Top 5 Eats in Makkah

The restaurants we actually go back to — not just the ones everyone talks about.

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Most visitors eat the same four things in Makkah: the hotel buffet, Al Baik, whatever's on the fourth floor of the Clock Tower mall, and maybe a shawarma from somewhere forgettable. They go home thinking the city doesn't have good food. They're wrong — they just didn't know where to look.

These are five restaurants we actually go back to. Not the most famous, not the most expensive — just the ones where the food is good enough that we'd eat there even if we weren't in Makkah.

1. Mado

Mado restaurant

Two locations that matter: Clock Tower and Jabal Omar. The Clock Tower branch has Haram views and more atmosphere. Jabal Omar is easier to get a table. I'd pick Clock Tower for breakfast and Jabal Omar for a quick lunch — the experience is noticeably different between the two.

The Turkish breakfast spread is the move. Eggs, cheeses, honey, simit, olives, and more small plates than your table can hold. Order it for two and you'll have leftovers. The mixed grill is solid for dinner. The kunafa is excellent. Skip the pasta dishes — they exist on the menu but nobody's coming to Mado for spaghetti.

The dondurma (stretchy Turkish ice cream) is worth queuing for, especially with kids. The staff do that whole theatrical thing where they pretend to hand it to you and pull it back — the children lose their minds every time.

The downside: it gets painfully crowded after Maghrib and after Isha. Like, thirty-minute wait for a table crowded. If you can go mid-morning or early afternoon, do that. Expect to pay around 300 SAR for two people — the mixed grill alone is about 200 SAR.

Read the full review →

2. Salt

Salt restaurant

Yes, we ranked a chain burger place at number two. Let me explain.

There's a moment on day three or four of Umrah where your body has had enough grilled chicken and rice. You've been eating heavy meals at odd hours, your sleep schedule is destroyed, and someone in the group — probably you — just wants a burger. Salt is where you go, and you will not regret it.

It's a Dubai-born chain in Makkah Mall, about a three-minute walk from the Haram. The sliders are the star — each order comes as two, and they're good enough to make you want a third. The popcorn chicken is addictive in a way I can't fully explain. Get the Mint Lemonade or the Lotus Softie — both are better than they need to be. There's also a pop-up location at Tilal Village near Masjid Al Rajhi if you're on that side of town.

The space is casual and fun. No tablecloths, no pretension. Expect to spend around 200 SAR for two, which makes it the most affordable restaurant on this list. It closes during prayer times like everywhere else, and the post-Isha rush can mean a twenty-minute wait for food — the kitchen gets slammed.

Not where you go for a special occasion. Absolutely where you go when you need a reset.

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3. Sahtein

Sahtein restaurant

Lebanese food is everywhere in Makkah. Most of it is forgettable — the same hummus, the same grills, the same everything. Sahtein, tucked up on the third floor of the Hilton Hotel Convention Jabal Omar, is the exception.

The grills are the star. Perfectly charred chicken tawook with a marinade that's distinctly theirs. Juicy kafta. A fattoush that's dressed properly — not drowning in sumac like some places do. The hummus is smooth, the bread arrives warm, and the mezzeh spread (hummus, moutabal, tabbouleh, fatayer) is built for sharing and ordering slowly. Don't rush this meal.

At 4.7 on Google with 500+ reviews, the reputation is earned. But — and this matters — it gets absolutely packed after Maghrib. The kitchen slows down, the wait staff are stretched thin, and what should be a relaxed meal becomes a test of patience. Go before Maghrib or well after Isha and you'll have a completely different experience. The lunch service is the sweet spot: quieter, faster, same food.

The bill feels fair for what you get. Expect around 300 SAR for two with a full mezzeh spread and grills.

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4. Voi Lounge

Voi Lounge

10,000+ Google reviews. A 4.7 rating. A menu that spans 13 countries. On paper this should be a disaster — one of those "we do everything" restaurants that does nothing well. Somehow, Voi makes it work.

Important context: this is not walking distance from the Haram. You're looking at a ten-minute drive, so it's an evening-out situation, not a between-prayers pit stop. Book ahead — especially weekends — or you'll be waiting.

The Middle Eastern dishes are the strongest section of the menu. The Asian selection is consistently good. I'd avoid the Italian pastas — they're fine, but "fine" isn't what you want at these prices. Ask the staff to put together a tasting selection if it's your first visit; they know the menu better than the menu knows itself, and they'll steer you right.

The space is beautiful. The presentation borders on theatrical. It's the kind of restaurant where the food arrives and everyone reaches for their phone before their fork. That can be annoying, but the food backs it up. Budget 250-350 SAR for two — it's not cheap, and the drinks (fresh juices, specialty mocktails) add up fast.

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5. Gurkan Sef Steakhouse

Gurkan Sef Steakhouse

Turkish steakhouse. Theatrical service. Dry-aged meat. You know the genre. The question is whether the food justifies the performance, and at Gurkan Sef it mostly does.

The Lokum beef tenderloin is the dish — so tender it barely needs a knife. If you're going big, the Dallas steak is 400 grams of 40-day dry-aged beef, and it's the best steak in Makkah. The Salkim kofte is a safer entry point if you don't want to commit to a 300+ SAR steak. The salad is fresh and well-balanced, which sounds like faint praise but matters when everything else on the table is protein.

Expect to spend 200+ SAR per person. This is a ten-minute drive from the Haram — like Voi, it's a destination meal, not a quick bite. They're open 1 PM to midnight. Surprisingly, there's a kids' play area, which makes it more family-friendly than you'd expect from a steakhouse at this price point.

The 4.4 Google rating (from 6,000+ reviews) feels about right — the food is excellent, but the service can be inconsistent and the theatrical element isn't for everyone. If you just want a great steak without the show, you might find it a bit much. Book ahead for weekends.

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