Diriyah has become one of the most compelling dining destinations in Saudi Arabia. Built on the edge of the At-Turaif UNESCO World Heritage Site, Bujairi Terrace brings together more than 20 restaurants and cafes in a pedestrianised quarter designed to echo traditional Najdi mud-brick architecture. Whether you are planning a full Riyadh travel itinerary or making a dedicated trip to Diriyah, dining here is an experience that combines world-class cuisine with a setting unlike anything else in the Gulf. Shopping is catching up too, with the new Zallal retail hub open and the ambitious Diriyah Square mall complex under construction.
Best Time to Visit: November to February (15-25°C evenings; outdoor terrace dining is comfortable)
Getting There: 15 minutes by car from central Riyadh; 30 minutes from King Khalid International Airport. Uber and Careem recommended
Visa Required: Yes — tourist e-visa available online
Budget: $50-135 per person for dinner; entry SAR 50 after 5 PM (redeemable as dining credit)
Must-See: Bujairi Terrace at sunset, Maiz Saudi tasting menu, At-Turaif illuminated walk
Avoid: Arriving without a reservation at peak hours (Thursday-Friday evenings). Book Hakkasan, Tatel, and Maiz in advance

What Is Bujairi Terrace?
Bujairi Terrace opened in December 2022 as the centrepiece of the Diriyah Gate development. Spanning 15,000 square metres, it is a purpose-built dining and leisure quarter arranged as a maze of winding alleyways, courtyards, and elevated terraces — all constructed in the Najdi architectural style that defines Diriyah’s historical identity. Every restaurant faces or overlooks At-Turaif across Wadi Hanifah, and after dark the heritage site is dramatically illuminated, making evening visits particularly rewarding.
The terrace is not a shopping mall with restaurants attached. It was designed as a standalone dining destination — pedestrianised, car-free, and built around the experience of eating well in a historically resonant setting. Riyadh has no shortage of high-end restaurants, but nowhere else in the city offers this combination of Michelin-pedigree kitchens, heritage architecture, and a UNESCO backdrop.
Fine Dining at Bujairi Terrace
The headline restaurants at Bujairi Terrace are international names that have opened their first Saudi branches here, alongside homegrown Saudi concepts that hold their own against the imports.
Hakkasan
The London-born Cantonese restaurant brings its signature moody interiors and refined dim sum to Diriyah. The menu runs from Peking duck to black truffle roasted duck with caviar. Expect to spend SAR 350-500 per person. Reservations are essential, particularly on Thursday and Friday evenings.
Tatel
Spanish haute cuisine in an atmospheric setting with live musicians. The semolina risotto with truffle and the slow-cooked beef ribs are standout dishes. Tatel attracts a well-dressed crowd and the energy builds through the evening. Budget SAR 300-450 per person.
Maiz
This is the restaurant most worth seeking out. Maiz bills itself as the world’s first Saudi fine-dining concept, offering tasting menus (six or eight courses) built around dishes from all 13 provinces of the Kingdom. The kitchen takes traditional Najdi, Hejazi, and Southern ingredients and presents them with contemporary technique. If you eat at one restaurant in Diriyah, make it this one. It is also a useful introduction to Saudi cuisine before exploring Riyadh’s street food scene at the more casual end.
Chez Bruno
A Michelin-starred truffle specialist from Provence, offering French cuisine built around seasonal truffle preparations. One of the more niche choices on the terrace, best suited to diners who want a classic European fine-dining experience.
Long Chim
Chef David Thompson’s Thai restaurant, which holds a Michelin star in Bangkok, serves bold street-food-inspired dishes in a more accessible price range than the restaurants above. Expect SAR 150-300 per person. Open daily from 11 AM to midnight, it is one of the better lunch options on the terrace.
Flamingo Room by tashas
Opened in September 2023, this seafood-focused restaurant draws on contemporary African culinary traditions. The interior design is striking — tropical textures, copper accents — and the menu leans toward grilled fish and shellfish. A mid-range option at SAR 200-350 per person.

Saudi and Regional Cuisine
Jareed Samhan
For visitors who want to taste Najdi heritage cooking in a setting that matches the food, Jareed Samhan serves traditional dishes — Muqalal (grilled meat), Jareesh (crushed wheat porridge), Matazeez (dough dumplings in tomato broth), and Kabsa — prepared with contemporary technique but faithful to regional recipes. The restaurant sits within the Samhan quarter of Bujairi Terrace, close to the car park entrance.
