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New Indian Restaurants in Austin (June 2026)

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New Indian Restaurants in Austin (June 2026)

Austin's South Asian community has been growing fast — and thankfully, so has the dining scene that feeds it, literally and culturally. Whether you moved here last year or have been calling Austin home for a decade, finding a good plate of biryani or a proper Hyderabadi curry can feel like finding a piece of home. This roundup is for you: the people who know the difference between a dum biryani and a pulao, and who want to know exactly where to go on a Sunday afternoon.

TL;DR

  • 🍚 Hyderabadi cuisine is having a serious moment in Austin — multiple spots now specialize in it.
  • 🌙 Late-night Indian food is finally a thing: Tandoori Lounge stays open until 3 AM daily.
  • 🛵 Nadeems Hyderabadi Kitchen offers Sunday home deliveries and pickups — perfect for lazy weekends.
  • 🗺️ New openings are spreading across the city, from North MoPac to East 7th Street.
  • 📱 Always check each restaurant's website before heading out — hours vary widely.

Why This Moment Feels Different for Austin's Desi Community

For a long time, the Indian restaurant scene in Austin was concentrated around a handful of reliable stalwarts on North Lamar or Anderson Lane. Good places, sure — but not a lot of regional variety. What's changed recently is depth. You're now seeing restaurants that go beyond the standard North Indian buffet format and instead lean into specific regional identities: Chettinad, Hyderabadi, Punjabi, even Indo-Tex-Mex. That specificity matters to a community that grew up understanding that "Indian food" is not a monolith.

For South Asians living in Austin, this isn't just about eating out. It's about having spaces where your palate is understood, your language might be spoken, and the spice level is actually spicy.

Hyderabadi Spots Worth Knowing About

If you have any connection to Hyderabad — or simply love a well-made biryani — Austin is giving you more options than ever.

Nadeems Hyderabadi Kitchen operates a little differently from your typical brick-and-mortar. Orders are taken Monday through Saturday by 6 PM for Sunday pickups and home deliveries, and catering is available on all weekends. It's a model that works beautifully for the community — you plan ahead, you get fresh, home-style Hyderabadi cooking delivered to your door. Check out their story at nadeemshyderabadikitchen.com and reach them at 919-741-2284.

Shah Ghouse Biriyani brings a name that carries serious weight for anyone from Hyderabad. Located at 2280 N Lamar Blvd, this spot leans into the authentic Hyderabadi biryani experience. Browse their menu at shahghousebiryaniaustin.com before you go so you know exactly what you're ordering.

Hyderabad House Austin, up at 12625 North Interstate 35, is open seven days a week from 11:30 AM to 11:00 PM (with slightly extended hours on select days), making it a reliable option when you need that fix without much planning. Find details at indiagateaustin.com.

Regional Gems Going Beyond the Usual

One of the most exciting things about Austin's current Indian food scene is that regional cuisines are finally getting their due.

Sangam Chettinad Indian Cuisine at 6001 West Parmer Lane is the place to go if you want food rooted in Tamil Nadu's bold, peppery Chettinad tradition. This is not butter chicken territory. Think crab masala, kuzhambu gravies, and dishes built around fresh spices ground in-house. Call ahead at 512-770-1104 or visit sangamchettinad.com for more.

Godavari at 12233 FM 620 North brings South Indian comfort food to North Austin. Open Monday and Wednesday through Sunday from 8 AM to 9 PM (closed Tuesdays), it's a solid spot for idli, dosas, and fuller South Indian meals. You can reach them at 678-579-5985 or visit godavarius.com/austin.

Suprabhat at 108 West Parmer Lane also covers Indian cuisine with a focus that feels neighborhood-friendly and approachable. Their website at suprabhataustin.com has the latest details.

Late Nights, Long Hours, and When You Just Need It Now

One of the real gaps in Austin's Indian food scene has historically been late-night access. That's changing.

Tandoori Lounge at 3601 West William Cannon Drive is open Monday through Sunday from 11:30 AM all the way to 3:00 AM. Read that again: 3 AM. For anyone who's ever left a late gathering wishing they could get a proper plate of tikka or naan instead of fast food, this is the answer. Find them at tandooriloungetx.com or call 512-608-4013.

