
Cypriot Food: What to Eat and What It Costs
Cypriot food is built around meze — a long, shared spread of dips, grilled halloumi, sausages, and slow-cooked meat or fresh fish. A full meze dinner with wine runs €18–28 ($20–30) per person; a souvlaki wrap for a quick lunch is €4–6 ($4–7). Don't miss halloumi grilled straight off the coals, kleftiko (slow-roasted lamb), and Commandaria dessert wine — one of the oldest named wines still made anywhere.
Cyprus gave the world halloumi — the squeaky, grillable cheese now sold in supermarkets from Sydney to Seattle — and that's really just the opening act. Here's what to actually order, what a real meal costs versus the tourist-menu markup, and how to eat well with dietary restrictions.
What is Cypriot meze, really?
Meze isn't a starter — it's the whole meal, ordered per person rather than per dish, and it arrives in waves: dips and salads first (hummus, tahini, tzatziki-style yogurt dips), then grilled halloumi and loukaniko (sausage), then the mains — usually a mix of grilled meats, kleftiko (lamb slow-roasted for hours until it falls off the bone), and often fresh fish if you're near the coast. Go hungry and don't rush it; a proper meze dinner is a two-hour event.
Must-try dishes
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| Halloumi (grilled) | Cyprus's iconic semi-hard cheese, grilled until browned and squeaky | €6–9 ($6.50–10) as a starter |
| Souvlaki / gyros | Grilled skewered meat or a wrapped gyros — the everyday lunch staple | €4–6 ($4–7) |
| Kleftiko | Lamb (sometimes goat), slow-roasted for hours in a sealed clay oven | €14–20 ($15–22) |
| Koupepia (dolmades) | Vine leaves stuffed with rice and minced meat | €6–9 ($6.50–10) |
| Loukoumades | Warm fried dough balls in honey syrup — the classic dessert | €4–7 ($4.50–7.50) |

Commandaria — a wine with a real history
A sweet dessert wine made in the Troodos foothills, Commandaria is documented as far back as the medieval Crusader period and is often cited as the oldest named wine still in continuous production anywhere in the world. Worth ordering with dessert, or picking up a bottle from one of the Troodos wine villages.
Street food and quick bites

Gyros and souvlaki wraps from a casual stand are the reliable, cheap lunch option in every town — fresh, fast, and rarely disappointing. Cyprus doesn't have the sprawling night-market street-food culture of, say, Thailand, but a good souvlaki stand is never far away in any town center.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian: easy — halloumi, grilled vegetables, and a full vegetarian meze are standard menu items almost everywhere. Vegan: ask specifically, since dishes often default to dairy (halloumi, yogurt-based dips) or honey; traditional bean and legume dishes (fasolada bean soup, black-eyed pea salad) are naturally vegan and worth requesting by name. Halal: more limited in the south than in Northern Cyprus, but larger towns (Larnaca, Limassol, Paphos) have halal-friendly options — worth checking ahead for specific restaurants rather than assuming.
What it costs, all in
| Meal type | Price per person |
|---|---|
| Souvlaki wrap or gyros | €4–6 ($4–7) |
| Casual taverna meal | €12–20 ($13–22) |
| Full meze dinner with wine | €18–28 ($20–30) |
| Fine-dining harbor-front restaurant | €35–55 ($38–60) |
Where to eat it
- A family-run taverna outside the main tourist strip — genuinely better food and noticeably lower prices than the harbor-front restaurants aimed squarely at cruise-ship crowds.
- Any Troodos mountain village (Omodos, Platres) for a slower, more traditional meze experience with local wine.
- Paphos or Larnaca harbor for the view — accept that you're paying a premium for the setting, and choose it accordingly rather than expecting the best food in town.












































