Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia

Cobblestone lanes glow amber beneath iron lanterns as white-washed walls rise into a deep Tunisian dusk, the sea glimmering at the end of the passage. This watercolor study of a Sidi Bou Said evening alley captures the electric contrast of warm gold light against cool midnight blue architecture.
Original Series / Visual Study
Sidi Bou Said Evening Alley
Regional Dossier

SIDI BOU SAID, TUNISIA | “The Blue-and-White Village Above the Gulf”

Sidi Bou Said is the most beautiful village in North Africa, a hilltop whitewashed town above the Gulf of Tunis where every building is painted the same brilliant white and every door, window, and wrought-iron detail is the same deep cobalt blue. Built above the ruins of ancient Carthage on a cliff overlooking the Mediterranean, the village has been a haven for artists since Paul Klee and August Macke arrived in 1914 and the light changed their painting forever. The blue-and-white palette is not a modern aesthetic choice but a building regulation introduced by Baron Rodolphe d’Erlanger in 1915, a piece of legislation that accidentally created one of the most photographed villages on earth.

The colors are absolute and extraordinary: cobalt blue, brilliant white, and the warm amber of the Mediterranean light on white walls at golden hour. This artwork captures the specific beauty of a village that has drawn artists, writers, and travelers for over a century without losing the quality of light that brought them here in the first place.

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Finding the Stillness

It's hard to put the "vibe" of a place into words, so we put together a few images that we think show the quiet side of Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia. These are the textures and small moments we've archived to capture the stillness of this corner of the world.

Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia visual study 01
Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia / No. 01 via Mahmoud Yahyaoui
Step into a sanctuary of timeless tranquility, where the vibrant blue of the window beautifully contrasts with the intricate warmth of traditional Tunisian tilework. Sunlight gently illuminates a peaceful corner adorned with plush cushions and sacred art, inviting you to pause, breathe, and connect with the rich heritage of Sidi Bou Said. It is a stunning reminder of how history and artistry can weave together to create a space of pure comfort and spiritual harmony.
Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia visual study 02
Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia / No. 02 via Mahmoud Yahyaoui
Tucked away in a quiet corner of Sidi Bou Said, this serene courtyard captures the timeless charm of Mediterranean life. The soothing presence of a central stone fountain pairs beautifully with the village's signature vibrant blue bench and shuttered window, framed by cascading green vines. It is an enchanting, sun-dappled retreat that invites you to slow down and lose yourself in the peaceful rhythm of Tunisia.
Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia visual study 03
Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia / No. 03 via Kotek Miau
Vibrant bursts of magenta bougainvillea canopy a sun-drenched cobblestone alley, perfectly framing the iconic white-washed walls and brilliant blue accents of Sidi Bou Said. Woven wicker crafts and local artisan storefronts peek through the historic stone archway, capturing the lively yet peaceful essence of village life. It is an inspiring glimpse into a Mediterranean dream, where every winding path tells a story of artistry, culture, and coastal warmth.

Where to wander

Archival Note: A curated field study of Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia, prioritizing cultural relevance and archival merit. These locations have been meticulously researched and vetted to ensure they represent the most authentic atmosphere for your own expedition.

Local Cuisine Spotlight
Immerse your senses in the vibrant heart of a traditional market, where perfectly sculpted pyramids of aromatic spices rise in brilliant shades of amber, gold, and crimson. From the earthy warmth of ground cumin and turmeric to the rich intensity of local harissa and precious saffron, each display tells a story of culinary heritage and ancient trade routes. It is an inspiring celebration of flavor and culture, capturing the lively spirit and sensory magic of a Tunisian souk.
Credits: KOTEK MIAU
Local cuisine study in Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia

☕︎ Local Flavor

Restaurant Dar Zarrouk

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 36.8698° N, 10.3460° E

The most celebrated restaurant in Sidi Bou Said, occupying a whitewashed terrace house whose dining rooms and garden terrace directly overlook the Gulf of Tunis. The kitchen is organized around the specific culinary tradition of the Tunisian coast: brick pastry filled with egg and tuna (the archetypal brik à l'oeuf), grilled sea bream with harissa, the slow-cooked lamb of the interior, and the orange blossom water-scented pastries that close every serious Tunisian meal. The combination of the view — the village rooftops dropping toward the sea at sunset — and the food makes it the finest single table in the village. Reserve in advance; the terrace fills early and the view is the reason.

