A budget backpacker's guide to Addis Ababa - Cheap hotels, local bars, and restaurant recommendations.
8.75 birr = US $1 (approx.)
PLACES TO STAY
(7) National Hotel - I lived here for months. Downstairs
the rooms are rented by the hour - avoid them. But upstairs there
are some nice old rooms with style - high ceilings and big comfortable
beds. My room had a huge balcony overlooking the street, in the
middle of the party, every night. Stay elsewhere if you're
looking for a quiet place. Shared bathroom - 40 birr/night.
(9) Taitu Hotel - The first hotel in Addis Ababa. The main
building has been redone and the rooms are expensive. In
buildings in the back, there are cheaper rooms (starting at 46
birr). The Taitu is a good budget option in the center of the
Piazza.
(10) Park Hotel & Cheap Local Hotels - If you're looking for
even cheaper there is Park hotel. You'll find it on a dirt road a
couple of minute walk from the center of the Piazza. With a big
of haggling I think that you can get a room for about 20-25 birr.
Next door to the Park hotel are some true local hotels - very little
English is spoken. I've heard rumors of rooms for 10-15
birr/night.
(12) Baro Hotel - The most popular place for the tourists.
The rooms start at 50 birr/night. The cheapest rooms have
showers, but not much ventilation so they smell a bit. The more
expensive rooms are nicer. The Baro is definitely best place in
Addis to meet other travelers.
PLACES TO EAT
(2) Raizel is by far the trendiest cafe in the Piazza with
polished glass and aluminum furniture. The crowd generally
consists of the hip, the hipper, and the runway models. The
macchiatos are amazing.
(3) Rooftop Italian - enter through the bakery (mediocre) and
walk up 4 flights of stairs - At the restaurant on the roof, the fresh
bread is delicious, and the soup is spectacular. The pasta was
good too, but I always showed up for the soup. The food is almost
as good as anything that you'd find in San Francisco. The
difference is that here a two-course lunch of pasta and soup costs only
$1.25. Note: I recommend this restaurant for lunch instead
of dinner - by dinnertime they're usually out of the soup.
(4) Omar Khayyam. Stylish and cheap! I ate there almost
every day for the fantastic mixed grill with 3 types of lamb (lamb
kebabs, lamb chops and lamb sausage) plus soup, rice, vegetables,
french fries, and bread - all of that for only $1. Draft beer is
$0.20 a glass, shots of Araki are $0.30, and half bottles of drinkable
local red wine are $1. Note: everything is great except the
chicken soup - avoid it - it's a watery porridge lacking any chicken.
(5) Best Juice - The best juice shop in the Piazza.
(7) National Hotel - I also ate regularly at my hotel. The
restaurant was surprisingly nice. On occasion, I'd order Kitfo -
Ethiopia's National dish; raw beef, ground up, and mixed with lots of
butter, and a served with a very spicy berbere powder. But, most
times, I'd go vegetarian and order the tasty and artistic, "mixed
salad" with decoratively cut beets and potatoes.
(8) Port Snack - Cheap food, open 24 hours. They guys who
work here don't speak English. Ask another customer to translate,
or if nothing else, just point at another diner's food that looks good.
(11) Cheap Eth. Food - This place has no sign, but it's a
couple of doors up from the Baro on the same side of the street.
All they serve is Injeera with vegetables or meat, but it's good and
cheap.
(13) Enrico's was the first patisserie in Addis Ababa, and has
fantastic little cakes. Their specialty is small custard cakes -
balls filled with custard, yellow cake with custard layers, and a white
cake with delicate flaky crust layers, custard layers, cake layers, and
a powdered sugar top (my favorite) - all done perfectly. My only
complaint about Enrico's is they are extremely popular, and far too
often, they're sold out of everything.
(14) Pizza - Good cheap pizzas.
PLACES TO DRINK
(6) Lots of little bars - Within two blocks of the National
Hotel there are perhaps 50 bars. I never managed to count them
all. Random doors would just open up on Friday and Saturday
nights and people would be serving booze inside. I particularly
liked some of tiny bars across from the National. Poke your head
in around Sunset and you'll probably find yourself invited to a coffee
ceremony. Show up around midnight and the party is just starting
- the drunks will be happy to meet a foreigner and will probably buy
you a beer.
(7) National Hotel - I have to confess that I really liked my
hotel. I lived there, I ate there and I drank there. The
National hotel has some of the largest hookers anywhere in Ethiopia,
which makes it a well, experience. It also has very cheap draft
beer. I liked to start my evenings with a couple of beers on the
patio in front watching the people walk by.
OTHER
(1) Book stalls - A great place to find used books. There are a dozen used books stalls along either side of this little side street.
(15) Money - There are still no working ATMs in Ethiopia.
However, you can get money off of your ATM card at a steep commission
from Daschen Bank offices at the Sheraton or on Bole Road.