All Restaurants in Samarkand
$ = under $20 $$ = $20–50 $$$ = $50–100 $$$$ = $100+
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Platan
The English-library-meets-winter-garden dining room where Samarkand's romantics come to be seen — piano, saxophone, and the city's best-judged Uzbek-European crossover cooking.
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Emirhan
The rooftop table with the city's best Registan sunset — traditional Uzbek cooking under the minarets, arranged for the camera but honest on the plate.
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Afrosiyob
Samarkand's most polished business restaurant — private rooms, a competent international menu, and the only wine list in the city that can match a Bordeaux to a lamb course.
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Khan Atlas
The rack of lamb in mint sauce that converts Samarkand sceptics — and the value play for groups who want the menu range without the palace-hotel bill.
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Merci
The bright-pink-and-blue international restaurant that proves Samarkand has a modern side — the sushi and the steak land cleaner than anyone expects.
Best for First Date in Samarkand
Intimate tables built for conversation over candlelight — impressive without intimidating.
Platan
The English-library-meets-winter-garden dining room where Samarkand's romantics come to be seen — piano, saxophone, and the city's best-judged Uzbek-European crossover cooking.
Emirhan
The rooftop table with the city's best Registan sunset — traditional Uzbek cooking under the minarets, arranged for the camera but honest on the plate.
Best for Business Dinner in Samarkand
Power tables where deals are closed over seasoned service and serious wine.
The Samarkand Dining Guide
Samarkand's dining identity is rooted in centuries of Silk Road trade — the plov, samsa, non bread, and lagman that define the table here carry ingredients and techniques that moved between Persia, China, and the Mediterranean along caravan routes that passed through the city. This is not a cuisine invented for tourists. Plov in particular is UNESCO-recognised and treated with the seriousness that Bologna applies to ragù: the rice variety (devzira), the timing of the carrot-layer caramelisation, the balance of fat rendering, all matter.
What has changed in the last decade is the hotel-led fine-dining scene. The Registan-area openings — Emirhan, Afrosiyob, Platan's Pushkin Street dining room — have pushed service, wine, and room-design standards closer to international luxury norms. This is still a city where the best plov is served at a roadside ош center at lunch, not a fine-dining restaurant at dinner, but the gap is narrowing. Visitors planning a week in Uzbekistan should book Samarkand's Registan-view tables ahead, particularly for sunset seatings during May–June and September–October peak season.
Practical dining notes: tipping at 10% is now standard at tourist-facing restaurants and appreciated at family-run places; reservations for serious restaurants should be made via Instagram DM or WhatsApp rather than phone, as English-language booking is handled online. Most premium restaurants accept Uzbek Visa/Mastercard, but carry som cash for tea houses and street plov. Dress code for fine-dining venues is smart casual — jackets are unnecessary even at the palace hotels, though shorts are poorly received after 6pm. Samarkand operates on Tashkent time (GMT+5), which matters because the sunset-dinner reservations at Emirhan and Platan's terrace work around specific golden-hour slots.
Neighbourhoods: the Registan district is the tourist core and holds the city's most photogenic dining rooms; Siyob Bazaar's perimeter is where to find traditional lunch plov; the University district and Pushkin Street have the modern, design-driven restaurants (Merci, Platan, a handful of good coffee bars). The newer Afrosiyob area — closer to the train station — is where the business-hospitality restaurants cluster, and where a traveller in town for meetings will likely eat. Drinking culture in Samarkand is lighter than in Tashkent; most fine-dining restaurants serve wine and spirits, but bar-forward venues are concentrated around Merci and a handful of hotel lounges.
Reservation Tips
Book Emirhan's rooftop and Platan's terrace 3–5 days ahead for sunset seatings. Use WhatsApp or Instagram DM — Uzbek restaurants respond faster there than to phone or email. Private-room requests at Afrosiyob need 48 hours for menu customisation.
Tipping & Etiquette
10% service tip at tourist restaurants (often not added to the bill). Remove shoes if invited to eat in a raised tapchan seating area. Bread (non) is symbolic — never place it upside down, and tear rather than cut it.
The Top 10 in Samarkand
- Platan
Uzbek & European — The English-library-meets-winter-garden dining room where Samarkand's romantics come to be seen — piano, saxophone, and the city's best-judged Uzbek-European crossover cooking.
- Emirhan
Uzbek — The rooftop table with the city's best Registan sunset — traditional Uzbek cooking under the minarets, arranged for the camera but honest on the plate.
- Afrosiyob
Uzbek & International — Samarkand's most polished business restaurant — private rooms, a competent international menu, and the only wine list in the city that can match a Bordeaux to a lamb course.
- Khan Atlas
Uzbek & European — The rack of lamb in mint sauce that converts Samarkand sceptics — and the value play for groups who want the menu range without the palace-hotel bill.
- Merci
International — The bright-pink-and-blue international restaurant that proves Samarkand has a modern side — the sushi and the steak land cleaner than anyone expects.