Best Restaurants in Tunis
Five essential tables, ranked by occasion.
$ Under 20 TND$$ 20–60 TND$$$ 60–150 TND
Tunis’s Top 5
Dar El Jeld
Dar El Jeld is a stunning gem nestled in the heart of Tunis’s medina, housed in an elegant 18th-century home that once belonged to the Abdelkefi family — one of the great merchant dynasties of Ottoman Tunis. ...
Fondouk El Attarine
Fondouk El Attarine is a gorgeously lit place set in a beautifully restored caravanserai — the medieval merchant inn that served as the commercial and social hub of the medina’s spice trade for centuries. The...
El Ali
El Ali’s restaurant serves typical Tunisian dishes in a covered courtyard with a literary café on the upper level and a roof terrace offering superb views overlooking the historical medina. The three-tier fo...
La Pêcherie
La Pêcherie is located adjacent to the Tunis fish market — the most direct possible connection between the Gulf of Tunis and the plate. The fish and shellfish that arrive at the market from the Tunisian Medit...
Le Cosmos
Le Cosmos is Tunis’s most storied new-city restaurant — located on Avenue de Paris in the Ville Nouvelle, the elegant French colonial district that was built alongside the medina in the late 19th century. The...
Essalhi
Essalhi is a traditional Tunisian farmhouse restaurant in the seaside suburb of La Marsa — one of Tunis’s most pleasant residential and beach neighbourhoods — that brings the generous food traditions of...
Dining in Tunis — The Essential Guide
The White City at Table
Tunis is one of the great North African capitals — a city of extraordinary historical depth, sitting on a lagoon between the Mediterranean and the great Saharan hinterland. The medina of Tunis is among the best-preserved medieval Islamic cities in the world, a UNESCO World Heritage Site of mosques, souks, and palaces that represents the full cultural achievement of the Hafsid and Ottoman dynasties. The cooking that developed in these palaces and merchant households — the refined couscous, the brik pastry, the harissa, the olive oil tradition that predates the Arab conquest — is among the most complete expressions of North African culinary culture.
The city’s dining scene reflects its dual character: the medina restaurants (Dar El Jeld, Fondouk El Attarine, El Ali) represent the historical dimension; the Ville Nouvelle and La Marsa addresses (Le Cosmos, Essalhi) represent the European-influenced modernity that the French Protectorate of 1881–1956 left in the city’s commercial and residential culture.
The Tunisian Pantry
Tunisia’s ingredient landscape is one of the richest in North Africa: the olive oil from the world’s fourth-largest olive oil producer, the harissa (the national condiment, a fermented chilli paste that appears at every table), the Sfax preserved lemons, the Jerba dates, the Grombalia wine, the Muscat de Kelibia, and the fish of the Gulf of Tunis — the rouget barbet, the dorade, and the sea bass that the Tunisian fishing tradition has been harvesting since the Phoenicians established Carthage on the adjacent headland. The restaurants that engage with this tradition most seriously constitute a dining scene of genuine culinary richness.