Last verified: March 2026
Q1: Is 14 days enough for Cairo, Luxor, Aswan, Abu Simbel, and the Red Sea? A1: Yes. Fourteen days is enough if you move in one direction and avoid backtracking. The most efficient version is Cairo and Giza first, then Luxor, then Aswan with an Abu Simbel option, then a Red Sea finish in Hurghada, El Gouna, Sahl Hasheesh, Soma Bay, or Marsa Alam.
Q2: What is the smartest Egypt route for 14 days? A2: The smartest route is open-jaw if fares are reasonable: arrive Cairo, depart Hurghada or Marsa Alam. If your international ticket must return from Cairo, keep the Red Sea at the end and add a final domestic flight or 5.5-hour road transfer back to Cairo.
Q3: Should I take the overnight train or fly between Cairo and Luxor? A3: For a 14-day first trip, fly. Cairo–Luxor road distance is about 637 km and overland travel is slow, while flights usually save half a day once you price in hotel nights and limited sightseeing time (Rome2Rio, 2026).
Q4: Is Abu Simbel worth adding to a 14-day Egypt itinerary? A4: Yes, but only if you already have at least 2 nights in Aswan. Abu Simbel adds a very long excursion day of roughly 280 km each way by road from Aswan, so it improves the trip for archaeology-focused travelers and overloads it for beach-first travelers (Experience Egypt; mein-aegypten.com).
Q5: Which Red Sea base is best after Luxor? A5: Hurghada is the easiest all-round finish after Luxor because the road transfer is about 4 hours and roughly 210 km. Marsa Alam is better for serious diving and quieter resorts, but it works best when you want more sea time and less nightlife (distancefromto.net; PADI, 2026).
Q6: How much does a 14-day Egypt trip cost in 2026? A6: A realistic 2026 total is €1,180 per person on a budget, €2,040 mid-range, and €3,980 premium, excluding international flights. The biggest cost variables are hotel tier, domestic flights, private guides, and whether you finish in Hurghada or Marsa Alam.
Q7: When is the best time to do a Cairo to Red Sea trip in 2026? A7: The best overall months are October, November, February, March, and April. These months give Cairo comfortable sightseeing conditions, strong Red Sea beach weather, and dive-friendly water with visibility often ranging from 20 to 50 meters in Egypt's Red Sea (PADI, 2026).
Two weeks is enough to see Cairo, Giza, Saqqara, Luxor, Aswan, and finish on the Red Sea without rushing — if you travel south once and keep your beach stay at the end. For 2026, the best-performing route is 4 nights Cairo, 3 nights Luxor, 2 nights Aswan, and 4 nights on the Red Sea, with one flexible day for Abu Simbel, a buffer, or a final Cairo return.
Quick Summary
- Best first-timer split: 4 nights Cairo, 3 nights Luxor, 2 nights Aswan, 4 nights Red Sea, 1 departure night
- Smartest route: Cairo → Luxor → Aswan → Hurghada / Soma Bay / El Gouna / Marsa Alam
- Best transport mix: domestic flights for Cairo–Luxor, private road transfer for Luxor–Hurghada
- Cairo–Luxor road distance: 636.8 km; Luxor–Hurghada direct road transfer: about 4 hours; Cairo–Hurghada road distance: 462 km (Rome2Rio, 2026; Cairo Governorate distance data)
- Abu Simbel works best with 2 Aswan nights, not 1
- Grand Egyptian Museum hours: complex 8:30 AM–7 PM, galleries 9 AM–6 PM, last ticket 5 PM; Wednesday and Saturday galleries run until 9 PM (GEM, 2026)
- NMEC hours: 9 AM–5 PM, Friday evening session 6 PM–9 PM, last admission 4 PM and 8 PM respectively (NMEC, 2026)
- Egyptian Museum Cairo ticket office runs to 3 PM in Ramadan schedule shown publicly; always recheck before travel because museum schedules shift seasonally (Egyptian Museum Cairo, 2026)
- Red Sea diving conditions: water 21°C–28°C, visibility often 20–50 m (PADI, 2026)
- Typical Hurghada boat day timing: hotel pickup from about 8:00, marina boarding around 8:30, return around 17:00 (local operator schedules, 2026)
- Tourist visa benchmark now varies by channel in 2026; multiple sources indicate a March 2026 move to US$30 for visa on arrival, while older pages still show US$25 — check the live official channel before payment (Egyptian Tourism Authority, 2026)

Day-by-Day Route Plan
This is the most balanced Cairo-to-Red-Sea sequence for 14 days because it keeps archaeology front-loaded and beach time protected at the end. It also limits the longest road leg to one practical transfer between Upper Egypt and the coast.
