La Cabrera is legendary in Buenos Aires and its Asunción outpost delivers the same experience: premium cuts, theatrical service, and the iconic complimentary side dishes that arrive with each main. The cuts are generously sized, the wine list is strong on Argentine Malbec, and the room has an energy that suits both celebration and deal-making. Book a full evening — this is not a quick dinner.
Brazilian-style churrascaria with tableside meat service — gauchos circulate with skewers of perfectly grilled meats until you signal stop. Great for groups, high energy, and reliably excellent. The picanha is exceptional.
A Paraguayan institution. No-pretense dining with outstanding local cuisine: sopa paraguaya (the iconic cornbread), chipa guazú, and grilled meats done the way they've always been done. The kind of place that locals take guests when they want to show off what the country actually tastes like.
On the increasingly vibrant Senador Long strip, Carmelitas is the place for sophisticated cocktails in a relaxed, beautifully designed space. Equal parts bar and kitchen — the food is genuinely good alongside the drinks. Excellent for post-dinner drinks or a lighter evening meal with cocktail focus.
Mercado Cuatro (Market 4) is one of the largest and most authentic markets in South America — a sprawling, chaotic, wonderful labyrinth of stalls selling everything from medicinal herbs and tropical fruits to electronics and textiles. It is not a tourist market; it is where Asunción actually shops. The food stalls in the interior serve some of the best and cheapest local food in the city. This is a daytime-only visit and the experience is as much cultural as culinary.
The most refined expression of Paraguayan cuisine in the city. Chef-driven menu that reworks local ingredients — heart of palm, yuyo herbs, Pantanal fish — through a modern lens. Excellent wine program. The destination restaurant for a serious dinner.
A Asunción classic on the waterfront paseo. Beautiful terrace, classic menu of grills and pastas, and a relaxed atmosphere that has attracted every important visitor to the city for decades. The bar is excellent at sunset.
Outstanding handmade pasta and traditional Italian cooking from a family that has been perfecting it for generations. A quieter option when partners want a relaxed meal without a production. The carbonara and fresh gnocchi are exceptional.
A casual, lively spot for groups who want excellent local craft beers alongside quality bar food. Good for a midday break or early evening. The beer selection covers the best Paraguayan microbreweries alongside regional South American options.
Walk the old city: Palacio de los López (presidential palace, best seen from outside), Plaza de los Héroes, and the 19th-century cathedral. The architecture is a layered colonial European/Guaraní hybrid. A 90-minute self-guided walk reveals more character than any other neighborhood. Go in the late afternoon for the best light and temperature.
The botanical garden is one of the great green spaces in South America and genuinely beautiful — not a tourist trap but a real working garden with subtropical forest, lakes, and well-maintained grounds. The former presidential estate on the grounds is historically interesting. Good for a morning walk before meetings or events.
Asunción's best shopping center with local and international brands. Also a good air-conditioned refuge in the afternoon heat. The Paseo on Avenida Santa Teresa has boutiques worth browsing. For serious shoppers, the handcraft shops near the Museo del Barro carry excellent indigenous art and leatherwork.
The finest collection of Paraguayan indigenous and folk art in existence. Extraordinary ceramics, textiles, and contemporary art — all in the context of a country whose artistic traditions are deeply rooted in Guaraní culture. Not large, but worth two hours for anyone genuinely curious about Paraguay.
The Bahía de Asunción waterfront has been revitalized in recent years. An evening walk along the rambla is pleasant, and several operators offer sunset boat tours on the Paraguay River — a genuinely beautiful way to see the city from the water and understand its geography.
The city's most vibrant contemporary neighborhood. Excellent coffee shops (Café Antik is a standout), boutiques, and the concentration of the city's best bars including Carmelitas. Worth an afternoon wander — it gives a sense of where the creative class of Asunción actually lives.
The "Golden Circuit" takes partners through the lake district east of Asunción. Areguá is a colonial lakeside town famous for strawberries and ceramics; San Bernardino is a German-founded resort town on Lago Ypacaraí with sailing, restaurants, and a different atmosphere entirely. The circuit can be done in a long day with the right guide and car. Ideal if partners have a free day and want to see countryside.
Paraguay's UNESCO World Heritage Site: the ruins of 17th-century Jesuit missions in the southern Misiones region. Trinidad is the most complete and most dramatic — a 100-hectare complex of churches, residences, and schools carved from red sandstone. A genuinely extraordinary site that few visitors to South America ever see. Worth the drive for partners with historical or architectural curiosity.
The former capital of Paraguay and home to the national football federation. A quieter historic town with colonial architecture, gold filigree workshops (ñandutí lace), and the feel of a city that time has been kind to. Easy half-day with a driver.