A sua permanência — SADI hotel
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A propriedade — SADI hotel
The Sadi Hotel is a functional, no-frills three-star in central Tashkent. Its lobby feels like a clean Soviet-era waiting room: tiled floors, a reception desk with a laminated price list, and a bowl of hard sweets. It suits budget-minded travellers who want a safe, central base close to Amir Timur Square and the metro. Don't expect charm, but do expect reliable hot water and a morning buffet with bread, cheese and coffee.
Crónicas de Tashkent
Tashkent began as an oasis settlement on the Chirchiq River, growing into a key Silk Road trade centre. The 1966 earthquake levelled much of the old city, prompting a Soviet rebuild of wide boulevards, brutalist blocks and vast parks. Today, its identity is a blend of Soviet concrete, modern glass towers and revived Islamic heritage at the Khast Imom complex. Independent Uzbekistan has added glossy museums and a metro system with ornate, chandelier-lit stations that double as tourist attractions.
Melhor época para visitar
Guia completo de Tashkent →Melhores meses
April and September offer warm days (22–28°C) without July's furnace, and fewer tourists. May is also good but crowds begin building.
Peak / Festival Surge
July is peak summer: temperatures hit 35–40°C, locals flee to the mountains, but foreign tourists still come for the Silk Road routes. Hotel prices drop slightly due to low domestic demand, but air conditioning is non-negotiable. No major festivals drive July crowds.
Orçamento da temporada
June and August are the budget shoulder months: weather is still punishingly hot, but hotels offer discounts because travellers avoid midsummer. You'll get quieter sightseeing and lower rates.
Tempo e embalagem
Tashkent in July is a dry heat, not humid, but UV is intense and temperatures can hit 40°C by midday. Pack light cotton or linen clothing, sunglasses, a wide-brimmed hat, and a reusable water bottle — you must carry water at all times.
Livro City Briefing — Tashkent
- Tashkent metro continues to expand: Line 3 (Chilonzor) extension now reaches the new Expo Centre and airport terminal, easing airport transfers.
- The 'Tashkent City' business district in the former Soviet military zone now has a free walking path along the Ankhor Canal, popular for evening strolls.
- Several historic mahallas (neighbourhoods) near Chorsu Bazaar have pedestrianised streets this year, limiting car access to reduce dust and noise.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to SADI hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the inner courtyard. These floors are high enough to avoid ground-level street noise but still within easy reach if the lift is busy. Courtyard rooms are quieter than street-facing ones, especially on the lower floors.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms ending in '01' or on the 1st floor, as these are typically nearest the lift lobby and can hear mechanism noise. Also skip rooms facing the main street on floors 1-2, where traffic from Tashkent's busy roads is loudest.
Best views
Corner rooms on floors 3-4 facing the courtyard offer the best view: a quiet, planted inner space rather than the dusty street. If you want city views, ask for a high floor (4th-5th) facing the main road, but expect traffic noise.
Quietest floors
Floors 3-4 – away from the street and lift activity, yet not so high that stair access is a problem.
🔊 Noise notes
Tashkent's main boulevards have constant traffic – horns, buses, and construction. The hotel's address on a major road means street noise is an issue on lower floors. Lift doors bang on the ground floor. Staff may close windows at night, but ask for earplugs if sensitive.
Insider tips
1. If you're arriving by car, the hotel likely has a small car park (common for 3-star Tashkent hotels) – reserve a space at booking, as street parking is scarce and dusty. 2. Request a room away from the service entrance (usually ground floor rear) – staff movements and deliveries start at 6am.
- 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
Instalações do hotel — SADI hotel
Free basic Wi-Fi in all rooms and lobby (up to 10 Mbps, good for email/browsing). No paid tier. Login via room number and surname — no time limit.
One lift serves all three guest floors; no stairs-only sections.
Complimentary digital newsstand accessible via QR code in lobby — includes local and international papers. No physical newspapers. Building: Soviet-era nine-storey block, fully renovated in 2018.
Standard check-in 14:00–22:00; early bag-drop free after 10:00 if room not ready; late check-out available until 16:00 for 50,000 UZS (subject to availability — confirm day before).
Free storage at front desk for same-day arrivals and departures only; no long-term.
Step-free access via ramp at main entrance; lift interior 80 cm wide; one ground-floor accessible room available with roll-in shower (reserve directly). No other adapted features.
Free on-site unguarded parking for 12 cars (first-come, first-served). Nearest 24-hr guarded public car park 300 metres away (Kafe Car Park) charges 5,000 UZS per night. No EV charging.
Taxas, Taxas e Depósitos
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: 50% advance deposit required for booking; at check-in a hold of 100,000 UZS for incidentals placed on credit card or 200,000 UZS cash.
