Romania

🇷🇴

Phone Code

+40

Capital

Bucharest

Population

19 Million

Native Name

România

Region

Europe

Eastern Europe

Timezone

Eastern European Time

UTC+02:00

Romania is a southeastern European country in the Carpathian Basin, bordered by Ukraine, Moldova, Bulgaria, Serbia and Hungary, and opening onto the Black Sea coast at Constanța. Bucharest is the capital and largest city, with a metropolitan population of over two million; the country as a whole has roughly 19 million people. Romania is the easternmost survival of the Latin language family in Europe — the country's name and language descend from Roman Dacia, the imperial province between 106 and 271 AD — and that Latin lineage runs through the medieval principalities of Wallachia, Moldavia and Transylvania, the long contact zones with the Ottoman, Habsburg and Russian empires, the modern unification of 1859 and 1918, and the country's emergence as a European Union member in 2007 and full Schengen Area member in 2025 (air and sea borders since March 2024, land borders from 2025). Modern Romania is best known for medieval Transylvania with its fortified Saxon towns (Brașov, Sighișoara, Sibiu) and the Bran Castle that has carried the global Dracula association since Bram Stoker's 1897 novel; the painted monasteries of Bucovina, where five UNESCO-listed sixteenth-century churches preserve full exterior fresco programmes including the famous Voroneț blue; the Carpathian Mountains with the largest brown-bear, wolf and lynx populations in Europe; the grand inter-war architecture of Bucharest's Calea Victoriei and the colossal Palace of Parliament; the Danube Delta, the best-preserved river delta in Europe and a UNESCO biosphere reserve; the wooden churches of Maramureș and the Saxon fortified churches of southern Transylvania (also UNESCO World Heritage); and the Black Sea coast at Constanța — where the Roman poet Ovid lived in exile from 8 AD until his death around 17 AD, leaving the Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto written from this exact stretch of coast. Romania is now part of the Schengen Area: short-stay tourism is visa-free for most non-EU nationalities up to 90 days in any 180-day period, with EES biometric registration on first Schengen entry and ETIAS travel authorisation rolling out alongside it. Long-stay categories — work, study, family reunification, the digital nomad visa launched in 2024 — are filed nationally with the Romanian General Inspectorate for Immigration.

Romania visa system overview

Romania is an EU member since 2007 and a full Schengen Area member as of 2025 (air and sea borders since 31 March 2024, land borders from 2025), so the country now applies the standard Schengen short-stay framework for tourism, business and short courses up to 90 days within any 180-day period, with longer stays — work, study, family reunification and residence — handled separately on a national track through the Romanian General Inspectorate for Immigration (Inspectoratul General pentru Imigrări). For short stays, EU/EEA/Swiss citizens enter freely under free-movement rules; nationals of the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and most Latin American and Gulf countries enter visa-free with a passport that meets the Schengen validity rules — issued less than ten years before arrival and valid at least three months beyond the planned departure from the Schengen area, with at least one blank page for entry stamps. Travellers from countries that require a Schengen visa apply at the Romanian embassy or consulate covering their place of residence, or at a designated VFS Global application centre acting on Romania's behalf, with the standard documentation: completed Schengen application form, passport-style photographs, a return or onward ticket, accommodation confirmation, travel insurance with at least EUR 30 000 in medical cover valid across the Schengen area, evidence of sufficient funds for the stay, and the Schengen visa fee. A Schengen visa issued by any Schengen member is valid for travel to Romania. The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) records biometric data — fingerprints and a facial photograph — at the first Schengen crossing and replaces manual passport stamping for short-stay tracking; the ETIAS travel authorisation, applied for online before travel, is the parallel pre-clearance step for visa-exempt nationalities. Cash declaration above EUR 10 000 is mandatory at entry and exit. Long-stay categories include the Romanian Long-Stay Visa (Type D) which acts as the entry instrument, followed by an in-country residence permit (permis de ședere) for work, study, family reunification or business; the Digital Nomad Visa launched in 2024 for remote workers earning at least roughly EUR 3 700 gross per month from non-Romanian sources, valid for one year and renewable; and the Romanian work permit which the local employer files with the General Inspectorate for Immigration before the visa application. Henri Coandă International (OTP) in Bucharest is the country's main international gateway alongside Cluj-Napoca (CLJ), Timișoara (TSR) and Iași (IAS).