Takya
A sharing-style Saudi contemporary restaurant where the menu is designed for groups to order widely and try everything. Takya reimagines local dishes with modern plating and lighter preparations. A good mid-range choice (SAR 150-250 per person) for visitors who want Saudi flavours without the formality of Maiz’s tasting menu.
Altopiano
A Saudi-born brand that blends Southern Italian cooking with Middle Eastern flavours. Open daily from 7 PM to 1 AM, it skews toward the evening crowd and works well as a second stop after drinks at one of the cafes.
Cafes, Bakeries, and Casual Dining
Not everything at Bujairi Terrace requires a reservation or a three-figure bill. The terrace has a strong cafe and bakery offering that suits afternoon visits, families, and visitors who want to spend time in the setting without committing to a full dinner.
Angelina Paris
The Parisian patisserie is best known for its hot chocolate — dense, rich, and served in a branded pot. The pastry selection is strong. Open Saturday to Wednesday 10 AM to midnight, Thursday 10 AM to 2 AM, and Friday 2 PM to 2 AM. Budget SAR 80-150 per person.
Cova Pasticceria
One of Italy’s oldest pasticcerias, with more than 200 years of history. The Diriyah branch serves espresso, Italian pastries, and light lunch plates in a refined setting. A good option for an afternoon pause while exploring At-Turaif.
Sarabeth’s
The New York brunch institution has landed in Diriyah with its signature pancakes, French toast, and egg dishes. One of the few restaurants on the terrace that works well for a morning visit.
Other Cafes
Joe & the Juice, Brunch and Cake, Somewhere (a homegrown Saudi brand with branches in the UAE), Cafe de L’Esplanade (first branch outside France), and Sum + Things (family-friendly casual dining) round out the casual options. Hi, another Saudi-born cafe brand, also has a presence here.
Tip: Bujairi Terrace charges SAR 50 entry per person after 5 PM, but this is fully redeemable as dining credit at any restaurant on the same day. Before 5 PM, entry is free. Children under 12 enter free at all times. If you plan to eat dinner, the entry fee is effectively zero.
Price Guide: What to Budget
| Category | Cost Per Person (SAR) | USD Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Fine dining (Hakkasan, Tatel, Maiz, Chez Bruno) | 300-500+ | $80-135+ |
| Mid-range (Long Chim, Flamingo Room, Takya) | 150-300 | $40-80 |
| Cafes and bakeries (Angelina, Cova, Sarabeth’s) | 50-150 | $13-40 |
| Average dinner across all venues | 200-250 | $53-67 |
A realistic budget for an evening at Bujairi Terrace — including parking, entry, and a sit-down dinner — is SAR 200-400 per person ($53-107). Self-parking costs SAR 30 for three hours, or you can use complimentary valet parking with a restaurant reservation. Paid valet without a reservation is SAR 195.
Shopping in Diriyah
Diriyah’s retail offering is still developing. The massive Diriyah Square — a 400-shop, 100-restaurant complex with six hotels — is under construction and not expected to open fully until 2028-2030. Brands including Apple, Adidas, Alo Yoga, On Running, and Spinneys have signed leases but their stores are not yet open. For now, shopping in Diriyah is more limited but still worth a visit.
Zallal
Diriyah’s first dedicated retail hub opened in 2025 in the Bujairi District, adjacent to Bujairi Terrace. Zallal occupies 8,000 square metres across two levels and includes 12 retail and food-and-beverage outlets. The architecture follows the same Najdi design language as the terrace. A 1,400-space basement car park beneath Zallal makes it the most convenient parking option for the wider Bujairi area.
Souq Al-Mawsim
During Diriyah Season (typically November to March), a seasonal market operates with local crafts, artisan products, fresh produce, and cultural items. The souq provides a more traditional shopping experience and is worth timing your visit around if you are in Riyadh during the cooler months. The 2025-2026 season ran from 1 November to 23 March.
Diriyah Art Futures
A contemporary art centre within the Diriyah development that hosts exhibitions, studios, and artist residencies. While not a traditional retail destination, the centre often sells limited-edition prints and artist collaborations, and it adds cultural depth to a visit.
What about luxury shopping? Visitors looking for high-end retail should head to Riyadh’s established malls — the Kingdom Centre (home to Harvey Nichols) and Riyadh Park — until Diriyah Square opens. For a more distinctive shopping experience, explore the markets of Al Malaz, where old-school Saudi retail culture is still intact.

