GuideUpdated July 15, 2026

10 Best Indian Restaurants in Winnipeg

The 10 best indian restaurants in Winnipeg, sorted by rating and curated by TastyPals editors.

The best indian restaurants in Winnipeg are Copper Chimney, Sigri Indian Bistro, Chilli Chutney Street Kitchen, and more. Start with Copper Chimney if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By Marcus Chen9 ranked picksPublished July 15, 2026Updated July 15, 2026
10 Best Indian Restaurants in Winnipeg
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Top picks at a glance

How the restaurants compare

How we chose

We looked for restaurants that feel like a strong fit for the guide topic, not just the most obvious names in the city. The shortlist favors rooms with clear mood, dependable pacing, and enough distinction to help someone decide faster. Read our full methodology →

Room tone

Lighting, pace, and general energy all need to support the reason someone clicked this guide.

Food fit

We favored restaurants that feel best suited for the moment, not just restaurants with broad reputation.

Useful range

The final list tries to give readers enough variation in neighborhood, price, and style to compare real options.

9 ranked picks

Sigri Indian BistroSigri Indian Bistro occupies a strip-mall address in Winnipeg's northwest that signals nothing from the outside — which makes the interior genuinely surprising. The bar area, by all accounts, is the room's quiet argument: warm lighting, a polished finish, the kind of atmosphere that makes an ordinary Tuesday feel like it was planned. Valet parking is offered, which tells you something about the ambition here — someone thought about the full arc of your evening, not just the menu. Sigri has built a reputation as the date-night room in this part of the city, the place that delivers the feeling of occasion dining without the stiffness that usually comes with it. The kitchen's identity is clearest in its tandoor work. The Alishan Tikka — a chef's special — arrives on a sizzling plate with melted cheese, and diners consistently describe it as the dish that earns the most table conversation. The Makhmali Fish Tikka is the one to watch: grilled fish that regulars report as notably delicate, the kind of result that comes from careful timing rather than shortcuts. Butter Chicken here has developed something close to a following — it's reportedly the version people reference when measuring every other butter chicken they encounter in this city. The Chilli Potato rounds out the picture as a sleeper on the menu: crispy-edged and genuinely spicy, the sort of thing ordered as an afterthought that apparently never stays that way. The Sigri Murg Curry rounds out the kitchen's confidence in slow-cooked, layered preparations. Sigri is open daily from 11am to 11pm, which makes a long Sunday lunch genuinely possible — rare in this part of the city. On weekends, the room reportedly finds its rhythm early; arriving by 7pm puts you ahead of the pace rather than behind it. Ask to be seated toward the bar side — by all accounts, the light holds better there. View restaurant →
Chilli Chutney Street KitchenLet's sort the geography first: Chilli Chutney Street Kitchen occupies a 6,200-square-foot former Swiss Chalet on Kenaston Boulevard in River Heights — a scale that signals genuine ambition. Chef-owner Laxman Negi, who launched the original location in Brandon back in 2005, brought Winnipeg manager Sarvesh Sahni on board for this expansion, and the two culinary classmates from New Delhi have built a room that seats 150 indoors, runs a 22-seat private dining room, and makes its paneer, naans, and chutneys from scratch daily. The menu pulls across regions — North Indian comfort, South Indian precision, and a Hakka-inflected Indo-Chinese section that signals Negi has no interest in cooking to a single audience. For a price-level-one kitchen, the stated scope is remarkable. The dishes the restaurant is known for reflect that range. The Palak Patte Ki Papdi Chaat is built around textural contrast — crisp spinach leaves and layered chutneys — and diners consistently point to it as a kitchen that respects the structure of the dish rather than letting it collapse. The Mysore Masala Dosa is made to order and reportedly carries the fermented-batter character that separates a properly managed griddle from a shortcut. Butter Chicken draws steady praise from regulars, and the Chickpea Masala is described as spice-forward rather than sweetness-leaning. Deep-Fried Paneer rounds out the menu as a crowd-pleaser that the kitchen makes in-house. Practical notes: the weekday buffet is the clearest way to sample the full breadth of what this kitchen produces in a single sitting. For à la carte ordering, the chaat logically leads into the dosa. The outdoor patio holds 30 and books quickly on warm evenings, and the private dining room for 22 is worth calling ahead to secure if you're arriving as a group. View restaurant →

