As the good weather has come and the numbers are approaching holidays, more and more people are planning trips, both in our country and abroad. However, if someone is going on a trip with their own car, it is important to know what the prices are toll in Serbia and the region.
In a little less than 10 days, we will have a mini vacation of as many as six non-working days, because from May 1st until May 7th, which is the first working day, there are holidays.
Many will use this gifted holiday to go out of town and visit some destinations and recharge their batteries.
For a well-planned trip, especially if you are traveling in your own car, you need to prepare well. One of the aspects of the preparation is reference to toll prices in Serbia, but also in the countries to which you are traveling, he writes Today.
From January 1st of this year, tolls on highways through Serbia are 30 dinars more expensive in any direction you go.
Presevo, Sid, Subotica
So, the toll from Belgrade to Preševo for vehicles of the first category, i.e. road vehicles, according to information from the website of JP Putevi Srbije, is a total of 1.720 dinars in one direction.
Then, from Belgrade to the Šid toll plaza, the toll is 450 dinars.
If you travel to the north of our country from the capital, you will have to pay a toll of 730 dinars to Subotica.
To the toll station near Čačak, i.e. to Pakovrač, if you are traveling from Belgrade, you will have to fork out 560 dinars for the toll.
If you are traveling to Zagreb, you will have to pay 16,90 euros from the border to the capital of neighboring Croatia.
If you decide to go further, from Zagreb to Rijeka you will have to shell out 9,20 euros. If you travel to Zadar, you need to pay another 16 euros, and to Šibenik 20.
Region
Tolls in North Macedonia are very affordable, so you can get to Skopje for only two euros, while you can get to Ohrid for five euros.
In this country, the toll does not exceed two euros on any section of the highway, but there are a large number of toll stations.
In our neighboring countries Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary use vignettes, which are paid for a certain period.
So, if you are going to Bulgaria only for the weekend, you can buy a vignette for those two days only at the price of nine levs, that is, a little more than 4,5 euros.
If you buy a vignette for the whole week, it costs 6,65 euros. If you decide to stay longer, a monthly vignette costs close to 14 euros, then 24,56 euros will cost you a vignette for three months, while for a year its price is 44.52 euros.
As for Romania, the prices of vignettes in this country are significantly lower. So you can buy a weekly one for only three euros, a monthly one for seven, a three-month one for 13 and an annual one for only 28 euros.
The Belgrade-Sarajevo highway has not yet been built
If you head north through Hungary, vignettes in that country are also a bit more expensive. So for 10 days, you will have to allocate 16,28 euros, then for the monthly vignette 26,35 euros and for the annual vignette 145,62 euros.
As for the trip to Bosnia and Herzegovina, although it has been announced and promised for a long time, the Belgrade-Sarajevo highway has not yet been built and it seems that it won't be anytime soon. Sections of the highway through this country are also not expensive, so the most you can pay is a little more than seven euros.
In Montenegro, the longest section on the newly opened highway costs 3,5 euros at most.