10 European Cities That Cost Half of Paris
Discover 10 stunning European cities where you can travel for $70-100/day â half the cost of Paris. Real daily budgets, must-see highlights, and best times to visit.
Europe's Best Cities Are the Ones Nobody's Hashtagging
Paris costs $180-220 per day for a comfortable experience in 2026. Paris is wonderful. Paris is also expensive in a way that makes your credit card send concerned text messages.
But there are cities across Europe with stunning architecture, vibrant food scenes, and genuine character at 40-60% of the cost. They're not tiny villages â they're real cities with airports, nightlife, and locals confused about why more tourists don't visit.
All estimates: mid-range traveler, 2026. Comfortable hotel, restaurant meals, public transport, 1-2 activities per day.
1. Porto, Portugal â $95/day
Porto has emerged from Lisbon's shadow. The Ribeira district is UNESCO-listed, port wine tastings start at $5, and the food scene rivals Lisbon at lower prices. Hotels: $55-70/night. Portuguese lunch with vinho verde: $10-14.
2. Ljubljana, Slovenia â $85/day
Car-free old town, castle on a hill, emerald-green river, world-class food market. Hotels: $50-65/night. Lunch at a gostilna: $9-12. Best experiences â river promenade, Metelkova arts district, Tivoli Park â are free.
3. KrakĂłw, Poland â $75/day
The largest medieval town square in Europe. Craft beer for $3-4. Cocktails for $5-7. Three-course dinner with beer for $12-18. The math doesn't make sense, and that's exactly why you should go.
4. Thessaloniki, Greece â $90/day
Everyone goes to Athens and the islands. Meanwhile, Thessaloniki quietly has better food than Athens. Waterfront, White Tower, Ano Poli old quarter â free to explore. Hotels: $50-65/night.
5. Ghent, Belgium â $100/day
What Bruges would be without cruise ships. Medieval architecture, canals, van Eyck's altarpiece, and Belgian beer at $3-5. Ghent Festival in July: ten days of free music that transforms the city into the best party nobody outside Belgium knows about.
6. Valletta, Malta â $90/day
A fortified city built by medieval knights on a tiny peninsula. Every street is a photo opportunity. Lunch at a pastizzeria: under $2 for flaky ricotta pastries. Hotels: $55-70/night.
7. WrocĆaw, Poland â $70/day
Over 100 bridges, colorful townhouses, 300+ hidden bronze dwarf statues. Hotels: $35-50/night. Full dinner with beer: $10-14. This city costs less per day than dinner for two in most European capitals.
8. Split, Croatia â $95/day
While Dubrovnik charges GoT prices, Split has Diocletian's Palace â a Roman emperor's retirement home turned living city center â where coffee inside a 1,700-year-old courtyard costs $2.
9. Braga, Portugal â $80/day
Portugal's third city: baroque churches, university-driven bar scene. A prato do dia â soup, main, dessert, and a drink â for $7-9. Seven to nine dollars for a complete meal with wine.
10. Kotor, Montenegro â $85/day
A UNESCO-listed old town between a dramatic bay and steep mountains. Hotels: $50-65/night. Seafood dinner with wine: $15-20. The fortress hike: $8 entry for 1,350 steps and some of the best views in Europe.
How to Choose Between Them
For food lovers: Thessaloniki, Porto, or Ghent
For history buffs: KrakĂłw, Kotor, or Split
For architecture: Valletta, WrocĆaw, or Ljubljana
For the tightest budget: WrocĆaw ($70/day), KrakĂłw ($75/day), or Braga ($80/day)
For a romantic getaway: Kotor, Porto, or Ljubljana
Stack any two European cities head-to-head and see exactly how costs compare.
Compare European Cities âEurope doesn't have to be expensive. It just requires looking past the cities that show up when you search "Europe" on Instagram. Go before the algorithm finds them.
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