Pasta salad gets a lot more interesting when the dressing is cold, garlicky tzatziki instead of the usual mayo-heavy coating. This version lands with a creamy tang, a crisp bite from cucumber, and enough dill and lemon to keep every forkful tasting bright instead of heavy. It holds up well on a buffet, but it still feels fresh enough to want for lunch the next day.
The key is treating the cucumber like part of the dressing, not just a mix-in. Half gets grated and squeezed dry so the yogurt base stays thick and the salad doesn’t puddle at the bottom of the bowl, while the rest stays diced for crunch. Rinsing the pasta under cold water also matters here because you want the noodles fully cooled before they meet the tzatziki.
Below, I’ve included the small details that keep the dressing creamy, the pasta from clumping, and the herbs tasting clean after chilling. If you’ve ever had a pasta salad go watery or flat after an hour in the fridge, this is the version that fixes both problems.
The dressing stayed creamy after chilling, and the grated cucumber gave it that tzatziki texture without making the pasta salad watery. I brought it to a cookout and the bowl was scraped clean.
Save this Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad for a creamy, chilled side dish with cucumber crunch and plenty of dill.
The Trick Is Keeping the Tzatziki Thick Enough to Coat the Pasta
Greek yogurt gives this salad its tang and body, but it only works if the cucumber doesn’t water it down. Grating half the cucumber and squeezing it dry is the part that keeps the dressing clingy instead of thin. If you skip that step, the yogurt loosens as it chills and the pasta ends up sitting in a milky pool instead of carrying a coating.
Cold pasta matters just as much. Warm noodles soak up dressing unevenly and can mute the lemon and dill before the salad even hits the table. Rinsing under cold water stops the cooking fast, cools the pasta enough to mix cleanly, and helps the texture stay firm after chilling.
What the Yogurt, Sour Cream, and Cucumber Are Each Doing Here

- Greek yogurt — This is the backbone of the tzatziki flavor. Use full-fat if you want the richest texture, but any plain Greek yogurt works as long as it’s thick. Regular yogurt will taste fine, but it’s looser and more likely to turn watery after chilling.
- Sour cream — This softens the tang of the yogurt and gives the dressing a rounder, silkier finish. If you want a lighter result, you can swap in more yogurt, but the dressing will taste sharper and a little less creamy.
- Cucumber — Half gets grated for the dressing and half stays diced for crunch. That split is what makes the salad taste like tzatziki instead of just pasta with cucumber in it. If your cucumber has big seeds, scoop some out before dicing so it doesn’t shed extra moisture later.
- Fresh dill — Dried dill won’t give you the same clean, green finish. Fresh dill stays bright in the fridge and carries the whole Greek-style flavor, especially after the salad has rested for an hour.
- Feta and olives — These are the salty anchors. Feta brings creaminess and brine, while Kalamata olives add a deeper, fruitier bite. If you’re using a saltier feta, season the dressing lightly at first and adjust after everything is mixed.
Building the Salad So It Stays Creamy After Chilling
Cook and Cool the Pasta Completely
Boil the pasta until it’s just tender, then drain it and rinse it under cold water until it feels fully cool. You’re not just stopping the cooking; you’re preventing the dressing from thinning out the second it hits the bowl. Shake off as much water as you can, because extra water on the noodles is the fastest way to dilute the tzatziki.
Mix the Dressing Before the Pasta Goes In
Stir the grated cucumber, Greek yogurt, sour cream, garlic, lemon juice, dill, salt, and pepper together in a large bowl until the mixture looks smooth and thick. Give it a taste before adding the pasta so you can correct the salt and lemon while the dressing is still easy to adjust. If the garlic tastes harsh, let the dressing sit for five minutes; it mellows a little once it starts to hydrate.
Fold Everything Together Gently
Add the cooled pasta, diced cucumber, tomatoes, red onion, and olives, then toss until every piece is coated. Fold in the feta last so it stays in soft crumbles instead of disappearing into the dressing. Chill the salad for at least an hour before serving; that resting time lets the pasta absorb flavor without turning mushy.
Make it dairy-free with a thick plant-based yogurt
Use a plain, unsweetened dairy-free Greek-style yogurt and replace the sour cream with a spoonful of dairy-free mayo or cashew cream. You’ll lose a little of the classic tang, so add lemon gradually and taste as you go until the dressing still reads bright.
Turn it into a gluten-free side without changing the flavor
Swap in your favorite gluten-free pasta, but cook it just to al dente and rinse it well so it doesn’t go soft in the fridge. Some gluten-free shapes absorb dressing faster than wheat pasta, so hold back a spoonful of the tzatziki and stir it in right before serving if the salad looks dry.
Make it more filling with chickpeas or chicken
A can of drained chickpeas turns this into a vegetarian main that still feels light, while chopped grilled chicken makes it lunch-box sturdy. Chickpeas soak up some of the dressing, so add them after the salad has chilled and adjust with a little extra yogurt or lemon if needed.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keeps for 3 to 4 days in a sealed container. The pasta will absorb some dressing as it sits, so the salad gets thicker by day two.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing it. The yogurt and cucumber separate when thawed, and the texture turns grainy and watery.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it tightens up in the fridge, stir in a spoonful of yogurt or a squeeze of lemon and let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before serving.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad
Ingredients
Method
- Cook the penne or rotini pasta according to package directions, then drain and rinse with cold water to stop cooking and keep it firm.
- Grate half the cucumber, then squeeze out excess moisture so the yogurt doesn’t get watery.
- Mix the grated cucumber with Greek yogurt, sour cream, minced garlic, lemon juice, chopped dill, salt, and pepper until smooth and creamy, with visible cucumber specks.
- Combine the pasta with the remaining diced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, red onion, and Kalamata olives in a large bowl.
- Add the tzatziki sauce and toss to coat the pasta evenly so it looks glossy and creamy.
- Gently fold in the crumbled feta cheese without breaking it up too much.
- Refrigerate the salad for at least 1 hour before serving so the flavors meld and the tzatziki thickens slightly.