Common Visa Types

Schengen short-stay (visa-free or Schengen visa)

Up to 90 days within any 180-day period

The standard route for tourism, family visits, conferences, contract negotiations, short courses and cultural events up to 90 days within any 180-day period. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens enter freely; nationals of the UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and most Latin American and Gulf countries enter visa-free with a Schengen-compliant passport. Schengen-visa nationalities apply at the Romanian embassy/consulate or at a designated VFS Global centre with the standard Schengen documentation; a Schengen visa issued by another member state is valid for Romania. EES captures biometric data at first crossing; ETIAS adds a pre-travel authorisation step for visa-exempt passports.

Romanian Long-Stay Visa (Type D) — Work

Type D visa for entry, then 1-year residence permit; renewable; route to permanent residence after 5 years

Required for paid employment in Romania. The Romanian employer must first obtain a work permit (autorizație de muncă) from the General Inspectorate for Immigration on the foreign hire's behalf — separate annual quotas apply by category. With the work permit in hand, the worker applies for the Type D long-stay visa at a Romanian embassy or consulate with the contract, qualifications, criminal-record certificate and standard documentation. After arrival the holder applies for the in-country residence permit (permis de ședere) at the General Inspectorate. Common profiles: IT and software (Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca and Timișoara have a substantial English-speaking tech scene), engineering, BPO/shared-services centres, healthcare, hospitality and seasonal Black Sea coast and Carpathian-resort tourism.

Romanian Long-Stay Visa (Type D) — Study

Aligned to the programme; renewable each academic year

For full-time studies at Romanian universities (University of Bucharest, Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, the West University of Timișoara, the medical and engineering universities, the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies and others). The institution issues the admission letter; the student applies for the Type D long-stay visa with the admission letter, proof of paid tuition where applicable, accommodation evidence, financial means at the published level for the period of study, and comprehensive health insurance. Romanian medical schools — particularly Carol Davila University in Bucharest, Iuliu Hațieganu in Cluj-Napoca and Victor Babeș in Timișoara — run substantial English-language and French-language programmes that draw students from across Europe and the Middle East at significantly lower tuition than Western Europe.

Romanian Long-Stay Visa (Type D) — Family Reunification

Type D visa for entry, then 1-year residence permit; renewable; route to permanent residence

For non-EU spouses, registered partners and children of Romanian citizens, of EU citizens exercising free-movement rights in Romania, or of permit-holding non-EU residents. Filed at a Romanian embassy or consulate with relationship evidence (marriage, registered partnership, joint cohabitation, birth certificates), accommodation and means-of-support documentation that applies to the sponsor in most categories, criminal-record certificate and the Type D visa fee. The in-country residence permit follows from the General Inspectorate for Immigration after arrival.

Digital Nomad Visa

1 year initially; renewable for 1 further year (maximum 2 years)

Launched in 2024 for remote workers and freelancers employed by non-Romanian companies or running businesses based outside Romania. Minimum monthly income of roughly EUR 3 700 gross, sustained over the previous six months. Documentation includes the foreign employment contract or business registration, salary or invoice statements, a clean criminal record, comprehensive health insurance valid in Romania, accommodation evidence in Romania (rental or property), and the visa fee. The holder cannot work for Romanian employers without a separate work permit. Cluj-Napoca, Bucharest, Brașov and Timișoara have well-established coworking and remote-worker communities and notably good fixed and mobile internet — Romania has consistently ranked at the top of European broadband-speed indexes for the better part of a decade.

Self-Employment & long-stay business

Type D visa for entry, then 1-year residence permit; renewable

Two further long-stay routes for entrepreneurs and investors. The Type D self-employment visa suits founders relocating an existing or new business — required documentation covers the business plan, sector experience, capital evidence sufficient to support the company and the applicant for at least the first year of operations, and supporting market and tax documentation. The Romanian commercial-activity visa is the route for non-EU directors and shareholders of a Romanian-registered company, filed with proof of company registration and the holder's role within the company.

Practical information for Romania travel

Schengen short-stay: Romania became a full Schengen Area member in 2025 (air and sea borders since 31 March 2024, land borders from 2025). Most non-EU nationalities (United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and most Latin American and Gulf countries) enter visa-free up to 90 days within any 180-day period; other nationalities apply for a Schengen visa at the Romanian embassy/consulate or at a designated VFS Global centre.