| Day | Overnight Base | Key Sights | Transfer Mode | Transfer Time (hrs) | Main Booking / Logistics Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Cairo | Arrival, hotel check-in, short Nile walk or Zamalek dinner | Private airport transfer | 1.0 | Book airport transfer in advance if landing after 20:00 |
| Day 2 | Cairo | Grand Egyptian Museum + Giza Plateau exterior sunset view | Private car / taxi | 0.8 total | GEM entry is timed; buy online in advance (GEM, 2026) |
| Day 3 | Cairo | Giza Pyramids, Sphinx, optional camel viewpoint, Sound & Light only if energy allows | Private guide/driver | 0.5 total | Start by 08:00 to beat heat and tour bus peaks |
| Day 4 | Cairo | Saqqara + Dahshur + Memphis or NMEC | Private car | 1.5 total | Combine Saqqara and Dahshur on one early-start day |
| Day 5 | Luxor | Fly Cairo to Luxor, Luxor Temple at dusk | Domestic flight + hotel transfer | 3.5 door-to-door | Arrive airport 2 hours before domestic departure |
| Day 6 | Luxor | Karnak Temple, Luxor Museum, Avenue of Sphinxes | Private guide/driver | 0.5 total | Karnak needs 2.0–3.0 hours; Luxor Temple 1.0–1.5 hours |
| Day 7 | Luxor | Valley of the Kings, Hatshepsut, Colossi of Memnon, optional Medinet Habu | Private guide/driver | 0.8 total | West Bank should start 06:30–07:00 in warm months |
| Day 8 | Aswan | Luxor to Aswan, Philae Temple, Aswan Corniche | Train or private road | 3.5 | Same-day transfer works if Luxor sightseeing is already done |
| Day 9 | Aswan | Abu Simbel day trip or relaxed Aswan day | Private convoy-style road trip | 8.0–9.0 total | Leave around 04:00–04:30 for Abu Simbel |
| Day 10 | Red Sea | Transfer Aswan to Hurghada via road/flight combination or via Luxor routing | Private transfer / flight mix | 6.0–8.5 | Most travelers should route Aswan→Cairo/Hurghada flight or private via Luxor only if priced well |
| Day 11 | Red Sea | Boat snorkel day, Giftun or nearby reef system | Boat trip | 8.5 | Boat days usually run 08:00–17:00 |
| Day 12 | Red Sea | Beach day, diving, spa, El Gouna marina or Soma Bay reef | Leisure | 0.0 | Leave one unstructured coast day |
| Day 13 | Red Sea | Second sea day: diving, dolphin house, intro dive, family beach club | Boat / shore | 4.0–8.0 | Pre-book dive operators with verified reviews |
| Day 14 | Departure city | Fly or transfer to Cairo for international departure, or depart from Red Sea airport | Flight / private transfer | 1.0–5.5 | Keep at least 6 hours buffer before long-haul departure if same-day connecting |
The Smartest Route Design for 14 Days
Open-jaw flights vs return to Cairo
Open-jaw is usually the best design if the fare difference is under €120 per person. Arrive in Cairo and depart Hurghada or Marsa Alam, and you remove one extra flight, one airport hotel risk, and half a day of dead transfer time.
Return-to-Cairo works if your international fare is much cheaper or you are using miles. In that case, keep your last 2 nights in Hurghada or nearby rather than Marsa Alam, because Hurghada–Cairo is operationally simpler by flight or road.
Domestic flight vs overnight train
Cairo to Luxor is where flights save real time. The road distance is about 636.8 km and Rome2Rio shows the journey at roughly 9 hours 53 minutes overland, so a morning flight protects most of the day for sightseeing (Rome2Rio, 2026).
Luxor to Aswan is different. That leg is much shorter, and overland or rail is efficient enough for a 14-day trip if you are cost-conscious and want scenery instead of another airport sequence.
Nile cruise vs overland Upper Egypt
A Nile cruise is excellent, but in a 14-day Cairo-to-Red-Sea route it compresses flexibility. Overland gives you tighter control over Abu Simbel, lets you choose better hotel locations, and preserves more full days at the coast.
A 3-night cruise works only if you shorten Cairo or the Red Sea. For first-time travelers who want both pyramids and beach recovery, overland usually wins.
Does Abu Simbel improve or overload the trip?
Abu Simbel improves the trip for archaeology-first travelers and anyone who may not return to southern Egypt soon. Experience Egypt places Abu Simbel about 200 km south of Aswan, while common road-planning figures used by operators run closer to 280–285 km each way depending on route and start point — which is why the day feels long even though the monument visit itself is compact (Experience Egypt; mein-aegypten.com).
If your priority is sea time, skip it. If your priority is temple-scale impact, keep it and reduce one beach excursion day instead.

