Restaurant in Сараево, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Arigato on Čobanija offers a non-Bosnian alternative in central Sarajevo, making it a low-effort discovery meal for visitors eating across the city over several days. No reservation appears necessary, and the central location keeps risk low. Go with flexible expectations: confirmed pricing and menu details are limited, but the walk-in format suits spontaneous visits well.
Arigato sits on Čobanija street in central Sarajevo and is worth considering if you are looking for a change of pace from the city's Bosnian grill and burek circuit. With limited public data on pricing, hours, and menu, the honest booking advice is to visit in person or ask your accommodation to confirm details before making a special trip. That said, its central address makes a spontaneous visit low-risk.
Sarajevo's dining scene skews heavily toward Balkan staples: ćevapi, burek, grilled meats, and slow-cooked stews. A venue trading under a Japanese-inflected name represents a noticeable departure from that norm. For the food-focused traveller, that positioning is either the reason to go or the reason to pause. Japanese cuisine technique, at its most disciplined, demands precise sourcing, knife work, and temperature control — standards that are harder to maintain in a landlocked city without direct access to high-grade seafood supply chains. Whether Arigato meets that bar is something the available data cannot confirm. If sourcing and technical precision matter to you, calibrate expectations accordingly and treat this as an exploratory meal rather than a destination booking.
What the address does confirm: Čobanija places Arigato within easy reach of the Baščaršija old town and the main pedestrian corridor, so it fits logically into a day of exploring central Sarajevo. For visitors already in the neighbourhood, the walk-in threshold is low. For those planning a meal as the centrepiece of an evening, the lack of confirmed booking infrastructure means you should arrive early or be prepared to flex.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. No reservation platform or phone number is publicly listed in our data, which points toward a walk-in-friendly operation. Arrive at the start of service to avoid a wait. Current hours are not confirmed, so check with your hotel concierge or look for posted hours on arrival. Dress expectations for a casual Sarajevo dining address in this category are relaxed — smart-casual is more than sufficient.
| Detail | Arigato | Buregdžinica Bosna | Garden Restaurant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine type | Not confirmed | Bosnian / Burek | Not confirmed |
| Price range | Not confirmed | Budget | Not confirmed |
| Booking difficulty | Easy / Walk-in | Easy / Walk-in | Easy |
| Location | Central Sarajevo | Central Sarajevo | Mokro |
| Awards | None confirmed | None confirmed | None confirmed |
Sarajevo's restaurant options are expanding beyond Bosnian classics, and a venue with a non-Balkan identity has a clear gap to fill for visitors eating in the city across multiple days. If Arigato delivers on its positioning, it serves a real purpose: a palate reset between ćevapi sessions. For context on the broader city dining picture, see our full Sarajevo restaurants guide. If you want to explore beyond food, our Sarajevo bars guide and experiences guide cover the rest of the city well.
For reference points further afield in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Buregdžinica Bosna in Sarajevo remains the local benchmark for Bosnian pastry, while Restaurant Goranci in Mostar and Kazamat in Banja Luka show how the country's dining range extends well beyond the capital. If you are curious how Sarajevo's options compare against globally benchmarked dining, Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent the kind of technical precision that sets a high-end cuisine benchmark. Arigato is not in that conversation based on available data, but knowing the range helps frame what a serious cuisine-focused booking looks like versus a casual neighbourhood meal.
For a wider view of what Sarajevo offers visitors, see our Sarajevo hotels guide and our Sarajevo wineries guide. Other Bosnia and Herzegovina restaurants worth knowing: Caffe Restaurant Soho in Istočno Sarajevo, Konoba Rogić in Trn, Nešković in Foča, Grill Kostro in Posušje, Zeks Doner in Konjic, and Coffee Zone in Tuzla round out the national picture for curious travellers moving through the region. Bistro Stari Grad in Metković and Garden Restaurant in Mokro are worth a look if your itinerary extends beyond Sarajevo itself.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arigato | Easy | — | |
| "Garden" Restaurant | Unknown | — | |
| Bistro Stari Grad | Unknown | — | |
| Buregdžinica Bosna | Unknown | — | |
| Buregdžinica ASDŽ | Unknown | — | |
| burgrs Sarajevo | Unknown | — |
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