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Samarkand 3-Day Essentials — Registan, Shah-i-Zinda & Timur's Tomb

The Registan + Bibi-Khanym Mosque + Siyob Bazaar + Shah-i-Zinda + Gur-e-Amir + Ulugh Beg Observatory + a Shahrisabz day trip

Samarkand 3-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
3 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$215
Budget–luxury
$107–$480

As of 2026, the recommended Samarkand 3-day route runs Day1 Registan + Bibi-Khanym Mosque + Siyob Bazaar · Day2 Shah-i-Zinda + Gur-e-Amir + Ulugh Beg Observatory · Day3 Shahrisabz day trip — Timur's birthplace, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $215 on a mid-range budget. Three days covers Samarkand's Silk Road core comfortably. Day 1 takes the Registan and its three madrasahs, the vast Bibi-Khanym Mosque, and the adjacent Siyob Bazaar, ending with the evening light on the Registan; Day 2 handles the Shah-i-Zinda necropolis, the Gur-e-Amir (Timur's mausoleum), and the Ulugh Beg Observatory; Day 3 works as a Shahrisabz day trip (Timur's birthplace, over a mountain pass) or a slower wander plus the Konigil paper village. The monuments cluster into walkable groups with short Yandex Go hops between them. Carry som cash and dress modestly at the religious sites.

3-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$107

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$215

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$480

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Registan + Bibi-Khanym Mosque + Siyob Bazaar

Registan (three madrasahs) - Bibi-Khanym Mosque - Siyob Bazaar - evening light on the Registan

Activities

  1. 09:00 The Registan — three madrasahs 2h

    Start at Samarkand's icon: the Registan, a grand square framed by the Ulugh Beg, Sher-Dor, and gold-domed Tilya-Kori madrasahs. Go early for soft light and thinner crowds. Entry covers all three (around 50,000-70,000 som).

    Cost: UZS 50,000-70,000 ($4-6) TIP: Morning light flatters the tilework and the square is quietest before tour groups arrive. Step inside each madrasah courtyard, and look up at the Tilya-Kori's gold-leaf interior. Climbing a minaret (a small unofficial fee, when allowed) gives the classic overhead view. Dress modestly.
  2. 11:30 Bibi-Khanym Mosque 45min

    A short walk to Timur's colossal congregational mosque (around 30,000 som), once among the largest in the Islamic world, with a towering turquoise-ribbed portal and dome. Partly collapsed over the centuries and restored, it still overwhelms by sheer scale.

    Cost: UZS 30,000 ($2.50) TIP: The scale is the point — stand under the main portal to feel it. It's a short walk from the Registan toward the bazaar, so it flows naturally into the morning. Cover shoulders and knees. Photograph the dome from the bazaar side too.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Bibikhanum Teahouse 1h15

    Lunch at the atmospheric Bibikhanum Teahouse beside the mosque — plov, samsa, dolma, and a pot of green tea on a terrace under the great dome, staff in traditional dress.

    Cost: UZS 50,000-150,000 ($4-12) per person TIP: The terrace setting beside the Bibi-Khanym dome is the draw. Order tea and graze on samsa and salads if you're not after a full meal. Carry som; cards may not work. A fitting, leisurely old-town lunch.
  4. 14:00 Siyob Bazaar 1h30

    Right next door, Samarkand's largest market — spices, dried fruit and nuts, sweets, seasonal melons and pomegranates, and stacks of the city's famous stamped round non bread, plus tandoor samsa baked on the spot.

    Cost: Free (snacks UZS 10,000-30,000) TIP: Buy a warm samsa and a round of Samarkand non to snack on. Sample dried apricots, raisins, and nuts before buying, and bargain good-naturedly. Cash only, small notes; watch your bag in the crowds. The melons and pomegranates are superb in late summer and autumn.
  5. 16:00 Hazrat Khizr Mosque + rest 1h

    Walk up to the Hazrat Khizr Mosque on the rise above the bazaar for a fine view back over the old town and the Bibi-Khanym dome, then rest during the heat of the afternoon before the evening.

    Cost: Small entry / free TIP: The terrace by Hazrat Khizr is one of the best free viewpoints over the old town. In summer, use mid-afternoon to retreat from the heat. The first president's mausoleum is also here. A gentle end to the sightseeing day.
  6. 19:30 Dinner + the Registan lit up at night 2h

    Dinner near the Registan (Shokhrukh Nur or Old City), then see the floodlit square — in the warmer months there's often a free sound-and-light show projected on the madrasah facades.

    Cost: UZS 60,000-200,000 ($5-16) dinner TIP: The Registan lit up at night is one of the city's best free experiences, with or without the show. Light-show schedules vary by season and aren't always reliable — ask your hotel for current timing. Shokhrukh Nur near the square is good value where many places inflate prices.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Guesthouse breakfast

Old town · Included / UZS 30,000

Non bread, eggs, fruit, suzma, and tea — the typical Uzbek guesthouse spread.

