You don’t need a month, but you do need a plan. Choosing an Egypt itinerary comes down to time, pace and what you refuse to miss: pyramids, Upper Egypt temples, a Nile cruise, maybe the Red Sea. Here’s exactly what fits in 5, 7, 10 and 14 days — and what to cut without regret.
Choosing your Egypt itinerary length: 5, 7, 10 or 14 days
Use this at-a-glance table to scope what realistically fits at a premium, private-tour pace.
| Trip length | Core stops | What comfortably fits | Pace |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 days | Cairo/Giza + Luxor | Pyramids, Saqqara, GEM; Luxor West Bank, Karnak | Fast; no cruise, no Red Sea, skip Abu Simbel |
| 7 days | Cairo/Giza + Luxor + Aswan | Highlights of all three; Abu Simbel only as a long day trip | Brisk; a short 3-night cruise is possible but tight |
| 10 days | Cairo/Giza + 4-night Nile cruise (Luxor–Aswan) | Full Cairo, full cruise with Edfu/Kom Ombo; Abu Simbel or Red Sea add-on | Balanced; best value-to-time |
| 14 days | Cairo/Giza + Alexandria + 4-night cruise + Red Sea | Depth everywhere; Abu Simbel, extra Luxor time, coast unwind | Unhurried |
Ready to compare actual departures? See our full range of Egypt tour packages.
What fits in 5 days: Cairo/Giza and Luxor
We allocate two full days in Cairo and two in Luxor, with a short flight between (Cairo–Luxor is about 1 hour). In Cairo, pair the Giza Pyramids and the Sphinx with Saqqara, then give yourself a deep half day at the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM), now fully open on the Giza plateau and home to the complete Tutankhamun treasures. The Egyptian Museum in Tahrir remains open too, but we prioritise GEM on tight schedules.
Luxor needs early starts. West Bank: Valley of the Kings, the Temple of Hatshepsut and the Colossi of Memnon. East Bank: Karnak, plus Luxor Temple after dusk if you’ve got the legs. No time for Aswan, cruises, or the Red Sea. Indicative premium pricing: from around USD 2,000–3,000 per person sharing, depending on season and hotel level.
7 days: Cairo, Luxor and Aswan — or a very short cruise
City-to-city highlights (our usual pick)
Three bases, no packing onto a ship. Fly Cairo→Luxor (about 1 hour), then Luxor→Aswan by road or train (about 3.5 hours), and Aswan→Cairo (about 1 hour 20 minutes). You’ll cover Giza, GEM and Saqqara; Luxor’s West Bank and Karnak; then Aswan’s Philae Temple and the High Dam, with time for a felucca sail at sunset. Abu Simbel is possible as a long day trip from Aswan: a 45-minute flight each way, or about 3.5–4 hours each way by road (~280 km).
Catch the first flight to be back in Aswan by early afternoon.
Expect a brisk pace, but it works. From roughly USD 2,800–4,500 per person. For sample day-by-day pacing, browse our 7-day private tours.
Short 3-night cruise (only if you’re cruise-or-nothing)
You can squeeze a 3-night cruise between Luxor and Aswan, but you’ll sacrifice depth in Cairo. On seven days, we usually keep it land-based and save the ship for a 10-day plan.
¿Quieres explorar How Many Days Do You Need in Egypt? A Realistic Itinerary Planner?
Permítenos diseñar el itinerario privado perfecto para ti. Desde expertos guías locales hasta cruceros de lujo, creamos viajes a medida que te muestran el Egipto real.
Personalizar por WhatsAppPaquetes de Viaje a EgiptoCruceros por el NiloTours de un Día
10 days: Cairo plus a 4-night Nile cruise — the sweet spot
This is where everything breathes. Start with 2–3 nights in Cairo for Giza, GEM, Saqqara and Old Cairo. Fly to Luxor (about 1 hour) and board a 4-night cruise to Aswan, ticking Edfu and Kom Ombo en route without watching the clock. In Aswan, add Philae and an optional Abu Simbel flight (45 minutes each way). Fly back Aswan→Cairo (about 1 hour 20 minutes).
Alternative: swap Abu Simbel for two lazy Red Sea nights via the road from Luxor to Hurghada (about 4 hours) or a 1-hour Cairo–Hurghada flight if you bounce via Cairo.
Expect from roughly USD 4,000–6,500 per person for premium cabins and top guiding. Compare ships and routes on our Nile cruise collection, and see example pacing in our 10-day itineraries.
14 days: Cairo, Alexandria, full cruise and the Red Sea
Two weeks let you go deeper without rushing. We plan 3 nights in Cairo, a day trip by train to Alexandria (about 2.5–3 hours each way), then down to Luxor for a 4-night cruise to Aswan with an extra Luxor day for Medinet Habu or the Valley of the Queens. Fly to Abu Simbel for sunrise if you want the quiet light, then wrap with 3 nights on the Red Sea. Drive Luxor→Hurghada in about 4 hours; fly Hurghada→Cairo in about 1 hour for your international departure.
