00 · Orientation

How to use this guide.

The five things this apartment is best positioned for, ranked.

  1. A walkable centre. The old town, the river, the market and the best of the eating are all inside a fifteen-minute walk of the door.
  2. Maribor as a base, not a stop. The city and a 90-minute radius give you a full week without repeating yourself.
  3. Wine country at the door. Štajerska is Slovenia's largest wine region; three of its sub-regions — Maribor hills, Jeruzalem, Haloze — are inside an hour.
  4. Pohorje. A gondola from the city limits. Hiking in summer, skiing in winter. Slovenia's most underrated mountain.
  5. The rest of Slovenia. Graz and Ptuj are inside thirty minutes; Ljubljana, Bled, the caves and the coast are all a long day or an easy overnight.

The first five chapters are on foot from the apartment. Everything after Pohorje assumes you have a car — public transport works for Ptuj and Graz; the rest is car country.

01 · The centre

The old town and Glavni trg.

Start where everyone starts. Glavni trg, the main square, is a 5-minute walk south and holds the 1743 white-marble Plague Column, raised after the 1680 epidemic that killed a third of the town, with the Renaissance Town Hall behind it. The fountain in front fills with children on summer afternoons. A 5-minute stroll lands you at Slomškov trg, the calmer square outside Maribor Cathedral and the university. The centre is small enough that almost everything is inside a 15-minute walk.

For a longer view, climb Piramida Hill. Begin at City Park, then follow the easy 20- to 30-minute path uphill through working vineyards to the white chapel at roughly 386 m, on the site of the medieval Upper Castle. The panorama over the red roofs to Pohorje is the best in the city. Do it the hour before sunset.

Two more central stops earn the detour: Maribor Castle on Grajska ulica (5 min), whose Regional Museum holds the armoury and the city's history, and the Synagogue on Židovska ulica (5 min), one of the oldest preserved in Slovenia.

02 · The river

Lent and the Old Vine.

Five minutes east of the apartment, then down to the water, is Lent, the Drava-front district and the city's most photographed quarter. Walk the riverbank promenade between the Old Bridge and the Water Tower, a 16th-century Renaissance fortification that is now a wine cellar, passing the Jewish Tower and synagogue along the way.

The headline stop is the Stara trta, the world's oldest fruit-bearing grapevine, at Vojašniška ulica 8, a 6-minute walk away. It is roughly 440 years old, a Žametovka variety, growing on the south wall of the Old Vine House on the river. Two minutes of attention is enough to take it in. Then step inside, where a guided tasting of three to five wines, drawn from over 200 bottles from around 50 Štajerska producers, is the proper introduction to the region. It is open Monday to Saturday 10 to 18 and Sunday 10 to 16.

03 · The water

The Drava and Pristan.

The apartment sits one minute from the Pristan complex on the river — indoor swimming pools and a public gym, close enough to see from the living-room window — so the Drava is the easiest outing of all. The 5 km dammed reservoir runs calm enough for stand-up paddleboarding and kayaking; rent from Drava Center on the central bank, where the small beach draws local swimmers in summer. Mariborski otok, the river island, has a well-known open-air pool complex open from mid-June to early September.

Cycling.

The Drava Cycle Route (Drauradweg) runs 510 km from Toblach in the Italian Tyrol to Varaždin in Croatia and passes directly through Maribor. The Maribor-to-Ptuj segment is 36 km, mostly flat and off-road, an easy half-day round trip. Rent at Bike Center Maribor, Erjavčeva ulica 5 — city and e-bikes, repairs, route advice. +386 (0)2 42 01 836 / +386 (0)40 208 335, bike-center.si.

On the water.

Drava Center — on the central bank: SUP, kayak and canoe rental, with a small beach-bar that's busy on weekends. Servis Gizo — Korčetova 19, +386 (0)31 280 484, a smaller operator with longer rental periods. DravaSplash — guided downstream paddling tours with gear and shuttle included; book ahead, dravasplash.si.

04 · The table

Where to eat and drink.

Maribor punches above its size at the table. The town was named European Best Culinary Destination in 2023, and the 2025 Michelin Guide kept three of its restaurants on the list. From the apartment, almost everything below is a walk.

The meal of the trip.

Mak (Restavracija Mak), Osojnikova cesta 20, ~15 minutes on foot, is the meal people plan a stay around — chef David Vračko cooks a no-menu surprise tasting that runs three to five hours, and it sits in the 2025 Michelin Guide. Go on an empty stomach; book three weeks ahead. Sedem, the hospitality college's teaching restaurant on Zagrebška cesta, is also Michelin-listed and roughly half the price — reserve about a week out. For a celebration without the Michelin context, Rožmarin on Gosposka ulica (4 min) grills steak over an 800°C fire and pours from a large list.

Traditional Štajerska.

Toti rotovž at Glavni trg 14 (5 min) is the reliable regional kitchen — pohorski pisker, the slow-cooked beef-and-pork Pohorje stew served in an earthenware pot, plus goulash and štruklji. Novi Svet on Slomškov trg has a vine-shaded terrace beside the cathedral; Gostilna Poper at Glavni trg 7 fires Neapolitan pizza with the Plague Column in view; and Malca Mimogrede does the locals' fast daily lunch, with good žlikrofi. Order the dark-green pumpkin-seed oil on more or less anything.

Coffee, cake and the market.

