This working paper analyses the salience of differentiated integration (DI) for subsequent Romanian governments between 2007 and 2020, and the positions that Romanian decision-makers took with respect to DI during this period. The salience analyses indicate that there has been a relatively low salience of DI models (i.e. multi-speed and multi-end EU) and DI mechanisms (i.e. enhanced cooperation and opt-outs) but a high salience of DI instances (i.e. twenty-one differentiated EU policies) in the official discourse emanating from the Romanian government during this period. The position of successive Romanian governments with regard to DI was strongly in favour of more integration, especially through accession both to the Schengen area and to the eurozone, but fervently against any type of DI models. This is explained in part by Romania’s pro-European electorate and decision-makers, and also by the desire of Romanian governments’ to be on an equal footing with other, typically older, EU Member States within the EU’s decision-making processes. It seems that this pro-European stance is not context-dependent but prevails across all DI instances, as Romanian decision-makers from across the political spectrum share the same general desire to strengthen the European project and to support its evolution towards ever-closer union.