8 Day
Everyday
Your Hotel
6 Attractions
Tour Description
8 days Cairo Nile cruise package we will pick you up from Cairo Airport to your hotel by air-conditioned deluxe vehicle. Overnight in Cairo. After your breakfast at your hotel, our archaeologist guide will accompany you to the Giza Plateau to visit, the Great Pyramids of Cheops, Chephren, and Mykerinus, the Sphinx, and the Valley Temple. Lunch in a local restaurant.
Included
- All transfers to/from the airport & hotel by a private air-conditioned vehicle
- flight ticket Cairo / Luxor and Aswan /Cairo
- 3 nights in Cairo
- 4 nights on Nile Cruise on full board
- speaking tour guide (all languages)
- Entrance fees to all sites mentioned in the
- Meals at the hotel, Nile cruise, and during your tours as mentioned in the itinerary
- Bottled water during the trip
- All service charges and taxes
Not Included
- International Airfare
- Entry visa to Egypt
- Any optional tours
- Personal spendings
- Tipping
Tour Itinerary
Day 1: Arrival to Cairo airport
Cairo airport
Upon your arrival at Cairo Airport, we will pick you up from Cairo Airport to your hotel by air-conditioned deluxe vehicle.
Overnight in Cairo.
Day 2: Pyramids and Cairo Sightseeing:
After your breakfast at your hotel, our Egyptologist guide will accompany you to the Giza Plateau to visit, the Great Pyramids of Cheops, Chephren, and Mykerinus, the Sphinx, and the Valley Temple.
The Great Pyramids of Giza and the Great Sphinx
The number one activity in Cairo is by far the Great Pyramids of Giza and the Great Sphinx. Dated almost 5000 years ago, these monuments and their great conservation state are one of the greatest things you can experience with your naked eye. Located in the Giza Complex on the west side of the Nile River banks, the Great Pyramids and the Great Sphinx are Cairo’s best-kept treasures.
It has many tombs. It consists of the great Giza Pyramids (Khufu, Khafre, and Mankaure), which are considered to be one of the seven wonders of the world, and the Khufu Pyramid is considered to be the grandest in the complex. This complex also contains the amazing Sphinx and the Valley Temple.
The Great Pyramid
It's an astonishing engineering accomplishment, as it's the greatest pyramid that has ever been built. It was built by King Khufu. It contains about 2300000 blocks. These white Tura limestone blocks give the pyramid a smooth surface.
The Great Sphinx
It is the oldest known monumental sculpture in the world, and tourists come from around the world to witness the beauty of its shape (as it is ahead of a man's head) and the body of a human, which has many spiritual and mythical meanings.
Lunch in one of the best restaurants in Cairo
After lunch, we will visit the Egyptian Museum and the Treasures of King Tutankhamun, then we will drive back to your hotel. Overnight in Cairo.
Cairo museum
Centrally located on the edge of Tahrir Square in Cairo, the Egyptian Museum is hard to miss on any tour of Cairo. Opening in 1902, it was purpose-built to house the antiquities of Ancient Egypt. Inside is the greatest collection of Ancient Egyptian archeological history in the world. The Egyptian Museum in Cairo houses over 120,000 artifacts, including the contents of Tutankhamun’s tomb
and most of the mummies that have been discovered since the 19th century. The museum’s exhibits span from the beginning of the Old Kingdom of Ancient Egypt (approximately 2700 BC) through the Greco-Roman period. The building consists of two floors. On the ground floor, you can follow the history of Egypt from the Old Kingdom up through the Greco-Roman period by turning left at the entrance and looping around
then we will drive you back to your hotel in Cairo to spend your night there
Day 3:Nile Cruise checking _karnak and luxor temples visits
Cairo airport
We will pick you up and drive you to Cairo Airport to catch a flight to Luxor. By air-conditioned vehicle at Luxor Airport, our Egyptologist guide will pick you up to check in for your Nile cruise. After lunch on board, we will go visit Karnak.