Passport rules: passport issued less than 10 years before the date of arrival and valid at least three months beyond the planned departure from the Schengen area; at least one blank page for entry stamps.

Entry/Exit System (EES) and ETIAS: biometric registration — fingerprints and a facial photograph — at the first Schengen crossing replaces manual passport stamping for short-stay tracking. ETIAS is the parallel online pre-clearance step for visa-exempt passports — apply online before travel.

Travel Guide

Romania rewards a thoughtful itinerary that mixes Transylvania, the Bucovina painted monasteries and Bucharest, with one or two single-region deep dives — the Danube Delta, Maramureș, the Black Sea coast or the Carpathians — slotted in by interest. Most international visitors land at Henri Coandă International (OTP) in Bucharest and use the capital as the anchor: two to three days take in the Belle Époque architecture of Calea Victoriei, the Romanian Athenaeum concert hall, the Lipscani old-town district, the colossal Palace of Parliament that was Ceaușescu's project of the 1980s and is today the second-largest administrative building in the world, the Village Museum on Lake Herăstrău and the cluster of national museums. The country's most distinctive single region is Transylvania — the medieval Saxon belt north and west of the Carpathian arc, where Brașov (the Black Church, Council Square, Mount Tâmpa cable car), Sighișoara (the UNESCO walled citadel, the Clock Tower, the house traditionally identified as the birthplace of Vlad III in 1431) and Sibiu (the European Capital of Culture 2007 with its Large Square, Small Square and the Bridge of Lies) form the three-day spine. Bran Castle just south of Brașov carries the global Dracula association from Bram Stoker's 1897 novel — the literary connection is loose but the castle itself is genuine fourteenth-century fortification and worth the visit; for the historical Vlad III the more authentic site is Poenari Castle, his real fortress, reached by a 1 480-step climb above the Argeș river. Northern Moldavia holds the Bucovina painted monasteries, five of which are UNESCO World Heritage sites — Voroneț, Moldovița, Sucevița, Humor and Arbore — with sixteenth-century exterior frescoes that have survived 500 winters thanks to a still partly mysterious mineral-binder technique. The Maramureș region in the far north preserves the wooden churches and rural traditional architecture that earned eight wooden churches their own UNESCO listing. The Carpathian Mountains form the spine of the country and hold the largest brown bear, wolf and lynx populations in Europe — guided wildlife observation operates out of Brașov, Făgăraș and Zărnești with established conservation operators. The Danube Delta, where Europe's second-longest river meets the Black Sea, is a UNESCO biosphere reserve covering 5 800 km² of the best-preserved river delta on the continent; tours run from Tulcea. And on the Black Sea coast at Constanța — Romania's main Roman site — the seafront square Piața Ovidiu is dominated by a statue of Ovid, who lived here in exile from 8 AD until his death around 17 AD, writing the Tristia and the Epistulae ex Ponto from this exact spot. Romania is part of the Schengen Area, so for most non-EU visitors entry is visa-free up to 90 days; the EES biometric system and ETIAS pre-travel authorisation are now layered on the experience but do not change which nationalities need a Schengen visa.

Ways to Experience This Destination

Transylvania — Brașov, Sighișoara, Sibiu & Bran Castle

The medieval Saxon belt north and west of the Carpathian arc is Romania's signature region. Brașov pairs the late-Gothic Black Church (the largest Gothic church between Vienna and Istanbul) with the Council Square (Piața Sfatului) and the Mount Tâmpa cable car for the city panorama. Sighișoara is a UNESCO-listed walled citadel — fourteenth-century clock tower, cobblestone streets, painted houses and the building traditionally identified as the birthplace of Vlad III in 1431. Sibiu was European Capital of Culture in 2007 and holds the Large Square, the Small Square, the Bridge of Lies and the Brukenthal palace museum. Bran Castle just south of Brașov is the marketed Dracula site (Stoker's novel attached the legend to its profile in 1897); for the historical Vlad III, Poenari Castle on the Argeș is the authentic fortress, reached by a 1 480-step climb.