Lunch

Bibikhanum Teahouse

Old town (by Bibi-Khanym) · UZS 50,000-150,000

Plov, samsa, and green tea on the terrace under the great dome.

Dinner

Shokhrukh Nur or Old City

Near the Registan · UZS 60,000-200,000

Plov and shashlik near the square before the evening light show.

Transit:

All on foot — the Registan, Bibi-Khanym Mosque, Siyob Bazaar, and Hazrat Khizr cluster within walking distance in the old town. A short Yandex Go ride back to your hotel if you're staying in the new town.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $30 Mid $60 Luxury $140
DAY 2

Shah-i-Zinda + Gur-e-Amir + Ulugh Beg Observatory

Shah-i-Zinda necropolis - Afrasiyab museum - Ulugh Beg Observatory - Gur-e-Amir (Timur's tomb)

Activities

  1. 09:00 Shah-i-Zinda necropolis 1h15

    An open, stepped avenue of mausoleums (around 30,000-40,000 som) built up over the 11th-19th centuries, famous for some of the most intense blue-and-turquoise tilework in the Islamic world. Many visitors rate it the most beautiful spot in the city.

    Cost: UZS 30,000-40,000 ($2.50-3.50) TIP: Go early to beat both heat and crowds; the tiles glow again in the late-afternoon sun if you'd rather return then. It remains a pilgrimage site, so dress modestly and be respectful. The tight lane of facades is the photographer's highlight of Samarkand.
  2. 10:45 Afrasiyab Museum (ancient Samarkand) 45min

    A short walk away, the Afrasiyab Museum sits on the mound of the ancient city, displaying the famous 7th-century Sogdian wall paintings and finds from pre-Mongol Samarkand. A good primer on the deep history beneath the Timurid monuments.

    Cost: UZS 30,000 ($2.50) TIP: The Sogdian murals are the highlight and put the city's age in context. It's a quick, worthwhile stop between Shah-i-Zinda and the observatory. The surrounding Afrasiyab mound is the site of the original city destroyed by Genghis Khan.
  3. 12:00 Ulugh Beg Observatory 45min

    The remains of the astronomer-ruler Ulugh Beg's 15th-century observatory (around 30,000 som) — the surviving lower arc of a huge curved sextant cut into the bedrock, plus a small museum explaining his remarkably accurate star tables.

    Cost: UZS 30,000 ($2.50) TIP: Modest in scale next to the great mosques, but historically extraordinary — the museum explains why it mattered. Pairs well with the Afrasiyab museum next door. A short taxi or Yandex Go ride from Shah-i-Zinda.
  4. 13:00 Lunch — Labi G'or or a local osh house 1h15

    Lunch on the eastern side near the necropolis at a traditional restaurant such as Labi G'or, or hunt down fresh layered plov at a local osh house while it's still being served.

    Cost: UZS 60,000-160,000 ($5-13) per person TIP: If you want the freshest plov, the osh houses serve it at midday and sell out by early afternoon — go now rather than later. Labi G'or is a calm sit-down alternative near the eastern monuments. Carry som cash.
  5. 15:30 Gur-e-Amir — Timur's mausoleum 45min

    Timur's mausoleum (around 30,000-40,000 som), with its fluted turquoise dome and a richly gilded interior chamber around the famous dark-jade tombstone over his grave. Architecturally a forerunner of later Timurid and Mughal tombs.

    Cost: UZS 30,000-40,000 ($2.50-3.50) TIP: Late-afternoon light catches the ribbed dome well. The gilded interior is small but dazzling — Timur, his sons, and Ulugh Beg lie here. It's near the southern end of the tourist boulevard, an easy walk or short ride from the Registan. Dress modestly.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Platan or Karimbek 2h

    A relaxed dinner at Platan (leafy courtyard, Uzbek classics and a European menu) or Karimbek (lively, great shashlik, evening live music) in the city center.

    Cost: UZS 100,000-250,000 ($8-20) per person TIP: Karimbek is the choice for a sociable evening with live music and a spread of shashlik; Platan for a calmer courtyard meal. Both are popular with groups, so go a little early or reserve. Cards usually accepted with som as backup.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Guesthouse breakfast

Old town · Included / UZS 30,000

Non, eggs, fruit, and tea before an early start at Shah-i-Zinda.

Lunch

Labi G'or or a local osh house

Eastern old town · UZS 60,000-160,000

Fresh layered plov at midday, or a calm traditional sit-down.

Dinner

Platan or Karimbek

City center · UZS 100,000-250,000

Shashlik and Uzbek classics — Karimbek for live music, Platan for the courtyard.

