Best Ćevapi in Sarajevo: Where Locals Actually Eat (2026)
Sarajevo ćevapi are smaller, hand-rolled, and served in fluffy somun bread — different from the larger machine-formed versions you'll find elsewhere in the Balkans. The three most famous ćevabdžinicas in Baščaršija are Željo (the biggest name, longest queue), Petica Ferhatović (the local favourite for many), and Hodžić (fastest service, three-time Golden Dining Crown winner). A plate of 10 ćevapi with somun, onion, and optional kajmak costs €5–7. Order 'desetku' (a ten-piece portion) and eat at lunch — this is daytime food. The debate over which is best is genuinely serious in Sarajevo and has no correct answer.
The ćevapi debate in Sarajevo is not casual. Families have allegiances. Friendships have been tested. The question “Željo ili Petica?” (Željo or Petica?) is asked with the same weight as football rivalries in other countries. This is the most important food in Bosnia, the most important place in Bosnia to eat it, and the most important decision you’ll make at lunch.
Here’s what you need to know.
What makes Sarajevo ćevapi different
Ćevapi exist across the Balkans — Serbia, Croatia, North Macedonia — but the Sarajevo version is its own thing:
- Size: smaller and thinner than Serbian ćevapi. Hand-rolled, not machine-formed.
- Meat: traditionally 100% beef (no pork, no lamb mix). The meat is minced, seasoned simply (salt, pepper, sometimes garlic), shaped by hand, and grilled over charcoal.
- Bread: served in somun — a round, flat, slightly chewy bread baked in a wood-fired oven. The somun is split and the ćevapi are placed inside.
- Accompaniments: raw white onion (finely diced), and optionally kajmak — a soft, creamy dairy spread made from slow-cooked milk. Kajmak is not sour cream, not butter, not cheese — it’s its own thing and it’s essential.
- Portions: ordered by number. Desetka (10 pieces) is standard. Petka (5) is for light eaters. Pola (half portion, 5) if you’re not sure.
The result is a dish that’s simple, elemental, and almost impossible to improve on. Meat, bread, onion, fire. Everything else is ego.
The famous three
Ćevabdžinica Željo
The most famous name in Sarajevo ćevapi. There are two Željo locations on the same block in Baščaršija — both run by the same family, both serving the same ćevapi.
- Location: Baščaršija, on Bravadžiluk street (two shops, side by side)
- The queue: expect 10–20 minutes at lunchtime in peak season
- The ćevapi: classic Sarajevo style — small, juicy, charcoal-grilled, served in fresh somun
- Price: ~€5–7 for a desetka (10 pieces) with somun and onion
- Kajmak: available on request (small extra charge)
- The atmosphere: no-frills, shared tables, fast turnover. You’re here for the ćevapi, not the ambiance.
Željo is the safe choice. The ćevapi are consistently good, the name is the most recognised, and the queue is part of the experience. Tourists gravitate here. Locals do too — but locals also have opinions.
Petica Ferhatović
Petica (also called Petica Ferhatović) is the ćevabdžinica that many Sarajevans quietly consider the best. Less famous internationally than Željo, but equally revered locally.
- Location: Baščaršija, on Bravadžiluk street — close to Željo
- The queue: shorter than Željo on most days
- The ćevapi: slightly more coarsely ground than Željo, with a more pronounced char. Some locals find these juicier and more flavourful.
- Price: ~€5–7 for a desetka
- The difference: Petica has a slightly rougher, more rustic vibe. The somun is often praised as fresher. The kajmak is excellent.
Petica is the local’s choice — the one Sarajevans recommend when they know you’re serious about ćevapi.
Ćevabdžinica Hodžić
Hodžić sits on the main Baščaršija square (Pigeon Square) — the most visible location of the three.
- Location: directly on Baščaršija square, near the Sebilj fountain
- The queue: often the shortest of the three famous places
- The ćevapi: reliable, consistent, fast service. Three-time winner of the Golden Dining Crown, a Sarajevo food award.
- Price: ~€5–7 for a desetka
- The difference: fastest service, most tourist-friendly location, and the only one of the big three where you can sit with a view of the square.
Hodžić is the convenience choice — great ćevapi, best location, least wait.
How to order
- Walk in and sit down (or join the queue if there is one)
- Say “desetku, molim” (a ten-piece, please) — pronounced “DEH-set-koo, MOH-leem”
- Add “sa kajmakom” (with kajmak) if you want it — pronounced “sa KAI-mah-kom”
- Drink: order a Sarajevsko pivo (local beer, €2) or a yogurt drink (traditionally the correct pairing, ask for “jogurt”)
- Eat: pick up the somun, squeeze the ćevapi inside, add onion, bite. No cutlery needed (though it’s available).
Cash only at most ćevabdžinicas. Have KM ready — a desetka with a drink is 12–18 KM.
Beyond the big three
The famous three are famous for a reason, but Sarajevo has dozens of ćevabdžinicas outside Baščaršija that locals rate just as highly:
- Ćevabdžinica Mrkva — rated 4.1 on TripAdvisor, slightly off the main tourist path, consistently praised for juicy ćevapi
- Ćevabdžinica Zmaj od Bosne — on Zmaj od Bosne street in the newer part of the city, where locals eat when they’re not performing for tourists
- Neighbourhood ćevabdžinicas in Marijin Dvor, Ilidža, and Grbavica — every neighbourhood has one, and locals will tell you theirs is the best
The honest truth: the quality difference between the top ćevabdžinicas is marginal. The debate is real but the gap is small. You will eat excellent ćevapi at any of them.
When to eat ćevapi
Lunch. This is daytime food — most ćevabdžinicas open at 8–9 am and close by early evening (6–8 pm). The lunchtime peak is 12:00–14:00. Some places close when they run out of meat for the day.
Breakfast ćevapi are a Sarajevo tradition — some places open at 7 am and the early-morning ćevapi crowd is real. If you want to eat like a local, a 10-piece plate at 8 am with yogurt is the move.
Dinner: not traditional for ćevapi. The ćevabdžinicas may be closed by then. For dinner, try a sit-down restaurant with begova čorba, japrak, or grilled meat.
Frequently asked questions
What are ćevapi? Small hand-rolled grilled beef sausages served in flatbread (somun) with raw onion and optionally kajmak (a soft dairy spread). The staple food of Sarajevo and all of Bosnia.
How much do ćevapi cost in Sarajevo? €5–7 for a standard 10-piece portion (desetka) with somun and onion. One of the best meals in Europe for the price.
Which ćevapi place is best in Sarajevo? Željo is the most famous. Petica is the local favourite for many. Hodžić has the best location. All three serve excellent ćevapi — the difference is marginal and the debate is the point.
Are Sarajevo ćevapi halal? Yes — Sarajevo ćevapi are traditionally 100% beef with no pork.
Do I need to queue? At Željo, expect 10–20 minutes at lunchtime in season. Petica and Hodžić have shorter queues. Going at 11:30 (before the rush) or 14:30 (after it) avoids the worst.
Can I eat ćevapi with a fork? You can, but the local way is to pick up the somun bread with the ćevapi inside and eat it with your hands. Both are acceptable.
More Sarajevo food and planning
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