Slaščičarna Ilich, Slovenska ulica 6 (4 min), has been a family patisserie since the Habsburg era — order the Ninina pita, a slice of prekmurska gibanica, or the homemade ice cream. Rooster Coffee on Gosposvetska cesta is the third-wave bar locals point to — beans rotate weekly from the Tovarna kave roastery; order the V60, and come before it closes at 16:00. Kavarna Astoria on Slovenska ulica is the early-opener for a quick breakfast, and Nana Bistro & Kavarna on Vetrinjska ulica does a calm, vegetarian-leaning brunch. For raw ingredients, Mariborska tržnica on Vodnikov trg (5 min) is busiest on Saturday morning — Štajerska honey, pumpkin-seed oil, cheese, seasonal fruit, autumn mushrooms; a smaller organic farmers' market runs on Glavni trg on Fridays. Bring cash, and stock the kitchen Saturday because the nearest supermarket shuts Sunday.

Wine bars and a quick bite.

Vinoteka Polek on Židovska ulica (5 min) is where locals send wine people, with a rotating by-the-glass list and good cheese plates; Old Vine House by the Drava pours 200-plus Štajerska wines beside the world's oldest grapevine. When you want something fast, the answer is burek — Pekarna Hameli (10–15 min) holds the local consensus, taken warm on the walk home, with Pekarna Zenit the dependable backup for burek and bread.

After dark.

The riverside terraces along Lent are where summer evenings go — a glass of šipon with the Drava sliding past. For a proper cocktail, Niagara Cocktail Bar on the river runs latest on Friday and Saturday; Patrick's Pub on Poštna ulica has poured draught and shown football since 1998 and is the easy default for a group. Maribor isn't a late city outside Festival Lent — most kitchens wind down by 22:00, the bars a little after.

Don't leave without trying.

  • Pumpkin-seed oil (bučno olje) — the dark-green regional condiment, good on salad, soup, even vanilla ice cream. A bottle from the market goes home with most guests.
  • Pohorski pisker — the slow-cooked Pohorje stew in an earthenware pot. Order it at Toti rotovž, or up at Mariborska koča on the mountain.
  • Žlikrofi — pinched potato-and-bacon ravioli; Malca Mimogrede does a good plate.
  • Prekmurska gibanica — the dense north-eastern layer cake of poppy seed, walnut, apple and curd cheese.
  • Šipon — the Štajerska white (furmint), best drunk where it grows: Old Vine House or the Dveri-Pax city bar.

05 · For families

With kids — by age band.

Maribor is genuinely good for kids; the city is small enough to walk, the parks are central, and Pohorje is a 15-minute drive. Mestni park (City Park) is a 10-minute walk with three ponds, ducks and swans, stroller-friendly paths, a summer children's railway, and the Aquarium-Terrarium inside it. What's below is how it sorts by age.

0–4 years.

  • Mestni park — three ponds, ducks, tame swans, big trees. Stroller-friendly paths, free.
  • Aquarium-Terrarium — 30–60 min indoor save for rainy afternoons. ~€5–7 entry.
  • Pohorje gondola → upper-station playground — kids' play area at the top. The ride alone holds attention. Pack snacks.
  • Glavni trg fountain — summer afternoons, kids self-organise around the basin.

5–10 years.

  • Pohorje Jet (summer luge) — bottom of the gondola, age 6+ self-driving. Repeat rides cheap.
  • Rozka's Forest Educational Trail — 1 hr loop with 17 info stations. Right level of structure for school-age curiosity.
  • Bike Park Pohorje (easier blue trails only) — for confident young riders with their own gear or rentals.
  • Terme Ptuj waterslides — the country's biggest. Half-day, plan around lunch at the resort.
  • Mariborski otok pool complex — outdoor pool on the Drava island, summer only.

10–15 years.

  • Enigmarium Maribor escape rooms — five rooms in central Maribor, ages 9+ (under 14 with adult). 60 min each. Booking.
  • Bike Park Pohorje — full graded trails with rentals + protective gear.
  • Postojna Cave (big-day trip) — cave train, 90 min underground, year-round.
  • Drava SUP rental at Drava Center — calm reservoir, good first-time SUP water.

Bad-weather backup list.

Aquarium-Terrarium  →  Vinag wine cellar tour (parents' version)  →  Enigmarium escape rooms  →  Terme Ptuj for the day  →  Žička kartuzija ruins. There's a fuller age-by-age plan in our guide to Maribor with kids.

06 · The mountain

Pohorje —
the mountain in the back garden.

Pohorje is the long forested ridge running south-west of Maribor. Top of the gondola is at 1042 m; the highest point on the ridge (Črni vrh) is 1543 m. It's not the Julian Alps — there are no jagged peaks — but it has 40 km of skiing in winter, around 200 km of walking trails in summer, four mountain huts, and the only cable car in Slovenia that connects directly to a city.

The gondola.

Cable car base — Mladinska ulica 29, ~7 km south of the apartment. 12 minutes by car, 25 minutes by bus 6 from the centre. Hourly 7:00–22:00 daily, with the 18:00 ride skipped on Mondays for maintenance. Multi-day shutdowns happen in spring (March–May 2026 has roughly weekly weekend closures, currently published on the operator site). 8-minute ride, scenic on a clear day. Schedule and closures.

Summer hiking.

