Indian Restaurants in Charing Cross
1. Colonel Saab Trafalgar Square
Indian restaurant in Westminster
40 - 42 William IV Street - WC2N
“Such a shame not more people recognise this as a top Indian” – so say fans of Roop Partap Choudhary’s lavishly decorated venue in Holborn’s spectacular old town hall. “They seem to have observed the leading groups and copied the best bits” and the result is “really well-executed food” (if perhaps “with few surprises”). Last year, he also debuted in the large space off Trafalgar Square that was formerly Jones Family Project (RIP): “a well-designed if cavernous space” but sometimes “a little raucous due to its seeming popularity with big work groups”.
2. Cinnamon Bazaar
Indian restaurant in
28 Maiden Lane - WC2E
“A fun place – great for a meal before a show… and the food is imaginative and good too” – Vivek Singh’s spin-off from the famous Cinnamon Club is well-supported for its “solid modern Indian cooking” at “relatively good value” prices for the West End. On the downside, service can be “disorganised” and the (“noisy” and “really packed in”) dining room “doesn’t really inspire” although “as it fills, it becomes animated with a buzz of excitement”.
3. Tandoor Chop House
Indian restaurant in Covent Garden
8 Adelaide Street - WC2
“Something a bit different when it comes to Indian food” – this wood-panelled chop-house off Trafalgar Square specialises in “tender meat from the tandoor oven (no wet curry sauces!), and at reasonable prices for central London”. The dishes are “packed with flavour” and in “generous portions”. Top Menu Tip – “the crispy lamb chops are a must”.
4. Farzi Cafe
Indian restaurant in Westminster
8 Haymarket - SW1Y
The “large, two-storey” outpost of a brand from India’s Massive Restaurants group on Haymarket is worth knowing about if you’re fighting hunger in the heart of the West End; and offers “a good selection of food including a great variety of small plates” at a quality level that can surprise for such a touristy location. Wallet-friendly lunch and pre-theatre set meals add to its appeal.
5. Dishoom
Indian restaurant in Chinatown
12 Upper St Martins Ln - WC2
“You’ll almost always find a queue of people waiting for a table and a palpable energy of excitement in the room” when you visit these “vibrant” and “exotic”-feeling Indian favourites, which “whisk you to Bombay and back”. Cousins Shamil & Kavi Thakrar started in Covent Garden in 2010 and their growing group has become the most commented-on business in our annual diners’ poll, complete with seven London branches, three outside town; their ‘Permit Rooms’ spinoff brand, and turnover of over £100m. The interior design, a homage to Mumbai’s Irani cafés, absolutely slaps – “wherever you sit it’s quirky” and even though the busy scene can become “a bit of a zoo”, it’s all so upbeat that “you leave feeling good about your meal and yourself!”. Dishes are “bursting with flavour” and served by “efficient” waiting staff “who know their stuff”. The menu is “deliciously different”, although so many Londoners have now sampled it that once-arcane items like the “legendary black dahl (so rich and filling!)” are now part of London’s culinary canon. And what better way to start a new day than with an “unbeatable bacon and egg naan roll” – a high watermark of dining out invention of the last 50 years that’s core to their “game-changing breakfasts” (“you will never want an English bacon roll again”!).
6. Madhu’s Of Mayfair, The Dilly
Indian restaurant in Mayfair
21 Piccadilly - W1J
“A gorgeous, sumptuous room with food to match” – classic Punjabi dishes with a Kenyan twist are a slightly offbeat discovery at this Piccadilly hotel restaurant from the Anand dynasty, founded almost a century ago in Nairobi. “The setting is delightful, all ornate with chandeliers but it doesn’t feel too swanky or over the top”. And appropriately for the West End hotel setting, they offer an afternoon ‘High Chai’ where tandoori salmon sandwiches and murgh tikka wraps are followed by very British scones, clotted cream and strawberry preserve. Top Menu Tip – “sea bass is prepared table side for that extra bit of theatre”.
7. Hankies
Indian restaurant in Soho
67 Shaftesbury Avenue - W1D
2024 Review: In the heart of Theatreland, this Indian street-food operation is focused on dishes served with ‘hankies’ – hand-spun roti folded around the dish – and still receives good marks (if from a limited number of reports). There used to be offshoots in Marble Arch and Paddington, but both have closed over the last couple of years.
8. Kricket
Indian restaurant in Soho
12 Denman Street - W1
“Interesting and unusual Indian food” – “not heavy curries at all, but a less familiar range of dishes, with very well-judged spicing and a huge range of delicate flavours” – again inspires rave reports for this superb Brit-run chain (founded by Will Bowlby & Rik Campbell), which also has a brilliant service ethos: “cheerful and obliging throughout and very prompt”. In 2025, they opened their latest 80-cover outpost in Shoreditch, which also introduced a debut breakfast menu alongside an all-day 50-cover Kafé and bar concept (serving street-food snacks). And coming soon – a launch in Covent Garden’s Neal’s Yard is planned. Top Menu Tips – “date and pistachio kuicha is particularly good; excellently light panipuri with tomato rasam”.
