Hero image for Via Transilvanica: Romania's New 1,400 km Camino
By Bucket List Ideas Team

Via Transilvanica: Romania's New 1,400 km Camino


I keep hearing the same thing from people who’ve done the Camino de Santiago: “I loved it, but I want something like that without the crowds.” Then they start googling and end up on a forum post about Romania. Specifically, about a trail that didn’t fully exist three years ago.

Via Transilvanica is 1,400 kilometers of waymarked trail running north-to-south through Romania, from the village of Putna in Bukovina down to Drobeta-Turnu Severin on the Danube. It crosses seven cultural heritage districts — Saxon fortified churches, Dacian fortress ruins, medieval Transylvanian towns with cobblestone squares that haven’t changed much since the 1600s. National Geographic named it one of the 26 best new things to do in the world in 2026. And spring 2026 is the first full season where the entire route is waymarked and supported with basic trail infrastructure.

It’s the Camino you haven’t heard of yet. At a fraction of the cost. And almost nobody is on it.

Quick Facts

AspectDetails
Total Distance~1,400 km (870 miles)
Time Needed50–70 days thru-hike; 5–14 days for sections
Cost Range$20–$45/day on trail; $800–$2,500 for a multi-week section
Best TimeMay–October (spring wildflowers peak in May–June)
Physical DemandsModerate. Long days, some elevation, but no technical terrain
Planning Lead Time2–4 weeks for section hikes; 2–3 months for thru-hike

In one sentence: Europe’s newest long-distance trail threads 1,400 km through Romania’s most historically rich countryside, and it’s still quiet enough to feel like a secret.

Why This Makes the List

Because it solves the problem that every long-distance walker eventually runs into: the best trails in Europe are crowded.

The Camino de Santiago had over 440,000 registered pilgrims in 2024. The Tour du Mont Blanc books out months in advance. The West Highland Way in Scotland (which is beautiful, genuinely) now feels like rush hour on popular weekends in summer.

Via Transilvanica is different. Not because Romania is some rugged frontier (it’s an EU country with good infrastructure), but because the trail is new enough that international hiking culture hasn’t caught up to it. You’ll pass through villages where the guesthouse owner is still surprised to see a foreign walker. Where the old man at the corner store wants to know where you started and why. Where dinner at a pensiune costs €8 and includes more food than you can eat, a carafe of house wine, a dessert you didn’t order, and an aggressive recommendation to try the plum brandy.

That won’t last forever. National Geographic doesn’t put things on a list for them to stay quiet. But right now, in 2026, the window is open.

What the Trail Actually Looks Like

The Route

Via Transilvanica runs roughly north to south, divided into sections that each take 4–7 days. The trail is waymarked with orange “VT” markers: paint blazes on trees, rocks, and posts. There’s also a free GPS app (Via Transilvanica app, available on iOS and Android) that tracks the full route with waypoints.

The terrain varies more than you’d expect across 1,400 km:

  • Bukovina (north): Rolling green hills, painted monasteries with UNESCO status, thick forests
  • Transylvanian heartland (center): Saxon fortified villages, wide valleys, farmland punctuated by church steeples visible from kilometers away
  • Southern Carpathians: Higher ground, more rugged but never technical. Some passes above 1,500 meters
  • Danube approach (south): River gorges, Dacian fortress ruins, the trail descending toward the Iron Gates

You don’t have to do the whole thing. Most hikers pick a section — two weeks through the Saxon villages in central Transylvania is probably the most popular stretch, and for good reason. That’s where the fortified churches cluster, where Sighișoara’s medieval citadel sits, where Viscri (the village Prince Charles famously bought a house in) feels like stepping into something from 400 years ago.

A Day on the Trail

A typical day covers 18–25 km. You start early because Romanian summer afternoons get warm (30°C+ in July and August, cooler in May–June and September). The morning is walking through forest or along farm tracks, past hay meadows that smell like something you forgot you remembered. Mid-morning you hit a village. Maybe there’s a magazin (small shop) where you buy water and a pastry for €1. Maybe there’s a church worth ten minutes of your time.

Lunch is whatever you’re carrying, or you stop at a pensiune if the timing works. Afternoons are longer stretches between villages. By 3 or 4 PM you’re arriving at your overnight stop: a guesthouse, a homestay, occasionally a basic cabin.

It’s not wilderness backpacking. You’re sleeping indoors almost every night. But it’s also not the Camino’s albergue system with 40 bunks and a vending machine. It’s somewhere between — personal, quiet, sometimes improvised.

The Real Costs

This is where Via Transilvanica pulls ahead of other European long-distance trails.

Money

Romania is far cheaper than Western Europe. On the trail, your daily costs look like this:

  • Accommodation: €15–€35/night at guesthouses and pensiuni (most include breakfast)
  • Dinner: €5–€12 at local restaurants or guesthouse dining
  • Lunch/snacks: €3–€6 from village shops
  • Daily trail budget: €25–€50/day (~$27–$55)

For a two-week section hike, that’s roughly $800–$1,500 all-in on the trail, plus flights.

