TripPick Uzbekistan Uzbekistan

Grand Silk Road 7-Day — Tashkent, Samarkand & Bukhara

Tashkent's sights + a Samarkand overnight + a Bukhara overnight + the Chimgan mountains

Seven days links Uzbekistan's three great cities. Days 1-2 cover Tashkent (Khast Imam, Chorsu, the metro art, the central squares). Days 3-4 are a Samarkand overnight by Afrosiyob (Registan, Gur-e-Amir, Shah-i-Zinda). Days 5-6 continue by train to Bukhara — the Po-i-Kalyan, Ark fortress, Lyab-i-Hauz, and a desert-city old town — for an overnight. Day 7 is a Chimgan mountains escape back near Tashkent before departure. Book all Afrosiyob legs and both overnight hotels well ahead; the trains sell out first and set the schedule.

A full week is enough to actually understand Tashkent. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$248

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$495

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,080

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Old City — Khast Imam, Chorsu Bazaar & the Minor Mosque

Khast Imam complex (Quran of Uthman) - Chorsu Bazaar - Old City lanes - Minor Mosque - plov center lunch

Activities

  1. 09:00 Khast Imam Complex + the Quran of Uthman 1h30

    Tashkent's religious heart — a complex of madrasas, mosques, and a mausoleum housing the Quran of Uthman, widely held to be the world's oldest surviving Quran (7th century). A calm, monumental start to the trip in the Old City.

    Cost: ~20,000-40,000 som ($2-3) TIP: Cover shoulders and knees; women should bring a headscarf. Photography of the manuscript is restricted. Go early before tour groups and heat. The library room with the Quran is the highlight — give it time.
  2. 11:00 Chorsu Bazaar — under the turquoise dome 1h30

    The largest market in the city, beneath an iconic turquoise-tiled dome. Spices, dried fruit and nuts, fresh produce, non bread, ceramics and suzani, and the Korean-Uzbek salad counters (morkovcha). A working market, not a tourist set-piece.

    Cost: Free (bring cash to buy) TIP: Go in the morning when it's freshest and busiest. Graze the samsa and salad stalls. Bring small som notes — it's cash-only — and bargain politely on souvenirs. Watch your bag in the crowds. A short walk or metro stop from Khast Imam.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — plov at Osh Markazi (Chorsu) 1h

    Lunch on kazan-cooked plov at a local canteen near Chorsu, where Tashkent residents queue for the dish at midday. Cheaper and more everyday than the famous TV Tower center, with lagman and shashlik also on offer.

    Cost: 25,000-55,000 som ($2-5) TIP: Plov is a lunch dish here, so this is the right time. Point at what you want if there's a language gap. Cash only. If it's sold out, the Old City has plenty of samsa and lagman stalls nearby.
  4. 15:00 Minor Mosque + Ankhor Canal walk 1h30

    The Minor Mosque (opened 2014) is an elegant modern white-marble mosque with turquoise domes beside the Ankhor Canal — a calm, photogenic counterpoint to the ancient Khast Imam, free to enter.

    Cost: Free TIP: Observe mosque dress codes. It's uncrowded and especially pretty at golden hour. Pair it with a riverside canal walk. A short Yandex Go ride from the Old City. A quick but worthwhile stop showing Tashkent's modern Islamic side.
  5. 19:30 Dinner — Caravan or Afsona (national cuisine) 1h30

    A proper sit-down Uzbek dinner in the center. Caravan serves shashlik, manti, and soups in a Silk-Road-caravanserai setting with a courtyard; Afsona pairs modern design with classics like plov, manti, and somsa.

    Cost: 100,000-220,000 som ($8-18) per person TIP: Order an assortment to share — shashlik, manti, salads, non. Both take cards and are comfortable for groups. Reserve on weekend evenings. A relaxed end to the day after the Old City.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or guesthouse breakfast

City center · $3-8

Non bread, eggs, fruit, and green tea — the local start to the day.

