An Old Dubai food tour through Bur Dubai and Deira was just named one of Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel top 25 experiences for 2026, the first time a specific Dubai district has earned the honour. The route is simple and glorious: an Emirati breakfast in Al Fahidi, street snacks in Meena Bazaar, legendary Persian kababs at Al Ustad Special Kabab (since 1978), an AED 1 abra ride across Dubai Creek, then the Spice Souk, Arabic sweets and creekside dinner in Deira. A full-day feast runs comfortably under AED 100 per person. Mayra Tours weaves these food stops into our Old Dubai city tours with hotel pickup, or builds you a dedicated food crawl.
Forget the gold-flake cappuccinos of Downtown for a day. The best eating in Dubai happens in its oldest streets, where Iranian bakers pull bread from stone ovens at dawn, where a yoghurt drink recipe has not changed since 1973, and where the flavours of nearly 200 nationalities crowd into a few walkable lanes either side of the Creek.
The world has officially caught on: Lonely Planet’s expert panel put a cultural food tour of Old Dubai among its 50 essential picks for 2026 (25 places, 25 experiences), and it is the neighbourhood’s first solo appearance on the list after Dubai as a whole featured back in 2020. We have been walking guests through these lanes for years, so here is our honest, stop-by-stop guide: where to eat, what to order, what it costs, and how to do the whole day for less than a Downtown brunch.
Old Dubai Food Tour: Quick Facts
Sources: Lonely Planet Best in Travel 2026 • Visit Dubai (Dubai Department of Economy & Tourism)
Why the World Is Suddenly Talking About Old Dubai’s Food
Lonely Planet’s recognition puts a name to what residents always knew: the neighbourhoods along Dubai Creek, Bur Dubai on the south bank and Deira on the north, are a living museum where the exhibits are edible. Emirati, Persian, Indian, Pakistani, Levantine and East African kitchens have shared these streets for generations, most of them family-run, cash-friendly and priced for locals rather than tourists. Visit Dubai’s own guide to the experience reads like a love letter to places that have not changed their recipes in decades, and that is precisely the point.
The One-Day Food Crawl, Stop by Stop

Emirati Breakfast at Arabian Tea House
Start in the courtyard that started it all. Serving Emirati and Arabic cuisine since 1997 in the Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood, the Arabian Tea House does the classic Emirati breakfast: balaleet, chebab pancakes, khameer bread, fresh cheeses and an encyclopedic tea list. Order karak and the regag bread, then take twenty minutes to do absolutely nothing under the vine shade.
Wander, Coffee & Camel Burgers
Walk off breakfast in the wind-tower lanes: galleries, museums and the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding (SMCCU), where cultural meals with Emirati hosts are worth booking on a second visit. Grab a cardamom-laced Arabic coffee at Mazmi overlooking the Creek, and note Local House for later; its camel burger and camel-milk ice cream are Old Dubai’s most talked-about novelty that actually tastes good.
Street-Snack Round in Little India
Ten minutes away, Meena Bazaar is Bur Dubai’s Indian quarter and the crawl’s street food heart and the best Dubai street food cluster in the city. The hit list: a flaky koki paratha with daal at Nihal Restaurant, pani puri at the vegetarian institution Bhavna, deep-fried anything on Pakora Lane, and a matka lassi at Sreeraj Lassi, served in an earthenware pot the way they have done it since 1973. Every item here costs pocket change.
Lunch at Al Ustad Special Kabab
One of Dubai’s oldest restaurants and its most beloved. Since 1978, this Iranian institution has grilled the kabab khas, chicken or mutton marinated in yoghurt, over charcoal, served with saffron rice, grilled tomatoes and warm bread under walls plastered with decades of photos. It is cash-only, portions are enormous, and regulars queue at peak lunch, so arrive by 12:45 or embrace the wait.
Cross the Creek by Abra: AED 1
The best-value experience in the entire UAE. One dirham buys you five minutes on a wooden water taxi across Dubai Creek, dhows and wind towers sliding past, exactly as traders have crossed for a century. This is the moment every guest photographs; sit on the bow side facing Deira.
Spice Souk, Sweets & Falooda
Land in Deira and follow your nose. The Spice Souk sells saffron, dried limes, cardamom and rose petals from open sacks (sample freely, haggle gently), the Gold Souk glitters two lanes over, and the snack circuit runs from ma’amoul date cookies at Al Samadi Sweets to a cold falooda at Ashwaq in the souk lanes and fresh stone-oven bread from the Iranian bakeries if any survives until afternoon.
Creekside Dinner & the Golden Hour
Finish on the water. Bayt Al Wakeel, trading since 1935 on the Bur Dubai bank, serves seafood on a deck over the Creek, while Al Khayma Heritage Restaurant (a Michelin Bib Gourmand holder) does the definitive lamb machboos in a lantern-lit courtyard. Either way, time it for sunset when the abras cross a gold-plated Creek and the whole day clicks into place.