TrailDistanceTimeDifficulty
Rozka's Forest Educational Trail3 km loop1 hrEasy — family
Bolfenk Energy Trail2 km loop70 minEasy
Bolfenk → Mariborska koča → return~6 km RT2 hrEasy/moderate
Bolfenk → Mariborska koča → Areh → Ruška koča~12 km4–5 hrModerate
Mariborsko Pohorje Loop29 km9–10 hrHard
Lovrenška jezera (from Rogla)6 km RT3 hrEasy/moderate

Mariborska koča is the lunch hike — from the top of the gondola, ~40 minutes through forest via Bolfenk. One of the oldest huts on Pohorje. Order goulash, jota (sauerkraut-bean stew), or pohorski pisker. The single best lunch payoff for non-hiker visitors.

Lovrenška jezera — Slovenia's largest high-altitude peat bog, ~1520 m. Up to 22 black-water lakes depending on rainfall, viewed from a wooden boardwalk. Trail starts from Rogla (~50 min drive south-west, separate Pohorje access), 6 km round trip, ~3 hr. The kind of place that's still atmospheric in fog.

Beyond hiking.

Bike Park Pohorje Maribor — top of the gondola. Daily 9:00–17:00 March–November. About a dozen graded downhill trails, full-suspension rentals at the base, lift-serviced. Not for first-time mountain bikers. Pricing & bookings.

Pohorje Jet (summer luge) — bottom of the gondola, age 6+ self-driving. Stainless-steel toboggan run, single sleds with brake. Open in good weather May–October.

Winter (skiing).

The largest interconnected ski resort in Slovenia: 40+ km of pistes, 9 chairlifts, 325–1327 m elevation, 10 km of floodlit slopes (Europe's longest illuminated piste), full snowmaking. Family-friendly mountain — beginner and intermediate skewing.

2025/26 ski passes: weekday €25 adult / €22 youth-senior / €15 child; weekend and holiday €28 / €24 / €16. Season runs roughly mid-December to late March. Full price list.

Rent gear at Pohorje Sport Center at the base of the gondola, or Intersport in central Maribor. The deeper version — trails, timetable and ski season — is in our full Pohorje guide.

07 · Štajerska

Wine country in detail.

Štajerska is Slovenia's largest wine region, surrounding Maribor on three sides. Cool-climate, white-wine dominant. The signature grape is šipon (called furmint in Hungary; same grape that makes Tokaji), but Sauvignon Blanc, Welsch- and Rhine Riesling, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, and the indigenous Ranina also do serious work. Reds are limited and rarely the reason to visit.

The region splits into three sub-regions worth knowing:

  • Maribor hills — north and east of the city, gentlest terrain, 15–30 min drive
  • Slovenske gorice / Jeruzalem-Ormož — east, dramatic hilltop ridges, about an hour's drive
  • Haloze — south-east, steep south-facing slopes, 45–60 min drive

Wineries — book ahead.

Most serious Štajerska wineries do not accept walk-ins. Email or call 2–4 days ahead. Tastings run 60–120 minutes; expect 4–6 wines, sometimes with a small plate. Range €15–€40 per person.

Dveri-Pax (Benedictine estate, the headline winery) — Jareninski Dvor, Jarenina; ~15 km north, 20 min drive. Owned by the Admont Benedictine monastery in Austria; wine tradition here goes back 800+ years. Tastings of the Benedict line ~40 min including the cellar tour. The estate restaurant Dveri Pax Jahringhof is Gault & Millau three-toque, tasting menus €67–88, wine pairings €28–40, open Thu–Fri evening, Sat all day, Sun lunch. Reservations: office@dveri-pax.com / +386 2 644 00 82. Winery site.

Vinag 1847 (in-city wine cellar tour) — Trg svobode, central Maribor, 5 minutes' walk from the apartment. 2.5 km of underground tunnels beneath the city centre, 20,000 m². 90-minute guided tour plus a 4-wine tasting, around €20–25. The wine archive's oldest bottle is from 1946. Tours typically run 12:00 / 14:00 / 16:00 / 18:00 — book ahead via vinag1847.si.

Hiša Joannes Protner (boutique, biodynamic-leaning) — Ranca, ~12 km north. Family estate; ask about the Renski Rizling and the šipon. Visits by appointment.

Verus Vineyards (modern, export-driven) — Ormož, ~55 km east, ~50 min drive. Three friends, three winemaking philosophies, one of Štajerska's most-exported labels. The furmint and Sauvignon Blanc are the standouts. Visits by appointment.

Vinothek Jeruzalem (starting point for the wine route) — Jeruzalem hilltop, ~55 km east, 1 hr drive. About 130 wines from 30+ local producers under one roof. The right place to taste across the region without committing to one estate.

Hiša Frangež (small grower in Slovenske gorice) — Plač, ~25 km north-east. Often recommended as the unfussy honest tasting; visit by appointment.

The Jeruzalem wine route.

The 20-km road through the Jeruzalem-Ljutomer-Ormož wine hills, ~55 km east. Slovenian-Hungarian border country, terraced vineyards, Catholic shrines on every other ridge, and the village of Jeruzalem itself at the highest point — named, the story goes, by 13th-century Crusaders who stopped here on the way home and decided this would do. The wines lean Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Gris.

Doing it right: start at Vinothek Jeruzalem for orientation, eat lunch at Gostilna Pri Mlinu in Ivanjkovci or Taverna Jeruzalem at the top of the hill, drop in at one or two of the small estates en route. Plan ~5 hours door-to-door from Maribor, longer if you taste seriously. Designated driver mandatory — police presence is real and the BAC limit is 0.05%.