Bucovina painted monasteries (UNESCO)

The painted monasteries of Bucovina in northern Moldavia are Romania's most distinctive cultural set. Five sixteenth-century Orthodox monasteries — Voroneț (1488, with the Last Judgment fresco covering the entire west wall and the famous Voroneț blue), Moldovița (1532), Sucevița (1582, the largest and best-preserved), Humor (1530) and Arbore (1503) — carry full exterior fresco programmes that have survived 500 winters thanks to a still partly mysterious mineral-binder technique that fixed the pigments to the limewashed plaster. The five together form a UNESCO World Heritage cluster that visitors typically cover in a day or two from Suceava or Gura Humorului with a local driver-guide.

Bucharest — Calea Victoriei, Palace of Parliament & Lipscani

Bucharest rewards two to three days. Calea Victoriei carries the Belle Époque architecture that earned the city its old nickname Le Petit Paris — the Romanian Athenaeum concert hall (1888), the Cantacuzino Palace and the National Museum of Art of Romania form the cultural spine. The Palace of Parliament, built between 1984 and 1997 as Ceaușescu's House of the Republic, is the second-largest administrative building in the world by floor area and is open for guided tours. The Lipscani district is the restored old-town quarter of restaurants, bars and small shops; Cărturești Carusel and the Stavropoleos Monastery are two single-stop highlights. The Village Museum (Muzeul Satului) on Lake Herăstrău is the country's open-air rural-architecture museum with peasant houses transplanted from across Romania.

Carpathian Mountains — hiking, brown bears & wildlife

The Carpathians arc through central Romania and shelter the largest populations of brown bear, wolf and lynx anywhere in Europe — roughly 6 000 brown bears, the highest concentration on the continent. The Făgăraș range holds the country's highest peak (Moldoveanu, 2 544 m) and the iconic Transfăgărășan road across it. Piatra Craiului and Bucegi national parks, accessible from Brașov and Sinaia, are the day-hike anchors. Retezat National Park in the south-west holds the country's largest cluster of glacial lakes (over 80, including Bucura Lake) and is the multi-day-trekker's choice. Wildlife-observation tours from licensed operators around Brașov, Făgăraș and Zărnești run guided brown-bear watching from the conservation hides established by Foundation Conservation Carpathia and others.

Danube Delta (UNESCO biosphere reserve)

The Danube Delta, where Europe's second-longest river meets the Black Sea, is the best-preserved river delta on the continent — a UNESCO biosphere reserve covering 5 800 km² of channels, lakes, reed islands and floodplain forest. The bird list is extraordinary: roughly 320 species, including Europe's largest pelican colonies (white pelican and Dalmatian pelican), the cormorants, herons, egrets, and the spring and autumn migration corridors that bring waders, ducks and raptors through in huge numbers. Tulcea is the gateway port; Sulina (the Black Sea outlet, Romania's easternmost town and a former international free-port city), Sfântu Gheorghe and Crișan are the deeper-delta villages. Tours run as full-day boat trips from Tulcea or as multi-night packages with overnight stays in delta villages.

Maramureș wooden churches & Black Sea Constanța

Two regional extremes round out a longer Romania trip. Maramureș in the far north — bordered by Ukraine — preserves the wooden churches (eight UNESCO-listed) and the Merry Cemetery of Săpânța, where the carved and painted blue tombstones each carry a humorous biographical poem about the deceased. The traditional architecture, the wooden gates, the daily rural rhythms and the Bârsana monastery complex make Maramureș the country's strongest rural-heritage destination. At the other end, the Black Sea coast at Constanța is Romania's Roman site — the National History and Archaeology Museum, the Roman mosaic floor (1 600 m², one of the largest in the Roman world), the cathedral and the seafront Piața Ovidiu dominated by the statue of the Roman poet who lived in exile here from 8 AD until his death around 17 AD. The beach resorts of Mamaia, Vama Veche and Costinești form the country's summer-beach belt.

Painted monasteries & cultural-heritage practicalities

Romania carries a UNESCO World Heritage list out of proportion to its size: the historic centres of Sighișoara, Horezu (the seventeenth-century monastery), the eight wooden churches of Maramureș, the seven Saxon fortified churches of southern Transylvania (Biertan, Câlnic, Dârjiu, Prejmer, Saschiz, Valea Viilor, Viscri — the last famously associated with the King Charles III rural-conservation project that started in the 2000s), the eight Bucovina painted monasteries and the Dacian fortresses of the Orăștie Mountains. Combined with the nineteenth-century Belle Époque core of Bucharest, the medieval Saxon citadels and the Roman Constanța, the country offers one of the densest cultural-heritage circuits in Europe at significantly lower cost than Western European equivalents — accommodation, food, transport and admissions run roughly 40–50 % of Western prices.

