2.5 Day Ljubljana Itinerary: Solo City Walks, Good Food, and Lake Bled
Planning a trip to Ljubljana and not sure what to expect? You’re in the right place. This 2.5-day Ljubljana itinerary maps out exactly how to spend a short solo trip in Slovenia’s capital, including what to see, where to eat, and how to add a Lake Bled day trip without renting a car.
I’ve been to Ljubljana in both summer (back in 2018 on a road trip to Croatia) and winter, and this itinerary is built around my most recent solo trip in January 2026. That means I can tell you what’s actually open in low season, which tours run, what gets canceled, and what to skip.
A quick, honest note: this is 2.5 days, not 3. Most itinerary posts pretend you have full first and last days. You don’t. Mine accounts for an afternoon arrival, two full days, and a morning departure — which is perfect if you don’t have the budget or the time.
If you only have 2 or 3 days for Slovenia, Ljubljana is a smart choice. The city is compact, walkable, affordable, and one of the safest European capitals I’ve traveled solo in. You can see the highlights without feeling rushed and pull off a major Lake Bled day trip with no car needed.
In a Rush? My 2.5-Day Ljubljana Itinerary at a Glance
🏨 Where to stay → ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Allegro Hotel in Old Town
Walkable to every restaurant and main sight in this itinerary. Breakfast included.
🗺️ Best day trip → ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Slovenia in One Day: Lake Bled, Postojna Cave & Predjama Castle
covers all three Slovenian highlights in one day.
🍝 Best food experience I didn’t get to go on
Ljubljana Small Group Food Walking Tour
Hits farmer’s markets, gourmet shops, and local diners with a guide. Book early
Low-season tours need 2+ people to run.
🍽️ Best splurge dinner → Reserve Breg via their official site
Michelin Guide mentioned. Reserve before you arrive in Slovenia.
The itinerary at a glance:
- Arrival Day (Thursday afternoon): Arrive in Ljubljana, check into the hotel, dinner at Breg
- Day 1 (Friday): Walking tour, lunch at Figovec, Ljubljana Castle, dinner in
- Day 2 (Saturday): Lake Bled + Postojna Cave day trip, dinner at Basa
- Departure Day (Sunday): Final breakfast, walk to bus station, depart

Before You Go: What I Wish I Knew About Visiting Ljubljana in Low Season
I want to put this at the top because it’s the single thing that almost derailed my trip planning.
Most tours in Ljubljana require a 2-person minimum to run.
I had booked a food tour for my full day in Ljubljana, and they canceled it the morning of because not enough people had signed up. This is very common in January, February, and other shoulder/low season months in Slovenia. The same is true for many walking tours, cooking classes, and small-group experiences.
What this means for your itinerary:
- Book popular, frequently-run tours first (like the Lake Bled + Postojna Cave bus tour) because they almost always go
- Have a Plan B for any tour that requires a minimum, usually the free walking tour or self-guided exploration
- Don’t build your whole trip around a single small-group experience in low season — it might not happen
- Travel insurance is worth it if you’re traveling in winter, since the weather can also cancel things
This is annoying, but it’s not a reason to avoid Ljubljana in the low season. The city itself is gorgeous in winter, prices are lower, restaurants don’t need reservations, and you get the place mostly to yourself. Just plan around tour limitations, not around them being guaranteed.
Custom Itinerary and Travel Planning Services
If you want help building an itinerary that accounts for low-season realities, that’s exactly what I do in my custom itinerary planning service.
Custom Itinerary and Travel Planning Services



Arrival Day: Late Afternoon in Ljubljana, Then Dinner at Breg
Total activity time: About 4-5 hours after arrival
If you’re coming by train and bus like I did from Vicenza (full route in my How to get from Italy to Ljubljana guide), you’ll likely arrive at Ljubljana bus station in the mid-to-late afternoon.
The bus station is centrally located and within walking distance to old town. There are taxis you can take on cold days if you don’t want to walk.
4:00 PM — Arrive at Ljubljana Bus Station and Check Into Your Hotel
Honest moment: I arrived at Ljubljana bus station after 4 PM, tired from 4.5 hours of train-plus-bus travel. I took a taxi from the bus station to my hotel for about €15. It’s only a 10-minute walk, but with luggage in cold January weather, the taxi was worth it.
If you’re staying in Old Town, I highly recommend Allegro Hotel — I’ll write a separate full review, but the short version is: central, walkable, comfortable, good breakfast included, and reasonably priced.
Note that in the wintertime, it gets dark early, but I generally felt safe walking around Ljubljana after dark.
