Tunisia — Tunis Governorate

Sidi Bou Said

The blue-and-white clifftop village above Carthage — Tunisia's most beautiful town and a dining scene built on Mediterranean fish, harissa, and the finest café culture in North Africa.

6Restaurants Listed
$$–$$$Average Price Range
7Avg Food Score
9Avg Ambience Score

Best Restaurants in Sidi Bou Said

Five essential tables, ranked by occasion.

$ Under 20 TND  |  $$ 20–60 TND  |  $$$ 60–150 TND  |  $$$$ Over 150 TND

Le Pirate Restaurant Sidi Bou Said
#1 in Sidi Bou Said
Le Pirate Restaurant
Tunisian / Mediterranean$$$
ProposalFirst Date
The clifftop terrace above the Gulf of Tunis — the most beautiful dining position in Tunisia and a kitchen that deserves the setting.
Food 8Ambience 10Value 7
Café des Nattes Sidi Bou Said
#2 in Sidi Bou Said
Café des Nattes
Tunisian Café$
Solo DiningFirst Date
The most painted café terrace in Africa — Paul Klee's 1914 watercolour is this café, and the mint tea is as it was when he painted it.
Food 7Ambience 9Value 8
Dar Zarrouk Sidi Bou Said
#3 in Sidi Bou Said
Dar Zarrouk
Tunisian / Mediterranean$$$
Close a DealBirthday
The view from this terrace takes in Carthage, the Gulf of Tunis, and the Cap Bon peninsula — Tunisian fine dining in the world's most historically significant dining room.
Food 7Ambience 10Value 7
Le Chargui Sidi Bou Said
#4 in Sidi Bou Said
Le Chargui
Tunisian / Traditional$$
BirthdayFirst Date
The village restaurant that feeds Sidi Bou Said's own residents — tajine, couscous, and the Tunisian home cooking tradition in a restored blue-and-white house.
Food 7Ambience 8Value 8
Restaurant Sidi Bou Fares Sidi Bou Said
#5 in Sidi Bou Said
Restaurant Sidi Bou Fares
Tunisian / Seafood$$
BirthdayTeam Dinner
The Gulf of Tunis seafood served at the foot of the village — fresh bream, prawns, and the Tunisian sea in a setting the village keeps to itself.
Food 7Ambience 8Value 8
Café Sidi Chabaane Sidi Bou Said
#6 in Sidi Bou Said
Café Sidi Chabaane
Café / Tunisian$
Solo DiningBirthday
The terrace where the village watches the sunset — pine nuts in the tea, the Gulf below, and the specific silence of Sidi Bou Said after the day-trippers leave.
Food 7Ambience 9Value 8

Sidi Bou Said’s Top 5

01

Le Pirate Restaurant

Le Pirate occupies the cliff edge at Sidi Bou Said — a position of extraordinary natural drama where the village's white walls drop precipitously to the Gulf of Tunis below and the island of Zembra is visible on clear da...

02

Café des Nattes

Café des Nattes is one of the world's most historically layered cafés. Paul Klee and August Macke stopped here in 1914 on the journey that Klee described as producing his understanding of colour — the watercolours he mad...

03

Dar Zarrouk

Dar Zarrouk occupies a restored Tunisian palace at the village's highest point — a position from which the entire sweep of the Gulf of Tunis is visible, including the ruins of ancient Carthage on the promontory below. Di...

04

Le Chargui

Le Chargui occupies a restored village house in Sidi Bou Said's residential streets — the lanes away from the main tourist terrace where the village's actual life continues. It serves the community that lives here year-r...

05

Restaurant Sidi Bou Fares

Restaurant Sidi Bou Fares sits at the base of the Sidi Bou Said cliff — accessible either by the winding lane from the village above or by boat from Tunis marina. The position at sea level provides the most direct possib...

06

Café Sidi Chabaane

Café Sidi Chabaane occupies one of the village's secondary terraces — less famous than the Café des Nattes but equally beautiful, and possessed of the specific advantage of being slightly less visited. The mint tea here ...

Dining in Sidi Bou Said

Sidi Bou Said is the most beautiful town in Tunisia and one of the most beautiful in Africa — a clifftop village of white-washed walls and cobalt-blue doors perched above the Gulf of Tunis, overlooking the ruins of ancient Carthage on the promontory below. The village's strict building regulations, maintained since the 1920s, have preserved its blue-and-white aesthetic in a form that Paul Klee, August Macke, and generations of artists have found irresistible. Dining here occurs within this visual framework.

Tunisian Cuisine

Tunisian food is among the Mediterranean's most assertive culinary traditions — defined by harissa (the dried chilli paste that appears at every table in every form), the French-influenced pastry tradition from the colonial era, and the Italian influences that the geographic proximity to Sicily and the colonial history of the north have deposited. The sea bass and bream from the Gulf of Tunis, the couscous of the interior, and the brick à l'oeuf (crispy pastry with egg and tuna) that is the most specifically Tunisian of all preparations constitute the culinary canon.

The Art History

In April 1914, Paul Klee and August Macke arrived in Tunisia and spent two weeks in Tunis, Hammamet, and Sidi Bou Said. Klee's diary records his realisation: 'Colour and I are one. I am a painter.' The paintings he made — including the Sidi Bou Said watercolour that shows the very terrace of the Café des Nattes — are among the most important works of 20th-century European art. The village they painted is unchanged in its essentials.

Practical Notes

Sidi Bou Said is 20 minutes from Tunis by the TGM electric railway or by taxi. Tunisia uses the Tunisian Dinar. The village is compact and best explored on foot. Most restaurants accept cards; cafés require cash. The best visiting period is April to June and September to November; July and August are very crowded with Tunisian and European summer visitors.