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Shahi FlamesShahi Flames operates at price level one, and its reputation in Winnipeg's South Asian dining scene rests on a straightforward premise: skip the theater, get the spicing right, feed people well. Diners and regulars consistently point to this as the kind of Indian kitchen that doesn't dilute flavors for an assumed crowd — the cooking is reportedly confident and unapologetic. It's the place for the student on a tight budget who still deserves real butter chicken, the family filling a booth on a weeknight, and anyone who wants tandoori naan with absolutely no pretense attached. Winnipeg's South Asian restaurant landscape has been quietly expanding; Shahi Flames holds an honest, accessible corner of it. The menu centers on exactly what you'd want it to. The Samosa is a standard-bearer here — the version Shahi Flames is known for has a properly spiced pea-and-potato filling built for dunking. Paneer Tikka is reportedly produced in a tandoor rather than a skillet, which distinguishes it from lesser versions; diners note the char and structure the cheese retains under real high heat. Butter chicken skews rich and slightly sweet, the tomato-cream sauce described by regulars as deeply layered rather than thin. The Lamb Biryani is widely flagged as the order that separates first-timers from the people who know what this kitchen can do — whole spices, fragrant layered rice, and meat that reportedly reaches pull-tender with patience. Tandoori Naan rounds everything out, and the general consensus is that portions at this price point are genuinely generous. Practical notes worth heeding: the recommended move is Lamb Biryani and Paneer Tikka together, paired with Tandoori Naan rather than additional rice. Weekend evenings draw a crowd, so arriving early improves your odds of a table without a wait. A call ahead is reportedly useful. View restaurant →
Cilantro's Restaurant - Gateway RdCilantro's on Gateway Road is doing something quietly radical in Winnipeg's Indian restaurant landscape: making the cuisine accessible without diluting it. The kitchen is anchored by co-founder Kapil Gusain, who brings culinary and hospitality management training along with time at the Sheraton Group into what is otherwise a tight, family-run operation. At price level one, the value proposition is serious — the kind that builds fierce regulars and weekend lineups that do the advertising for you. This is a neighbourhood room that has, by all accounts, thought hard about what it wants to be. The menu centers on two pillars: the Butter Chicken and the Lamb Rogan Josh. The Butter Chicken is widely regarded as the anchor dish — a tomato-cream preparation that diners consistently describe as velvety and balanced, spiced with presence rather than timidity. The Rogan Josh is positioned as the bolder counterpoint, a slow-braised lamb preparation known for deeper, more assertive heat and the kind of long-cooked tenderness the dish has historically demanded. Samosas — offered in both veggie and chicken versions — are a recurring mention across guest feedback, reportedly arriving with a properly crisp shell. Where Cilantro's separates itself most clearly from the standard playbook is the fusion side of the menu: the Currito, an Indian curry burrito, and the Indian Poutine, which layers Indian-spiced gravies over fries. These read as genuine expressions of a kitchen trained across culinary traditions, not afterthoughts. The practical move is to anchor your order around the Butter Chicken or the Rogan Josh, then add the Indian Poutine as a shared table dish — it's reportedly the one that generates the most conversation and signals you've actually read the menu. Vegan and gluten-free options are available; ask your server to walk you through them specifically. On weekends, come early — the room is cozy and staff attentiveness scales better before the full rush. Call ahead. View restaurant →