Budget from roughly USD 5,500–8,500 per person for a private, premium build: upgraded rooms, handpicked guides, and smart transfers that save time.
Cairo essentials: GEM vs the old Egyptian Museum
The Grand Egyptian Museum on the Giza plateau is fully open and holds the headline collection, including the entire Tutankhamun assemblage. Give it a generous half day with a sharp Egyptologist guide; it repays the time. The Egyptian Museum in Tahrir is still operating and worthwhile for specific galleries and atmosphere, but on short trips we prioritise GEM and the pyramids.
Practical planning: transport, timing and seasonality
- Internal flights: Cairo–Luxor about 1 hour; Cairo–Aswan about 1 hour 20 minutes (grouped: roughly 60–85 minutes). Luxor–Aswan is about 3.5 hours by road or train.
- Abu Simbel: a 45-minute flight each way from Aswan, or about 3.5–4 hours by road each way (~280 km). First-flight seats go early.
- Red Sea links: Luxor–Hurghada about 4 hours by road. Cairo–Hurghada flight about 1 hour.
- Best sightseeing season: October–April. Most major sites open around 7am (earlier in peak summer) and close mid-to-late afternoon. We start at dawn and rest at midday.
- What to wear: light, breathable layers; hat; decent walking shoes. Shoulders and knees covered at religious sites.
If you want something built around a special interest — photography, family pacing, or extra tombs — ask us to tailor it on our Egypt tour packages.
¿Quieres explorar How Many Days Do You Need in Egypt? A Realistic Itinerary Planner?
Permítenos diseñar el itinerario privado perfecto para ti. Desde expertos guías locales hasta cruceros de lujo, creamos viajes a medida que te muestran el Egipto real.
Personalizar por WhatsAppPaquetes de Viaje a EgiptoCruceros por el NiloTours de un Día
What to cut first on shorter trips
- Abu Simbel on 5 days. It eats a day; save it for 7+ days.
- Red Sea under 10 days. You’ll spend more time moving than relaxing.
- Alexandria on 5–7 days. Cairo and Upper Egypt deserve the time.
- Secondary temples (Edfu/Kom Ombo) unless you’re cruising. They fit naturally on the river.
- Back-to-back museum marathons. Prioritise GEM; add Tahrir only if you’ve got the bandwidth.
Want the full spread of sites in one place? Browse key stops on our Egypt attractions guide.
How much does a trip to Egypt cost?
This is the question I get before anyone asks about temples. Fair enough. The honest answer: your trip length and your standard of travel drive the cost far more than the time of year.
A private, guided Egypt trip isn't a backpacker exercise, and it isn't Maldives money either. What moves the number most is the standard of your Nile boat (a 5-star vessel versus a solid 4-star), suite versus standard cabin, and how many internal flights you take instead of long road transfers. Longer trips that include a cruise cost more than short city-only stays — predictably.
Two honest rules of thumb. The most overpriced thing people buy is too many days they can't actually use. And the best value usually sits at seven to ten days done well. For real, current figures against a specific route, our Egypt tour packages show all-in pricing by duration, and a tailor-made trip is quoted to your exact itinerary.
Compare Every Itinerary Length Side by Side
If you only skim one thing, make it this. Each row links to a full day-by-day guide and the matching package, so you can read the plan and then book the real thing.
| Trip length | What it covers | Cruise? | Read the plan | Book a package |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 days | Cairo, Giza, Luxor | No | 5-day itinerary | 5-day packages |
| 7 days | Cairo, Aswan, Luxor + short cruise | 3-night | 7-day itinerary | 7-day packages |
| 10 days | Cairo, full cruise, Abu Simbel, Red Sea | 4-night | 10-day itinerary | 10-day packages |
| 14 days | Cairo, Alexandria, full cruise, Red Sea | 4-night | See the 14-day section above | Build it tailor-made |
My short version: five days is a teaser, seven is a real trip, ten is the sweet spot, and fourteen is for people who want Egypt to sink in rather than rush past. Pick the row that matches your time off, not your ambition.
How to Plan a Trip to Egypt Without Overcomplicating It
People tie themselves in knots over Egypt. They don't need to. Work through it in order and it falls into place:
- Lock your number of days first. Everything else flows from this. Be honest about jet lag and travel days.
- Decide cruise or no cruise. With seven days or more, a Nile cruise is the easiest way to see Luxor and Aswan without daily packing.
- Anchor Cairo at the start. Giza, the Grand Egyptian Museum and old Cairo deserve at least two full days — see our Cairo tours and short Giza tours.
- Add or cut the Red Sea last. It's a reward, not a must. Bolt it on only if your days allow.
- Book domestic flights early. Cairo–Luxor and Cairo–Aswan sell out in high season and the cheap fares go first.
One thing I'll be opinionated about: don't try to self-drive the logistics between cities to save a little. The time lost at ticket windows and the stress of finding reliable transfers costs more than it saves. If you'd rather hand the whole thing over, that's what our tailor-made service is for.
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