Most of the experimental tests of GR are in the weak field limit. These use the PPN formalism.
These include (http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2001-4/ )
Weak field:
1. The deflection of light which passes near the sun. (see Eddington in circa 1919)
2. The perihelion shift of the planets, especially, Mercury.
3. The time delay of light as it is sent to a planet or moon and returned to earth.
4. Gravitational redshift experiements. For example, The Pound and Rebka Experiment
http://world.std.com/~sweetser/quaternions/gravity/redshift/redshift.html
5. There is also Gravity Probe B which has measured the geodetic precession caused by the Earth to high precision-better than 1%. Results for the dragging of inertial frames(Lense-Thirring effect) of the Earth will be available sometime later this year, I think.
http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/gravity_probe_b_031231.html
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=104694
6. GPS would not be very accurate without GR corrections.
see here:
http://www.eftaylor.com/pub/projecta.pdf
Strong Field:
1. GR predicts that any relativistic system should radiate energy in the form of gravity waves-leading to the inspiral. Gravitational radiation is causing the binary pulsar PSR 1913+16 orbits to shrink at a rate of about 3.5 meters per year. The equation for energy loss due to gravitational waves gives an answer that matches observations of Hulse and Taylor, for which they received the Nobel Prize.
2. Gravitational waves are a prediction but not yet detected.
I guess it could be said that the solutions to Einstein equations also predict or atleast allow an expanding universe which is what is observed. Other theories of gravity might come close to describing SOME of these effects but not all of them and not to the same precision.