Estonia Travel Guide: Tallinn, Tartu, Saaremaa & Where to Go 2026
Explore Estonia with LocalsInsider’s guide. Discover charming boutique hotels, Nordic-inspired dining, serene hiking paths, and rich history in this Baltic gem.
Estonia is the smallest Baltic state and somehow the one most likely to surprise you. Tallinn's medieval Old Town is UNESCO-listed for the obvious reasons, but the city's real energy is in Kalamaja and Telliskivi where the tech-and-design crowd actually live. Tartu is the university town with the café culture. Saaremaa is the island where Estonians escape — windmills, juniper, sauna traditions taken with proper Northern seriousness. And the food scene has quietly become one of the most exciting in Northern Europe.
Our Estonia coverage is small but considered — focused on Tallinn's neighborhoods and the island getaways most travelers don't make it to.
The travel personality: The Quiet Northerner
Quick facts
Live right now
Best time to visit
| Season | Why go |
|---|---|
| June-August | Endless summer light, beach season, midsummer celebrations |
| September-October | Forest mushroom season, fall colors, cool but not cold |
| December-February | Northern Lights possible, dark and atmospheric, Christmas markets |
Top cities to visit
Experiences you'll probably love
- Walk Tallinn's Old Town walls at sunrise before the cruise ships arrive
- Bog walk in Soomaa National Park — wooden boardwalks across northern Europe's largest bogland
- Sauna at Iglupark in Tallinn — wood-heated, harbor-side, the Estonian sauna ritual is serious
- Tartu's student bars and the Aparaaditehas creative quarter
- Saaremaa island stay with windmills, juniper, and spa traditions going back centuries
Not many tourists know about…
- Kalamaja and Telliskivi in Tallinn — the creative neighborhoods locals actually go to
- Pickled herring and dark rye bread at Rataskaevu 16 in Tallinn — traditional Estonian taken seriously
- Sauna isn't a tourist activity, it's a national religion — take it seriously, drink water
- Mid-summer (June 23-24) is Jaanipäev, the biggest national holiday — bonfires nationwide
- The Estonian language has 14 grammatical cases — locals don't expect you to try, English is universal
If you visit only once, make it this
Europe's best-preserved medieval city center, UNESCO-listed, with intact 13th-century walls. Walk up to Toompea hill at dusk for the panorama of red-tiled roofs and church spires. The view from the Patkuli viewing platform is the iconic Tallinn photograph.
Free to walk; Tallinn Card €32/24hr includes museums.
Where to walk & breathe
Northern Europe's largest contiguous bogland — wooden boardwalks float across 8,000-year-old peat, with bog pools the color of strong tea. Best in 'fifth season' (the spring floods, late March-April) when canoes navigate the flooded forest.
2 hours south of Tallinn. Free entry, parking at Riisa or Tõramaa.
Museums worth your time
Estonia's national art museum — the building itself (by Finnish architect Pekka Vapaavuori) won the 2008 European Museum of the Year. Strong Soviet-era and contemporary holdings.
Visit website →13 reconstructed farmsteads from across Estonia, set in 80 hectares of forest 8km from central Tallinn — windmills, schoolhouses, a fishing village. Traditional Estonian food at the Kolu Tavern.
Visit website →The Insider's Edit
A few additions for travelers building a Baltic deep-dive:
In a 19th-century telegraph building in the Old Town — a quiet, elegant base for Tallinn's medieval lanes.
A 14th-century manor on a Baltic island — the Alexander tasting-menu restaurant uses Muhu-island ingredients almost exclusively.
Chef Tõnis Siigur's tasting-menu counter overlooking the Baltic — one Michelin star (Estonia received its first Michelin guide in 2022).
A 1916 hangar with a real submarine inside — one of Europe's most cinematic maritime museums.
Several boutique experiences combine forest manor stays with restored Cold War sites.
Where to eat
Two Michelin stars — Estonia's first restaurant to receive 2 stars (2024). Chef Matthias Diether's seafood-focused tasting menu in Tallinn's Noblessner harbor district.
One Michelin star — chef Tõnis Siigur's contemporary Nordic in a Bauhaus-style seaside villa, 7km from central Tallinn. Tasting menu only at the Chef's Hall section.
Traditional Estonian in Tallinn's Old Town — elk roast, herring with sour cream, dark Estonian rye bread. The signature dish: the wandering haunted-house ghost legend on the menu.
Three young Estonian chefs converted a 19th-century manor house into a farmhouse restaurant — Sunday lunch institution, all ingredients from the surrounding farms.
Where to stay
1878 former telegraph office in Tallinn Old Town — Autograph Collection by Marriott, the Tšaikovski Russian restaurant, the spa with original brick vaulting.
Tallinn's oldest functioning hotel (1850) in the Old Town — 27 individually decorated rooms, the Du Nord restaurant. Family-run hospitality.
16th-century manor on Muhu island (3-hour drive + ferry from Tallinn) — Relais & Châteaux, the Alexander restaurant with one Michelin star, 26 rooms across the manor and outbuildings.
Glass-fronted A-frame cabins on Tallinn's harbor — saunas, sea-view terraces, the Iglu Spa with traditional Estonian sauna rituals. Walking distance to the Old Town.
Realistic daily budget
Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.
Travel safety & inclusivity
Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.
Major festivals
Need a visa for Estonia?
Many travelers can enter Estonia visa-free, but it depends on your passport. Check your specific requirements:
Powered by evisas.com · We'll open your nationality-specific requirements page in a new tab.
Partner link — Locals Insider may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. Always confirm the latest requirements with the official embassy.
Not sure if Estonia is right for your next trip? We'll compare 53 destinations against your travel style. Take our country matcher quiz →
Frequently asked questions about Estonia
Do I need a visa to visit Estonia?
