Bucharest Hotels

Check out our great deals on cheap Bucharest hotel accommodation for leisure travel, holiday getaways and breaks from lastminute.com Book from our fantastic selection of discount hotels in Bucharest today.

You can either take a browse of our Bucharest hotel deals below, or use our search box to help find the perfect Bucharest hotel. What could be easier than that?

Search hotels

Bucharest (Buchuresti), located midway between the Carpathian Mountains and the Black Sea, in southeastern Romania, has not earned the nickname Paris of the Balkans by accident. Its astonishing range of architecture (from Wallachian wooden and bell-towered mansions to Byzantine-style chapels, neo-classical buildings, striking 1930s modernism and even the post-Stalinist absurdities of Ceaucescus megalomaniac regime) cannot help but leave the visitor in awe at the varieties of vision that have taken place in this city, over the centuries. But Bucharest has also been the epicentre of the countrys many upheavals, with the stages of the countrys history like vivid tattoos etched across the citys surface, each telling a different chapter of the story.

The first mention of Bucharest is in a document from 1459, signed by Vlad Dracula, then ruler of the first Romanian state of Wallachia. Known as Vlad the Impaler (or Tepes) (for leaving his enemies to die slowly on stakes) he became the inspiration for the famous vampire of literary and celluloid fame. Yet among his countrymen, he is something of a folk hero, renowned for standing up to the Ottomans, Saxons and Wallachias noble families. The ruins of one palace attributed to him can still be seen in old Bucharest, where trendy bars and clubs also capitalise on his image, with cobwebs and dank underground dancefloors.

After the Turkish conquest, Bucharest continued as a scene of rebellion and was burnt by the Ottomans, in 1595. A century later, it was made the seat of the Wallachian government, by Sultan Mustafa II. The city was caught in the crossfire of conflicts between the Ottomans, Austria and Russia the city was frequently occupied and destroyed until 1862, when it became the capital of a unified Romania. But after liberation, Bucharest began to forge a different identity, with French architects called in to remake it in the image of Paris, with long, tree-lined boulevards and a forging of classical and new Romanian architecture. Between the world wars, influenced by modernist trends from native artists who had lived abroad, such as Constantin Brancusi, Bucharest began to rejoice in a mixture of styles that would make it totally individual and produced some of Europes most beautiful residences for the elite.

This romantic chapter came to a close when Communism took root in 1946. Although never heavily bombed by the Allies, in World War II, Socialist Realism ushered in dreary Stalinist apartment blocks, many of which remain today. When Nicolae Ceausescu became president of Romanias Communist Party in 1965, however, he was so determined to create an imitation Champs Elysee in the civic centre that he destroyed many historic buildings, including 26 churches. His plans were never completed but the strange combination of neo-Stalinist architecture nonetheless gives a nod towards the citys avant-garde tradition. Oddly, all of these architectural incongruities afford an added dimension to the city today. And as the city looks hopefully to foreign investment and closer ties with the EU, historic buildings and parks are being restored, fashionable shops, restaurants, trendy bars and Internet cafés are popping up all over and the sense of a new dynamism is evident.

At present, however, the almost total lack of tourism infrastructure or facilities can be frustrating. There is no tourist office and even basic brochures in museums can be hard to find, leaving one to fend almost entirely on ones own. Although Bucharest enjoys a temperate climate, tourists should avoid mid-summer visits, since temperatures soar, air conditioning is rare and much of the city shuts down, as students return home and locals head for the coast.

Romanian Tourist Office

Address: Bucharest, Romania

Email: promovare@mturism.ro

Phone: +40 (0) 2 1410 1262

  • Palace of Parliament
    Commissioned in the 1980s by Romania's last communist leader, Nicolae Ceausescu, the majestic Palace of Parliament building features around 6000 rooms, making it the world's second-largest structure after the US Pentagon.
  • The Museum of The Romanian Peasant
    Winner of the EMYA (European Museum of the Year Award), the Museum of the Romanian Peasant is home to an impressive collection of objects, including pottery, costumes, woodwork, photographs and manuscripts dating back to a century ago.
  • The Royal Palace
    Once the official royal residence, the Neoclassic Royal Palace is today home to Romania's National Museum of Art.
Tell us about Bucharest in your own free blog at lastminuteliving.com