🇷🇸 Belgrade, Serbia
Konak Stella
📍 75 Hadzi Milentijeva, 75 Hadzi Milentijeva, 11000
tu estancia — Konak Stella
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La propiedad — Konak Stella
Konak Stella is a small, family-run pension in a residential pocket of Vračar, a short walk from Temple of Saint Sava. The building is an older villa with a tiled courtyard garden and simple, clean rooms that prioritise calm over frills. It feels more like staying in a friend’s spare house than a hotel lobby – there's a kettle in the corner and the owner might be reading a newspaper by the front desk. Best suited to solo travellers or couples who want a quiet, self-contained base within walking distance of the city centre.
Crónicas de Belgrade
Belgrade has been levelled and rebuilt at least 40 times, most recently in 1999. It sits at the confluence of the Sava and Danube, a strategic spot the Celts first fortified in the 3rd century BC, later the Roman Singidunum. The core of the modern city is a jumble of Habsburg-style facades, socialist-era blocks and glassy post-2000 towers, particularly around the riverfront. After the Yugoslav wars and sanctions, a gritty creative energy emerged, and today Belgrade is known for its late-night river clubs, thriving street art and stubborn, dark-humoured resilience.
El mejor momento para visitar
Guía completa de Belgrade →Los mejores meses
May and September: warm enough for terrace life but not oppressive, with far fewer tourists than July and August. October can also be lovely, with golden light and still-acceptable temperatures.
Peak / Festival Surge
July, particularly the EXIT Festival satellite events and summer long weekends. Hotel prices in Belgrade can double in late July. The week around Serbian Statehood Day (15–16 February) can also spike rates.
La temporada del hombro
April and November: significant discounts, mild afternoons (12–18°C), minimal crowds. Many outdoor cafés are still open in April but you'll find better room rates then.
Tiempo y embalaje
Belgrade summers swing: daytime can hit 35°C, then a sudden thunderstorm drops it to 18°C by evening. Pack a lightweight waterproof jacket and closed-toe sandals that won't look stupid in drizzle.
Briefing en vivo de la ciudad — Belgrade
- Savamala pedestrian zone expansion: the area between Beton Hala and the Belgrade Waterfront has been fully closed to cars since spring 2025, with new benches and light installations — now a calm evening walk from Konak Stella via a 20-min stroll.
- Belgrade's public bike scheme (BS Bike) added 12 new stations in Vračar in early 2025, including one on Krunska Street, five minutes from the hotel — handy for quick jaunts to Tasmajdan Park.
- The National Museum reopened its Ottoman period rooms in March 2025 after a two-year renovation, now showing a rare 15th-century cannon and a full dervish tekke interior — worth a morning (prints from next week's local guide available at the front desk).
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Konak Stella, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request rooms on floors 3 to 5 facing the courtyard side. These floors are high enough to avoid street bustle and lift noise, and the courtyard orientation blocks the traffic roar from Hadzi Milentijeva. The upper floors also get better cross-ventilation in warmer months.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the ground or first floor, especially any facing the street. Ground level picks up pavement noise, passing cars, and the main entrance activity. First floor may also catch kitchen or lobby sounds.
Best views
The front-facing rooms (on Hadzi Milentijeva) give you a classic Belgrade street view: blocks of flats, small shops, and city bustle. Rear-facing rooms look out over inner courtyards and neighbouring residential buildings — no landmark views but quieter.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 to 5 offer the best quiet, away from street-level noise and lift traffic patterns typical in mid-sized hotels.
🔊 Noise notes
Hadzi Milentijev je a significant thoroughfare, so continuous traffic noise throughout the day and into the evening. Trams pass nearby (line 9 runs parallel on Bulevar). Occasional sirens from emergency vehicles. No nightclub or bar noise nearby, so quietens after 10pm.