Estonia is an EU member, Schengen Area country, and eurozone country, so EU citizens travel freely with a national ID and most non-EU travelers use the standard Schengen rules. Citizens of EU/EEA/Swiss countries: passport or national ID, no time limit. Citizens of the UK, US, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and around 60 other Schengen-visa-exempt countries: visa-free 90 days in any 180-day period across the entire Schengen Area (so days spent in Spain/Germany/France count toward your Estonia allowance). ETIAS pre-authorisation ($7-equivalent) is now required for these nationalities as of the 2026 rollout — apply online before travel. Russian and Belarusian passport holders need a Schengen visa; Estonia has suspended issuing tourist visas to Russian citizens since 2022, so most Russians apply via Hungary, Italy, or France. Passport valid 3 months beyond exit. From Helsinki: the 2-hour Tallink ferry to Tallinn is one of the world's busiest passenger routes — most travelers do this as a day trip without thinking about visa logistics (Schengen-internal travel).
When is the best time to visit Estonia?
June to August is the universal sweet spot — 18–25°C, long Nordic summer days (sun rises at 4am, sets at 11pm in midsummer), terraces in Tallinn's Old Town spilling onto the cobblestones, the Baltic islands (Saaremaa, Hiiumaa, Muhu) fully open. June 23–24 Jaanipäev (Midsummer) is the most important holiday — most Estonians leave the cities for country houses, bonfires, and traditional sauna; Tallinn quiets down. Mid-May and September are the photographer's months — cool but pleasant, fewer tourists in Old Town, autumn colours in Lahemaa National Park. December (especially first three weeks) is magical for the Tallinn Christmas Market on Town Hall Square — mulled wine (hõõgvein), Estonian sausages, the medieval setting under snow. January–February: -10 to -15°C is normal, frozen Baltic in places, beautiful but seriously cold; skiing in Otepää and Haanja. Avoid November and early March — grey, wet, dark (sun sets at 3:30pm in November). White nights (Valged Ööd): late May through mid-July, never properly dark.
How long do I need in Estonia and what's the classic route?
2 nights minimum for Tallinn alone, 5–7 nights for the full country. Tallinn (2–3 nights): the Old Town is UNESCO-listed and remarkably intact — the Town Hall Square, St. Olaf's Church (climb the spire), Toompea Hill with Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, the city walls and Kiek in de Kök tower. Beyond Old Town: Telliskivi Creative City (the rebooted industrial district — design studios, food halls, Fotografiska photo museum), Kalamaja (the colourful timber-house district with the seaplane museum Lennusadam), Kadriorg Palace and KUMU art museum. Tartu (1–2 nights): 2 hours south — the university town (Estonia's second city, 2024 European Capital of Culture), the wooden Supilinn quarter, the AHHAA science center. Saaremaa Island (2 nights, summer only): 4–5 hours west including ferry — Kuressaare Castle, working windmills, the Kaali meteorite crater, juniper plantations, traditional Baltic sauna culture at Padise Mõis. Lahemaa National Park (1 night): 1 hour east of Tallinn — bogs, boardwalks, the Viru Bog hike, Soviet-era submarine bases at Hara Harbour.
What makes Estonia different from the other Baltics?
Estonia is the most digital society in the world — 99% of government services are online, you can vote from your phone, file taxes in 3 minutes, register a company in 18 minutes, and e-Residency lets foreigners run Estonian companies remotely (over 100,000 e-Residents from 170+ countries). Tallinn is a tech hub — Skype, Bolt, Wise, and several unicorns were founded here. Culturally: Estonia is Finno-Ugric, not Slavic or Germanic — the language is closer to Finnish than to Latvian or Lithuanian, and Estonians culturally feel more Nordic than Baltic (the local quip: "We're not Baltics, we're Nordics who haven't admitted it yet"). Sauna culture is fundamental — every Estonian family has access to a smoke sauna (UNESCO-listed in Võrumaa) or wood-fired sauna. Quietly green: over 50% of Estonia is forest, the country has the world's cleanest air according to several rankings, and there's no light pollution outside Tallinn — northern lights are visible in northern Estonia in winter. Russian-speaking minority: around 25% of the population, concentrated in Narva and Sillamäe near the Russian border — speakable in Russian for older travelers; English is fluent under 40.
How do I get around Estonia and what should I budget?
Estonia is small (the whole country is 5 hours' drive end-to-end) and well-connected. Within Tallinn: trams, buses, and trolleys are free for residents and €2 cash per ride for visitors — but most travelers walk the compact Old Town. Bolt (the Estonian-founded Uber competitor) is universal and cheap. Old Town is car-free. Long-distance: the Lux Express and Hansabuss coaches are the standard way — Tallinn to Tartu €10–15 (2h30, several daily, free WiFi, sometimes free coffee). Trains (Elron) are also good for Tallinn–Tartu and Tallinn–Narva. Saaremaa Island requires car or organized tour — bus to Virtsu, ferry across to Kuivastu, then bus to Kuressaare (3.5h total). Helsinki day trip: Tallink, Eckerö, Viking Line ferries from Tallinn Old City Harbour, 2 hours, from €25 return (€60 booked at the gate). Budget for 2 people, 4 nights in Tallinn: mid-range €600–1,000 all-in (hotel €80–140/night, meals €30–50/person/day, attractions, transport). Estonia is the cheapest Schengen country after the Baltic neighbors — about 25–35% cheaper than Helsinki across the board.
Locals Insider's Articles About Estonia
Articles in this section are written by Locals Insider editorial team. Want to share your experience about Estonia? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com.