Money & Currency

Money & Currency
lei

Romanian Leu (RON)

Currency code: RON

Practical Money Tips

Romanian Leu (RON) — Romania is NOT in the eurozone; 1 EUR ≈ 5 RON (floating); EUR widely quoted in tourist areas but payment must be made in RON by law; USD and GBP exchangeable at banks and exchange offices in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, Brașov; best rates at licensed exchange offices (casa de schimb) in city centres — avoid hotels and airports; Banca Transilvania, BCR, BRD, Raiffeisen Bank, ING Romania ATMs nationwide

Romania uses the Romanian Leu (RON) and is not a member of the eurozone. The exchange rate is approximately 1 EUR ≈ 5 RON (floating). EUR is commonly quoted in property listings, hotel rates, and tourist prices — but payment is legally required in RON. EUR, USD, and GBP are exchangeable at licensed exchange offices (case de schimb) in Bucharest's city centre, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, and Brașov. Licensed exchange offices in city centres offer far better rates than hotels, airports, or banks. ATMs of major banks (Banca Transilvania, BCR, BRD, Raiffeisen Bank, ING Romania) are widely available.

ATMs widespread throughout Romania — Banca Transilvania, BCR, BRD, Raiffeisen Bank, ING Romania, Unicredit; always choose RON at ATM — DCC (Dynamic Currency Conversion) is very common in Bucharest tourist areas; avoid unlabelled ATMs in busy tourist spots; Wise and Revolut excellent for fee-free RON withdrawals; CHF, GBP, USD, and EUR exchangeable at licensed exchange offices in Bucharest, Cluj, Timișoara

ATMs are widely available throughout Romania. Banca Transilvania, BCR (Banca Comercială Română), BRD, Raiffeisen Bank, ING Romania, and UniCredit have ATMs in all major cities and increasingly in smaller towns. Always choose RON at ATMs — Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) is very common in Bucharest's tourist areas and will offer significantly worse rates. Avoid unlabelled or standalone ATMs in busy tourist spots — prefer bank branch ATMs. Wise and Revolut cards are excellent for fee-free RON withdrawals with competitive EUR/GBP/USD to RON rates. CHF is exchangeable at major exchange offices in Bucharest.

Good card infrastructure, improving rapidly — Visa and Mastercard widely accepted in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, Brașov; Apple Pay and Google Pay work very well throughout Romania; always pay in RON, not EUR — DCC trap very common in Bucharest; smaller towns, markets, and rural areas may prefer cash; contactless payments increasingly standard; one of Europe's most affordable destinations

Romania has a rapidly improving card payment infrastructure. Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted in Bucharest (particularly the city centre, Floreasca, and Victoriei Square area), Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, and Brașov. Apple Pay and Google Pay work very well throughout Romania. Always pay in RON when using a card — DCC is common in Bucharest hotels and tourist restaurants. Smaller towns, rural areas, markets, and older restaurants may prefer or require cash. Contactless payments are increasingly standard. American Express acceptance remains limited.

Very affordable: budget hostel Bucharest/Cluj RON 60–120/night (EUR 12–24); mid-range hotel RON 250–600/night (EUR 50–120); restaurant meal RON 40–90; traditional ciorbă or mămăligă meal RON 25–40 at local restaurants; Peles Castle entrance RON 50; budget travel possible at EUR 25–40/day; tipping 10–15% standard at restaurants; very strong value for EUR/GBP travelers

Romania is one of Europe's most affordable destinations. Budget hostel in Bucharest or Cluj-Napoca: RON 60–120/night (EUR 12–24). Mid-range hotel: RON 250–600/night (EUR 50–120). Quality hotel: RON 600–1,500/night. Restaurant meal: RON 40–90 (EUR 8–18). Traditional ciorbă (sour soup) or mămăligă (polenta) at a local restaurant: RON 25–40 — outstanding value. Beer at a bar: RON 10–20. Peles Castle entrance: RON 50. Budget travel in Romania: EUR 25–40/day possible including accommodation and meals. Tipping: 10–15% is standard and appreciated at restaurants.

Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.

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