Lunch

Osh Markazi (Chorsu plov)

Old City · $2-5

Kazan-cooked plov near the bazaar, the local lunch.

Dinner

Caravan or Afsona

City center (Mirabad) · $8-18

Sit-down national cuisine — shashlik, manti, plov, salads.

Transit:

Metro and short Yandex Go taxi rides (20,000-50,000 som / $2-4). The Old City sights cluster together; the Minor Mosque is a short ride away.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $22 Mid $48 Luxury $110
DAY 2

Metro art tour + Amir Timur & Independence squares

Soviet metro art (Kosmonavtlar, Pakhtakor, Alisher Navoi) - Amir Timur Square & museum - Independence Square - Central Asian Plov Center

Activities

  1. 09:30 Central Asian Plov Center (Besh Qozon) 1h30

    Start at the famous Besh Qozon ('five cauldrons') near the TV Tower, where oshpaz cooks prepare plov in enormous open-air kazans over firewood. Walk through the visible kitchen and eat an early plov while the cooking spectacle is on.

    Cost: 35,000-70,000 som ($3-6) TIP: Go before noon — the plov is freshest and the cooking is on show, and it sells out by early afternoon. Choose add-ons (quail egg, kazy horse sausage, garlic). High-volume and lively. Cash easiest. A combined early-lunch-and-sightseeing stop.
  2. 11:30 Soviet-era metro art tour 2h

    Station-hop the metro, a sightseeing attraction in itself: Kosmonavtlar (space-program portraits and planetary medallions), Pakhtakor (cotton-harvest mosaic), and Alisher Navoi (a domed hall echoing a mosque, the most photographed). Photography allowed since 2018.

    Cost: ~1,700 som ($0.14) per ride TIP: Go after the morning rush. Stations are dim — a phone with good low-light helps. Alisher Navoi is the standout. The metro is the oldest in Central Asia (1977). Allow 2-3 hours to hit the highlights at a relaxed pace.
  3. 14:30 Amir Timur Square + Amir Timur Museum 1h30

    The leafy central square anchored by the equestrian statue of Amir Timur (Tamerlane), Uzbekistan's national founding hero, with the blue-domed Amir Timur Museum nearby covering the Timurid Empire. The Soviet-era Hotel Uzbekistan looms over one side.

    Cost: Museum ~25,000 som ($2) TIP: Understanding Timur here makes the Samarkand monuments click tomorrow. The square is a pleasant walk; the museum is optional but well done. Hotel Uzbekistan is a Brutalist landmark worth a photo. Central and walkable.
  4. 16:30 Independence Square (Mustaqillik Maydoni) 1h

    Tashkent's grand central plaza — fountains, the Independence Monument, the arch of Good and Noble Aspirations, and memorials, set in wide open space. The civic heart of the modern capital, pleasant in the late-afternoon light.

    Cost: Free TIP: Cooler and prettier late afternoon. It's a short walk from Amir Timur Square through the central district. Big and open — good for a relaxed stroll. Combine with the surrounding parks and boulevards.
  5. 19:30 Dinner — Bek's Cafe shashlik or City Grill 1h30

    A hearty grill dinner. Bek's Cafe is a lively local spot for some of the best charcoal shashlik in the city; City Grill is a more polished option with high-quality meats and good service.

    Cost: 75,000-310,000 som ($6-25) per person TIP: Order an assortment of shashlik with non and salads to share — the local way. Bek's is busier and cheaper; City Grill is smarter. Both fine on cards. Reserve City Grill on weekend evenings. Get an early night before the Samarkand train.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

City center · $3-8

A light start — plov lunch comes early today.

Lunch

Central Asian Plov Center (Besh Qozon)

Yunusobod (TV Tower) · $3-6

Kazan plov where the cooking is the show — go before noon.

Dinner

Bek's Cafe or City Grill

City center · $6-25

Charcoal shashlik and grills with non and salads.

