Things to do and where to stay in Tunis
Where to stay · Tunisia

Where to stay in Tunis — pick the right hotel, book in 3 clicks

Tunis, the capital of Tunisia, packs a UNESCO World Heritage medina of thousand-year-old souks, the Roman ruins of ancient Carthage on the Mediterranean shore, and Sidi Bou Said, the blue-and-white cliff village overlooking the sea — all within a single day's reach. Add the French colonial boulevards of Avenue Habib Bourguiba and Tunis becomes the ideal launchpad for any Tunisia trip: easy to walk, friendly on the wallet, and serving some of North Africa's spiciest, most rewarding food.

🕌UNESCO World Heritage Medina🏛️Roman Carthage ruins💙Blue-and-white Sidi Bou Said🌊On the Gulf of Tunis🌶️Fiery harissa cuisine
4areas to consider
1ranked guides
14See & Eat
🤝 Curated by the TopOfHotel team · scores from real guest reviews · live price comparison across 3 sites · no hidden adsHow we review →

Why stay in Tunis

🕌

A living medina

The old city of Tunis is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that's no museum piece — it's a working market and neighborhood. Get lost among souks selling spices, perfume, gold, and carpets for hours.

🏛️

Ancient Carthage

Phoenician and Roman ruins by the sea: the vast Antonine Baths, Byrsa Hill, and a Roman theatre. The TGM train from the city centre gets you there in about 30 minutes.

💙

Postcard Sidi Bou Said

A clifftop village painted entirely blue and white, looking out over the Gulf of Tunis. Sip mint tea at a historic café and find a photogenic angle around every corner.

🌶️

Bold, cheap eats

Brik, lablabi, couscous, ojja, fricassé — bold local dishes fired up with harissa, costing just a few dinars. Both the street stalls and sit-down spots deliver.

Pick an area first — where to stay in Tunis

Location is the single most important thing about a hotel — choose the right area first, then pick the hotel

The MedinaThe Medina

UNESCO old town, labyrinth of souks and the Zitouna Mosque, walkable to everything, budget rooms and characterful guesthouses

Coming soon
Ville NouvelleVille Nouvelle

French colonial quarter along Avenue Habib Bourguiba, cafés, restaurants and central hotels — the most convenient base

Coming soon
Les Berges du LacLes Berges du Lac

Modern lakeside district, hotels with pools, family-friendly, near malls and close to the airport

Coming soon
Sidi Bou Said & GammarthSidi Bou Said & Gammarth

Northern coast, the blue village, upscale resorts and beaches — best for couples and beach lovers

Coming soon

Ranked reviews — find your ideal stay in Tunis

Start with where to stay (the heart of the trip), then explore food and sights

Find the right Tunis hotel for you

1 ranked reviews

Local dishes to try in Tunis

  1. 1🥟

    Brik

    Thin pastry folded around egg, tuna and capers, then fried crisp so the yolk runs when you bite in. The quintessential Tunisian snack to try first.

    📍 Crispy staple
  2. 2🍲

    Lablabi

    A hearty chickpea soup with garlic, cumin and harissa, ladled over torn bread with an egg and olive oil. A beloved Tunisian breakfast and comfort food.

    📍 Breakfast soup
  3. 3🍛

    Couscous

    Steamed semolina grains served with meat, fish or a vegetable stew, seasoned generously with harissa. The national dish that families cook every Friday.

    📍 National dish
  4. 4🍳

    Ojja

    A spicy tomato-and-pepper stew with eggs cracked in, often boosted with merguez sausage or seafood. Eaten hot with bread for dipping.

    📍 Egg stew
  5. 5🌶️

    Harissa

    Tunisia's signature fiery red chili paste, inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2022. It goes with almost everything — spice lovers, rejoice.

    📍 National chili paste
  6. 6🍯

    Makroudh

    Diamond-shaped semolina pastries filled with date paste or nuts, fried and soaked in honey. Sweet and fragrant, best with a glass of hot mint tea.

    📍 Sweet treat
  1. 1🕌

    Medina of Tunis

    A UNESCO World Heritage old town — a maze of narrow lanes packed with souks selling spices, perfume, carpets and gold, plus the Zitouna Mosque at its heart. The cultural soul of Tunisia.

    📍 World Heritage
  2. 2🏛️

    Carthage

    Ruins of the great Phoenician-Roman metropolis by the sea: the monumental Antonine Baths, Byrsa Hill, and a Roman theatre. Easily reached by the TGM train from the centre.

    📍 Archaeology
  3. 3💙

    Sidi Bou Said

    A clifftop village painted blue and white overlooking the Gulf of Tunis. Cobbled lanes, historic cafés and sweeping sea views make it Tunisia's most photographed spot.

    📍 Blue village
  4. 4🖼️

    Bardo Museum

    Set in a former bey's palace, it holds one of the world's greatest collections of Roman mosaics, displayed across grand palace halls gathered from across Tunisia.

    📍 Museum
  5. 5🕌

    Zitouna Mosque

    The oldest mosque in Tunis, at the centre of the medina, once a leading Islamic university. Its colonnaded courtyard is stunning; visitors can view the outer court.