Wine tour operators.

Tasting Maribor — multiple formats: 5-wine Štajerska tasting in the city, half-day winery hop, full-day tour into Jeruzalem. Book via tastingmaribor.com. The most reliably-rated local operator.

Maribor Wine Tour / Slovenia360 — chauffeured 6–8-hour wine tours, €100–180 per person depending on group size. The deeper version, including the Jeruzalem route, is in our Maribor wine country guide.

Festivals worth planning around.

EventWhenWhere
Old Vine Harvest (Trgatev Stare trte)Late SeptemberLent, Maribor — free
Jeruzalem Wine FestivalMid SeptemberJeruzalem hilltop
Festival of the Old Vine (ceremonial pruning)Late FebruaryLent, Maribor — free
St Martin's Day (martinovanje)11 NovemberWineries across Štajerska

08 · Thermal water

Spas worth a half-day.

Slovenia has more thermal springs than its size suggests. Most are commercial resorts with hotels attached; you can buy a day pass without staying. Four are within reasonable distance.

Terme Ptuj (largest waterslide complex in Slovenia, family-leaning) — Pot v Toplice 9, Ptuj. 28 km, 25 min drive. Outdoor + indoor pools, the country's biggest waterslide complex (4 slides), saunas. Day passes ~€12–25 depending on season and access. Good for kids; adult-only retreat-seekers should look elsewhere.

Terme Olimia / Atomske Toplice (family resort, large + busy) — Podčetrtek, ~80 km south, 1 hr 15 min. Operating since 1966 (then "Atomske Toplice"). Termalija Family Fun + Aqualuna are the kids' draws — the largest family wellness in Slovenia. Termana Wellness Orhidelia is the adults-only sister facility on the same site, with quieter pools and a 16+ rule.

Terme Zreče (quieter, near Pohorje west end) — ~50 km, 50 min drive. Smaller, calmer, often locals' choice. Good if you want a thermal afternoon paired with a Pohorje hike or Žička kartuzija.

Terme 3000 (Moravske Toplice) (the unusual one) — ~100 km north-east, 1 hr 15 min. The water here comes from a deeper aquifer and is black — high mineral content, a different mineral profile from the others. A novelty worth knowing about, but not the closest option.

Booking note: in school holidays and weekends in winter, all four are full of Slovenian families. Off-peak weekdays are pleasant; Saturdays are not.

09 · The radius

Day trips by car —
sorted by drive time.

DestinationDistanceDrive timeWhat it is
Pohorje gondola base7 km15 minMountain access
Ptuj28 km25 minRoman town & castle
Slovenske Konjice / Žička kartuzija45 km40 minWine town & medieval monastery
Rogla / Lovrenška jezera50 km50 minPohorje west, lake walk
Jeruzalem wine route55 km1 hrSlovenia's most photogenic vineyards
Graz, Austria70 km1 hrUNESCO old town & modern art
Logarska dolina130 km1 hr 40 minAlpine glacial valley
Ljubljana130 km1 hr 20 minThe capital
Lake Bled180 km1 hr 45 minThe postcard lake
Postojna Cave200 km1 hr 50 minShow cave with cave train

Within 30 minutes.

Ptuj — 28 km east, 25 min by car, 37 min by train (€4–11), 41 min bus. Slovenia's oldest documented town (Roman Poetovio). Cobbled centre, Ptuj Castle on a hill housing the regional museum — armoury, baroque art, and the largest collection of historical musical instruments in Slovenia. Open Tue–Sun 10:00–18:00 (15 Apr–15 Oct), 10:00–16:00 in winter, closed Mondays. Adult ticket ~€10, students ~€5. Half-day minimum; full day if you add Terme Ptuj or a winery in the Haloze hills.

30–60 minutes.

Slovenske Konjice + Žička kartuzija — 45 km south, 40 min drive. The town is wedged between Konjiška gora and Škalce (the wine hill); pretty enough for a 90-minute walking detour. The reason to come is Žička kartuzija in the nearby valley — Slovenia's only Carthusian monastery, founded 1165. Dramatic Romanesque-Gothic ruins, herbal garden, working pottery workshop, and Gostilna Gastuž 1467, billed as the oldest still-operating inn in Slovenia. Open Tue–Sun, around €8 entry. Combine with lunch at Gastuž and a walk in Konjiška gora.

Rogla / Lovrenška jezera — 50 km, 50 min via Slovenske Konjice. The west end of Pohorje. Park at Rogla ski centre, walk 6 km RT through the peat bog on a wooden walkway, ~3 hr. Best May–October.

One hour — Graz, Austria.

Graz — 70 km north, 1 hr drive. Austria's second city. Schlossberg (a 473-m dolomite hill in the centre, with a 13th-century clock tower; reach the top by funicular, lift, or 260 steps), Kunsthaus Graz (the "Friendly Alien" — Peter Cook's blob-shaped contemporary art museum), the Murinsel (a floating café-stage on the Mur river), and the densest dinner scene this side of Vienna. Half-day minimum; better as a full day. The Graz Card (24 hr €26 / 48 hr €34 / 72 hr €39) covers the funicular, public transport and most museums. Crossing the Austrian border by car requires a vignette (€10.30 for 10 days) — buy at the petrol stations on the Slovenian side. Train from Maribor: 1 hr 5 min, €16.10 standard, as low as €4.90 with First Minute.

