Bran Castle sits 30 kilometres from Brasov on a rock outcrop guarding a mountain pass, and almost nobody who built or lived in it had anything to do with Bram Stoker's Dracula. The marketing stuck anyway. Built by Transylvanian Saxons in the 14th century as a customs post and border fortress, it later became a royal residence for Queen Marie of Romania, and today it draws coach groups from across the region on the strength of a novel most of its rooms have nothing to do with.
Brasov itself earns its keep without the Dracula connection. The Black Church, the largest Gothic church between Vienna and Istanbul, still bears its name from a 1689 fire, and the Saxon walls encircling the old town, built between the 14th and 17th centuries, remain some of the best-preserved in Transylvania. In winter, coaches climb a further twelve kilometres to Poiana Brasov, Romania's best-known ski resort, sitting at the base of the Postavaru massif.
Transylvanian Saxons built Bran Castle in 1377 as a fortified customs post controlling trade between Transylvania and Wallachia, and Vlad the Impaler, the historical figure behind Dracula, almost certainly never lived there, staying instead near Sighisoara and Bucharest. Queen Marie of Romania made it a royal home in the 1920s, and her furnishings remain on display. Coaches use a dedicated car park at the base of the castle rock.
A fire in 1689 blackened the church's stone walls and gave it the name it still carries, though the building itself, completed in the 15th century, survived structurally intact. It remains the largest Gothic church between Vienna and Istanbul and holds one of the largest working pipe organs in south-eastern Europe. The Saxon fortification walls, built in stages from the 14th to the 17th centuries, still ring much of the old town, a short walk from the church.
Rasnov Fortress, a peasant stronghold built from the 13th century onward on a hilltop above the town of the same name, gave local villagers somewhere to retreat during Ottoman and Tatar raids, and its walls and watchtowers are open for coach groups today. Twelve kilometres in the other direction, Poiana Brasov sits at 1,030 metres at the foot of the Postavaru massif and remains Romania's most established ski resort, busy in winter and increasingly popular for summer hiking too.
As a rough guide, a minibus (up to 19 seats) in Brasov runs around 800 to 1,350 RON per day, a midi-coach (around 29 seats) around 1,350 to 2,250 RON per day, and a full-size coach (49 seats) around 2,050 to 3,350 RON per day. Brasov's pricing tracks close to the Transylvania regional average, with the sharpest demand spike running from December through Easter for both skiing and Christmas markets. The final figure depends on your route, the date, and how long you need the vehicle. We confirm a fixed price with no hidden charges -- send your details for a free quote.
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