European Culture

European cultural guides — traditions, etiquette, language tips, regional customs and what to expect in each country. Designed for visitors who want to blend in instead of standing out.

What you will find in this section

  • Greeting and dining etiquette across Europe (handshakes, double-kisses, tipping norms)
  • Local customs: siesta in Spain, apertivo in Italy, pub culture in the UK and Ireland
  • Language survival kits: basic phrases for France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece
  • Religious and civic holidays and how they affect opening hours
  • Regional identity inside countries (Catalonia, Bavaria, Scotland, Sicily, Flanders)
  • Cultural etiquette at churches, mosques, synagogues and historic sites

Most popular topics

  • Tipping in Europe country by country
  • Dining times across Mediterranean vs Northern Europe
  • How to dress for different European cities (and why it matters for pickpockets)
  • Understanding regional languages: Catalan, Basque, Welsh, Gaelic

FAQ

What European country has the friendliest culture for tourists?

Consistent standouts: Ireland (conversational pub culture), Portugal (low-pressure hospitality), Greece (generous food traditions), Italy (warm but faster-paced). Expat surveys often rank Portugal, Malta and Ireland highest for English-speaking expats’ quality of life.

What are the European countries with the strictest etiquette?

Germany, Switzerland and Austria value punctuality (5 minutes late is rude) and direct communication. Scandinavia values privacy and quiet in public spaces. The UK values queuing and under-statement. Belgium, Netherlands are also punctuality-focused.

What are the main religions in Europe today?

Majority Christian with wide variation: Catholic (Italy, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Ireland, Austria, France historically), Protestant (Germany, UK, Scandinavia, Netherlands), Orthodox (Greece, Romania, Russia, Bulgaria, Serbia). Growing minorities of Muslims (France, Germany, UK), Jewish communities (France, UK, Germany), and Hindus (UK). Roughly 20-40% of Europeans identify as non-religious.

Is English widely spoken in Europe?

Yes in Western and Northern Europe: UK, Ireland (native), Netherlands, Scandinavia, Germany and Switzerland (90%+ speak functional English). Moderate in France, Italy, Spain (55-65%). Lower in rural Portugal, Greece, Eastern Europe (25-45%). Everyone in the tourism industry speaks basic English.

What are the typical meal times in Southern Europe?

Spain: lunch 14:00-16:00, dinner 21:00-23:00. Italy: lunch 13:00-14:30, dinner 19:30-22:00. Portugal: similar to Spain. Greece: lunch 14:00-15:00, dinner 20:00-22:00 (later in summer). Kitchens usually close between meal services. This matters — many restaurants turn away diners arriving at 18:00 looking for dinner.

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