Getting to Tashkent: A Traveler's First Day Playbook
From airport arrival to your first plov: the essential phrases, currency tips, and rituals that make day one in Uzbekistan's capital feel less like a tourist's stumble and more like a guest's welcome.
Tashkent does not announce itself. You step out of Islom Karimov International with the dry Central Asian air on your face, the chorus of taxi drivers calling out destinations in three languages, and the quiet, surprising realization that almost no one is in a hurry.
This is your first day. Here is how to spend it like someone who was invited rather than someone who showed up.
Before you leave the airport
Two things to do at the airport — both take less than ten minutes:
- Pick up a SIM. Ucell and Beeline kiosks sit just past customs. A tourist SIM with 20 GB runs about 50,000 so’m (roughly $4 USD at the time of writing). Bring your passport.
- Withdraw or exchange cash. ATMs are reliable but the official exchange counter just before the exit door gives a fair rate without the per-transaction fee. Aim for 500,000 so’m — enough for a taxi, dinner, and breakfast tomorrow.
The taxi conversation
Yandex Go works in Tashkent and is the safest first ride. But if you’d rather flag one down — and many travelers will — these are the four phrases that matter:
- Salom — Hello. Use this every time.
- Mehmonxonaga olib boring — Take me to my hotel. (Replace with the name of the place; drivers usually know the major ones.)
- Narxi qancha? — How much? Always ask before you get in.
- Rahmat — Thank you. Use this often. Generously.
Agree on the price before the wheels move. A ride from the airport to the city center should be around 50,000–80,000 so’m. If the driver names a number meaningfully higher, smile, say rahmat, and find another car.
Your first meal
Find a choyxona — a teahouse. Order plov if it is before 2pm. Order shashlik and non (bread) if it is after. Drink green tea. Refuse the first refill politely, accept the second; this is the rhythm.
When the bill comes, expect it to be smaller than you predicted. When you stand to leave, expect the staff to walk you to the door. This is not service. This is hospitality, and it is the thread that runs through everything in this country.
What to skip on day one
- Do not try to see Chorsu Bazaar, Khast-Imam Complex, and the Tashkent Metro all in one afternoon. Pick one. The metro alone deserves a morning.
- Do not drink tap water. Bottled is cheap and everywhere.
- Do not worry about your pronunciation. The effort is more meaningful than the accuracy.
What to bring tomorrow
A few words. Curiosity. A willingness to be a guest rather than a customer. We’ll cover the rest in the next post.