Transit:

The metro is the star today (~1,700 som / $0.14 a ride) and doubles as sightseeing. Short Yandex Go rides between the plov center and the central squares.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $24 Mid $50 Luxury $115
DAY 3

Tashkent → Samarkand by Afrosiyob + the Registan

Afrosiyob train - check in - Registan ensemble - Registan by evening light - Samarkand dinner

Activities

  1. 08:00 Afrosiyob high-speed train to Samarkand 3h

    Ride the Spanish-built Afrosiyob (up to 250 km/h) from Tashkent to Samarkand in about 2 hours, then check into a Samarkand hotel and drop your bags. An overnight lets you enjoy the city unrushed, including its monuments after dark.

    Cost: ~$10-20 one way TIP: Book 45-60 days ahead — seats sell out. Pack a small overnight bag; leave heavier luggage at your Tashkent hotel if returning there. A Yandex Go taxi covers the short hops between Samarkand's sights.
  2. 12:30 Lunch + first look at the Registan 2h30

    Lunch on Samarkand plov or shashlik, then a first visit to the Registan — three tiled madrasas around a plaza, the defining image of the Silk Road. With an overnight, you can split it across day and evening light.

    Cost: Lunch $5-12 + Registan ~$4-5 TIP: Go inside all three madrasas; the gold-leaf Tilya-Kori mosque is the highlight. A local guide adds context. Cooler than midday by early afternoon. You'll return at dusk, so a relaxed first pass is fine.
  3. 16:00 Gur-e-Amir + Bibi-Khanym Mosque 2h

    The blue-domed Gur-e-Amir, mausoleum of Amir Timur (Tamerlane) — the same figure you saw in Tashkent's Amir Timur Square — then the colossal Bibi-Khanym Mosque, one of the Islamic world's largest in its day.

    Cost: ~$3-5 each TIP: Gur-e-Amir is small but exquisite, with a richly tiled interior. Bibi-Khanym is monumental in scale. Both are short rides apart. Cover shoulders and knees. Save energy for the Registan after dark.
  4. 20:00 Registan by evening light + dinner 2h

    Return to the Registan as the crowds thin and the tilework glows — many travelers rate the floodlit ensemble the highlight of all Uzbekistan. Dinner afterward on Samarkand specialties.

    Cost: Dinner $6-15 TIP: Evening is the magic hour at the Registan — quieter and beautifully lit. There are sometimes light shows; check timings. A relaxed Samarkand dinner caps the day. The overnight is what makes this evening possible.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tashkent hotel breakfast

Tashkent · $3-8

A solid breakfast before the morning Afrosiyob.

Lunch

Samarkand plov or shashlik

Samarkand · $5-12

Samarkand-style plov or grilled skewers near the Registan.

Dinner

Samarkand national restaurant

Samarkand · $6-15

Local plov, lagman, and shashlik after the evening Registan.

Transit:

Afrosiyob Tashkent → Samarkand ~2 hours (~$10-20 one way, book ahead). Yandex Go taxis between Samarkand's monuments.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $80 Luxury $170
DAY 4

Samarkand — Shah-i-Zinda, Ulugbek Observatory & return

Shah-i-Zinda necropolis - Ulugbek Observatory - Siab Bazaar - return Afrosiyob to Tashkent

Activities

  1. 09:00 Shah-i-Zinda avenue of mausoleums 1h30

    A narrow avenue of tiled mausoleums in dazzling blues, layered over centuries and often called Samarkand's most beautiful tilework. A working pilgrimage site as well as a monument, stunning in morning light.

    Cost: ~$2-3 TIP: Go early for soft light and fewer crowds. Cover shoulders and knees. The detail of the tilework rewards a slow walk up the avenue. One of the most photogenic places in the country.
  2. 11:00 Ulugbek Observatory + Siab Bazaar 2h

    The remains of the 15th-century observatory of the astronomer-king Ulugbek (Timur's grandson), with its giant sextant arc, then the lively Siab Bazaar for bread, dried fruit, and the famous Samarkand non.