You can also take a look at my Stay22 Accommodation map for where to stay in Ljubljana, Slovenia
Note that in the wintertime, it gets dark early, but I felt safe walking around the old town solo.
5:00 PM — Settle In and Wander to Get Oriented
You’ll want about an hour to drop your bag, change clothes, and take a short walk to get oriented. Old Town is small enough that even a 20-30 minute wander will give you a feel for the place.
8:00 PM — Dinner at Breg
This is the bold move, and I’m proud of it: I booked Breg, a Michelin Guide-listed restaurant, for my arrival night. It’s really simple to make a reservation here: just go to their Google listing and click the reservation link! No calls needed
Most travelers would save Breg for the middle of the trip. I say do it on arrival night — here’s why:
- You’re at your most awake (relatively speaking) before travel fatigue settles in fully
- It sets a beautiful tone for the trip
- It gets the most expensive meal out of the way so the rest of the budget is easier
- If anything else gets canceled in low season (food tours, cooking classes), at least this anchor meal is already secured
What I ordered (from Breg’s seasonal menu):
- Chicken Kiev with mashed potatoes and spicy bok choy in chili oil
- A Slovenian cheese plate with apple and prune jam I’m still thinking about
- Dessert: waffle with apple confit and salted caramel ice cream
- Three glasses of Caprìs Refošk from Vinakoper at €4.50 each
Looking for more restaurants in Ljubljana?
Read about the three restaurants I went to in Ljubljana
10:00 PM — Walk Back to Hotel
Old Town is small. Walking back from Breg through the lit-up streets and over the river is the kind of arrival-night moment that justifies the trip. There were still Christmas lights up in Ljubljana, so if you time your arrival around the end of Christmas Market season, you’ll be able to catch them. I had gotten there two days after the Christmas Markets ended.
Day 1: A Full Day Exploring Ljubljana
Total activity time: About 8-10 hours
This is your “Ljubljana day” — the day you get to know the city beyond the surface.
8:00 AM — Hotel Breakfast
Allegro’s breakfast (and most central Ljubljana hotel breakfasts) is included with the room and is worth eating. Stock up, because you’re walking a lot today.
Not booked your hotel yet? Check Allegro Hotel rates on Expedia [affiliate link] it’s where I stayed and it’s a 5-minute walk to everything in this itinerary.
10:00 AM — Free Walking Tour of Old Town
Start with a free walking tour. I cannot recommend this enough as a Day 1 activity:
- It gets you oriented fast. A 2-hour walking tour shows you the lay of the land — the Triple Bridge, Dragon Bridge, Preseren Square, the main old town streets.
- It runs in any weather and doesn’t require a minimum the way paid tours do. Free walking tours in Ljubljana operate year-round.
- You learn the story of the city — why the dragons are everywhere, what Preseren wrote, and why the architecture looks the way it does.
Look for the Ljubljana Free Walking Tour at Preseren Square or check the tourist information center for current options. Tip your guide at the end — €10-€15 is standard.
What you’ll see on the tour:
- Preseren Square — the main square
- The Triple Bridge (Tromostovje)
- The Dragon Bridge, with its iconic dragon statues
- The old town streets and architecture
- A view up to Ljubljana Castle (you’ll go up there this afternoon)
Check availaibility for the tour and see if you can fit this in your itinerary. They run several options during the day
12:30 PM — Lunch at Slovenska Hiša Figovec
After the walking tour, you’ll be hungry and ready to sit. Slovenska Hiša Figovec is the right move — traditional Slovenian food, walk-ins easy, and a hearty meal that powers you through an afternoon at the castle.
I had the Pečenica sausage with sauerkraut and roasted potatoes (€15) and a glass of local Slovenian wine. The portions are generous — you won’t need a big dinner tonight.

Full Figovec review in my Where to Eat in Ljubljana post.
2:00 PM — Ljubljana Castle (Funicular Up, Walk Down)
After lunch, head to Ljubljana Castle. It sits on a hill above old town and is the city’s main visual landmark. I purchased advanced tickets from GetYourGuide, as I just wanted to scan and go. However, I feel it’s important to note that you do not have to do this.
If you want, you can easily walk up to the kiosk at to the funicular and buy tickets there.
You have two ways up: walk, but only in good weather as the path is slippery (10-15 minutes uphill) or funicular (1 minute, €3.30 one way or €6 round trip).