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Café Sidi Chabaane

Rating: 4.7★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 36.8699° N, 10.3455° E

Built directly into the cliff face at the western edge of the village, Café Sidi Chabaane offers the most dramatic panoramic view available in Sidi Bou Said: the entire Gulf of Tunis spread below the terrace from the ruins of Carthage on the left to the Cap Bon peninsula on the right, with the fishing boats of La Goulette visible on the water and the mountains of the Sahel on the far shore. The café serves mint tea, pine nut coffee, fresh-squeezed orange juice, and a small selection of Tunisian pastries. It is the correct answer to the question of where to watch the sun set in North Africa. Arrive 45 minutes before sunset and take the front terrace.

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Tunisian Home Cooking Class

Rating: 5★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 36.8698° N, 10.3460° E

Enter a traditional Tunisian kitchen above the Gulf of Tunis to document the foundational recipes of a culinary tradition shaped by Berber, Arab, Ottoman, Andalusian, and French influences over two thousand years of North African history. The curriculum covers the brik à l'oeuf (the pastry that defines Tunisian street food), the slow-cooked lamb tagine with olives and preserved lemon, the grilled mechouia salad of roasted peppers and tomatoes with harissa, and the orange blossom water pastries that close every significant meal. The session ends on the terrace with the view of the gulf and the understanding that Tunisian cuisine is one of the most underestimated in the Mediterranean world.

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Tunis Medina Street Food Tour

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 36.7986° N, 10.1712° E

Navigate the food geography of the Tunis medina — a UNESCO World Heritage Site whose souks have been organized by trade for a thousand years — with a local guide who knows which stall has the finest lablabi (chickpea soup with harissa and cumin), which bakery produces the best bambalouni (fried dough ring dusted in sugar), the correct address for merguez grilled on charcoal at the Halfaouine market, and the spice merchant whose ras el hanout blend encodes the specific flavor profile that distinguishes Tunisian cooking from every other North African cuisine. The walk connects Sidi Bou Said’s aesthetic beauty to its culinary depth, and the two are inseparable.

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🛌︎ Boutique Stays

Dar Saïd

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 36.8700° N, 10.3467° E

The most celebrated boutique hotel in Sidi Bou Said and the finest expression of traditional Tunisian domestic architecture available to overnight guests: a 19th-century palace of carved plaster, hand-painted tiles, and inlaid cedar ceilings organized around a series of courtyard gardens where jasmine and bougainvillea press against the white walls. The 24 rooms are individually furnished with antique Tunisian pieces and embroidered textiles. The rooftop terrace looks over the village roofscape and the Gulf of Tunis to the ruins of Carthage on the plain below. Dar Saïd is the kind of property that makes the destination make sense — everything about the village becomes legible through the building you are sleeping in.

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Hotel Sidi Bou Fares

Rating: 4.6★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 36.8698° N, 10.3471° E

A restored traditional house in the heart of the village, steps from the main Rue Habib Thameur and the blue-and-white alleyways. The rooms are built around a central courtyard with a fountain and a terrace that captures both the sea breeze and the evening call to prayer from the mosque across the lane. The combination of location, traditional architecture, and the specific quality of waking up inside the village rather than approaching it from a hotel outside makes this the most atmospherically correct base in Sidi Bou Said for a traveler who has come for the place itself rather than the amenities.

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Villa Didon

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 36.8550° N, 10.3306° E

Perched on the Carthage hill between the ancient ruins and the Gulf of Tunis, Villa Didon is the most dramatically positioned hotel in the greater Tunis region: 22 rooms in a contemporary white villa whose rooftop pool, infinity terrace, and panoramic restaurant deliver an uninterrupted view of the gulf, the Cap Bon peninsula, and on clear days the silhouette of Sicily. Named for Dido, the legendary founder of Carthage, the hotel is a 10-minute drive from Sidi Bou Said village and a five-minute walk from the Antonine Baths. For a traveler combining Carthage, Sidi Bou Said, and the Gulf, it is the most strategically placed and most visually spectacular address available.

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Dar El Médina

Rating: 4.7★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 36.7986° N, 10.1712° E

A restored 19th-century palace in the Tunis medina, 20 minutes from Sidi Bou Said, whose carved plaster arches, hand-painted blue-and-white tiles, and colonnaded courtyard make it the most authentic and most beautiful traditional riad-style accommodation in greater Tunis. The 14 rooms are individually decorated with Tunisian antiques, handwoven kilims, and embroidered textiles. Staying here and making the 20-minute TGM train journey to Sidi Bou Said each day is the best way to combine both places without sacrificing the experience of either — the medina in the evening, the village at sunrise.