    Cost: Observatory ~$2-3 + bazaar free TIP: Ulugbek's observatory is a reminder of Samarkand's scientific golden age. Siab Bazaar is where to buy the distinctive round Samarkand non bread and dried fruit. Bring cash. A good last morning before the train.
  3. 13:30 Lunch + relaxed Samarkand wander 2h

    A final Samarkand lunch and a relaxed stroll — revisit a favorite monument, shop for suzani or ceramics, or simply enjoy a tea before heading to the station.

    Cost: Lunch $5-12 TIP: Keep an eye on your booked return train time. Suzani embroidery and ceramics make good souvenirs. A calm, unhurried finish to the Samarkand overnight.
  4. 16:30 Return Afrosiyob to Tashkent 2h30

    Take the ~2-hour Afrosiyob back to Tashkent, arriving in the evening. Check back into your hotel and enjoy a relaxed dinner in the capital.

    Cost: ~$10-20 one way TIP: Confirm your return seat before lunch. Back in Tashkent, the center is lively in the evening. Rest up — Chimgan mountains tomorrow. A short Yandex Go ride from the station to the center.
  5. 20:00 Tashkent dinner — Rayhon or Sette 1h30

    Dinner back in the capital — Rayhon (Milliy Taomlar) in Chilonzor for outstanding lagman and lamb plov, or Sette in the center for a smarter celebration meal.

    Cost: $6-30 per person TIP: Rayhon's hand-pulled lagman is among the city's best; Sette is the nicer option for a special evening. Both fine on cards (Rayhon cash safest). A satisfying end after two Silk Road cities.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Samarkand hotel breakfast

Samarkand · $3-8

An early breakfast before Shah-i-Zinda.

Lunch

Samarkand restaurant

Samarkand · $5-12

A final Samarkand plov or lagman before the train.

Dinner

Rayhon or Sette

Tashkent (Chilonzor / center) · $6-30

Lagman and plov, or a smarter celebration meal back in Tashkent.

Transit:

Yandex Go around Samarkand in the morning; Afrosiyob Samarkand → Tashkent ~2 hours (~$10-20). Metro/taxi in Tashkent.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $42 Mid $82 Luxury $175
DAY 5

Samarkand → Bukhara + the old town

Train to Bukhara - Lyab-i-Hauz - Po-i-Kalyan - Ark fortress - old-town evening

Activities

  1. 08:30 Train Samarkand → Bukhara 3h

    Continue west by train to Bukhara (roughly 1.5-2.5 hours from Samarkand depending on service), the best-preserved medieval city on the Silk Road, and check into an old-town guesthouse.

    Cost: ~$8-20 TIP: Book this leg ahead too. Bukhara's old town is compact and walkable — base yourself in or near Lyab-i-Hauz. Note: this assumes you continue from Samarkand rather than returning to Tashkent on Day 4. Pack the overnight bag accordingly.
  2. 13:00 Lyab-i-Hauz + lunch 1h30

    Lunch beside Lyab-i-Hauz, the tree-shaded pool plaza at the heart of Bukhara's old town, ringed by madrasas and chaikhanas — the most atmospheric spot in the city.

    Cost: Lunch $5-12 TIP: The shaded plaza is the social heart of Bukhara — a relaxed place to eat plov or shashlik under the mulberry trees. A gentle introduction before the monuments. Cash is handy here.
  3. 15:00 Po-i-Kalyan + Ark fortress 2h30

    The Po-i-Kalyan complex — the towering Kalyan minaret and mosque and the Mir-i-Arab madrasa — then the massive Ark of Bukhara, the emirs' ancient royal citadel.

    Cost: ~$3-6 across sites TIP: The Kalyan minaret (12th century) was so striking that Genghis Khan reputedly spared it. The Ark gives city views. Cover shoulders and knees. Late afternoon light suits the sandy-gold architecture.
  4. 19:30 Bukhara old-town evening + dinner 2h

    Wander the trading domes (Toki bazaars) and lanes as they light up, and dine on Bukhara specialties around Lyab-i-Hauz — the old town is magical after dark.