At the castle (€15 entry):
- Climb the Outlook Tower for panoramic views of Ljubljana and the Alps in the distance
- Visit the Slovenian History Exhibition
- Wander the courtyard and ramparts
- Stop for coffee at the castle café
Budget about 2-2.5 hours at the castle. You’ll want to make sure all viewpoints are included in the ticket. I have to say this was the best part of the castle. I don’t think you need to spend too much time at the Ljubljana castle. Dare I say it was a bit underwhelming? You can find out their opening hours here. There are a lot of wonderful castles in Europe that I felt were so much more information heavy!

5:00 PM — Slow Wander Through Old Town
Walk back down from the castle and let yourself meander through old town with no agenda. This is the part of the trip I loved most as a solo traveler. Some suggestions:
- Triple Bridge and Preseren Square in different light (you saw them on the tour, but they look different at golden hour), even in the cold January days, these are quite beautiful!
- The Cobblers’ Bridge — quieter than the Triple Bridge, beautiful
- Pop into the bookshops, ceramic shops, and small boutiques on Mestni Trg and Stari Trg
- The dragon statues on Dragon Bridge — the symbol of Ljubljana
- Riverside coffee at a café along the Ljubljanica or head to Nebotičnik Skyscraper, lots of people mention the viewpoint here is wonderful. Locals will tell you it’s overpriced coffee with a view (that’s what a guide told me)
8:00 PM — Dinner: Chips, Gin and Tonic, in Bed, Watching National Geographic in Slovenian
This is what I actually did, and I’d do it again. After Breg the night before and a generous lunch at Figovec, I wasn’t hungry. I was tired. I’d walked all day and my feet hurt. I’d been on the go since 9 AM.
So I stopped at a corner store near my hotel in Ljubljana, picked up a bag of chips and a small gin and tonic, and ate it in bed while watching National Geographic dubbed in Slovenian. It’s called balance.
Why I’m including this in the itinerary:
Most travel blogs pretend every dinner is photogenic and every night is magical. They’re not. Building a quiet night into your itinerary is one of the smartest things you can do, especially as a solo traveler. The next day is a long Lake Bled tour — you’ll thank yourself for resting.
Where to eat in Ljublijana
If you’d rather eat out, there are dozens of casual spots in Old Town. A simple bowl of soup and bread somewhere riverside is a great alternative. Or read my Where to Eat in Ljublijana blog post.

Day 2: Lake Bled + Postojna Cave Day Trip from Ljubljana
Total activity time: About 11.5 hours
This is the big day. If you don’t have a car (and I didn’t), the smartest way to see Lake Bled AND Postojna Cave in one day is to book a guided day tour from Ljubljana. You’ll start super early, and if you are staying at Allegro Hotel, you’ll only be about an 8-minute walk from the pickup point!
7:00 AM — Hotel Breakfast
: ask the hotel if you can get breakfast to go, prearrange this as you’ll be out the door early!
7:30 AM — Tour Pickup
I booked the ⭐️⭐️⭐️ From Ljubljana: Lake Bled & Postojna Cave with Entry Tickets tour on GetYourGuide — click here for current availability [GetYourGuide affiliate link].
Why I chose this specific tour:
- Three sites in one day — Postojna Cave, Predjama Castle, AND Lake Bled
- All entry tickets included — no fumbling at ticket booths or surprise costs
- Pickup right near my hotel in central Ljubljana
- Small van groups — felt personal, not herded
- 4.8 stars from 769+ reviews — heavily vetted by past travelers
The tour is about 11.5 hours total, with pickup near the city center and drop-off at the same spot. Full honest review of the day in my Lake Bled day tour post.
Cost: €169 per person when I went in January 2026.
Important: bring cash. €30-40 minimum for the optional pletna boat, the church entry at Bled Island, and tipping your guide. There are no ATMs along the tour route where you’ll need them.
I wrote a full, honest review of this day tour that breaks down every stop, what to bring, what to skip, what nobody warns you about, and whether it’s worth the €169. If you’re considering booking, read that one before you click. [Internal link to Lake Bled day tour review post]
Why book a tour instead of DIY: If you don’t have a car, getting between Lake Bled, Predjama, and Postojna by public transit is nearly impossible in one day. You’d burn most of your day on regional buses. The tour gives you all three sites with zero logistics.
👉 Check pricing and availability for the tour I took on GetYourGuide here [GetYourGuide affiliate link]
7:30 PM — Dinner at Basa
Head to Basa for the perfect end to a long day.
Basa is a small Vietnamese restaurant in Old Town that surprised me as one of the best meals of the trip. After 11.5 hours on a tour bus and walking through caves, you want warm broth, fresh herbs, and a glass of wine in a cozy room. Basa delivers all of it.
I had pho with a Slovenian white wine— the broth is exactly what you want after a day of cold weather. It made me miss living in South Korea.

