Travel advice for Egypt
From travel safety to visa requirements, discover the best tips for visiting Egypt
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Inspired?The following itineraries range right across Egypt, taking in both classic attractions and little-visited sights, from temples to turtles. Don't worry if you can't complete the list – even a handful of places will give you a feel for the themes.
Created by local experts
If you are planning your travel to Egypt yourself, use these itineraries created by our travel writers as a starting point for inspiration.
Over 96 percent of Egypt's landmass is desert, from the arid peaks of Sinai and the Eastern Desert to the dunes and escarpments of the Western Desert, where most of Egypt's oases are located. A jeep-safari to all these sites lasts 11 to 18 days, but you could do most of the highlights in a week, using buses in conjunction with local safari outfits.
1. Siwa Oasis
Way out near Libya, Siwa has a unique character, romantic ruins, natural springs and other beauty spots.
2. Great Sand Sea
A 72,000-square-kilometre wilderness of dunes up to 100m high, stretching from Siwa to the Gilf Kebir. The Sand Sea can be entered from Siwa, or traversed on deep-desert safaris from Bahariya or Farafra Oasis.
3. El-Qaf
A 500,000-year-old stalactite cave, accessible by jeep from Bahariya or Farafra.
4. White Desert
This surreal landscape of chalk rock-formations within Farafra Oasis is actually best reached from Bahariya, visiting the Black Desert en route.
5. Al-Qasr
A labyrinthine medieval Islamic settlement in Dakhla Oasis, reached by off-road safari from Bahariya, or by bus along the road between these oases.
6. Gilf Kebir
This super-arid plateau at the remotest corner of Egypt is the site of extraordinary prehistoric rock art at the Cave of the Swimmers (featured in The English Patient) and other sites, accessible by long-range safari from Bahariya, Farafra and Dakhla.
Egypt's world-famous ancient tombs and temples range the length of the Nile Valley, from the Pyramids of Giza outside Cairo to Abu Simbel. It takes about ten days to explore them, using intercity trains, local taxis and minibuses.
1. Pyramids of Giza
These gargantuan Old Kingdom monuments were constructed as tombs for three IV Dynasty rulers, Egyptologists believe – but there are many alternative theories as to why (and how) they were built.
2. Abydos
One of the foremost healing centres of Ancient Egypt, dedicated to the god Osiris enshrined in the exquisitely carved mortuary-temple of Seti I.
3. Luxor
The ancient New Kingdom capital has more tombs and temples than anywhere else in Egypt, from the awesome complex at Karnak to the Theban Necropolis across the river, with its fabulous Valley of the Kings.
4. Edfu
Sacred to the falcon-headed sky-god Horus, Egypt's best-preserved cult-temple dates from the Greco-Roman era, but respects all the Ancient Egyptian traditions of temple architecture.
5. Philae
An exquisite island shrine to the goddess Isis, which was semi-submerged by the Nile before its reconstruction between the two Aswan Dams.
6. Abu Simbel
This great sun temple, with its colossi of Ramses II hewn from a hillside, was also saved from submersion by Lake Nasser.
Egypt is one of the world's major flyover zones for birdlife, and the Red Sea abounds in corals and other aquatic life. You could visit all of these sites in about two weeks using a combination of buses and liveaboard boats.
1. Lake Manzala
This Mediterranean wetland is a wintering ground for egrets, avocets, cormorants, plovers, lapwings, redshanks, terns and other bird species.
2. Ras Mohammed
A marine national park at the southern tip of Sinai, which sustains a thousand-odd species of fish, from the child-friendly Crevice Pools to offshore dive-sites.
3. Careless Reef
Two coral-encrusted pinnacles just below the sea's surface, whose depths harbour semi-tame moray eels (normally known for their ferocity).
4. The Brothers
These two isolated reef-pillars are magnets for pelagic fishes and the hunting grounds of hammerhead, tiger, reef and whale sharks.
5. Marsa Alam
The Red Sea's southernmost resort serves as a springboard to wildlife sites in the far south, from Wadi Gimal to Ras Banata.
6. Wadi Gimal
This national park is especially rewarding during the spring and autumn migrations, to observe ospreys, falcons and flamingos.
7. Ras Banata
One of the few undisturbed breeding colonies for sea turtles, accessible by dive-boat from eco-lodges 80km south of Wadi Gimal.
From travel safety to visa requirements, discover the best tips for visiting Egypt
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written by
Rough Guides Editors
updated 26.04.2021
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