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Something happens to visitors somewhere around day three in Egypt.
The pace stops feeling foreign. You start greeting the man at the juice stand. You learn that the driver who asks about your family isn't making small talk, he genuinely wants to know. You stop checking your watch.
Most people eventually reach that day three. The ones who arrive prepared get there on day one.
That's really all this guide is. Not a warning list — Egypt doesn't need one — but the handful of things I'd tell a friend the week before their flight, so they spend their first morning at the Pyramids instead of working out how any of this fits together.
 

Give Yourself More Time Than You Think

 

If there's one thing first-timers get wrong, it's arithmetic.

Egypt looks compact on a map and isn't. Cairo alone holds around 20 million people, and the city rewards you for slowing down inside it. The Pyramids sit out at Giza. The Grand Egyptian Museum is its own long, glorious afternoon. Islamic Cairo — the mosques, the medieval gates, Khan el Khalili — deserves a full day and will quietly become your favourite part of the trip.
So the classic mistake is booking Cairo, Luxor, Aswan and the Red Sea into seven days. You'll see all four. You'll remember none of them.

Here's my rule, and it's held up over thousands of itineraries:

  • Seven days: two regions. Cairo plus a Nile cruise is the pairing everyone should do once.
  • Ten days: three. Add the Red Sea, or add Abu Simbel properly rather than as a dawn dash.
  • Two weeks: now you can wander. Siwa, the White Desert, Alexandria.
  • Fewer places, longer in each. That's the whole secret.

 

Come Between October and April

Egypt has a season, and it's generous.

1- October through April is the sweet spot — warm days, cool evenings, and temple stone that doesn't burn your hand. December and January are the busiest months, with the highest prices and the liveliest atmosphere. If you want the same weather with thinner crowds, aim for late October, November, or March.
2- Summer isn't off limits, but be honest about it. July and August in Luxor and Aswan run hot enough that sightseeing happens at dawn and after five, with a long lunch and a pool in between. Plenty of people love that rhythm. The Red Sea stays perfect year round, and city hotels drop their rates.
3- March and April occasionally bring the khamsin, a warm dusty wind off the Sahara. It passes in a day or two. Build a little flexibility into your flights and you'll never notice it.

 

Stay Close to What You Came For

Where you sleep shapes everything.
In Cairo, a hotel near Giza or in Zamalek costs more and gives you back your mornings. A cheaper room forty minutes out is not cheaper once you've paid for taxis and watched the traffic from the back seat. In Luxor, stay on the East Bank near the temples. On the Nile, the boat is your hotel and the view changes while you sleep.
Book early for November through March, especially in Upper Egypt and along the Red Sea. Those months fill.
 

Scuba diver exploring a vibrant coral reef surrounded by colorful tropical fish in the Red Sea, Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.
Scuba diver exploring a vibrant coral reef surrounded by colorful tropical fish in the Red Sea, Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.
What is the best month to visit Egypt?

October through April offers the most comfortable weather for sightseeing. December and January are peak season with the liveliest atmosphere, while late October, November and March give similar conditions with fewer crowds.
 

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Things to Know Before Traveling to Egypt

 

None of these are hard. They're just the local grammar, and knowing them makes people warm to you immediately.
Dress for the room you're in

At mosques and churches, cover shoulders, chest and knees. Women, bring a light scarf for your hair — mosques usually lend one, but the queue costs you twenty minutes inside. Men, nothing above the knee; a T shirt with a mid bicep sleeve is fine. Wear shoes that slip off, because they come off at the door.

Everywhere else, comfort wins. Linen, loose cotton, a hat, and shoes you can walk five miles in. At Red Sea resorts, wear whatever you'd wear anywhere.

 

Greetings are the good part

Salaam aleikum — peace be with you. The answer is waaleikum us salam. Learn those two and watch faces open.
Handshakes between people of the same gender are standard and often long. Between a man and a woman, the woman offers her hand first; if she doesn't, a nod of the head is the warm, correct response. And when someone asks about your health and your family, they aren't filling silence. Ask back.