Spice Circle East Indian RestaurantSpice Circle operates out of two Winnipeg locations — Osborne Village and Portage Ave — and while neither technically sits in the Downtown core, the kitchen has built exactly the kind of halal Indian restaurant the city has needed: one where generous portions aren't shorthand for cutting corners, and where the menu is legible enough that a first-timer and a regular can share a table and both feel like they ordered correctly. The Portage Ave location runs a full bar, cocktails and beer and wine included, which changes the shape of a longer dinner considerably. The Osborne spot reads as more neighborhood, more drop-in. Both locations have developed a consistent following since opening in December 2019. The menu centers on a handful of dishes that diners return to deliberately. Butter Chicken is the anchor — reportedly the benchmark order, and the kind of preparation that regulars point to when recommending the restaurant to someone new. Butter Paneer is known for drawing its own loyal crowd, with the sauce described across reviews as rich without tipping into heavy, and the spicing reading as intentional rather than broadly softened. Biryani is the kitchen's signature flex: diners consistently describe it as fragrant and layered, the kind of dish that signals real technique rather than pantry efficiency. The Garlic Naan has developed specific word-of-mouth in Winnipeg — reportedly pillowy with the right degree of char, and a frequent mention in reviews alongside the biryani. The Manchurian rounds out the menu with an Indo-Chinese register that regulars appear to return to specifically. Portions run generous, which means a table of two can cover real ground without over-ordering. The practical path through the menu: anchor with the Biryani and Garlic Naan, choose between Butter Chicken and Butter Paneer based on protein preference, and add the Manchurian if that direction interests you. Price level sits at the accessible end — this is weeknight food with weekend ambition. View restaurant →
Punjabi TastePunjabi Taste, anchored at 33 University Crescent in Winnipeg, positions itself as a straightforward champion of North Indian cooking with a specifically Punjabi identity — not pan-Indian fusion, not a buffet-first operation, but a kitchen organized around the tandoor and the masala that define one of the subcontinent's most influential regional traditions. The late hours are a genuine differentiator in a city where Indian food past 10 p.m. can feel like a puzzle: this is the spot the post-shift crowd and the late-night craving crowd have figured out. The interior leans into Punjabi cultural markers rather than generic subcontinental décor, and the room's comfort-over-spectacle approach matches a menu built for return visits rather than occasion dining. The dishes diners return to consistently are the Chicken Tikka and the Tandoori Fish — both products of what the kitchen is clearly organized around: marination and the tandoor. Chicken Tikka in the Punjabi tradition means chicken that has spent serious time in spiced yogurt before it ever sees the oven, and this kitchen's version draws repeated praise for its depth of spice. The Butter Chicken, the curry that Punjabi cooking gave the world, is described by diners as creamy and genuinely flavorful rather than sweet-forward — a meaningful distinction. The Parantha combo, served with yogurt and pickle, represents the everyday heart of Punjabi home cooking and the fact that it lands on a restaurant menu here with care is worth noting. Portions read as generous across the board, making the value proposition particularly strong for groups or anyone eating to share. The practical move: arrive knowing that the kitchen's tandoor work — the Chicken Tikka and Tandoori Fish — is where this restaurant separates itself from the broader Winnipeg Indian dining landscape. Server Parabjot Kaur has been specifically named by diners as someone who knows the menu and makes the experience feel personal rather than transactional, so lean on the floor staff for guidance if you're building an order for the table. For late-night visits, come with a clear order in mind — the kitchen is built for it, but a decisive table gets the best of the experience. View restaurant →

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Save these spots to your Winnipeg list

Save these spots to your Winnipeg list in the TastyPals app, then explore similar restaurants when you want a tighter shortlist for the night.

Personalized city picksCleaner shortlistsBuilt for iPhone and Android
TastyPalsTonight
Your taste. Our picks.
Smarter follow-through after the guide: better restaurant context, quicker narrowing, less second-guessing.
For tonight
Date night spots with warm rooms and polished service
Next step
Keep exploring in the app when you want a tighter shortlist