Where to Stay Near Bujairi Terrace
The Bab Samhan Hotel, a Marriott Luxury Collection property, opened in January 2025 as the first hotel within the Diriyah development. It has 134 rooms including 23 suites, with Najdi-inspired design and handcrafted artwork by local artists. Its location within walking distance of Bujairi Terrace makes it the obvious choice for visitors who want to dine at multiple restaurants across an evening or return for breakfast the next morning.
The Langham, Diriyah is expected to open in 2026, with Aman, Ritz-Carlton, Raffles, Park Hyatt, and Rosewood following in 2027-2028. For now, most visitors will stay in central Riyadh — the luxury hotels along King Fahd Road and Olaya Street are 15-20 minutes away by car. The Diplomatic Quarter is also a convenient base, particularly for its parks and quieter atmosphere.
Getting to Diriyah
Diriyah sits on the northwestern edge of Riyadh, roughly 15 minutes from the city centre and 30 minutes from King Khalid International Airport. There is no metro station at Diriyah yet, so taxis and ride-hailing apps (Uber and Careem both operate in Riyadh) are the practical options.
Parking
- Self-parking: SAR 30 for three hours at Bujairi Parking or Samhan Parking
- Valet with reservation: Complimentary when you have a restaurant booking
- Valet without reservation: SAR 195
- Zallal basement car park: 1,400 spaces, convenient for both shopping and dining
- Saturday to Tuesday: 9 AM – midnight
- Wednesday to Friday: 9 AM – 1 AM
- Entry fee: Free before 5 PM; SAR 50 per person after 5 PM (redeemable at restaurants; children under 12 free)
- Diriyah Square: 400 shops, 100 restaurants, six hotels, and 34 branded residences. Underground parking (10,500 spaces) was 55% complete as of mid-2025. Apple has signed a flagship store lease. A Time Out Market is planned for 2027.
- Luxury hotels: Aman, Ritz-Carlton, Raffles, Park Hyatt, and Rosewood are all under construction, expected 2027-2028.
- Wadi Hanifah promenade: A landscaped valley walk connecting the heritage district to new residential and leisure areas.
- Riyadh Travel Guide 2026 — Everything to see, do, and eat in the Saudi capital
- Diriyah Travel Guide — At-Turaif, Bujairi Terrace, hotels, and the full heritage district
- Riyadh Street Food Guide — The best spots and what to order across the city
- Best Luxury Hotels in Riyadh — From Four Seasons to Raffles
- Diriyah: The Cradle of the Saudi State — The history behind the heritage site
- Saudi Arabia Visa Guide — Every visa type explained
Opening Hours
Most restaurants open from 4 PM onwards, with the terrace at its liveliest between 7 and 11 PM. Book ahead through tickets.bujairi.sa or individual restaurant platforms.
Dress Code
Modest dress is expected. Men should wear trousers and a shirt with sleeves. Women should wear loose-fitting clothing covering shoulders and knees; an abaya is not required but is commonly worn. Comfortable walking shoes are essential — At-Turaif has uneven stone paths and steps, and the terrace itself involves some walking between venues.
Combining Dining with At-Turaif
The most rewarding way to visit Bujairi Terrace is to arrive in the late afternoon, explore At-Turaif while the light is golden, and then walk across to the terrace for dinner as the heritage site lights up. At-Turaif offers 75-minute guided walking tours in Arabic and English, or you can explore independently using the information panels throughout the site. Key landmarks include Salwa Palace and the restored mosque complex. The site is wheelchair-accessible.
During Diriyah Season, the terrace and surrounding area host cultural events, live music (Layali Al-Diriyah), storytelling festivals, and the TYN Festival celebrating Najdi architecture. These events add another dimension to a dining visit and can turn an evening meal into a full night out.
What Is Coming Next
Diriyah is one of Saudi Arabia’s giga-projects, with a total investment exceeding $63 billion. The current dining and retail offering — Bujairi Terrace, Zallal, and Bab Samhan — represents a fraction of the planned development. Key future additions include:
The overall masterplan completion has shifted from the original 2027 target to 2030, reflecting the scale of infrastructure work required. For visitors in 2026, Bujairi Terrace is the finished product and the reason to visit. Come back in three years and Diriyah will be a different place entirely.
Planning a longer trip? Diriyah pairs naturally with the Edge of the World day trip, which departs from the same side of Riyadh. You can also explore more of Saudi Arabia with our hotels guide for accommodation across the Kingdom.