Getting there: Flights to Bucharest or Cluj-Napoca from major European cities run €50–€200 return. From the US, expect $600–$1,000 round-trip to Bucharest, with internal flights or trains to your starting point adding $20–$50.

Compare that to the Camino: A typical 30-day Camino Francés costs €1,500–€2,500 for accommodation and food alone. Via Transilvanica’s equivalent stretch costs roughly half that. Or less, if you eat at guesthouses rather than restaurants.

Time

The full thru-hike takes 50–70 days depending on pace and rest days. Most people don’t do that.

Popular section options:

SectionDistanceDaysHighlights
Bukovina monasteries~120 km5–7Painted churches, forested hills
Saxon Transylvania~200 km8–12Fortified villages, Sighișoara, Viscri
Southern Carpathians~150 km6–9Mountain passes, Dacian ruins
Full thru-hike~1,400 km50–70Everything

Two weeks covers the central section comfortably with rest days. That’s the sweet spot for most international hikers. Enough to feel immersed, short enough to fit into a normal vacation.

Physical Demands

Moderate. If you can hike 20 km with a daypack on mixed terrain, you can do Via Transilvanica. The trail doesn’t have the sustained high-altitude exposure of the GR20 or the Alpine passes of the Tour du Mont Blanc. Some sections through the Carpathians involve 800–1,200 meters of elevation gain in a day, but most days are gentler rolling terrain.

Carry a daypack (8–12 kg) if you’re staying in guesthouses. You don’t need a tent, stove, or heavy camping gear unless you specifically want the freedom to bivvy.

The main challenge is distance and consistency. Walking 20+ km every day for two weeks wears on feet and joints. Break in your boots before you go. (I shouldn’t have to say this. I’m saying it anyway because people keep showing up to long trails in new shoes.)

How Via Transilvanica Compares to the Camino de Santiago

This matters, because the Camino comparison is how most people find this trail.

Via TransilvanicaCamino de Santiago (Francés)
Distance~1,400 km~800 km
Daily cost€25–€50€40–€70
CrowdsVery few international hikers400,000+ pilgrims/year
AccommodationGuesthouses, pensiuniAlbergues, hostels
WaymarkingOrange VT blazes + appYellow arrows
Spiritual frameworkCultural/historical, not religious pilgrimageCatholic pilgrimage tradition
Infrastructure maturityNew (2024–2026 completion)Centuries old
End-of-trail certificateNo formal equivalent yetCompostela certificate

The biggest difference is feel. The Camino has a built community — you walk with people, you eat with people, you share bunk rooms with people. Via Transilvanica is more solitary. You’ll encounter other hikers, especially in the popular Saxon section, but you might walk entire days without seeing another foreigner. That’s either a drawback or the whole point, depending on what you’re after.

How to Make It Happen

Step 1: Choose Your Section

Don’t try to plan a full thru-hike for your first time unless you have two months free and prior long-trail experience. Pick a section based on what interests you:

  • History and villages: Saxon Transylvania (start in Sighișoara or Mediaș)
  • Nature and quiet: Bukovina monasteries (start in Putna or Suceava)
  • Mountain terrain: Southern Carpathians (start in Sibiu area)

The Via Transilvanica website has detailed section maps and suggested itineraries.

Step 2: Sort Logistics

Fly into: Cluj-Napoca (for central/northern sections) or Sibiu (for the Saxon heartland) or Bucharest (for southern sections or if flights are cheaper, then take a domestic train).

Trains: Romania’s rail network connects most trail towns. CFR (Romanian railways) runs affordable, if sometimes slow, trains between major cities. Sibiu, Sighișoara, and Brașov are all on the rail network.

Accommodation: Book guesthouses 1–2 weeks ahead in May–June and September. July–August is busier (Romanian domestic tourism), so book earlier. The Via Transilvanica app lists accommodation options along the route.

Step 3: Pack Smart

This isn’t the Himalayas. You need:

  • Broken-in hiking boots or trail shoes (I’ve seen people do sections in trail runners and be fine)
  • Rain jacket (afternoon thunderstorms happen in spring and summer)
  • Layers for Carpathian sections (nights above 1,000 m get cool even in summer)
  • Basic first aid and blister kit
  • Cash in Romanian lei. Village shops don’t always take cards
  • The VT app downloaded with offline maps

You don’t need: a tent (unless you want one), a stove, technical climbing gear, or a Romanian phrasebook (though learning mulțumesc (thank you) goes a long way).

Planning Timeline

  • Now–April 2026: Choose your section, research accommodation, book flights
  • April–May: Break in your hiking boots. Seriously. Walk in them weekly
  • May–June: Prime hiking window. Wildflowers, moderate temps, long days
  • Or September–October: Autumn colors, cooler weather, harvest season in the villages

What Are the Best Sections of Via Transilvanica for First-Time Hikers?