    Cost: Dinner $6-15 TIP: The covered bazaars sell carpets, suzani, and metalwork. Evening is the loveliest time to wander Bukhara's car-free core. A relaxed dinner under the trees caps the day. Watch for occasional folklore shows at the madrasas.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Samarkand hotel breakfast

Samarkand · $3-8

Breakfast before the Bukhara train.

Lunch

Lyab-i-Hauz chaikhana

Bukhara old town · $5-12

Plov or shashlik under the mulberry trees by the pool.

Dinner

Bukhara old-town restaurant

Bukhara (Lyab-i-Hauz) · $6-15

Bukhara specialties in the atmospheric car-free old town.

Transit:

Train Samarkand → Bukhara ~1.5-2.5 hours (book ahead). Bukhara's old town is compact and walkable; short taxis otherwise.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $42 Mid $82 Luxury $175
DAY 6

Bukhara → Tashkent by Afrosiyob

Chor Minor - Bolo Hauz - last old-town wander - Afrosiyob to Tashkent - capital dinner

Activities

  1. 09:00 Chor Minor + Bolo Hauz Mosque 1h30

    The quirky four-towered Chor Minor gatehouse and the elegant Bolo Hauz Mosque with its slender painted-wood columns — two of Bukhara's most distinctive smaller sights before you leave.

    Cost: Small fees / free TIP: Chor Minor is small but charming and photogenic. Bolo Hauz's wooden iwan reflects in its pool. A pleasant final morning of Bukhara's quieter monuments before the train back.
  2. 11:00 Last old-town wander + souvenirs 1h30

    A final stroll through Bukhara's trading domes and lanes for carpets, suzani embroidery, ceramics, and metalwork, with a tea break before heading to the station.

    Cost: Shopping extra TIP: Bukhara is one of the best places in Uzbekistan for handicrafts. Bargain politely. Keep an eye on the time for your booked Afrosiyob seat back to Tashkent.
  3. 13:30 Afrosiyob Bukhara → Tashkent 4h

    Take the Afrosiyob high-speed train back to Tashkent (roughly 4 hours from Bukhara), arriving in the capital in the evening.

    Cost: ~$15-30 TIP: Bukhara to Tashkent is the long leg (~4 hours) — book ahead and bring snacks and water. A relaxing ride through the landscape. Order Yandex Go from the station to your Tashkent hotel.
  4. 19:30 Tashkent dinner — Caravan or Sette 1h30

    Back in the capital, a relaxed dinner — Caravan for atmosphere and national dishes, or Sette for a smarter farewell meal after the Silk Road circuit.

    Cost: $8-30 per person TIP: A fitting end to the three-city loop. Both take cards; reserve on weekend evenings. Rest up if you have the Chimgan day tomorrow before flying out.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bukhara guesthouse breakfast

Bukhara · $3-8

A relaxed breakfast in the old town.

Lunch

Light lunch or train snacks

Bukhara / train · $4-10

A quick bite before or on the long Afrosiyob to Tashkent.

Dinner

Caravan or Sette

Tashkent center · $8-30

A farewell national-cuisine or celebration dinner in the capital.

Transit:

Afrosiyob Bukhara → Tashkent ~4 hours (book ahead). Walking in Bukhara's old town; Yandex Go in Tashkent.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $80 Luxury $175
DAY 5

Chimgan mountains escape + departure

Charvak reservoir - Chimgan cable car/foothills - mountain air - return to Tashkent - TAS departure

Activities

  1. 08:30 Drive to Chimgan & Charvak 2h

    Head into the Tian Shan foothills about 1.5-2 hours northeast — the Chimgan and Charvak area, Tashkent's nearest mountain escape, with the turquoise Charvak reservoir and cool, fresh air after the city heat.

