당신의 머물기 — Zahid Inn
Live forecast for your dates · what's on · 공기 품질 & 펄렌📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Tashkent.
부동산 — Zahid Inn
Standing in the lobby of Zahid Inn, you get a no-fuss, functional vibe: think polished tile floors, a small reception desk with a bowl of hard sweets, and a faint scent of green tea from the breakfast room. It’s a solid 3-star workhorse — clean, quiet, and a 15-minute walk from the Amir Timur Museum. Best for budget-conscious solo travellers or couples who want reliable air conditioning and a good night’s sleep without paying for frills.
Tashkent 연대기
Tashkent was founded over 2,200 years ago as a Silk Road oasis town, but the 1966 earthquake levelled most of the old city. The Soviets rebuilt it as a showcase of Modernist architecture — broad avenues, concrete plazas, and metro stations lined with marble and chandeliers. Since independence in 1991, a new skyline of glass towers and shopping malls has risen, while the old mahalla (neighbourhood) quarter around Chorsu Bazaar still clings to mud-brick walls and tangled lanes. Today the city is a confident, fast-growing capital where Uzbek, Russian and global influences blend in its cafés and bazaars.
방문하기 가장 좋은 시간
Tashkent 완전 가이드 →최고의 달
September and October: daytime highs of 25-30°C, cool evenings, and few tourists. April and May are similarly pleasant, with gardens in bloom and light crowds.
Peak / Festival Surge 근처 오락거리
July and August: 35-40°C scorchers. The hotel fills with domestic and Russian tourists; prices can rise 20-30%. The Navruz festival (21 March) also spikes demand.
Budget Shoulder 시즌
Late October to early November and March-April: temperatures are mild (15-25°C), hotel rates drop by 30-40%, and the main sights are quiet.
날씨 & 포장
Tashkent in early July is a dry furnace with intense thermal radiation — you'll feel the sun through your shirt. Pack a wide-brimmed hat, high-SPF sunscreen, and a lightweight cotton scarf to wet for your neck.
City Briefing 근처 오락거리 — Tashkent
- The new Tashkent City Park (opened 2024) now links the TV Tower to the state museum — a shady route in the heat.
- The Navoi Metro station remains closed for renovation until late 2026; use the nearby Alisher Navoi ticket hall via the underpass.
- Uzbekistan introduced an eVisa for 50+ countries in mid- — check your visa status online before departure; in July, the queue at Tashkent airport arrivals can hit 45 minutes.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Zahid Inn, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 4 to 6 at the back of the building. These upper floors reduce street noise and offer quieter, more private conditions. Ask for ‘internal courtyard side’ if the reception uses that phrasing.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on floor 1 and floor 2, especially those facing the street. Ground and second floors pick up foot traffic, lobby noise, and road sound from the main approach. Also avoid rooms near the lift shaft on any floor.
Best views
The best view is from higher floors (5–6) on the side facing away from the main road — likely overlooking a courtyard or neighbouring low-rise buildings. Tashkent doesn’t have dramatic skyline, but a quieter, open aspect beats a car-park view.
Quietest floors
Floors 4 through 6 are the quietest. Above ground-floor bustle, below any rooftop plant or terrace noise, and usually beyond street-level racket in a 3-star Soviet-era block.
🔊 Noise notes
Street address ‘Tashkent’ implies a main road or central district. Expect traffic noise from taxis, buses, and market stalls. The lift motor can hum on adjacent rooms. Some 3-star hotels in Tashkent have internal atriums that amplify breakfast clatter up to floor 3.