9. Sagar
Indian restaurant in Covent Garden
31 Catherine St - WC2
If you’re looking for a “good pitstop in the West End”, this trio (also with an offshoot in Hammersmith) offers “tasty vegan and veggie Indian food” at “very reasonable prices” – nothing fancy, but “good basic cooking” of “South Indian staples”. Pickier diners can feel that some sauces are “rather watery”, or that the filling food can come “with no stand-out flavours”. Practically all agree, however, that “a great Masala Dosa and beer makes a very affordable meal in Central London”. Top Tip – “good choice to take a crowd: they’re not fazed by large tables”.
10. Veeraswamy
Indian restaurant in Mayfair
Victory House, 99-101 Regent Street - W1
Now in its 99th year, London’s oldest Indian has (under its most recent owner, the MW Eat Group) maintained “consistently high standards”, providing “superior, delicate flavoursome curries in a series of colourful, beautifully presented dishes”, matched with thoughtfully updated decor, overlooking Regent Street from the first floor. Whether or not it sees its 100th birthday is in the hands of landlords, The Crown Estate, who seem blind to its cultural significance, and more interested in terminating its lease and redeveloping the building of which it is part. Sign the petition to save it on the Veeraswamy website!
11. Tamarind Kitchen
Indian restaurant in Soho
167-169 Wardour St - W1F
“Inventive and fancy Indian food a fair few notches above your standard curry house” is found at this Soho spinoff from the smart Mayfair namesake; (“have eaten here a handful of times this year and the dishes each time have been good”).
12. Gopal’s of Soho
Indian restaurant in Soho
12 Bateman St - W1
“A favourite curry house for many years” – this stalwart Soho venue opened in 1988 and is a well-preserved time capsule of what the curry experience looked like when nobody dreamt of an Indian restaurant ever winning a Michelin star. “Everything is always high-quality and really tasty and the price is super-competitive for the area; and the staff are lovely too”.
13. India Club, Strand Continental Hotel
Indian restaurant in Covent Garden
143 Strand - WC2
2023 Review: “Good scruffy fun with a side order of nostalgia” is to be had at this “hidden gem” in the Strand (a favourite with staff at the Indian High Commission opposite). “An almost anonymous doorway leads you up some stairs” where you “step back in time, not to a cheesy incarnation of the British Raj, but to the early days of independence”. Founded in 1951 (Prime Minister Nehru was among the founding members), the ‘club’ is open to the public and serves food that can be (but is not invariably) “excellent” at a “great price”, in an authentically “slightly chaotic atmosphere”. It’s been under siege for the past five years from a landlord itching to redevelop, but it’s “an institution that deserves to survive, and an oasis of good value in central London”. Top Tip – it’s unlicensed – “pause for a drink in the bar downstairs before or after eating” or carry your pint to the table.
14. Chutney Mary
Indian restaurant in Westminster
73 St James's Street - SW1A
Celebrating its 35th anniversary in 2025, this “top-of-the-class” flagship of the MW Eats chain continues to thrive under the ownership of Ranjit & Namita Mathrani and Namita’s sister, Camellia Panjabi. Originally founded in SW3, the business moved to this large, “opulent” central site in St James’s in 2015: “a great space with wonderful decor that gives it character” but which also combines being “upmarket with a good vibe”. Having helped lead the vanguard of London’s ‘nouvelle Indian’ cuisine from the 1990s onwards, the cooking here remains “exceptional, complex and balanced” and the performance all-round is impressive: “everything you would expect of a top-notch Indian restaurant and set of restauranteurs”.
15. Sagar
Indian restaurant in Westminster
37 Panton Street - SW1Y
If you’re looking for a “good pitstop in the West End”, this trio (also with an offshoot in Hammersmith) offers “tasty vegan and veggie Indian food” at “very reasonable prices” – nothing fancy, but “good basic cooking” of “South Indian staples”. Pickier diners can feel that some sauces are “rather watery”, or that the filling food can come “with no stand-out flavours”. Practically all agree, however, that “a great Masala Dosa and beer makes a very affordable meal in Central London”. Top Tip – “good choice to take a crowd: they’re not fazed by large tables”.
16. Masala Zone
Indian restaurant in Westminster
244 Piccadilly - W1J
“One of the most iconic interiors in London” – the historic, late-Victorian Criterion restaurant in Piccadilly Circus (built in 1873) – makes the latest addition to the Masala Zone group (opened in 2023) “a new gem in the collection”, whose “opulence really suits an Indian destination”: it’s “worth going just to see the old Criterion, and thankfully the wonderful original decor has been retained”. With “great food and attentive but unobtrusive service” typical of the classy MW Eats group, “all Masala Zone restaurants are excellent”, offering good-value street-food or home- style thalis in four venues. The Covent Garden branch opposite the ROH stage door is tipped for pre- or post-opera dining.
17. Oorja
Indian restaurant in Camden
117 Shaftesbury Avenue - WC2H
A new casual North Indian deep in the melee of Theatreland which opened in February 2025. Owned by Indian restaurateur Gobind Chona of Covent Garden’s Gura Gura, it offers dishes such as BBQ Butterfly Chicken and is open for breakfast and Sunday lunch.
18. Gunpowder Soho
Indian restaurant in Soho
20 Greek Street - W1D
Harneet Baweja’s 10-year-old Indian street-food outfit “just gets better and better”, with “innovative, authentic and well-spiced sharing plates” and “warm service”. The Spitalfields branch is “the original and best”; while the Soho and Tower Bridge follow-ups also win praise. Top Tip – look out for the ‘India Club’ events: one-off celebrations of a particular city, region or festival.
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