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📍︎ Field Study

Café des Nattes

Rating: 5★ | Price: $ | Coordinates: 36.8694° N, 10.3462° E

At the top of the main staircase of Sidi Bou Said, Café des Nattes has been serving mint tea, pine nut coffee, and shisha to artists, writers, and travelers since the 1920s — it was here that Paul Klee and August Macke sat in 1914 when the light of North Africa changed their painting forever, and where Simone de Beauvoir and André Gide later wrote in the same blue-shuttered room. The rush mat (natte) seating on the terrace, the brass tea service, and the view over the village rooftops toward the gulf constitute one of the most historically charged café experiences in the Mediterranean world. Order the pine nut coffee and stay as long as the afternoon allows.

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Carthage Archaeological Site

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 36.8526° N, 10.3228° E

Carthage, the city that challenged Rome for dominance of the Mediterranean world and was destroyed so completely in 146 BCE that the phrase 'Carthago delenda est' became a byword for absolute annihilation, is a ten-minute taxi ride from Sidi Bou Said. The archaeological park spreads across several hilltop sites: the Byrsa Hill with its Punic tophet and the Carthage National Museum; the Antonine Baths, the largest Roman baths ever built outside Rome, whose columns frame the Gulf of Tunis; the Roman amphitheater; and the Punic ports. A full day visits all four sites. A Sidi Bou Said trip without Carthage is a trip to the wrong century.

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Sidi Bou Said Village Walking Tour

Rating: 5★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 36.8700° N, 10.3467° E

The village of Sidi Bou Said occupies a single clifftop promontory above the Gulf of Tunis and can be walked entirely in two hours — but to understand what you are looking at requires a guide who knows the specific history of each building, why the blue-and-white color scheme became law under Baron Rodolphe d'Erlanger in 1915, which courtyard contains the tomb of the Sufi saint after whom the village is named, and where Paul Klee actually sat when he wrote in his diary that the light here had given him color entirely. The combination of the palace architecture, the artisan workshops, the clifftop views, and the café culture makes it the most concentrated expression of Tunisian aesthetic identity available in a single walk.

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Bardo National Museum

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 36.8187° N, 10.1338° E

The Bardo National Museum in Tunis houses the largest and most important collection of ancient Roman mosaics in the world — 3,000 square meters of floor and wall mosaics removed from the Carthage region, the Roman province of Africa, and the rest of Tunisia, displayed in the rooms of a 19th-century Husainid palace whose own architecture is as remarkable as the collection it contains. The mosaics document the full arc of North African Roman culture from the 2nd to the 6th century CE: the portraits, the mythological scenes, the hunting and fishing compositions, and the exquisite Neptune mosaic from the Antonine Baths are the anchors of a collection that has no peer in the Mediterranean world.

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Typography

Archival Note: A formal technical study of Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia, archiving the coordinates, elevation, and environmental data that define the region. This data serves as a vital record for our ongoing global field study, providing the technical foundation behind every atmospheric detail captured in our visual work.

Botanical and pigment specimen study for Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia Colors of Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia
Coordinates
36.8700° N, 10.3467° E — Northern Tunisia, Gulf of Tunis, above Carthage
Historical Epoch
Berber/Punic settlement (c. 9th century BCE), Ottoman conquest 1574 CE, French Protectorate 1881 CE, d’Erlanger blue-and-white law 1915 CE
Elevation
130 m / 427 ft, clifftop village above the Gulf of Tunis, directly over the ruins of Carthage
Atmosphere
Mediterranean (Csa), warm dry summers, mild wet winters, constant sea breeze from the Gulf
Observation Hour
18:15, Cliff-edge café terraces at golden hour, white walls turning amber above the Gulf of Tunis
Primary Pigment
Cobalt Blue (#0047AB) and Sidi White (#F8F6F0)
Best Time to Visit
April through June, September through October, the spring and early autumn bring mild temperatures, clear blue skies, and the Gulf at its most vivid before summer heat and August crowds from Tunis
Avoid Visiting
July through August, peak summer heat above 35°C with intense weekend crowds from Tunis filling the narrow lanes and the café terraces from noon onwards

Behind The Scenes

Nathan

Note from the Founder

Hey, did you know this fun fact about Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia? The blue-and-white color scheme is the result of a single building law passed in 1915 by Baron Rodolphe d’Erlanger, a French baron who moved to Sidi Bou Said, fell in love with it, and then legally enforced its aesthetic.
Thank you for exploring the Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia series with us. We hope these notes have inspired you to add this incredible destination to your own passport—we are so glad you're here. — Nathan

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