The bigger Slovenian trips — Ljubljana, Bled and Bohinj, the caves, the coast and the alpine valleys — have their own chapter next.

10 · The country

Across Slovenia.

Maribor sits in the north-east corner, but Slovenia is small — the whole country fits inside a long day's drive, and the best of it rewards an overnight. Sorted roughly by distance.

Ljubljana.

Ljubljana — 130 km, 1 hr 20 min. Direct train ~2 hr (€10–15). The capital is small, walkable, and lower-key than Vienna or Prague — half a day on the Ljubljanica river plus the castle, market, and Plečnik's centre is enough.

Lake Bled.

Lake Bled — 180 km, 1 hr 45 min via the A1. Worth the drive once. Walk the lake (6 km, ~1.5 hr), take a pletna boat to the island (€18–20 return, cash), climb to Bled Castle (€18 entry), eat kremna rezina at one of the lakeside hotels. Add Vintgar Gorge (4 km from town, wooden walkway through a limestone canyon, 90 min) if the weather holds. Big day; leaving by 8:00 is sensible.

Lake Bohinj.

Twenty minutes beyond Bled and a different world. Bohinj is the largest natural lake in Slovenia, set deep inside Triglav National Park, wilder and quieter than its famous neighbour. Swim off the shore, walk the lake loop, or ride the Vogel cable car from the south shore for the Julian Alps laid out in front of you — it becomes a small ski area in winter. The Savica waterfall is a short climb at the valley head. About 2 hr 15 from Maribor; best paired with Bled as a two-day Julian Alps loop.

Postojna Cave and Predjama Castle.

Postojna Cave — 200 km, 1 hr 50 min. 24 km of explored caves; the tour covers 5 km, 3.5 km of which you ride on a small electric cave train. 90 min underground, year-round, daily. Adult ticket ~€31.90, combined with Predjama Castle ~€42.90. Book ahead online in summer. Pair with Predjama Castle, 9 km north — a castle built into the mouth of a cave.

The coast — Piran, Koper and Portorož.

Slovenia's Adriatic coast is only about 47 km long, which is part of its charm. Piran is the jewel — a Venetian-Gothic old town packed onto a peninsula, with marble Tartini Square at its heart and a church on the hill for the view over red roofs to the sea. Koper, the working port city, has a handsome medieval core around Tito Square and the Praetorian Palace; Portorož next door is the resort-and-spa strip; and the Sečovlje salt pans south of Piran are a quiet nature park where salt is still harvested by hand. About 2 hr 30 to 3 hr from Maribor — doable in a long day, far better as an overnight.

Alpine valleys — Logarska dolina and the Soča.

Logarska dolina — 130 km, ~1 hr 40 min via the A1 then mountain roads. The most photographed valley in Slovenia after Triglav: a single linden-lined road into a U-shaped glacial valley, dramatic limestone walls of the Kamnik-Savinja Alps, and Slap Rinka, Slovenia's second-tallest free-falling waterfall (90 m), at the head. From the upper car park it's a 10–15 min walk to the falls; the flat Logar Valley Trail runs the length (7 km one way). Park fee April–October €10 per car; combine with the 21-km Solčava Panoramic Road. Over the Alps, the Soča Valley — Bovec for rafting the emerald river, Kobarid for WWI history and the two-Michelin-star Hiša Franko — is a 2 hr 30+ drive and earns a couple of nights of its own.

Slovenia's best lakes, hikes and rides.

Lakes: beyond Bled and Bohinj, the small alpine Lake Jasna at Kranjska Gora, the disappearing Lake Cerknica (Europe's largest intermittent lake), and the eerie Wild Lake (Divje jezero) near Idrija.

Hikes: Triglav (2864 m), the national symbol, is a serious two-day climb for fit, equipped walkers. For most visitors the rewards are easier — the boardwalk through Vintgar Gorge near Bled, the Tolmin Gorges at the southern tip of Triglav National Park, and Velika planina, a highland plateau of herders' huts reached by cable car from Kamnik.

Rides: closest to home, the Drava Cycle Route through Maribor (see The Drava). Further out, the Parenzana — a former narrow-gauge railway turned cycle-and-walking trail through the hills of Slovenian Istria — and the long-distance Alpe-Adria route are the country's best-loved.

The Pannonian east is gentler still: Goričko Nature Park, about 1 hr 10 north-east, is rolling stork-country with Grad Castle, the largest castle in Slovenia by surface area — a big-sky register a world away from the Alps. The full list of long-haul ideas, including Graz and Zagreb, is in our day trips from Maribor guide.

11 · The good ones

Castles, museums and manors.

The central sites — the Plague Column, the cathedral, the Old Vine, Maribor Castle — are covered in the city chapters above. Beyond them:

Ptuj Castle & Regional Museum — see Day trips. The headline cultural site within 30 min.

Žička kartuzija — see Day trips. The headline ruins.

Maribor Synagogue (15th century) — Židovska ulica 4, 5 minutes' walk. One of the oldest preserved synagogues in Slovenia, now a museum and study centre. Small, ~30 minutes.

Pokrajinski muzej Maribor (Regional Museum) — Maribor Castle, Grajska ulica 2, 5 min walk. Rotating regional history exhibitions. Worth checking what's on rather than committing in advance.

Borl Castle (13th-century, on the Drava) — ~45 km east, 45 min drive. In partial ruin / partial restoration; access varies — check ahead. Atmospheric for those who like castle stops.

