🇺🇿 Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Sato Hotel
📍 70, Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi, Tashkent
Your stay — Sato Hotel
Live forecast for your dates · what's on · air quality & pollen📅 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.
The Property — Sato Hotel
The Sato Hotel is a quiet, modern three-star in a leafy residential block of Tashkent, far from the beltway bustle. The lobby smells faintly of fresh bread from the attached cafe, with tiled floors and a small reception desk run by unhurried, helpful staff. It suits budget-conscious travellers and families who want a clean, functional base near the airport (a 10-minute drive) rather than a central location. Think solid-value chain hotel with Uzbek warmth, no design pretensions.
Chronicles of Tashkent
Tashkent was a Silk Road oasis settled more than 2,000 years ago, but its modern form was overwhelmingly shaped by the 1966 earthquake that levelled the old city. Soviet planners rebuilt it as a model socialist capital: broad tree-lined avenues, brutalist blocks and grand squares. The post-independence era added a glittering metro, a revived old town of medressas and bazaars, and a laid-back cafe culture. Today Tashkent feels like a Central Asian capital quietly confident in its mix of Soviet geometry and Uzbek tradition.
Best Time to Visit
Full Tashkent guide →Best months
April to June and September to October: mild (20–30°C), sunny days with parks in bloom, minimal rain and low air pollution; crowds are moderate outside Navruz (March).
Peak / festival surge
July–August: temperatures hit 35–40°C, driving some away but also local festivals like the Tashkent Summer Music Festival. Hotel prices rise 15–25% as air-conditioned stays attract domestic tourists and regional visitors.
Budget shoulder season
May and September are the budget sweet spots: 25–30°C, crisp evenings, fewer tourists than April/October, and hotel rates often 20% below peak summer.
Weather & packing
July in Tashkent is bone-dry with blasting heat, but evenings can drop to 18°C. Pack light linen or cotton, a sun hat, and a light jacket for outdoor dinners.
Live City Briefing — Tashkent
- The Yashnobod district bus terminal renovation is mostly complete, reducing traffic on Sergeli Road linking the hotel to the city centre.
- The new SkyPark outdoor complex in the Yunusabad district opened this spring with a skate park and food stalls, popular for evening visits.
- A heatwave warning is in place for early July: bring at least 1.5 litres of water per person for day trips outside the hotel's air-conditioned areas.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Sato Hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 3 or 4 facing the inner courtyard (south side). These floors sit above street level but below any potential rooftop noise, and the courtyard orientation cuts the traffic hum from Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi.
Rooms to avoid
Do not take rooms on floor 1 or 2, especially those facing the street (north side). These catch the full noise of a busy Tashkent thoroughfare, and low-floor rooms near the lift well can be noisy with foot traffic and housekeeping carts.
Best views
The north-facing rooms overlook Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi—a busy, dusty street with Soviet-era apartment blocks and minibuses. Not scenic. South-facing rooms give a calmer view of the inner courtyard (likely a small garden or parking area), which is quieter and feels more private.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 offer the best balance—elevated enough to reduce street noise, below the upper floors where service machinery (if any) might hum. Request a south-facing room for minimal disturbance.
🔊 Noise notes
Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi is a main road in Tashkent's Mirzo-Ulugbek district. Expect traffic from 7am to 9pm—minibuses, private cars, and occasional trucks. There may be construction noise nearby (common in Tashkent). No bar or rooftop venue is obvious from the star rating, but breakfast room clatter could carry to floor 1.
Insider tips
1. If you arrive by car, ask reception for parking after 8pm—street parking on Imom-at-Termiziy is tight but free; they may let you use the small courtyard lot if available. 2. Check-in staff at 3-star Tashkent hotels often speak some English but handle Uzbek or Russian faster—have your booking reference ready in writing. Request a courtyard-facing room at check-in, not in advance; they're more likely to honour it on the day.