Basa Review
Full Basa review in my Where to Eat in Ljubljana post.
10:00 PM — Last Walk Through Old Town
If you have the energy, walk along the river one more time. The castle lights up at night, old town glows, and this is the last evening of the trip. Soak it in.
Departure Day: A Morning in Ljubljana
Total activity time: About 2-3 hours
8:00 AM — Final Hotel Breakfast
I enjoyed a slow breakfast at the hotel, I also wanted to try and do one last walk through the old town.
9:30 AM — Last Walk Through Old Town
If your bus or train leaves around noon, you have time for one final walk through old town for souvenir shopping (Slovenian honey, ceramic, or wine make great gifts) and one last coffee somewhere like STOW
11:00 AM — Walk to Ljubljana Bus Station
I walked back to the bus station with my luggage on departure day instead of taking a taxi. It’s about a 10-minute walk from most old town hotels, and once I knew the route from arrival, it was completely manageable — even with luggage and even in cold January weather.
Tip: When you arrive at the bus station, look for your bus by the number/destination posted on paper at the front of each bus, not just the screens. Slot assignments are clearly listed on physical signs.
12:10 PM — Depart
My Flixbus departed at 12:10 PM and arrived back in Udine at 2:50 PM. Full return-route logistics in my Italy-to-Ljubljana guide.
Modifications for Your Lubljana Itinerary
This is just some general information to help you plan your trip to Ljubljana.
If You Only Have 2 Days (Not 2.5):
- Combine the arrival day with Day 1’s walking tour and castle into one long first day
- Make Day 2 your Lake Bled + Postojna day
- Depart the morning of Day 3
If You Have 3 Full Days:
- Add a half-day for Slovenian wine country (Vipava Valley) or visit the mountains of Slovenia if going in shoulder season
- Add a half-day for a cooking class, food tour, or longer hike!
If You want outdoors in the Summer in Slovenia
- Use that day for a Vintgar Gorge hike (April-November) or a Logarska Valley Alpine day trip
- In winter, swap for a half-day at the Ljubljana Zoo or a hot springs visit (Terme Olimia is doable as a day trip)
If You’re Visiting in High Season (June-September):
If you happen to only be able to make it to Slovenia from June to September, here are some tips to make your trip a little bit more comfortable:
- Book accommodations 2-3 months in advance — Ljubljana fills up
- Make Breg reservations as soon as you book your flights
- The Lake Bled pletna boat runs reliably — add it to your day
- Wear lighter layers; old town is hot in summer
- When I went in summer 2018, the energy of old town in the evening is electric — café terraces full, music everywhere, much busier than winter
If You’re Visiting in Low Season (November-March):
My advice for those of you visiting in the lowseason based off of personal experience:
- Read the warning at the top of this post about tour cancellations carefully
- Have a Plan B for any small-group activity
- Bring waterproof boots — old town cobblestones are slick when wet
- The Christmas markets run from mid-November through early January and are beautiful
If You Drive (Not the Route I Took, But Worth Knowing):
If you’re driving from Italy, Austria, or Croatia, here’s the parking reality nobody mentions:
- Old town has very limited car access — most of the historic center is pedestrianized
- Castle parking (Grajska planota): First 15 minutes free, then €2/hour for the first 2 hours, €2.50/hour after that
- Tourist buses and motorhomes are prohibited from parking at the castle
- Best strategy: Park at one of the public garages on the edge of old town (Kongresni trg, Kapitelj, or Trg Republike garages) and walk in
- Most hotels in Old Town do NOT have parking — confirm with your accommodation before driving
If you’re staying anywhere central, honestly, leave the car parked for the duration of your stay. Ljubljana is more walkable than it is drivable.
What I’d Do Differently
If I did this trip again:
- I’d book Breg for the night before I even left home. I did this and it was the right call.
- I’d skip booking any other paid food/cooking tour in the low season. They cancel. Plan a self-guided food walk instead, or budget for an extra night at a restaurant.
- I’d walk from the bus station on arrival, not take the taxi. The €15 felt unnecessary once I knew the route.
- I’d add a half-day for the Vipava Valley if I had a fourth day, because Slovenian wine country is criminally underrated.
What I Really Wish I’d Done: Thermal Spas or Skiing
Honestly, the one thing I’d change about this whole trip is that I wish I’d had the money and time to extend it for a Slovenian thermal spa experience or a day at one of the ski resorts in the Julian Alps.
Slovenia is genuinely one of the most underrated wellness destinations in Europe. The thermal spa scene here is beautiful, affordable, and almost no Americans know about it. You can stay at a thermal hotel with multiple pools, saunas, and mineral baths for a fraction of what you’d pay in Iceland, Hungary, or Switzerland.