What to Eat & What It Costs (2026)
| Dish | Where | Approx. Price |
|---|---|---|
| Karak chai | Cafeterias everywhere | AED 1–2 |
| Matka lassi | Sreeraj Lassi, Meena Bazaar | AED 10–15 |
| Koki paratha + daal | Nihal Restaurant, Meena Bazaar | AED 10–20 |
| Pani puri | Bhavna, Meena Bazaar | AED 10–15 |
| Kabab khas + rice | Al Ustad Special Kabab | AED 30–45 |
| Camel burger | Local House, Al Fahidi | AED 40–60 |
| Lamb machboos | Al Khayma Heritage | AED 60–90 |
| Ma’amoul / luqaimat / falooda | Al Samadi & souk stalls, Deira | AED 5–20 |
| Abra crossing | Bur Dubai ↔ Deira | AED 1 |
Vegetarian & Family Notes
Guided Tour or Go Solo?
Solo works: this guide, comfortable shoes and cash will carry you. A guided crawl adds the stories, the back-lane stops you would walk past, zero navigation stress and, in our case, hotel pickup and a guide who knows which bakery pulled bread out twenty minutes ago. Dedicated food-tour operators in Dubai typically charge AED 350–500 per person for a small-group walk; we build the food route into a private Old Dubai day at similar cost with transport included, which usually wins for families and groups of three or more.
Getting There & When to Go
- Metro: Al Fahidi or Sharaf DG stations for Bur Dubai; Al Ras station lands you at the Gold Souk in Deira. Taxis know “Arabian Tea House, Al Fahidi” instantly.
- Season: October to April is outdoor-eating weather; in summer, flip the route to late afternoon and evening when the lanes cool and the souks glow.
- Timing quirks: Friday mornings run quiet until after prayers; evenings from 5 PM are the souks at full theatre. During Ramadan, daytime dining moves indoors and the post-iftar atmosphere is unforgettable.
🍢 Taste Old Dubai with Mayra Tours
Our Dubai city tour already walks Al Fahidi, the souks and the AED 1 abra; tell us you want the food edition and we turn it into a full crawl with the stops above, hotel pickup included. Pair it with the full Dubai city tour guide for the sights between bites, end the day with an evening desert safari, or browse all our tours and packages.
Real Guest Experiences
“We did the crawl two weeks after the Lonely Planet list came out, expecting crowds. Instead we had the Arabian Tea House courtyard half to ourselves at 9 AM and paid AED 4 total for the abra both ways. The kabab at Al Ustad was the best meal of our two-week UAE trip, and it cost less than our airport coffee.”
“As Nigerians we were worried about finding food that felt familiar and halal-friendly. Everything on this route qualified, and the spice souk felt like Balogun Market’s long-lost cousin. My wife still messages the guide for the name of the date cookies. Ma’amoul. We ordered a kilo home.”
“Went solo on a Friday morning, which was a mistake, as half of Meena Bazaar opened after noon. Flipped the route, did Deira first, and by evening the souks were pure magic. Take the advice about cash seriously; my card was useless at three of the best stops.”
Frequently Asked Questions: Old Dubai Food Tour
Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2026 panel selected a cultural food tour of Old Dubai (Bur Dubai and Deira) as one of its 25 essential experiences worldwide, citing the authenticity, value and diversity of eateries along Dubai Creek. It is the first time a specific Dubai district has featured, after the city as a whole appeared in the 2020 edition.
Self-guided, a full day of eating runs under AED 100–150 per person including the AED 1 abra, with a street food only version possible for under AED 50. Guided small-group food tours in Dubai typically cost AED 350–500 per person; Mayra Tours builds private food crawls with hotel pickup at comparable rates.
Karak chai, an Emirati breakfast at Arabian Tea House, kabab khas at Al Ustad Special Kabab, koki paratha and matka lassi in Meena Bazaar, saffron and dried limes from the Spice Souk, ma’amoul date cookies, luqaimat, and the camel burger at Local House for the brave. Lamb machboos at Al Khayma is the definitive Emirati main.
Very. Bhavna in Meena Bazaar is fully vegetarian, the paratha-lassi-pakora street circuit is meat-free by default, and most heritage restaurants mark substantial vegetarian sections. Halal diners are covered everywhere by default.
The traditional abra water taxi crosses Dubai Creek in about 5 minutes for AED 1 per person, running continuously through the day and evening. Metro alternatives exist (Al Fahidi and Al Ras stations), but the abra is half the experience.
October to April for all-day outdoor comfort. In summer, start late afternoon and eat into the evening when the souks come alive. Avoid Friday mornings, when many small spots open after prayers, and expect a special buzz after iftar during Ramadan.
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Hungry for the Real Dubai?
Private Old Dubai food crawls with hotel pickup, a guide who knows every stall, and the AED 1 abra timed for golden hour. Message our team your date and group size; we respond within 30 minutes (9 AM to 9 PM GST, Monday to Saturday).