    📍 Religious site
  6. 6

    Cathedral of St Vincent de Paul

    A Catholic cathedral on Avenue Habib Bourguiba, completed in 1897, blending Moorish, Gothic and Neo-Byzantine styles — a landmark of the French colonial era.

    📍 Architecture
  7. 7🌳

    Belvedere Park

    Tunis's largest park, set on a hill with panoramic views over the city skyline and the gulf — a green lung to escape the bustle of the streets.

    📍 Park
  8. 8🏖️

    La Marsa Beach

    A golden-sand beach north of the city with a relaxed, upscale vibe and seafront cafés. Once a royal summer retreat, it's the last stop on the TGM line.

    📍 Beach

Things to do in Tunis

Day tours, attraction tickets and travel essentials for Tunis — book ahead on Klook with mobile e-tickets.

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★ TEAM'S TOP PICKS

3 Tunis hotels our team picked for you

Selected from real reviews — one per budget tier, each with a score and instant 3-site price comparison

Dar El Jeld Hotel & Spa★ 9.3Luxury

Dar El Jeld Hotel & Spa

📍 Tunis⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

#3 heritage · palace inside the UNESCO Medina

From~$171/night
read the full review →
The Residence Tunis★ 9.2Luxury

The Residence Tunis

📍 Tunis⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

#2 seafront luxury resort · Gammarth

From~$329/night
read the full review →
Dar Ben Gacem Kahia★ 9.1Upper-mid

Dar Ben Gacem Kahia

📍 Tunis⭐⭐⭐⭐

#9 medina boutique · restored historic house

From~$120/night
read the full review →
🏨 ALL PICKS

โรงแรมแนะนำทั้งหมดในTunis

ครบทุกระดับงบ — คัดจากคะแนนรีวิวจริง พร้อมเทียบราคา 3 เว็บ

#4

Hotel Dar Said

★ 8.9⭐⭐⭐⭐Upper-mid📍 Tunis

#6 boutique in the blue-and-white village

~$157/night
#5

Four Seasons Hotel Tunis

★ 8.8⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Luxury📍 Tunis

#1 luxury resort · private Gammarth beach

~$397/night
#6

Hotel Belvedere Fourati

★ 8.6⭐⭐⭐⭐Upper-mid📍 Tunis

#10 Best value · Family-run boutique by Belvedere Park

~$66/night
#7

Mövenpick Hotel du Lac Tunis

★ 8.5⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Luxury📍 Tunis

#5 closest to the airport · business district

~$151/night
#8

Mövenpick Hotel Gammarth Tunis

★ 8.4⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Luxury📍 Tunis

#4 beachfront resort · better value than Four Seasons

~$143/night
#9

Royal Victoria Hotel

★ 8.4⭐⭐⭐⭐Upper-mid📍 Tunis

#8 historic boutique on the medina's edge

~$71/night
#10

Laico Tunis Spa & Conference Center

★ 8.2⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Luxury📍 Tunis

#7 value 5-star · Les Berges du Lac lakeside

~$149/night

🚆 Getting around Tunis

✈️

Tunis-Carthage Airport (TUN)

Just 7 km from the centre, about a 20-minute drive. A metered taxi runs 15-20 TND by day (a legal 50% surcharge applies 9pm-5am), or bus lines 35/635 reach Tunis Marine for around 1 TND.

🚆

TGM train to Carthage & Sidi Bou Said

The Tunis-Goulette-Marsa line runs from Tunis Marine along the coast through La Goulette, Carthage and Sidi Bou Said to La Marsa — the single most useful sightseeing route, and cheap.

🚊

Métro léger (light rail)

The Métro léger is a surface tram network across the centre; lines 1 and 4 connect at Tunis Marine. Tickets are cheap and great for in-city hops, though it doesn't reach the airport directly.

🚕

Yellow taxis

Metered taxis are everywhere and inexpensive, but always ask the driver to switch on the meter (compteur) or agree a fare before you set off — especially as a tourist.

💵

Dinar cash & payments

Tunisia uses the dinar (TND; 1 dinar = 1000 millimes). It can't be imported or exported, so exchange on arrival. Souks and street food are cash-only, so keep small notes handy.

Where to go next near Tunis

Frequently asked — where to stay in Tunis

How many days do you need in Tunis?+

Two to three days is ideal. Spend day one walking the medina and the French quarter, day two riding the TGM train out to Carthage and Sidi Bou Said, and a third day on the Bardo Museum and La Marsa beach. Tunis also makes a great base for trips elsewhere in Tunisia.

When is the best time to visit Tunis?+

April-May and September-October are best — pleasant weather, fewer crowds and lower hotel prices. June-August climbs above 30°C and is great for the beach, but it's busier and pricier.

Is Tunis safe to explore on your own?+

The city centre, medina and tourist areas are comfortable to walk solo, and Tunisians are welcoming. Watch your valuables in crowded markets, expect to haggle in the souks, and always use a metered taxi or agree the fare upfront.

Ready to book your Tunis stay?

Start with the 3 hotels our team picked, or search all 3 sites — always compare before booking