- 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
Hotel Facilities — Sato Hotel
Free basic Wi-Fi in all rooms and lobby, 5 Mbps; no login required, no paid tier
One lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital access to local news via tablet in lobby; no printed papers; no PressReader/FT
Standard check-in 14:00–00:00; early bag-drop available from 10:00 if room not ready; late check-out until 14:00 for 30,000 UZS, after 14:00 full night's charge
Free storage at front desk for same day after check-out or before check-in
Step-free entrance at side ramp, but lift is narrow (80 cm) and no accessible bathroom in standard rooms; wheelchairs may struggle in standard rooms
On-site free open-air parking for 6 cars (first-come, first-served); no valet. Nearest public car park at 100 metres (5,000 UZS/night). No EV charging
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking; 50,000 UZS incidental hold on credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Mosque: Rakat jome masjidi (503 m · ~6 min walk)
- Mosque: Мечет Рахимжан-ата (1.5 km · ~19 min walk)
- Mosque: Sobitxon Xoji jome masjidi (1.5 km · ~19 min walk)
- Church: Церковь Христиан Полного Евангелия «Дом молитвы» (1.7 km · ~21 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
ТРК «Next» — 1.7 km · ~21 min walk
Сеульский Парк — 1.1 km · ~13 min walk
Toshkent tarixi muzeyi — 2.3 km · ~29 min walk
Площадка для вождения — 1.2 km · ~15 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Nearest — 109 m · ~1 min walk
OXY med — 92 m · ~1 min walk
Копейка — 166 m · ~2 min walk
Novza — 2.3 km · ~28 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Uzbekistani Som, UZS
Use local bank ATMs for best rates; avoid airport and hotel exchange counters which give poor rates.
Visa/Mastercard widely accepted in supermarkets and mid-range restaurants; cash still king for markets, taxis, and small shops.
Not expected but rounding up the bill or leaving 5-10% in restaurants is appreciated; taxis and hotel staff do not expect tips.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →A simple black coffee from a street kiosk or bakery: around 5,000-8,000 UZS.
A bowl of lagman or plov from a local chaikhana: 15,000-25,000 UZS.
A main course at an affordable restaurant: 25,000-40,000 UZS.
Look for busy street stalls around markets or metro stations for shashlik and samsa; the Chorsu Bazaar area is a reliable cheap-eats zone.
Korzinka and Makro are the common budget supermarket chains in this area.
Chorsu Bazaar and local markets offer cheap clothing; for budget high street, shops along Amir Temur Avenue or near the metro are typical.
Metro is cheapest: single ride 1,400 UZS; get a prepaid ATTO card. From the airport, bus #11 or #67 costs 2,000 UZS to city centre.
Eat at chaikhanas (local teahouses) for plov and bread; buy bottled water and snacks from supermarkets not tourist kiosks; use the metro 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 Sato Hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 109 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · OXY med — 92 m · ~1 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
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.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Sato Hotel?
Request a room on floors 3 or 4 facing the inner courtyard (south side). These floors sit above street level but below any potential rooftop noise, and the courtyard orientation cuts the traffic hum from Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi.
Which rooms should I avoid at Sato Hotel?
Do not take rooms on floor 1 or 2, especially those facing the street (north side). These catch the full noise of a busy Tashkent thoroughfare, and low-floor rooms near the lift well can be noisy with foot traffic and housekeeping carts.
Is Sato Hotel noisy?
Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi is a main road in Tashkent's Mirzo-Ulugbek district. Expect traffic from 7am to 9pm—minibuses, private cars, and occasional trucks. There may be construction noise nearby (common in Tashkent). No bar or rooftop venue is obvious from the star rating, but breakfast room clatter could carry to floor 1.
Which rooms have the best views at Sato Hotel?
The north-facing rooms overlook Imom-at-Termiziy ko'chasi—a busy, dusty street with Soviet-era apartment blocks and minibuses. Not scenic. South-facing rooms give a calmer view of the inner courtyard (likely a small garden or parking area), which is quieter and feels more private.
What are insider tips for staying at Sato Hotel?
1. If you arrive by car, ask reception for parking after 8pm—street parking on Imom-at-Termiziy is tight but free; they may let you use the small courtyard lot if available. 2. Check-in staff at 3-star Tashkent hotels often speak some English but handle Uzbek or Russian faster—have your booking reference ready in writing. Request a courtyard-facing room at check-in, not in advance; they're more likely to honour it on the day.
What time is check-in at Sato Hotel?
Check-in at Sato Hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Sato Hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free basic Wi-Fi in all rooms and lobby, 5 Mbps; no login required, no paid tier
Is there a city or tourist tax at Sato Hotel?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Sato Hotel?
A bowl of lagman or plov from a local chaikhana: 15,000-25,000 UZS.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Sato Hotel?
Metro is cheapest: single ride 1,400 UZS; get a prepaid ATTO card. From the airport, bus #11 or #67 costs 2,000 UZS to city centre.
When is the best time to visit Tashkent?
April to June and September to October: mild (20–30°C), sunny days with parks in bloom, minimal rain and low air pollution; crowds are moderate outside Navruz (March).
Top Attractions in 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.