Štatenberg Manor (baroque hunting manor + restaurant) — ~50 km south-east, 50 min. Often hosts events; the restaurant is the reliable draw.

12 · By the calendar

Events across the year.

Time your visit and the city changes character. The headline dates, in Maribor and within reach.

In Maribor.

Festival Lent — 26 June to 4 July 2026 — is the big one: around 700 events over nine days across the Drava banks, Glavni trg and City Park, most outdoor stages free. Book restaurants further ahead than usual that week; the deeper version is in our Festival Lent guide. In late September the Old Vine Harvest (Trgatev) brings the ceremonial picking of the world's oldest grapevine on Lent; late February has its mirror, the Festival of the Old Vine ceremonial pruning. From late November into early January, Festive Maribor fills Glavni trg with the Christmas market, a Ferris wheel and the Vilinsko mesto fairy town for children in Vetrinjski dvor. Each autumn the city also hosts the Borštnik Festival, Slovenia's main theatre festival.

Within the region.

Kurentovanje in Ptuj, 25 minutes east, is one of Europe's oldest and largest Shrovetide carnivals (February–March): hundreds of kurenti in sheepskin and bells parade to chase off winter — it's on UNESCO's list of intangible cultural heritage. The Jeruzalem Wine Festival runs mid-September in the hills east of the city, and St Martin's Day on 11 November turns wineries across Štajerska into martinovanje dinners as the new wine is christened.

Further afield.

Slovenia's calendar peaks in summer: the Ljubljana Festival (July–August) fills the capital's open-air Križanke and other venues with classical music, opera and dance. If you're building a trip around a particular event, tell us your dates and we'll point you to what's on.

13 · Three weeks

Multi-day itineraries.

Three opinionated weeks. Each assumes a Saturday-to-Saturday rhythm with the apartment as a fixed base. Pick one; mix at your peril — the day-trip windows fill faster than you'd think.

Itinerary A — the slow city week.

Families, mostly walking, 5 days.

Day 1

Settle, walk, eat well in town.

Morning: walk Glavni trg → Lent → Old Vine House. Lunch at Toti rotovž (pohorski pisker). Afternoon: City Park + Aquarium-Terrarium. Evening: pizza at Gostilna Poper, ice cream at Slaščičarna Ilich.

Day 2

Pohorje by gondola.

Morning gondola up. Walk Rozka's Forest Educational Trail (1 hr). Lunch at Mariborska koča (goulash). Afternoon: Energy Trail or kids' play area. Gondola down. Evening: home-cooked from the Vodnikov trg market haul.

Day 3

Ptuj day trip.

Train or drive 25 min. Castle Museum (closed Mondays — check). Lunch in the old town (Gostilna Ribič for fish; Restavracija Grof for traditional). Afternoon at Terme Ptuj waterslides. Back to Maribor for dinner — Sedem if you booked ahead.

Day 4

The river day.

Morning: SUP or kayak rental from Drava Center. Lunch at one of the Drava-promenade terraces. Afternoon: Piramida Hill walk, sunset at the chapel. Evening: tasting at Old Vine House (book ahead), late dinner at Novi Svet.

Day 5

Graz across the border.

Drive 1 hr. Schlossberg funicular up, clock tower, Kunsthaus, lunch on the Hauptplatz. Murinsel coffee. Drive back by 18:00 for relaxed dinner at Rožmarin.

Itinerary B — the wine country week.

Couples or wine-leaning friends, 6 days.

Day 1

In-city wine grounding.

Walk to the Old Vine + tasting at Old Vine House. Lunch at Malca Mimogrede. Afternoon Vinag 1847 underground tour + tasting (book ahead, 14:00 or 16:00). Dinner at Mak (book three weeks ahead).

Day 2

Maribor hills.

Drive to Dveri-Pax in Jarenina, 20 min. Tasting + cellar tour. Lunch at the Dveri Pax Jahringhof (book ahead). Afternoon at Hiša Joannes Protner in Ranca, by appointment. Drive back.

Day 3

Jeruzalem wine route.

Designated driver day. Vinothek Jeruzalem for orientation. Lunch at Taverna Jeruzalem. Afternoon at one or two estates en route (book ahead). Dinner back in Maribor at Vinoteka Polek (small plates + by-the-glass).

Day 4

Slovenske Konjice + Žička kartuzija.

Drive 40 min. Charterhouse ruins + Carthusian gardens. Lunch at Gastuž 1467. Afternoon: walk the Škalce wine hill or drive Konjiška gora for the lookout tower. Evening at Vinoteka Vinski Bar Dveri-Pax in Maribor.

Day 5

Graz reset.

A non-wine day. Schlossberg, Kunsthaus, lunch and coffee in Graz. Border-vignette + train both work.

Day 6

Verus + Ormož.

50-min drive east. Tasting at Verus Vineyards (book ahead). Lunch in Ormož. Afternoon back via Ptuj Castle — close the loop where Slovenian wine has been made longest.

Itinerary C — the active week.

Pohorje + Drava + alpine, 6 days.

Day 1

City warm-up walk.

Glavni trg → Lent → City Park → Piramida Hill at sunset. Pasta at Gostilna Poper.

Day 2

Pohorje long hike.

Gondola up. Bolfenk → Mariborska koča → Areh → Ruška koča loop, 4–5 hr. Lunch at one of the huts. Soft evening.

Day 3

Drava Cycle Route, Maribor → Ptuj → return.

