A busy street market with stalls and shoppers

How to Avoid Tourist Traps and Eat Like a Local

The restaurant with the laminated photo menu, the pushy host, and the prime spot next to the monument is almost always the worst meal in town — and the priciest. Tourist traps survive on one-time visitors who never come back, so they don’t need to be good. Eating well while travelling isn’t about luck or a famous food blog; it’s a few simple habits that lead you to where locals actually eat. Here they are.

How to spot a tourist trap

  • It’s right next to the main attraction. Prime tourist real estate means high rent and a captive audience — rarely a recipe for good, fair-priced food.
  • Photos of the food on the menu, often in many languages, with a host waving you in. Good places don’t need to sell that hard.
  • A giant menu of everything. Pizza, sushi, biryani, and burgers under one roof usually means nothing is made well.
  • Empty of locals. If everyone inside is a tourist, that tells you who it’s built for.

How to find where locals eat

The reliable move is to walk a few streets away from the main sights — even two or three blocks changes the prices and the crowd entirely. Look for places busy with locals, especially at normal local mealtimes. A short menu that changes is a great sign; it means they cook what’s fresh. And simply asking a local — your host, a shopkeeper, a taxi driver — “where do you eat?” beats any ranking. This is the same eat-and-sleep-like-a-local thinking in our cornerstone budget travel playbook.

Use reviews wisely

Review apps help if you read them right. Don’t just trust a high star rating — check whether reviews are from locals or only tourists, and read recent ones. A place with a slightly lower score but glowing local reviews often beats the five-star spot every visitor is funnelled to. Better still, look at where the reviews mention specific dishes rather than “great atmosphere.”

Embrace street food and markets

Some of the best, cheapest, most authentic food anywhere is at markets and street stalls. The safety trick is simple: go where there’s a queue and high turnover, so the food is fresh and the crowd vouches for it. Eating this way is also lighter on the wallet, which leaves more for the rest of the trip — the same reason packing light with a carry-on and snagging cheaper flights stretches your budget further.

FAQ

How do I avoid tourist-trap restaurants?

Walk a few streets away from the main attractions, avoid places with photo menus and hosts waving you in, and choose spots busy with locals. Asking a local where they eat is the single best shortcut.

Is street food safe to eat while travelling?

Often it’s among the freshest food around. Favour busy stalls with high turnover and a local queue, where food is cooked to order — that crowd is doing your quality control for you.

Can I trust restaurant review apps?

Use them carefully. Read recent reviews, check whether they’re from locals or only tourists, and trust ones that mention specific dishes. A slightly lower-rated local favourite often beats the tourist-magnet five-star spot.

Eating well is one of the best parts of cheap, smart travel. Start with our cornerstone budget travel playbook, find underrated cities worth the trip, or browse more Travel guides.

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