Uzbekistan — Ranked by Occasion

Best Restaurants
in Khiva

Uzbekistan's UNESCO Silk Road open-air museum — Itchan Kala's mud-brick walled inner city, Khorezmian cuisine that the rest of Central Asia has forgotten how to cook, with shivit oshi green-noodle soup as the city's distinctive signature.

5Restaurants Listed
7Occasions Covered

All Restaurants in Khiva

Every table ranked, verdicts written, occasions assigned. Use the occasion filter above to narrow by your dining purpose.

$ under $40  ·  $$ $40–$80  ·  $$$ $80–$150  ·  $$$$ $150+ per person

Khorezm Art Restaurant restaurant
1
Team Dinner
Khorezm Art Restaurant
Khorezmian Traditional$$
The Allakuli Khan Madrasah-converted restaurant — Khorezmian classics in a 1830s royal-school building, the city's most architecturally evocative dining se
Mirzaboshi Restaurant restaurant
2
Team Dinner
Mirzaboshi Restaurant
Uzbek-Khorezmian$$
The Kalta-Minor-edge restaurant in the centre of Itchan Kala — Uzbek national dishes plus Khorezmian regional specialties, with a vegetarian section unusua
Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant restaurant
3
Team Dinner
Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant
Uzbek BBQ / Rooftop$$
The Itchan Kala rooftop terrace restaurant — grilled-meat kebab with soup and dumplings, the city's reference summer-evening anchor with continuous walled-
Malika Kheivak Restaurant restaurant
4
Impress Clients
Malika Kheivak Restaurant
Khorezmian Hotel Restaurant$$$
The Malika Kheivak Hotel restaurant inside Itchan Kala — comfortable upscale Khorezmian dining in a converted traditional house, the city's reference upper
Cafe Zarafshon restaurant
5
Team Dinner
Cafe Zarafshon
Uzbek Cafe / Modern$
The contemporary Khiva cafe outside the Itchan Kala walls — Uzbek classics at student-rate prices, the local-favourite daytime anchor.

Khorezm Art Restaurant

Khorezmian Traditional · $$
First Date
The Allakuli Khan Madrasah-converted restaurant — Khorezmian classics in a 1830s royal-school building, the city's most architecturally evocative dining setting.
Food 9.0 Ambience 9.6 Value 9.0
Mirzaboshi Restaurant restaurant Khiva
#2 in Khiva

Mirzaboshi Restaurant

Uzbek-Khorezmian · $$
Team Dinner
The Kalta-Minor-edge restaurant in the centre of Itchan Kala — Uzbek national dishes plus Khorezmian regional specialties, with a vegetarian section unusual in Uzbek dining.
Food 8.7 Ambience 9.2 Value 9.0
Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant restaurant Khiva
#3 in Khiva

Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant

Uzbek BBQ / Rooftop · $$
First Date
The Itchan Kala rooftop terrace restaurant — grilled-meat kebab with soup and dumplings, the city's reference summer-evening anchor with continuous walled-city views.
Food 8.6 Ambience 9.4 Value 9.1
Malika Kheivak Restaurant restaurant Khiva
#4 in Khiva

Malika Kheivak Restaurant

Khorezmian Hotel Restaurant · $$$
Birthday
The Malika Kheivak Hotel restaurant inside Itchan Kala — comfortable upscale Khorezmian dining in a converted traditional house, the city's reference upper-tier Khiva dinner.
Food 9.0 Ambience 9.3 Value 8.8
Cafe Zarafshon restaurant Khiva
#5 in Khiva

Cafe Zarafshon

Uzbek Cafe / Modern · $
Solo Dining
The contemporary Khiva cafe outside the Itchan Kala walls — Uzbek classics at student-rate prices, the local-favourite daytime anchor.
Food 8.4 Ambience 8.2 Value 9.6

Best for First Date in Khiva

  • Khorezm Art Restaurant — The Allakuli Khan Madrasah-converted restaurant — Khorezmian classics in a 1830s royal-school building, the city's most architecturally evocative dining setting.
  • Mirzaboshi Restaurant — The Kalta-Minor-edge restaurant in the centre of Itchan Kala — Uzbek national dishes plus Khorezmian regional specialties, with a vegetarian section unusual in Uzbek dining.
  • Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant — The Itchan Kala rooftop terrace restaurant — grilled-meat kebab with soup and dumplings, the city's reference summer-evening anchor with continuous walled-city views.

See all First Date restaurants →

Best for Business Dinner in Khiva

  • Khorezm Art Restaurant — The Allakuli Khan Madrasah-converted restaurant — Khorezmian classics in a 1830s royal-school building, the city's most architecturally evocative dining setting.
  • Mirzaboshi Restaurant — The Kalta-Minor-edge restaurant in the centre of Itchan Kala — Uzbek national dishes plus Khorezmian regional specialties, with a vegetarian section unusual in Uzbek dining.
  • Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant — The Itchan Kala rooftop terrace restaurant — grilled-meat kebab with soup and dumplings, the city's reference summer-evening anchor with continuous walled-city views.

See all Deal-Closing tables →

Dining in Khiva

Khiva dines as the Silk Road's preserved inner-city. The Khorezm Province city — population 95,000, Uzbekistan's most-preserved medieval city — has its inner walled fortress (Itchan Kala) inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1990 as a complete Silk Road urban environment with original mud-brick walls, working madrasahs, the iconic Kalta Minor Minaret (the unfinished 14th-century blue-tiled minaret that's the city's marquee visual symbol), and the Tash-Hauli royal palace. The cuisine is distinctively Khorezmian — the regional style of north-west Uzbekistan — and differs from the more commonly-known Uzbek dishes (Tashkent-or-Samarkand plov, manti) in significant ways: shivit oshi (the green-dyed dill-noodle soup that's the city's most-distinctive single signature), Khorezmian Pilaf (different from other Uzbek pilafs in technique and ingredients), tukhum barak (eggs-in-dumplings), and a deeper tradition of seasonal-vegetable accompaniments.

The dining map is small and walkable. Itchan Kala — the UNESCO walled inner-city — holds the iconic restaurants: Khorezm Art Restaurant (in the converted Allakuli Khan Madrasah), Mirzaboshi Restaurant (near the Kalta Minor Minaret), Terrassa Cafe & Restaurant (the rooftop with city views), and a dozen smaller traditional kitchens within the historical-monument buildings. Outside the walls (Dichan Kala, the outer city) hold the more contemporary cafes and a few modern Uzbek restaurants.

Reservations are not standard culture in Khiva and most restaurants are walk-in only; the city's small size means evening dining is relatively quiet. English menus are universal at the tourist-tier restaurants. The proper Khiva visit is one to two days — most visitors arrive from Bukhara or Samarkand, eat lunch and dinner inside Itchan Kala, and depart the next morning.

Pair the food with one of the local Khorezm-region green teas (the Khorezm Province produces a particular variety of black-and-green tea blend that's served sweetened with rock-sugar) or with the Uzbek-style Sherbet drinks. Most full meals end with a plate of the regional Khorezm dried fruits and nuts — apricots, walnuts, almonds, raisins — and a cup of the famous Khiva-region halva. The proper post-dinner anchor is a walk along the Itchan Kala ramparts at sunset (the original mud-brick walls remain intact and are accessible from several tower-mounted stairways).

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