Bike rental at Bike Center Maribor (or e-bikes if mixing levels). 36 km each way mostly off-road and flat; build in lunch in Ptuj's old town. Train back if legs go.

Day 4

Logar Valley.

Big day; leave by 7:30. Drive 1 hr 40 min. Park at the upper lot, walk to Slap Rinka, lunch at Pension Logarski kot or similar. Loop back via the Solčava Panoramic Road. Home for late dinner.

Day 5

Pohorje Bike Park, or Lovrenška jezera.

Mountain bikers: full day at the bike park. Walkers: drive to Rogla, walk Lovrenška jezera, lunch at the Rogla restaurant, afternoon back via Slovenske Konjice for a wine stop.

Day 6

Recovery + Graz.

Schlossberg, lunch in Graz, easy afternoon. Saunas at Terme Zreče on the way home if you fancy it.

Booking-ahead checklist.

  • Mak — three weeks ahead minimum
  • Sedem — one week ahead
  • Any winery visit — 2–4 days ahead, by email
  • Vinag 1847 tour — 1 day ahead
  • Pohorje gondola in winter weekends — same morning, queues form
  • Postojna Cave in July/August — at least 2 days ahead
  • Bled Castle — walk-up generally fine; pletna boats walk-up too

14 · The basics

Practical info.

Transport.

Renting a car at Maribor airport (MBX, Edvard Rusjan) — 9 km south of the apartment, ~15 min drive. Sixt, Europcar, Hertz have desks in the terminal. Limited inventory — book ahead, especially in summer. Most international guests fly into Ljubljana (LJU) instead; that's a 1 hr 20 min drive or a direct train.

Trains (Slovenske železnice) — Maribor → Ptuj 37 min, €4–11. Maribor → Ljubljana 2 hr direct, €10–15. Maribor → Graz 1 hr 5 min, €16.10 standard / €4.90 First Minute. Maribor station is on Partizanska cesta, ~10 min walk. Buy at the kiosk or the SŽ app.

Marprom city buses — single ride ~€1.30, easiest paid by tap card. Bus 6 to the Pohorje gondola from the centre.

Flixbus — Maribor → Graz from ~€11. Maribor → Ljubljana, Vienna, Zagreb all serviced. Stops at the bus station next to the train station.

Vignettes for Austria and Slovenia — required for motorway driving in both. Slovenia: e-vignette online (€16 for one week). Austria: digital or sticker, €10.30 for 10 days. Buy at the petrol station before the border.

Parking — the apartment has no private space, but Parking Pristan, a 24/7 CCTV-monitored paid garage at Koroška 35, is one to two minutes' walk on the same street (opposite the indoor pool). Street parking in the centre is metered and scarce; the garage is the simple answer if you've a car.

Money + payments.

Currency: Euro. Cards: universally accepted in cities, restaurants, hotels, supermarkets. Cash: still preferred at Vodnikov trg market stalls, some small wineries, mountain huts on Pohorje, and small village bakeries. ATMs are everywhere — Bankomat is the local term. Avoid Euronet ATMs (high fees); stick to NLB, NKBM, A1, or SKB.

Tipping: discretionary. Round up the bill or ~10% at sit-down restaurants for good service. €1–2 per round at bars is fine. Leave the tip in cash where possible — card tips don't reliably reach the staff. Taxis: round up.

Tourist tax: €2.50 per adult per night, included in your Airbnb total.

Booking culture.

  • Mak, Sedem, Pri treh ribnikih — must book ahead, the further ahead the better.
  • Wineries — almost all by appointment. Walk-ins to small Slovenian estates are unusual.
  • Vinag 1847 cellar tour — book the day before by phone or website.
  • Pohorje gondola — walk-up except big winter weekends.
  • Ski rentals — same-day usually fine outside Christmas / New Year.
  • Bike rentals — call the day before in summer.
  • Spas — day passes walk-up except Saturdays in winter.
  • Trains, buses — buy 5 min before departure; First Minute fares need 30+ days lead time.

Emergency + health.

  • General emergency: 112
  • Police: 113
  • UKC Maribor (University Medical Centre) — Ljubljanska ulica 5, ~3 km south of the apartment, 8 min by car or taxi. Slovenia's second-largest hospital, 1316 beds, 24-hour emergency.
  • Pharmacies (Lekarna) — multiple in central Maribor; Lekarna Glavni trg is closest. The on-call pharmacy rotates; the schedule is posted on every pharmacy door.

Closest essentials to the apartment.

NeedNearestDistance
SupermarketMercator Market Koroška vrata, Koroška 116~10 min walk
BakeryPekarna Hameli (see neighbourhood guide)~10 min walk
Open-air marketMariborska tržnica, Vodnikov trg~5 min walk
PharmacyLekarna Glavni trg~5 min walk
ATMNLB, Slovenska ulica~5 min walk
PetrolOMV / Petrol on Partizanska or Tržaška~5 min drive

Mercator Market Koroška vrata hours: Mon–Fri 8:00–19:00, Sat 7:30–13:00, closed Sunday. Carry essentials Saturday afternoon for Sunday meals.

15 · By the year

Seasonal calendar.

Spring (March–May).

  • Pohorje gondola operates, with maintenance closures clustered on weekends through May
  • Skiing typically winds down by late March (planned 29 March end for 2026)
  • Hiking season opens on the lower trails; the high-altitude bog (Lovrenška jezera) needs late April or May to be reliably dry
  • Asparagus festivals in Slovenske Konjice and surrounding villages, late April
  • Festival of the Old Vine ceremonial pruning, late February — public, free
  • Easter markets on Glavni trg and in Graz

Summer (June–August).