And in winter, the Julian Alps ski resorts (Kranjska Gora, Vogel, Krvavec) are doable as day trips from Ljubljana — far cheaper than the Italian Dolomites or Austrian Alps, with shorter lift lines.
Is 2.5 Days in Ljubljana Worth It?
Yes — and I’d do it again tomorrow.
Ljubljana surprised me in the best ways. It’s compact enough to feel manageable in a short trip, but layered enough that I’m already thinking about what I’d do on a second visit (thermal spas, Vipava Valley wine country, maybe a longer stay at Lake Bled in summer to actually swim in it). It’s one of the safest, most solo-friendly capitals I’ve traveled to in Europe, the food scene punches way above the city’s size, and prices in low season are genuinely reasonable.
The biggest thing I took away from this trip: don’t let “small country” fool you into thinking Slovenia is a side quest. It deserves more than 2.5 days. If you can give it 4 or 5, do that. But if you only have 2.5 what you’ll see is enough to know you’ll come back.
A few honest reminders before you go:
- Book Breg before you leave home. I cannot say this enough.
- Bring cash for the pletna boat and the Bled Island church if you want to do both.
- Plan around low-season tour minimums if you’re going November through March.
- Talk to the lithographer at Bled Castle. Even if you don’t buy a print.
If this post helped you plan your trip, the best way to say thanks is to bookmark it, send it to a friend planning a trip to Slovenia, or book your day tour through my GetYourGuide link [affiliate link]. It costs you nothing extra and helps me keep writing posts like this one.
Safe travels — and if you have questions, leave a comment below. I read every one of them!
FAQ: 2 Days in Ljubljana
Yes — 2 full days is enough to see the highlights of Ljubljana itself. If you want to add a Lake Bled day trip (recommended), plan for 2.5 to 3 days total.
Yes, with realistic expectations. The city is beautiful, safe, and affordable in winter, but be aware that many small-group tours require a minimum number of participants and may cancel at the last minute.
No. Everything in this itinerary is doable without a car — including the Lake Bled and Postojna Cave day trip via guided bus tour.
Roughly €300-€500, not counting transport. That breaks down to ~€80-100/night for a central hotel, ~€40-60/day for food, and ~€164 for the Lake Bled + Postojna day tour. Cheaper if you stay in a hostel or apartment.
Yes — Slovenia is one of the most underrated wellness destinations in Europe. Terme Olimia, Terme Čatež, and Rimske Terme are all doable as day trips or short overnight stays from Ljubljana. If wellness is your priority, I’d recommend extending your trip by a night to include a spa stay rather than trying to squeeze it in.
YES! Ljubljana is an easy-going destination for solo travelers. It’s walkable, locals are wonderful, and there are lots of tours that accommodate solo travelers.
Check out my Social Media Posts about this Trip to Ljubljana!
@kimberlykepharttravels You need to eat this in Slovenia! Tasting Blejska kremšnita at Lake Bled — a deceptively simple cream cake with a surprisingly long history. Sooooo good! Layers of crisp puff pastry, light vanilla cream, and custard come together in a dessert that dates back to the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Variations still exist across Central and Eastern Europe: krempita in Bosnia, kremówka in Poland, krémeš in Slovakia. Same roots. Different names. One very good reason to slow down and taste where you are.
♬ I did my hair well today. – Sum Dekinaita
@kimberlykepharttravels Would you visit Lake Bled in January? This was my second visit to Lake Bled, and while it’s stunning in summer, Lake Bled in winter is quietly special. If you’re looking for fewer crowds, peaceful walks, and space to actually enjoy the scenery, January is a great time to go. A full walk around Lake Bled is totally doable in winter — just bundle up and take it slow. Don’t skip Bled Castle, especially the restaurant. The Lake Bled cream cake (kremšnita) is absolutely worth it. I based myself in Ljubljana, Slovenia, and joined a day tour with @todoslovenia, which included: -Lake Bled -Predjama Castle -Postojna Cave It’s an easy way to see three of Slovenia’s most iconic landmarks in one day, especially if you’re traveling without a car or visiting in winter. Hi, I’m Kim. I live in northern Italy and share hiking guides, day trips, and realistic travel planning tips for Europe — especially Northern Italy. Follow along and like this post if you’re planning future trips or want practical travel inspiration you can actually use. Save this for later or share it with someone planning a Slovenia winter itinerary. #lakebledslovenia #lakebled #slovenia #sloveniatravel #januarytravel ♬ Dreamland – Robert Gromotka







