Slovenia
Traveling to · Slovenia
Weather right now
13°C
Sun
29° / 13°
Mon
30° / 15°
Tue
30° / 15°
Wed
31° / 15°
Country facts
Capital
Ljubljana
Language
sl · sl
Currency
EUR €
Emergency
113 police 112 fire 112 all
Tipping
5-10% at restaurants; round up for cafés.
Plug & power
Type C/F · 230V · 50Hz (Europlug)
When to visit
May–September: mild, long days, festivals. October + April are shoulder seasons (fewer crowds, lower prices).
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
high season
low season
Typical costs (USD)
Hotel · budget
$40-80
per night
Hotel · midrange
$100-180
per night
Meal
$10-25
restaurant, typical
Transit
$1-5
single trip
Cheaper than Western Europe. Capital cities priciest; rural areas excellent value.
Essential phrases
Hello
zdravo
Thank you
Hvala
Please
prosim
Excuse me
Oprostite
Sorry
oprosti
Where is the toilet?
Kje je stranišče?
How much?
koliko?
Help!
pomoč!
The bill please
Račun prosim
I don't understand
ne razumem
Coffee
kava
Water
voda
Translate any phrase →
Open the full translation grid — your phrase will appear in 65 languages with audio and a cross-check verdict on each card.
Numbers
0
0
Nič
Zero
1
1
ena
One
2
2
Dva
Two
3
3
tri
Three
4
4
štiri
Four
5
5
Pet
Five
6
6
Šest
Six
7
7
Sedem
Seven
8
8
Osem
Eight
9
9
Devet
Nine
10
10
deset
Ten
20
20
Dvajset
Twenty
50
50
Petdeset
Fifty
100
100
sto
Hundred
1000
1000
tisoč
Thousand
What to pack
- Layered clothing — temperature shifts day to day
- Compact rain jacket
- Comfortable walking shoes
- Type C/F plug adapter (Europlug)
- Travel umbrella
Cultural notes
- Tiny country with Alps + Adriatic + caves — drive 2 hours = whole new biome
- English widely spoken in tourist areas; German useful in north
- Punctuality matters — Central European norms
- Bottled water unnecessary — tap water is clean and tested
- Don't lump Slovenia with Slovakia or Yugoslavia — independent identity
Universal courtesies
Apply everywhere, every country — respect travels with you.
- Try a greeting in the local language even if it's the only word you know — it's appreciated everywhere.
- Match local dress norms when entering religious sites, government buildings, or rural areas.
- Ask before photographing people, especially children or in religious settings.
- Tipping customs vary — never assume your home country's expectation applies.
- Remove shoes when entering homes if your host does; watch their cue.
- Keep voices lower than at home in temples, mosques, museums, public transport.
- Hands and gestures mean different things across cultures — observe before reaching out.
- Cash + cards: rural areas often need cash; major cities take cards. Carry small notes.
- Don't compare countries to each other in front of locals — every culture stands on its own.
- If you don't know the etiquette, watching for 30 seconds usually teaches it.