to taste, chat, and reset, so each pour lands with context rather than blur.
You’ll also get those conversational moments the tour is built around—there’s an emphasis on local wine chats, meaning the guide doesn’t just point at bottles. It’s more like guided tasting plus explanation, aimed at helping you understand what you like and why.
If you’re someone who likes to compare wines side-by-side, this part of the walk is where that rhythm clicks.
You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Belgrade
Skadarlija: where the night mood gets real (and you may find a hidden pub stop)

Then comes Skadarlija, the neighborhood vibe people talk about when they want Belgrade to feel old-school and fun. This is where the tour’s character shifts from daytime stroll to evening atmosphere.
What makes Skadarlija special in this experience is the chance to hit places that feel like they were chosen for personality, not just convenience. One of the standout comments you’ll see in guide experiences is praise for a hidden pub style stop—exactly the kind of setting that turns a tasting into a story you’ll remember.
You may also catch rooftop views depending on the venue setup. It’s not something you should count on as guaranteed, but the point is that the atmosphere can get extra scenic and photogenic.
The tradeoff: Skadarlija can be popular for nightlife, so the mood may be livelier here than at the start. If you prefer very quiet tastings, you’ll want to focus on pacing your sips and using the food between pours.
What you taste: Serbian wines in three categories

The tour is designed around tasting a range, not repeating the same style. You’re set up to sample:
- Local commercial wines (the kinds you’d more easily find as mainstream options)
- Local house wines (more “where you are” selections that can surprise you)
- Famous Serbian wines that represent the headline side of local production
This structure is smart for your learning. Many wine novices get stuck buying whatever looks familiar. By tasting across categories, you start to figure out your preferences—whether you like fruit-forward styles, drier profiles, or something with more body.
Also, the tour includes up to 6 glasses, so you get enough repetition to make comparisons. Small group discussions help here. When you’re allowed to ask questions in plain language, the tasting stops being random and starts turning into a personal short course.
Food pairing: why the cheese and platters are more than an afterthought

A wine tasting lives or dies by food timing, and this tour gets it right. You’ll have gourmet bites along the way, plus cheese and aperitif platters that support the flavors you’re tasting.
The practical benefit is comfort. Wine plus walking can get tiring fast if you’re not eating. Here, the food keeps your palate reset, which makes it easier to enjoy what’s in the glass instead of just powering through.
Also, pairing matters for learning. You don’t just taste wine in isolation—you start to notice how certain bites make a wine feel smoother, more balanced, or more aromatic.
If you tend to get hungry during tours, this one is a safer bet than the ones that only offer water and a cookie.
The guide and the small-group advantage (this is where the fun really happens)
The tour caps at 20 travelers, which is the difference between a tour you can participate in and a tour you just endure.
That small-group feel shows up in how the tasting conversation works. The format is built around local wine chats, so you can ask questions, compare preferences, and get recommendations that actually help you order later.
One guide name that’s been specifically praised is Toby, noted for being fun to chat with and for steering people toward good tasting spots. Even if your guide isn’t Toby, the key is the same: you’re not sitting silently while someone reads a script.
The best part is the social energy. You’re walking together, tasting together, and sharing small reactions—some wines you’ll love, some you won’t, and that’s part of the value. The point is you leave knowing what you want next time.
Photos and atmosphere: turning a tasting into a night you can keep
A lot of wine tours promise photos and then hand you a blurry group shot. This one includes a photographer all day long, which is ideal for a walking route with multiple venues.
You’ll get images that match the experience: city streets, tasting moments, and the little in-between beats that make a tour feel real. And because the tour moves through areas like Knez Mihailova and Skadarlija, your photos don’t look like generic bar décor.
This is also where an English-hosted tour helps. When people relax because they understand the flow, they tend to look more natural in photos too.
Who should book the Belgrade Local Serbian Wine Tasting Tour
This tour fits best if you want:
- A fun evening that teaches you enough about Serbian wine to order confidently later
- A structured tasting with multiple venues rather than one stop
- A small-group vibe where you can actually talk
- Food included (cheese, aperitif platters, gourmet bites)
- English guidance if you want to follow the wine talk without a language hurdle
It’s less ideal if you’re hoping for a long, slow, fancy sit-down meal with zero walking. This is still a stroll through town.
Should you book this Belgrade wine tasting tour?
If your goal is to taste Serbian wine in a guided, social way—while getting an authentic feel for central Belgrade—this is a strong pick. You’re not just sampling a single house pour; you’re getting up to six glasses across different categories, with food support and photo coverage.
My advice: book it if you like the idea of pairing wine with conversation and short venue jumps. Then wear shoes you can walk in, and pace yourself. With the mix of landmark streets and Skadarlija atmosphere, it’s the kind of evening that turns into a highlight without needing you to be a wine expert.
FAQ
How long is the Belgrade Local Serbian Wine Tasting Tour?
It runs for about 3 hours 30 minutes.
How many wines will I taste?
You can taste up to 6 glasses of Serbian local wines.
What’s included in the tour price?
Included are fully traditional local wines, up to 6 glasses, gourmet bites/cheese and aperitif platters, local wine chats, and photographer coverage all day long.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Studentski trg, Belgrade, and ends back at the same meeting point.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum of 20 travelers.
What if the weather is bad or I need to cancel?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. You can also cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the start time.

