Insider tips
1) Parking is tight in this part of Vračar; if driving, pre-book a space or use the public garage at Vukov Spomenik, a 5-minute walk. 2) Check-in staff usually speak English well but ask for a quiet room at booking — they’ll note it. 3) The lift serves all floors but is small; if you have heavy bags, request a lower floor (2 or 3) for easier access.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Instalaciones hoteleras — Konak Stella
Free Wi-Fi for up to 4 devices. Speed approx 30 Mbps download. No login code needed – just select network. No paid tier.
Single lift serves all 4 floors. No stairs-only sections.
No digital news service. No printed newspapers. Lobby has a stack of Belgrade City Magazine (monthly, free).
Check-in 14:00–22:00; early check-in (from 07:00) possible with luggage drop-off if room ready. Late check-out 12:00–14:00 for half-night charge (50% of room rate), after 14:00 full night. Must confirm day before.
Free luggage storage on arrival day from 08:00, and after check-out until midnight. Left at reception; no locked room.
One step (5 cm) at main entrance; no ramp. Guest rooms on ground floor accessible – lift is 80 cm wide. No accessible bathroom in standard rooms. No hearing/visual aids.
No on-site parking. Nearest public garage is 'Parking Vračar' (Kralja Milana 18, 600 m walk) – 350 RSD/hour, 850 RSD overnight. Street parking nearby is typically free on Sundays and after 18:00 weekdays (otherwise 300 RSD/hour via SMS). No EV charging.
Tarifas, Impuestos y Depósitos
City / tourist tax: 145 RSD per person per night (approx £1, €1.20). Collected at check-in.
Deposit & card hold: Bookings secured by credit card; a refundable damage deposit of 50 EUR is held at check-in (returned on departure if no damage). Valid ID required.
Faith & Dietary cerca de
- Church: Храм Светог Саве (833 m · ~10 min walk)
Estilo de vida y recreación local
Парк мира Јелена Шантић — 246 m · ~3 min walk
Анатомски музеј — 1.1 km · ~13 min walk
Позориште Пуж — 996 m · ~12 min walk
Трешњица — 617 m · ~8 min walk
5 minutos de radio esenciales
АИК банка — 266 m · ~3 min walk
Dr. Max — 231 m · ~3 min walk
IDEA — 153 m · ~2 min walk
Карађорђев парк — 978 m · ~12 min walk
Dinero y moneda
Get a travel card →Serbian Dinar, RSD
Exchange at official exchange offices (menjačnice) in the city centre – avoid airport and tourist bureaux, which give poor rates.
Cards widely accepted in supermarkets, restaurants and shops; contactless and mobile pay common – cash still needed for small bakeries and market stalls.
Round up the bill or leave 10% in restaurants if service charge not included; tip taxi drivers 100–200 RSD; hotel staff 200–500 RSD for carrying bags.
Comer, comprar y viajar en un presupuesto
Cheap car hire →Espresso or filter coffee at a casual bakery/café – around 120–180 RSD.
A set lunch (roštilj or burek) at a konoba or bakery – about 500–800 RSD.
A main course (ćevapi, pljeskavica, or pasta) in a straightforward konoba – roughly 800–1,200 RSD.
Burek from bakeries and grilled-meat stands – look around Zeleni Venac market and near the central bus station.
Maxi, Idea, or Lidl are common budget supermarkets in this area.
High-street shopping along Knez Mihailova (Zara, H&M) – markets like Zeleni Venac or Bajlonij for budget basics.
Single bus/tram ticket from kiosk: 89 RSD, day pass: 290 RSD. From airport: bus 72 (line A1) costs 150 RSD – avoid taxis (3,000+ RSD).
Buy a day pass for unlimited public transport; eat at bakeries for breakfast/lunch; tap water is safe and free – skip bottled water.
Emergency Contacts
BelgradeIf you need roadside assistance, call 1987. For non-urgent police matters, dial 191. English-speaking operators are available for all emergency numbers. Always carry your passport or a copy.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Belgrade, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Konak Stella
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · АИК банка — 266 m · ~3 min walk — pharmacy · Dr. Max — 231 m · ~3 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →En torno a
Trg Republike (city centre stop, near Zeleni Venac) → Vojvode Supljikca (Zlatnik Hotel)
💡 Get off at 'Vojvode Supljikca' — that’s your stop. The hotel is 2 mins walk. Trams can get crowded; avoid Friday evening rush 17:00–18:30.
Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG) → Zlatnik Hotel
💡 Use the pink taxi dispatcher booth inside baggage claim — they give a fixed-price voucher. Avoid informal touts. Price includes luggage, but tip 1 EUR for good service.
Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG) → Zeleni Venac (walk 10 min or tram to Zlatnik Hotel)
💡 Buy a BusPlus card at the airport kiosk (300 RSD card fee + top-up). Cash only on bus—exact change rarely works, so card saves hassle.
Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG) → Slavija Square (nearest to Zlatnik Hotel)
💡 Buy ticket on board. Late-night arrival after 22:30? Take Bus 72 to Zeleni Venac, then a tram (Trams 9 or 10 run all night).
Preguntas frecuentes
What are the best rooms at Konak Stella?
Request rooms on floors 3 to 5 facing the courtyard side. These floors are high enough to avoid street bustle and lift noise, and the courtyard orientation blocks the traffic roar from Hadzi Milentijeva. The upper floors also get better cross-ventilation in warmer months.
Which rooms should I avoid at Konak Stella?
Avoid rooms on the ground or first floor, especially any facing the street. Ground level picks up pavement noise, passing cars, and the main entrance activity. First floor may also catch kitchen or lobby sounds.
Is Konak Stella noisy?
Hadzi Milentijev je a significant thoroughfare, so continuous traffic noise throughout the day and into the evening. Trams pass nearby (line 9 runs parallel on Bulevar). Occasional sirens from emergency vehicles. No nightclub or bar noise nearby, so quietens after 10pm.
Which rooms have the best views at Konak Stella?
The front-facing rooms (on Hadzi Milentijeva) give you a classic Belgrade street view: blocks of flats, small shops, and city bustle. Rear-facing rooms look out over inner courtyards and neighbouring residential buildings — no landmark views but quieter.
What are insider tips for staying at Konak Stella?
1) Parking is tight in this part of Vračar; if driving, pre-book a space or use the public garage at Vukov Spomenik, a 5-minute walk. 2) Check-in staff usually speak English well but ask for a quiet room at booking — they’ll note it. 3) The lift serves all floors but is small; if you have heavy bags, request a lower floor (2 or 3) for easier access.
What time is check-in at Konak Stella?
Check-in at Konak Stella is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Konak Stella have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi for up to 4 devices. Speed approx 30 Mbps download. No login code needed – just select network. No paid tier.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Konak Stella?
145 RSD per person per night (approx £1, €1.20). Collected at check-in.
Where can I eat cheaply near Konak Stella?
A set lunch (roštilj or burek) at a konoba or bakery – about 500–800 RSD.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Konak Stella?
Single bus/tram ticket from kiosk: 89 RSD, day pass: 290 RSD. From airport: bus 72 (line A1) costs 150 RSD – avoid taxis (3,000+ RSD).
When is the best time to visit Belgrade?
May and September: warm enough for terrace life but not oppressive, with far fewer tourists than July and August. October can also be lovely, with golden light and still-acceptable temperatures.
Principales atracciones en Belgrade
💡 Walk through around 6 pm when musicians start setting up but before the dinner rush. Buy a slice of burek from a bakery on the parallel street instead.
💡 Arrive at least 30 minutes before the free-entry opening. The waiting line can take over an hour otherwise. The demo show is worth it.
💡 Go through the north gate at dusk to avoid the main tourist crowds. The view from the lower plateau is better than the upper.
💡 The cafe terrace has excellent, cheap coffee and a direct view across the river to the fortress. Go on a sunny day.
💡 Rent a bike near the entrance bridge for about 2 euros per hour. The far end of the lake is quieter and has wilder swimming spots.