  1. Sighișoara to Viscri (2–3 days): The signature stretch. Medieval citadel start, Saxon fortified churches, rolling green hills, Prince Charles’s adopted village at the end
  2. Viscri to Sibiu (4–5 days): Continues through the Saxon heartland with increasingly dramatic scenery approaching the Carpathian foothills
  3. Putna to Vatra Dornei (5–6 days): The northern Bukovina section. Painted monasteries, thick forests, quiet mountain villages
  4. Sibiu outward (4–5 days south): Starts in one of Romania’s best small cities, heads into Carpathian terrain with fortress ruins and gorge scenery
  5. Any two connected sections (10–14 days): The sweet spot. Enough time to settle into trail rhythm without needing a two-month window

Pro Tips

Learn the pensiune system. Romanian guesthouses (pensiuni) are the backbone of trail accommodation. Most cost €15–€30, include breakfast, and serve dinner for an extra €5–€10. The hosts are often the best source of trail information. They know which paths flood, which shortcuts work, and where the next night’s bed is.

Carry cash. Villages on the trail often have exactly one shop. That shop might not have card payment. ATMs exist in larger towns (Sighișoara, Sibiu, Mediaș) but not in every hamlet. Withdraw enough lei to cover 3–4 days between towns.

Spring wildflowers are real. May and June in the Transylvanian hills produce wildflower meadows that look retouched. They’re not. If you have any interest in botany or just want your photos to look absurd, time your trip for late May.

The fortified churches close early. Saxon fortified churches, the ones with UNESCO consideration, often have irregular hours, especially in smaller villages. Ask locally or arrive before 3 PM. Some require a small donation (€1–€2) to enter.

Don’t skip the food. Romanian rural cooking is underrated. Ciorbă (sour soup), mici (grilled meat rolls), sarmale (cabbage rolls), and whatever fruit preserves the guesthouse owner made last autumn. The plum brandy (țuică) will be offered. Declining is possible but considered suspicious.

Alternatives to Consider

Lower Commitment Version

Pick a single section, Sighișoara to Viscri, and walk it in 2–3 days. You get the Saxon Transylvania highlight reel without committing to a multi-week trip. Combine it with a few days in Sibiu or Brașov and you’ve got a week in Romania that includes a genuine long-distance trail experience. Check the new bucket list hikes guide for other short-section options on new trails.

Different Camino Alternative

If you want the pilgrimage framework but not the crowds, Mallorca’s new 67 km Camino route launches in 2026 as well. Shorter, Mediterranean, and connected to the traditional Santiago network. Different feel entirely, but solves the same “I want the Camino without 400,000 other people” problem.

Pair It with More Europe

Via Transilvanica works well as part of a longer European trip. Romania connects easily to Hungary, Serbia, and Bulgaria by train. If you’re planning a sabbatical year or extended travel window, two weeks on the trail followed by Europe’s sleeper train network is the kind of trip that justifies the flight across the Atlantic.

Go Solo

Via Transilvanica is one of the better trails in Europe for solo hiking. The guesthouse system means you’re never truly isolated — there’s a warm meal and a conversation waiting at the end of each day — but the walking itself is quiet and solitary in a way that the Camino hasn’t been for a decade.

Is This For You?

Probably yes if:

  • You’ve thought about the Camino but the crowd reports put you off
  • You want a long-distance trail that costs $30/day instead of $70
  • Medieval history and rural European culture genuinely interest you (not just as backdrop for hiking)
  • You can handle 18–25 km days on mixed terrain for a week or more
  • You’re comfortable with some improvisation — this isn’t a trail with Yelp reviews at every stop

Probably no if:

  • You want a fully developed trail community with fellow international hikers at every meal
  • You need detailed English-language infrastructure at every step (signage is good; English-speaking hosts vary by region)
  • You’re looking for high-altitude mountain scenery — the Carpathian sections have some, but this is primarily a cultural trail through hills and valleys
  • You can’t do the trip without reliable WiFi and creature comforts in every village

The Bottom Line

National Geographic put Via Transilvanica on its 2026 list for a reason. It’s the kind of trail that feels like discovering something before the rest of the world catches on — because, for the moment, that’s exactly what it is. The full waymarking is done. The guesthouses are there. The fortified churches and Dacian ruins have been there for centuries. So have the wildflower meadows. What’s missing is the crowd.

In five years, this trail will have guidebooks and gear lists and forum threads arguing about the best section. In ten years, it might have the Camino’s popularity problem. Right now, in 2026, you can walk through villages where your arrival is still an event. Where the guesthouse owner brings out the good țuică because you walked there from two valleys away.

That’s not a sales pitch. That’s a window, and it’s open right now.


Prices and trail details current as of March 2026. Via Transilvanica infrastructure continues to develop — verify accommodation availability and current waymarking status on viatransilvanica.com before planning your trip.