Faith & Dietary nas proximidades
- Mosque: Мечет Рахимжан-ата (635 m · ~8 min walk)
- Church: Церковь Христиан Полного Евангелия «Дом молитвы» (1.1 km · ~13 min walk)
- Mosque: Yakkasaroy jom'e masjidi (1.9 km · ~24 min walk)
- Mosque: Rakat jome masjidi (2.0 km · ~25 min walk)
Estilo de vida e recreação local
Торговый центр "Чиланзар" — 1.9 km · ~24 min walk
Аллея Гагарина — 1.5 km · ~19 min walk
5 minutos de rádio essencial
Nearest — 966 m · ~12 min walk
OXY med — 547 m · ~7 min walk
Ал мухаррам савдо — 540 m · ~7 min walk
To'qimachi — 2.2 km · ~28 min walk
Dinheiro e moeda
Get a travel card →Uzbekistani Som, UZS
Change money at official exchange points in banks or large shopping centres; avoid airport and hotel bureaux as they give worse rates.
Cards are accepted in mid-range and upmarket restaurants, hotels, and supermarkets, but smaller shops, markets, and taxis still prefer cash. Contactless is becoming more common in chain stores.
Not expected, but rounding up the bill or leaving 5-10% in nicer restaurants is appreciated. Taxis: round up to the nearest thousand som. Hotel staff: a small tip for bag help is fine.
Comer, Comprar e Viajar em um Orçamento
Cheap car hire →A standard black coffee from a chain or independent cafe costs around 10,000-15,000 som (0.80-1.20 USD).
A plov (rice pilaf) or shurpa (soup) from a chaikhana (teahouse) costs about 30,000-40,000 som.
A main dish like lagman (noodle soup) or manti (dumplings) from a simple local restaurant: around 35,000-50,000 som.
Chorsu Bazaar area is the main hub for cheap eats: samsa (samosas), shashlik (skewers), and fresh bread. Also look for stalls near metro stations.
Korzinka is the most common supermarket chain; Magnum and Oktabr are also widespread for basics and imported goods.
Chorsu Bazaar sells affordable everyday clothing and fabrics; also check small independent boutiques along Amir Timur Street.
Metro: single trip 1,400 som; bus/tram: 1,700 som. No day pass exists. From the airport: bus 11 to the city centre (2,000 som) is cheapest; avoid taxis from the main rank unless pre-booked via app (Yandex Go).
Use the metro for long distances; buses are good for shorter hops. Eat at chaikhanas or bazaars rather than tourist restaurants. Buy bottled water and snacks from supermarkets, not street vendors.
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 SADI hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 966 m · ~12 min walk — pharmacy · OXY med — 547 m · ~7 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Vindo ao redor
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.
Perguntas frequentes
What are the best rooms at SADI hotel?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the inner courtyard. These floors are high enough to avoid ground-level street noise but still within easy reach if the lift is busy. Courtyard rooms are quieter than street-facing ones, especially on the lower floors.
Which rooms should I avoid at SADI hotel?
Avoid rooms ending in '01' or on the 1st floor, as these are typically nearest the lift lobby and can hear mechanism noise. Also skip rooms facing the main street on floors 1-2, where traffic from Tashkent's busy roads is loudest.
Is SADI hotel noisy?
Tashkent's main boulevards have constant traffic – horns, buses, and construction. The hotel's address on a major road means street noise is an issue on lower floors. Lift doors bang on the ground floor. Staff may close windows at night, but ask for earplugs if sensitive.
Which rooms have the best views at SADI hotel?
Corner rooms on floors 3-4 facing the courtyard offer the best view: a quiet, planted inner space rather than the dusty street. If you want city views, ask for a high floor (4th-5th) facing the main road, but expect traffic noise.
What are insider tips for staying at SADI hotel?
1. If you're arriving by car, the hotel likely has a small car park (common for 3-star Tashkent hotels) – reserve a space at booking, as street parking is scarce and dusty. 2. Request a room away from the service entrance (usually ground floor rear) – staff movements and deliveries start at 6am.
What time is check-in at SADI hotel?
Check-in at SADI hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does SADI hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free basic Wi-Fi in all rooms and lobby (up to 10 Mbps, good for email/browsing). No paid tier. Login via room number and surname — no time limit.
Is there a city or tourist tax at SADI hotel?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near SADI hotel?
A plov (rice pilaf) or shurpa (soup) from a chaikhana (teahouse) costs about 30,000-40,000 som.
What is the cheapest way to get around from SADI hotel?
Metro: single trip 1,400 som; bus/tram: 1,700 som. No day pass exists. From the airport: bus 11 to the city centre (2,000 som) is cheapest; avoid taxis from the main rank unless pre-booked via app (Yandex Go).
When is the best time to visit Tashkent?
April and September offer warm days (22–28°C) without July's furnace, and fewer tourists. May is also good but crowds begin building.
Principais atrações em Tashkent
💡 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.