Karnak Temples
The ancient Egyptian name of the temple was Ipet-isu—or “most select of places”—the ancient Egyptians, over 2,000 years to build the complex of Karnak from the middle kingdom to the Greek-Roman period. It is the largest religious center ever built, covering about 200 acres
(1.5 km by 0.8 km. and was a place of pilgrimage for nearly 2,000 years, dedicated to the Theban triad of Amun, Mut, and Khonsu. The Hypostyle Hall, one of the most interesting things we will visit about 54,000 square feet with 134 columns—is still the largest room of any religious building in the world. After finishing the tour in Karnak, we will drive to the Temple of Luxor
Luxor temple
The temple was built by Amenhotep III (1390-52 BC) 18th Dynasty and Ramesses II (1279–13 BC), 19th Dynasty. It was covered by sand until the 1880s but after restoring the temple, the Pylon measured 24 meters high and 65 meters wide, The scene on the pylon Represents the glory of Ramesses at the battle of Kadesh. Also, two massive seated statues of Rameses II guard the huge gateway, which is flanked by four standing statues of the king.
In front of the temple, thousands of sphinx of human-headed and lion bodies, about ( 3 km, made it between the complex of Karnak and the temple of Luxor. This avenue was built for the ” Opet festival” when Amun and Mut visited the temple of Karnak in a symbolic re-enactment of their marriage. At Luxor temple, Amun has magically transformed into Min, the god of fertility.
after you visit karnak and Luxor temples, we will drive again to the cruise to spend one night there & relaxing
Day 4: valley of the kings _Hatsheput temple_memnoon colassal visits
hot air balloon over Luxor City (optional ride)
A 45- to 80-minute hot air balloon ride will show you a different perspective of Luxor from the air. You'll be picked up by a driver from your hotel and driven to the launch site, where you'll receive a brief safety orientation before floating upward. Your pilot guide will point you to numerous historic sites and share some of the region's rich old history with you as you soar over the ancient city.
After breakfast on board with our archaeologist guide, you will go to the west bank of Luxor to visit, the temple of Hatshepsut and the colossi of Memnon.
Valley of the Kings
In 1979 UNESCO designated the Valley of the Kings a part of the World The heritage site of ancient Thebes, includes Luxor, the Valley of the Queens, and the complex of Karnak. The site of royal burials since around 2100 BC, the pharaohs of the New Kingdom (1550–1069 BC) chose this isolated valley to make their tombs.
One of the reasons they chose this valley on the west bank of Luxor is ” the pyramid-shaped mountain," in the center of the mountain on the west bank, so they will not waste time or spend money building a pyramid. The Valley of the Kings has 64 tombs—just 24 royal tombs.
Hatshepsut temple
Hatshepsut The Woman Who Was Pharaoh, was the daughter of Thutmosis I. She ruled Egypt for about 23 years during the 18th Dynasty (approximately 1490–1469 B.C.). She built a very beautiful temple on the west bank of Luxor with limestone and dedicated it to the god Amoun-Ra. The temple has three floors, with the third floor carved on the mountain as a holly of the hollies of Amoun-Ra. Then we will stop to visit the colossal Memnon.
Colossal of Memnon
Two massive statues of quartzite sandstone represent king Amenhotep III, who ruled Egypt during the 18th Dynasty. The statues are high at about 15 m. The Colossi was at the entrance to Amenhotep’s memorial temple, which was destroyed by an earthquake in ancient times
after you finish your day tour in Luxor's west bank, we will drive back to your cruise to have your lunch, and enjoy the sail to to Edfu city
Day 5: Edfu and Kom Ombo Temples
Edfu temple
After breakfast on board the Nile Cruise, we will stop to visit the Temple of Horus at Edfu. The Temple of Horus at Edfu is widely considered to be the most impressive of all of the Nile-side temples along the journey between Luxor and Aswan. It is a required stop by all of the cruise ships that make the trip,
also stopping at Esna and Kom Ombo. Like at Esna, the temple at Edfu is a late construction. It was built during the Greco-Roman Period, but the builders painstakingly preserved the form of Egypt’s true pharaohs. As a result, a visit to Edfu allows you to see what all of the other ruined temples around Egypt might have looked like had they been built 2,000 years later.
Then, sailing to Kom Ombo to visit the Temple of Sobek, the crocodile god,
Kom Ombo temple
The setting of this Temple of Sobek, the crocodile god, makes an approach by water the far superior way to visit this site. The temple is perched atop a picturesque bluff alongside the river and while there are no longer any crocodiles in the river or in the sacred lake inside the temple complex, this riverside temple is still worthy of a visit.