Transit:

Walking between Shah-i-Zinda, the Afrasiyab museum, and the observatory (they cluster on the east side), with short Yandex Go rides to the Gur-e-Amir and to dinner in the center.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $32 Mid $65 Luxury $150
DAY 3

Shahrisabz day trip — Timur's birthplace

Drive over the pass to Shahrisabz - Ak-Saray Palace ruins - Timurid monuments - return to Samarkand

Activities

  1. 08:30 Drive to Shahrisabz over the mountain pass 2h

    Hire a car and driver for the day and head south to Shahrisabz (about 1.5-2 hours), Timur's birthplace, crossing a scenic mountain pass. The town's Timurid monuments are a UNESCO World Heritage Site in their own right.

    Cost: Car & driver UZS 400,000-800,000 ($32-65) for the day TIP: A car with a driver is the comfortable way; agree the price in advance and ask your guesthouse to arrange a reliable one. The pass scenery is part of the trip. Bring water and snacks. Start early to be back by evening.
  2. 10:30 Ak-Saray Palace ruins 1h

    Shahrisabz's centerpiece — the towering ruined gateway of Timur's 'White Palace' (Ak-Saray), once vast, now two colossal tiled pylons rising dramatically from the square. The scale of what survives hints at the original ambition.

    Cost: Small entry fee TIP: The sheer height of the surviving portal is the photo. An inscription is said to read 'if you doubt our power, look at our buildings.' A short climb (when open) gives a view. The surrounding park is pleasant for a stroll.
  3. 12:00 Timurid monuments + lunch in Shahrisabz 2h30

    See the Kok-Gumbaz Mosque, the Dorut Tilovat and Dorus Saodat complexes (with Timurid tombs), then lunch on local plov and shashlik in town before the drive back.

    Cost: UZS 60,000-150,000 ($5-12) lunch TIP: The monuments are spread along a green axis through the town — easy to walk between with your driver shuttling as needed. Lunch on freshly made plov while it's at its best. A quieter, less touristed contrast to Samarkand.
  4. 15:00 Return drive + Konigil paper village (optional) 2h30

    Drive back toward Samarkand (about 1.5-2 hours). If time and energy allow, stop at the Konigil village just outside the city, where artisans make paper from mulberry bark by hand — a revived Silk Road craft.

    Cost: Included in car hire; Konigil small fee TIP: Konigil's water-powered paper mill demo is a charming short stop and a good souvenir source. Skip it if you're tired after the pass. Back in Samarkand, the evening is free for a final dinner and a last look at the lit Registan.
  5. 19:30 Farewell dinner + last look at the Registan 2h

    A final Samarkand dinner near the old town, then a last evening walk to see the Registan floodlit against the night sky.

    Cost: UZS 60,000-200,000 ($5-16) per person TIP: End where the trip began — the lit Registan is the city's signature image. Order plov and shashlik one more time, or try a European grill at Platan for a change. A relaxed close to the Silk Road core.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early guesthouse breakfast

Old town · Included / UZS 30,000

An early start before the drive over the pass.

Lunch

Shahrisabz osh house

Shahrisabz · UZS 60,000-150,000

Local plov and shashlik in Timur's birthplace.

Dinner

Farewell dinner near the old town

Old town / center · UZS 60,000-200,000

A last plov, or a European grill at Platan, before the lit Registan.

Transit:

Car and driver hired for the day (UZS 400,000-800,000 / $32-65) for the round trip to Shahrisabz over the pass; walking within Shahrisabz and back in Samarkand's old town.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $90 Luxury $190

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Packing Checklist

Samarkand 3-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Samarkand?
Yes for the core — the Registan, Bibi-Khanym, Siyob Bazaar, Shah-i-Zinda, the Gur-e-Amir, and the Ulugh Beg Observatory, with a third day free for a Shahrisabz day trip. The monuments cluster into walkable groups with short rides between them. If you're doing the wider Silk Road, add Bukhara (1.5-2 hours by train) for 2-3 more days.
Do I need a guide?
Not essential, but a licensed local guide for a half or full day (roughly UZS 200,000-450,000 / $16-36) adds a lot of context to the Timurid history and is easy to arrange through your guesthouse. The monuments have limited signage in English. For the Shahrisabz day trip, a car-and-driver (often with a guide) is the practical choice over public transport.
Is the Shahrisabz day trip worth it?
Yes if you have the third day — Timur's birthplace, about 1.5-2 hours over a scenic pass, with the dramatic ruined gateway of the Ak-Saray Palace and other Timurid monuments (a UNESCO site). Hire a car and driver for the day. If you'd rather stay local, swap it for a slower old-town day plus the Konigil paper-making village just outside Samarkand.
When should I avoid visiting?
Midsummer (Jun-Aug) is hot and dry, often 95-104°F (35-40°C) with little shade around the open squares — possible with an early-start, midday-break routine, but demanding. Deep winter (Dec-Feb) is cold and quiet. Spring (Apr-May) and autumn (Sep-Oct) are the clear sweet spots for mild weather and clear, photogenic skies over the tilework.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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