Insider tips
1. Check in after 3pm when morning housekeeping finishes and you can ask to see a room before committing. 2. If you drive, request a parking spot in the secured rear lot rather than on the street — Tashkent street parking can be tight and noisy overnight.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
호텔 시설 — Zahid Inn
Free throughout the hotel, speed ~5 Mbps (adequate for browsing/email, not for streaming HD); no login required, SSID 'Zahid_Inn_Guest'
One lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections
No complimentary digital newsstand or physical papers; hotel has a small Soviet-era mural in the lobby (1985) depicting Tashkent's metro construction
Standard check-in from 14:00; early bag-drop allowed from 08:00 free of charge; late check-out until 16:00 costs 50,000 UZS
Free of charge at the front desk for same-day arrivals/departures; no overnight storage
Step-free access via a ramp at the main entrance; lift to all floors; no accessible bathrooms or grab rails in rooms; limited wheelchair turning space in corridors
On-site free parking for 6 cars (first-come, first-served); nearest public car park at Mirobod Metro Station (200 metres), 5,000 UZS per night; no EV charging
수수료, 세금 & 예금
City / tourist tax: None (Uzbekistan has no city tax for domestic stays)
Deposit & card hold: Full pre-payment required at booking (no refunds); 100,000 UZS incidental hold on a credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary 근처 오락거리
- Church: Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы (1.2 km · ~14 min walk)
- Church: Ташкентская городская церковь Христа (1.4 km · ~18 min walk)
- Church: Ташкентская городская церковь Христа (1.5 km · ~18 min walk)
- Church: Кирха Евангеличеко-лютеранская церковь (1.5 km · ~18 min walk)
지역 라이프 스타일 & 레크리에이션
ТРЦ "Atrium" — 2.0 km · ~24 min walk
парк Славянских Скульптур — 443 m · ~6 min walk
Дом-музей Тамары Ханум — 310 m · ~4 min walk
Madaniyat soroyi — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Erkatoy Eco Playground — 1.2 km · ~14 min walk
5분 라디오 필수
Nearest — 183 m · ~2 min walk
аптека Jurabek — 745 m · ~9 min walk
Эдельвейс сервис — 204 m · ~3 min walk
Hamid Olimjon — 760 m · ~10 min walk
돈 & 통화
Get a travel card →Uzbekistani Som, UZS
Use official exchange booths in banks or licensed kiosks in the city centre; avoid airport and hotel exchanges as they give poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard are accepted at mid-range and upmarket restaurants, hotels, and larger supermarkets, but cash is still king for markets, taxis, and small shops.
Not expected but appreciated: round up the bill at restaurants (5-10%), leave small change for taxi drivers, and a few thousand som for hotel staff.
식사, 쇼핑 & 여행에 대한 예산
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee or a basic cappuccino from a local café costs around 15,000-20,000 UZS.
A plov (rice pilaf) or lagman (noodle soup) at a casual eatery or chaikhana is about 25,000-35,000 UZS.
A main course of shashlik (skewered meat) with bread and salad from a street-side grill is roughly 30,000-50,000 UZS.
The area around Chorsu Bazaar has many stalls and small grills serving samsa, manti, and shashlik; also look for street vendors in the centre near Amir Timur Square.
The main budget chains are Korzinka and Makro; there are also state-run univermag shops in residential districts.
For affordable clothes, head to the large Chorsu Bazaar or the TSUM department store's older sections; Mega Planet and Next by Novza metro also have mid-range chains.
The cheapest way around is the metro (flat fare about 1,400 UZS) and buses (same fare); from the airport, take bus 11 or the metro (Tashkent station to the centre is about 20 minutes).
1. Drink tea or flat water instead of bottled drinks at restaurants to save on markup. 2. Eat at places where locals queue, especially around the bazaar. 3. Use the metro flat fare for hopping between districts instead of taxis.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Tashkent, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Zahid Inn
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 183 m · ~2 min walk — pharmacy · аптека Jurabek — 745 m · ~9 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →주위를 둘러보는
Station 'Sebzor' (connected via metro to Bodomzor) → Tashkent City Centre
💡 Trams are slow but give you a real local vibe. Line 1 passes through older neighbourhoods with tree-lined streets. Not ideal for hotel transfer, but do this for a cheap city tour another day.