Like the other two sites between Luxor and Aswan, Kom Ombo dates from the Ptolemaic Dynasty and it was only completed under Roman rule. The temple has a dual dedication to Sobek, and Horus, and the plan of the temple reflects this dual purpose.
after continuing to sail to Aswan.
enjoy your night on the Nile cruise
Day 6: Aswan Tour
After breakfast, we will visit the High Dam of Aswan, then the unfinished obelisk of Hatshepsut, finally, we will go visit the beautiful Temple of Philae, dedicated to the goddess Isis.
Philae temple
The dazzling Philae temple of the renowned mother goddess Isis The “Myth of Osiris” is depicted in the enormous storybook Isis, which was crafted from heavenly stone and endured the test of time. It was moved to Agilkia Island between the 1960s and 1970s as part of the UNESCO Nubia Campaign project.
King Ptolemy II erected it about 280 BC. It was built in honor of the goddess Isis, the chief deity of the island.
then we drive to Aswan High Dam
Aswan high dam
When construction began on the High Dam in 1960, it was the most heralded part of President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s effort to develop Egypt for all Egyptians. While the dam is certainly not the largest in the world, it is nonetheless an impressive engineering feat, over 360 feet tall and 12,500 feet across. The dam was completed in 1971, and the huge reservoir behind it, named for President Nasser, finished filling in 1979.
after we finish the day tour in Aswan, we will go back to the cruise
Day 7: Aswan - Abu Simbel ( optional )
Abu simple temples (optional tour )
After breakfast on board, you have a free day in Aswan or go to visit Abu Simbel Temples, south of Aswan along Lake Nasser’s shore, which are the most famous in all of Egypt after the Giza Pyramids. Built by the greatest of the pharaohs, Ramesses II, which made it also known as the Temple of Ramses II or Ramesses II,
these huge rock-cut temples marked the southern boundary of the Egyptian Empire, with Nubia at the peak of its power during the New Kingdom. They were meant to convey the power of Egypt’s rulers to anyone who laid eyes upon them. The four statues guarding the doorway to the larger of these temples are the largest sculptures that survive from the ancient Pharaonic era.
Aswan airport
After that, transfer to the airport of Aswan to fly to Cairo, where our assistant will pick you up at your hotel in Cairo.
day-8 Cairo - Fly Back Home
Cairo airport
After breakfast, we pick up you at the airport in Cairo to fly to your country
Pricing Policy
- 0 to 5.99 – Free.
- From 6 to 11.99 – 50% of the adult person.
- From 12 – will be treated as an adult and must pay the total price of the tour.
- If your travel package includes airfare, there may be an extra fee for each child accompanying you.
- The child policy applies to children who share rooms with their parents (maximum 2 child sharing the parents’ room under 12 years old)
- Reservations should be made as soon as possible.
- The payment of the total amount must be made at the time of booking confirmation and can be made by credit or debit card (Visa and Mastercard) via Verisign Secured system on our website
We don’t charge a cancellation fee for tours canceled for “force majeure” reasons, such as volcanoes, earthquakes, or other reasons. If the cancellation is due to personal or business reasons and we have already incurred costs on your behalf, these costs will be transferred to you.
- All our packages and tours of Egypt do not include entrance fees to special archaeological sites such as visiting inside the pyramids, the Museum where the Solar Boat is located in the pyramid area, or to enter the Tutankhamun tomb in the Valley of the Kings in Luxor.
- If you wish to visit one or all of these areas, please contact us by email as soon as possible, so that we can make the necessary arrangements.
- Tips are not mandatory. And a form of appreciation for the services provided.
- Whether you offer a tip or not, we thank you for choosing us to help you on your tour, and we hope we have pleased you.
- Read More about Tipping in Egypt
Frequently Asked Questions
To book a tour, you can visit the official website of the tour company or contact them directly through phone or email. Alternatively, you can use online booking platforms or visit a travel agency. Make sure to provide all necessary details such as preferred dates, number of participants, and any specific preferences to ensure a smooth booking process.
We offer tours in a variety of languages, including but not limited to English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Russian, and Arabic. If you require a tour in a specific language, please feel free to inquire, and we will do our best to accommodate your needs.
The most widely accepted currency on this tour is the US dollar. While local currencies may also be accepted in certain locations, carrying US dollars as a backup is advisable to ensure smooth transactions throughout the tour.
Yes, we accept payment by credit card.
Tipping is not included in the tour price. It is customary to tip tour guides and other service providers in the tourism industry as a gesture of appreciation for their services.