    Cost: Hired driver ~$40-70 round trip TIP: Hire a taxi or driver for the day (negotiable) or join a group tour — there's no direct train. The drive itself is scenic. A welcome contrast to the city and the monuments. Bring a layer; it's cooler in the hills.
  2. 11:00 Charvak reservoir + Chimgan foothills 2h30

    Time at the Charvak reservoir (boating and swimming in summer) and the Chimgan foothills — cable cars or chairlifts run for views, and in winter the area becomes a small ski destination. A relaxed nature half-day.

    Cost: Cable car / lift small fee TIP: Summer is for the reservoir and views; winter brings skiing. The cable car gives easy mountain panoramas without a hike. Keep it relaxed — this is a breather, not a packed sightseeing day. Watch the time for your flight.
  3. 14:00 Mountain lunch + return to Tashkent 3h

    A lunch of shashlik and fresh air at a mountain cafe, then the drive back to Tashkent (about 1.5-2 hours), arriving with time to collect luggage before the airport.

    Cost: Lunch $6-12 + driver included TIP: Mountain shashlik cafes are simple and good. Agree the return timing with your driver in advance. Build in a buffer before your flight. A scenic, easy final day.
  4. 18:00 Tashkent Airport (TAS) departure 1h30

    Tashkent International (TAS) is only 10-15 minutes from the center, so the transfer is quick — a Yandex Go taxi for a few dollars, or a pre-arranged hotel transfer.

    Cost: Taxi ~30,000-60,000 som ($3-5) TIP: Arrive 2-3 hours before international flights. Order Yandex Go for a fixed fare rather than using airport touts. Keep hotel registration slips handy. Use up remaining som on snacks or souvenirs — it's hard to exchange back.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tashkent hotel breakfast

Tashkent · $3-8

A good breakfast before the mountain drive.

Lunch

Chimgan mountain shashlik cafe

Chimgan / Charvak · $6-12

Fresh-air shashlik in the foothills.

Dinner

Airport or in-flight

TAS / en route · $6-15

A light bite before departure.

Transit:

Hired car/driver for the Chimgan day (~$40-70 round trip; no direct train). Quick Yandex Go taxi from the center to TAS (10-15 min, ~$3-5).

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $75 Luxury $160

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Packing Checklist

Tashkent 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days enough for Tashkent, Samarkand, and Bukhara?
Yes — seven days does the three great Silk Road cities at a comfortable pace: two days in Tashkent, an overnight in Samarkand, an overnight in Bukhara, and a final mountain day. It's the sweet spot for the classic Uzbekistan loop. If you want to add Khiva (further west, in the Khorezm desert), allow 9-10 days, as it's a longer haul from Bukhara.
How do I travel between the three cities?
By train. The Afrosiyob high-speed service links Tashkent-Samarkand (~2h) and Bukhara-Tashkent (~4h), with trains connecting Samarkand and Bukhara (~1.5-2.5h). Book every leg ahead — they sell out to tour groups and resellers 45-60 days out. The trains are comfortable, fast, and far better than driving the long distances. A private driver is a fallback for sold-out dates.
Should I end in Bukhara or return to Tashkent?
Most travelers fly out of Tashkent, so this itinerary loops back by the long Afrosiyob from Bukhara. If your flight allows, you can fly out of Bukhara or Samarkand instead and skip the return leg — check airline options, as Tashkent (TAS) has the most international flights. Returning to Tashkent also enables the easy Chimgan mountain day before departure.
Is Bukhara worth the extra days over just Tashkent and Samarkand?
Yes if you have the time — Bukhara is the best-preserved medieval Silk Road city, with a compact, car-free old town (Lyab-i-Hauz, Po-i-Kalyan, the Ark, the trading domes) that feels like stepping back centuries, and it's the country's best place for handicrafts. Samarkand is grander and more monumental; Bukhara is more intimate and atmospheric. Together they show two different faces of the Silk Road.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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