  • Festival Lent — 26 June – 4 July 2026. ~700 events across central Maribor. Book restaurants further ahead than usual that week.
  • Drava swimming + SUP at peak; outdoor pool on Mariborski otok open mid-June to early September
  • Pohorje hiking, Bolfenk + Mariborska koča huts open daily
  • Long evenings on Glavni trg, Lent, and Slomškov trg
  • Maribor heat — July/August can sit at 30°C+. The apartment's inverter AC keeps the living space cool; mornings out and long late lunches are still the move

Autumn (September–November).

  • The best month is late September: vineyards turning, harvest active, weather still mild
  • Old Vine Harvest — late September on Lent
  • Jeruzalem Wine Festival — mid September
  • Mushroom foraging on Pohorje slopes (boletes, chanterelles); restaurants run mushroom menus
  • St Martin's Day, 11 November — wineries open for martinovanje dinners and new-wine tastings; book ahead
  • Walking weather generally holds through early November

Winter (December–February).

  • Festive Maribor / Christmas Market — late November to early January. Christmas Village on Glavni trg, Vilinsko mesto for kids in Vetrinjski dvor, Ferris wheel, mulled wine, klobasa stalls. Daily ~10:00–20:00 through December.
  • Pohorje skiing typically opens mid-December depending on snowmaking, runs to late March
  • 10 km of floodlit skiing — book a night session
  • Kurentovanje carnival in Ptuj, February
  • Festival of the Old Vine ceremonial pruning, late February
  • Cold and grey through January; if you only have a winter week, ski-week is the right shape, and the Christmas market is the right week
  • Indoor backups: Vinag cellar tour, escape rooms, Aquarium-Terrarium, Terme Ptuj, Žička kartuzija

Q · Common questions

Questions, answered.

What are the top things to do in Maribor?

Walk Glavni trg and the old town, follow the Lent promenade along the Drava to see the world's oldest fruit-bearing grapevine, ride the Pohorje gondola for hiking or skiing, and taste your way through the Štajerska wine region. Glavni trg is a 5-minute walk from the apartment; the Old Vine is 6 minutes; the Pohorje gondola base is about 15 minutes by car.

How many days do you need in Maribor?

Three to five days lets you see the old town and the river, ride the Pohorje gondola, and take one or two day trips such as Ptuj or Graz. A full week works well if you want to add wine country and the Jeruzalem route, roughly an hour east, or a longer trip across Slovenia to Ljubljana, Bled or the coast. Five nights is the comfortable shape for a base, not a stop.

Is Maribor good for families with kids?

Yes. The centre is small enough to walk, City Park is a 10-minute walk with three ponds and an Aquarium-Terrarium, and the Pohorje gondola is about 15 minutes by car with an easy forest trail at the top. The Glavni trg fountain fills with kids on summer afternoons. The apartment sleeps 6 across roughly 85 m².

What is Maribor famous for?

Maribor is home to the world's oldest fruit-bearing grapevine, a roughly 440-year-old Žametovka vine on the Drava riverbank, and it sits at the centre of Štajerska, Slovenia's largest wine region. It was named European Best Culinary Destination in 2023, and the 2025 Michelin Guide kept three Maribor restaurants on its list.

When is the best time to visit Maribor?

Late September is the standout: the vineyards are turning, the harvest is active and the weather is still mild. Summer brings Festival Lent (26 June to 4 July 2026) and swimming in the Drava; winter brings Pohorje skiing and the Christmas market on Glavni trg from late November.

What is the best restaurant in Maribor?

For a special meal, Mak (Restavracija Mak) on Osojnikova cesta is the one people travel for — chef David Vračko cooks a no-menu surprise tasting that runs three to five hours, and it has held a place in the 2025 Michelin Guide. Book ahead; three weeks is sensible. Sedem, the hospitality college's teaching restaurant, is also Michelin-listed and roughly half the price.

Where can I eat traditional Slovenian food in Maribor?

Toti rotovž at Glavni trg 14, a 5-minute walk from the apartment, does honest regional Štajerska cooking — pohorski pisker (a rich Pohorje stew), goulash and štruklji. It is touristy at peak hours but the portions are generous and the location on the main square is hard to beat for a long lunch.

Where do I get the best burek and pastries in Maribor?

Local consensus puts the best burek at Pekarna Hameli, a 10–15 minute walk away — meat or cheese, taken warm and eaten on the way home. For something sweeter, Slaščičarna Ilich on Slovenska ulica (4 minutes' walk) is a family patisserie from the Habsburg era; order the Ninina pita or the homemade ice cream.

Do I need to book restaurants in advance?

For the special-occasion places, yes. Book Mak around three weeks ahead and Sedem about a week ahead. Casual spots — Gostilna Poper, Toti rotovž, the cafés and bakeries — take walk-ins. During Festival Lent (26 June to 4 July 2026) book everything further ahead than usual.

Where can I drink local Štajerska wine in Maribor?

Vinoteka Polek on Židovska ulica (5 minutes' walk) is the wine bar locals send wine people to, with a rotating by-the-glass list and good cheese and prosciutto plates. For the regional grounding, Old Vine House by the Drava pours more than 200 Štajerska wines beside the world's oldest grapevine; book a guided tasting.

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