Getting around Zagreb
Zagreb is served by an extensive network of buses and trams which are operated by Zagreb Municipal Transit System (ZET) (tel: 385 72 500 400; www.zet.hr). The city centre is compact and manageable on foot, but to reach the outlying suburbs, public transport is necessary.
Regular bus and tram services operate through the day; at night, services are few and far between. Tickets, which are valid for 90 minutes in any direction, should be stamped upon boarding using the validation boxes. You can buy them either from a kiosk or, at a slightly higher price, from the driver. One-day tickets are also available.
The Zagreb Card (zagrebcard.com) offers 24 or 72 hours of unlimited travel on city public transport (including its famous funicular), free entry to four museums as well as discounts at numerous museums, galleries, attractions, restaurants, shops, nightclubs and car hire.
Zagreb’s short funicular trundles up and down between Gornji grad and Donji grad every 10 minutes from 0630 to 2200.
Taxis in Zagreb are relatively cheap for a European capital city. There are taxi ranks outside the train and bus stations, near the main square and in front of the larger hotels.
Recommended firms include Radio Taxi (tel: 1717 in Croatia only; radiotaxizagreb.com), Ekotaxi (tel: +385 60 77 77; www.ekotaxi.hr) and Taxi Cammeo (tel: +385 1 1212; www.cammeo.hr). All three companies have mobile apps for iOS and Android. Tipping is not expected beyond rounding up the fare. Alternatively, you can book a taxi via Uber.
Zagreb is quite easy to drive around – the roads are wide and parking is ample and cheap. Street parking is relatively easy to find, though spaces can be harder to find in the post-work rush hour (1700-1900). Watch out for trams, and don’t be tempted to park illegally as fines are heavy and your car can be towed away.
Car hire companies in Zagreb include Budget (tel: +385 1 4673 638 outside Croatia; www.budget.hr), Dollar and Thrifty (tel: +385 21 399 000; www.subrosa.hr), Hertz (tel: +385 7272 7277; www.hertz.hr) and Sixt (tel: +385 1 6651 599; www.sixt.hr).
The centre of Zagreb is flat and makes cycling easy, but the steep and cobbled streets of Gornji grad can be hard work. Bicycle hire is available from Bicikli Zoric (tel: +385 98 774 574; www.bike.com.hr). Blue Bike (tel: +385 98 188 3344; www.zagrebbybike.com) rents bikes and runs group bike tours of the city. Nextbike (tel: +385 1 777 6534; www.nextbike.hr/en/zagreb) runs the city's small bikeshare scheme. Nextbike does not operate during the winter season.
Do you have any Feedback about this page?
© 2024 Columbus Travel Media Ltd. All rights reserved. No part of this site may be reproduced without our written permission, click here for information on Columbus Content Solutions.