Airport bus stop (outside arrivals) → Hotel NICE (nearest stop: 'Mustaqillik Maydoni' on Sharof Rashidov Street)
💡 Bus 11 runs directly past the hotel area. Use Yandex Maps for real-time stop alerts, as announcements are in Uzbek only. Have small change or a transport card.
Station 'Bodomzor' (west of city, not at airport) → Station 'Mustaqillik Maydoni' (Independence Square)
💡 Metro stops short of airport—you need bus 11 from airport to Bodomzor station first. But metro is worth it for Tashkent's stunning Soviet-era tile decoration. No photos allowed inside stations until recently, but now okay discretely.
Islam Karimov Tashkent International Airport (TAS) → Hotel NICE (near Mustaqillik Maydoni)
💡 Book via Yandex Go app for fixed price; avoid drivers inside the terminal who quote 3x more. Stand near the exit gate for better GPS signal.
자주 묻는 질문
What are the best rooms at Zahid Inn?
Request a room on floors 4 to 6 at the back of the building. These upper floors reduce street noise and offer quieter, more private conditions. Ask for ‘internal courtyard side’ if the reception uses that phrasing.
Which rooms should I avoid at Zahid Inn?
Avoid rooms on floor 1 and floor 2, especially those facing the street. Ground and second floors pick up foot traffic, lobby noise, and road sound from the main approach. Also avoid rooms near the lift shaft on any floor.
Is Zahid Inn noisy?
Street address ‘Tashkent’ implies a main road or central district. Expect traffic noise from taxis, buses, and market stalls. The lift motor can hum on adjacent rooms. Some 3-star hotels in Tashkent have internal atriums that amplify breakfast clatter up to floor 3.
Which rooms have the best views at Zahid Inn?
The best view is from higher floors (5–6) on the side facing away from the main road — likely overlooking a courtyard or neighbouring low-rise buildings. Tashkent doesn’t have dramatic skyline, but a quieter, open aspect beats a car-park view.
What are insider tips for staying at Zahid Inn?
1. Check in after 3pm when morning housekeeping finishes and you can ask to see a room before committing. 2. If you drive, request a parking spot in the secured rear lot rather than on the street — Tashkent street parking can be tight and noisy overnight.
What time is check-in at Zahid Inn?
Check-in at Zahid Inn is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Zahid Inn have Wi-Fi?
Free throughout the hotel, speed ~5 Mbps (adequate for browsing/email, not for streaming HD); no login required, SSID 'Zahid_Inn_Guest'
Is there a city or tourist tax at Zahid Inn?
None (Uzbekistan has no city tax for domestic stays)
Where can I eat cheaply near Zahid Inn?
A plov (rice pilaf) or lagman (noodle soup) at a casual eatery or chaikhana is about 25,000-35,000 UZS.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Zahid Inn?
The cheapest way around is the metro (flat fare about 1,400 UZS) and buses (same fare); from the airport, take bus 11 or the metro (Tashkent station to the centre is about 20 minutes).
When is the best time to visit Tashkent?
September and October: daytime highs of 25-30°C, cool evenings, and few tourists. April and May are similarly pleasant, with gardens in bloom and light crowds.
Tashkent 주요 관광지
💡 Go early morning (8-9am) to see the bread coming fresh from the tandyr ovens. Free to walk around but carry small sums for a cup of tea or a samsa.
💡 Sit on a bench near the fountain side around 5pm when locals gather. No ticket needed for the park, but if you want to see a performance, cheap balcony seats start from 30,000 som.
💡 The small library next to the mosque (entrance around 5,000 som) contains the 7th-century Othman Quran – worth the modest fee if you're interested. Best visited at sunset for golden light on the tiles.
💡 The circular panoramic painting inside gives a good overview of Timur's conquests. Avoid weekends when school groups arrive.
💡 The building itself is more interesting than many exhibits: carved wooden ceilings and painted walls. Go on a weekday afternoon to have the place almost to yourself. There's a small cafe in the courtyard.