Zaviya Grill at 1212 West Parmer Lane covers Pakistani, Indian, and Punjabi cuisine and opens at 11 AM on Mondays (check their site for full weekly hours). It's the kind of place that scratches the desi comfort food itch — hearty, familiar, and generous with flavor. Visit zaviyagrill.com or call 512-284-8298.

Spreading Across the City: New Locations to Know

Austin's Indian restaurants are no longer clustered in just one or two corridors. Here's a quick map of where things are opening up.

Nala's is out west on Highway 290 — a convenient stop for residents in that part of the city. Find them at nalasusa.com or call 512-358-0909.

Jaipur Palace sits along South I-35 at 9900 South Interstate 35, bringing Indian cuisine to a part of town that has needed more options. Their website is jaipurpalaceatx.com and you can reach them at 512-599-4025.

Nasha on East 7th Street at 1614 East 7th is doing something genuinely interesting with an Indo-Tex-Mex approach — a fusion that actually makes sense in Austin. For a city that loves a mashup, this one feels organic rather than gimmicky. Visit downtown.nashaindia.com or call 512-350-2919.

Biryani Pot and What The Biryani are both accessible from the North MoPac area, with Biryani Pot at 12407 North MoPac Expressway (open weekdays 11 AM to 2:30 PM for lunch) serving as a solid weekday lunch destination for the tech corridor crowd.

Established Spots Still Holding It Down

Newcomers get the attention, but a few longtime anchors deserve a mention because they remain genuinely excellent and deeply woven into the community.

Star of India at 2900 West Anderson Lane has been a go-to for years and continues to serve a broad Indian menu six days a week. Saffron at 3616 Far West Boulevard keeps lunch hours running daily. Sangam Chettinad and Godavari have both built loyal regulars who return not just for the food but for the sense of familiarity.

These places have earned their place in Austin's Desi ecosystem, and they're worth supporting alongside anything new.

💡 Desi Insider Tip: If you're craving Hyderabadi biryani on a Sunday but don't want to leave the house, Nadeems Hyderabadi Kitchen's pre-order model is genuinely underrated. Place your order before Saturday evening, and you wake up Sunday knowing home delivery is coming. It's the closest thing to calling your mom and having food appear at your door.

FAQ

Q: Are there any new Indian restaurants open late in Austin? Tandoori Lounge on West William Cannon Drive is open until 3 AM every day of the week, making it the clear answer for late-night South Asian cravings in the city.

Q: Where can I find Hyderabadi food specifically in Austin? You have several options: Nadeems Hyderabadi Kitchen (delivery/pickup model), Shah Ghouse Biriyani on North Lamar, and Hyderabad House Austin on North I-35 are all dedicated to Hyderabadi cuisine.

Q: Is there South Indian food available in Austin beyond the usual spots? Yes — Sangam Chettinad Indian Cuisine on West Parmer Lane specializes in Chettinad cooking from Tamil Nadu, and Godavari on FM 620 North offers a South Indian menu including breakfast hours starting at 8 AM.

Q: Are any of these restaurants good for catering a Desi event? Nadeems Hyderabadi Kitchen explicitly offers catering on all weekends. For other spots, it's best to call ahead or check their websites directly.

Q: Which new Austin Indian restaurant is best for someone who doesn't live near North Lamar? It depends on your neighborhood. Nala's serves the west side on Highway 290, Jaipur Palace covers South Austin near I-35, Nasha is on the East Side, and Zaviya Grill and Suprabhat are both on West Parmer Lane for the north/northwest crowd.

The Bottom Line

Austin's Indian and South Asian restaurant scene in mid-2026 is the most geographically spread out, regionally diverse, and community-rooted it has ever been. From late-night Tandoori to Sunday delivery biryani to proper Chettinad cooking, there is genuinely something here for every corner of the diaspora — whether you grew up in Hyderabad, Chennai, Lahore, or Mumbai. The city is catching up to its South Asian population, and that's something worth celebrating one plate at a time.

Want to stay on top of new openings, community events, and Desi life in Austin? Explore more at Desi.Net — your local hub for everything South Asian in the ATX.

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