 

Tipping is how the country says thank you

Baksheesh isn't a hustle. It's a genuine part of how service work is paid, and it moves in both directions — Egyptians tip each other constantly.
Set aside roughly five to fifteen percent of your trip budget for it, and then forget about it. The practical trick is small notes. Break your large bills at the hotel every morning and you'll never have that awkward moment where the only thing in your wallet is a 200.

The right way to say no

Vendors at the big sites are persistent, and they're also doing a job. A vague "maybe later" or an apologetic smile reads as keep going. A clear, friendly la, shukran — no, thank you — while you keep walking ends it cleanly and cheerfully on both sides.

That's it. No drama, no confrontation.

 

The Practical List

These are the small egypt travel tips that quietly remove all the friction.

  • Sort your visa online. Egypt's official e-Visa portal takes ten minutes and saves you the arrivals queue.
  • Check health guidance early. The CDC's Egypt page covers routine vaccinations well ahead of departure.
  • Carry cash in small denominations, with a card as backup. Pay in Egyptian pounds rather than your home currency — you'll get the better rate every time.
  • Drink bottled water, check the seal, and drink far more of it than feels necessary.
  • Confirm monument hours at the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities before you set out. Some sites close early in summer.
  • Book transfers before you land. Prices agreed in advance, in pounds, no arithmetic at midnight.
  • Photograph your passport and keep the copy somewhere separate.
  • Learn five words of Arabic. It changes every interaction you'll have.
     
Travel essentials including a passport, boarding passes, airplane model, alarm clock, and a notebook labeled 'Travel Tips' on a wooden table.
Travel essentials including a passport, boarding passes, airplane model, alarm clock, and a notebook labeled 'Travel Tips' on a wooden table.
What should I wear in Egypt?

Cover shoulders, chest and knees at mosques and churches, and carry a light scarf if you have long hair. Elsewhere, loose cotton or linen, a hat and comfortable walking shoes work best. Red Sea resorts have no dress restrictions.
 

What Actually Makes the Difference

 

Look back at that list. Almost every item is logistics — permits, hours, transfers, agreed prices, sensible pacing.
None of it is difficult. It's just a lot of small things, in a country whose systems don't work quite the way yours do, while you're jetlagged and trying to look at a 4,500 year old pyramid.
That's the real argument for travelling with a licensed operator. Not because Egypt is hard, but because someone else should be holding the paperwork while you're standing in front of Karnak with your head tipped back. The guide is licensed. The driver is waiting. The boat is booked. The days are paced by someone who knows exactly how long the road to Saqqara takes.
You get to be a traveller. That's the most useful egypt travel advice anyone can give you.

Come and see it. Tell us your dates and what you're dreaming about, and one of our Egypt specialists will build you a tailored itinerary within 24 hours. Honest pacing, real prices, no surprises. The form is just below.
 

Tourist making a heart shape with her hands while admiring the Abu Simbel Temples in Aswan, Egypt.
Tourist making a heart shape with her hands while admiring the Abu Simbel Temples in Aswan, Egypt.
Is Egypt good for first time visitors?

Yes. Egypt is one of the world's most rewarding first time destinations, with world class monuments, warm hospitality and excellent tourism infrastructure. Most visitors find it easiest with a licensed operator handling transfers, guides and pacing.
 

How many days do you need in Egypt?

Allow seven days for two regions, such as Cairo and a Nile cruise, or ten days for three. Two weeks lets you add Siwa, Alexandria or the White Desert without rushing.
 

Do I need a visa to visit Egypt?

Most nationalities need a visa. Applying through Egypt's official e-Visa portal before you travel takes about ten minutes and saves you queueing on arrival.
 

What is the best itinerary for a first trip to Egypt?

Cairo and a Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan is the classic seven day pairing. It covers the Pyramids, the Grand Egyptian Museum, Karnak, the Valley of the Kings and Philae without a rushed schedule.
 

Where should I stay in Cairo?

Staying near Giza or in Zamalek costs more but saves significant time in traffic. A cheaper hotel further out often ends up costing the same once you add taxi fares and lost sightseeing hours.
 

What mistakes do first time visitors make in Egypt?

The most common are packing too many destinations into too few days, underestimating Cairo traffic, visiting in peak summer, forgetting small banknotes for tipping, and booking a hotel far from the sites they came to see.
 

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