How Many Nights to Spend in Each Stop
The best split depends on why you are coming to Egypt. First-timers should not treat every city equally because Cairo and the Red Sea consume time very differently.
| Traveler Type | Cairo | Luxor | Aswan | Red Sea | Total Nights | Why This Split Works |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First-timers | 4 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 13 + 1 transit/departure | Covers all headline sites without killing the beach finish |
| Families | 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 12 + 2 transit | Fewer temple mornings, more resort recovery |
| Couples | 4 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 13 + 1 transit | Strong mix of culture, river views, and premium coast time |
| Divers | 3 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 13 + 1 transit | Enough archaeology, maximum Red Sea value |
| Archaeology-focused | 5 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 13 + 1 transit | Best for museum depth and Abu Simbel inclusion |
| Beach-first | 3 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 13 + 1 transit | Strong if Red Sea hotels are the main goal |
Best Red Sea Finish Compared
Hurghada is the default best finish because it is easy. Marsa Alam is the specialist finish because the reefs are stronger and the pace is quieter.
| Red Sea Base | Transfer Time from Luxor | Transfer Time from Cairo | Reef Quality | Family Fit | Nightlife | Diving / Snorkeling Level | Typical Hotel Price per Night |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hurghada | 4.0 hrs / ~210 km | 5.5 hrs road / 462 km | Good | Strong | Strongest | Beginner to intermediate | €75 |
| El Gouna | 4.5 hrs / ~250 km | 5.5–6.0 hrs road / ~457 km | Good | Very strong | Stylish, moderate | Beginner to intermediate | €155 |
| Sahl Hasheesh | 4.25 hrs / ~230 km | 5.75 hrs road | Good to very good | Strong | Low | Beginner to intermediate | €130 |
| Soma Bay | 4.5 hrs / ~260 km | 6.0 hrs road | Very good | Strong | Low | Intermediate, kitesurf + dive | €195 |
| Marsa Alam | 6.5–7.5 hrs road | Flight usually better than road | Excellent | Good | Very low | Intermediate to advanced, serious snorkelers | €175 |
Hurghada suits mixed groups, families, and travelers who want marina dining and easy logistics. Marsa Alam suits divers, repeat Egypt visitors, and travelers prioritizing reef access over city-style evenings.

2026 Trip Cost Breakdown
This table reflects realistic independent-travel planning for 2026, not ultra-low local pricing that most international travelers never actually secure. It excludes international airfare because that varies too widely by departure market.
| Cost Item | Budget | Mid-Range | Premium | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation per night in Cairo/Luxor/Aswan | €35 | €85 | €190 | 3-star vs 5-star differs sharply by season |
| Accommodation per night Red Sea | €55 | €140 | €320 | All-inclusive often wins on value at coast |
| Domestic flight Cairo–Luxor | €70 | €110 | €180 | Checked baggage can add €12–€30 |
| Domestic flight Hurghada–Cairo | €60 | €95 | €160 | Useful only if returning to Cairo |
| Private Luxor–Hurghada transfer | €45 | €70 | €120 | Based on 2–3 travelers sharing |
| Luxor–Aswan train | €12 | €25 | €55 | Seat class and booking channel matter |
| Full-day private guide | €45 | €85 | €160 | Vehicle extra on some days |
| Shared group tour day | €18 | €35 | €65 | Useful for Abu Simbel or sea days |
| Major archaeology entry fees bundle | €140 | €160 | €200 | Depends on tomb add-ons and museum choices (Egyptian Tourism Authority, 2026) |
| Red Sea boat trip | €25 | €45 | €95 | Snorkel boats usually include lunch |
| Meals per day | €14 | €32 | €75 | Coast all-inclusive changes totals |
| eSIM / SIM for 14 days | €8 | €15 | €25 | Tourist data bundle |
| Tips / gratuities | €40 | €75 | €140 | Driver, guide, boat crew, hotel staff |
| Visa | €28 | €28 | €28 | Use live official channel at payment stage due to 2026 changes (Egyptian Tourism Authority, 2026) |
Sample Total Budgets for 14 Days
These totals assume 13 hotel nights, 1 Cairo–Luxor flight, 1 Luxor–Aswan rail or road leg, and a Red Sea finish in Hurghada area.
| Travel Style | Per Person Total | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Budget | €1,180 | 2-star/3-star hotels, one domestic flight, train to Aswan, shared tours, 1 Red Sea boat trip, simple meals |
| Mid-Range | €2,040 | 4-star hotels, domestic flight, private guide on 3 archaeology days, private Luxor–Hurghada transfer, 2 sea activities |
| Premium | €3,980 | 5-star hotels/resorts, premium transfers, private guide/vehicle, Abu Simbel add-on, 2 premium sea days, higher dining spend |
Budget travelers should spend carefully on transport, not just rooms. A cheap room plus two lost half-days usually costs more than a better-located hotel.
Mid-range is the best value tier for Egypt in 2026. It buys reliable logistics, better pacing, and fewer planning failures.
Major Transfer Legs and What They Really Mean
Transfer planning is where most Egypt itineraries break. Distances alone do not show friction — airport procedures, desert roads, and early starts matter more.
| Route | Approx Distance | Realistic Fastest Mode | Typical Time | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cairo → Luxor | 636.8 km road | Flight | 3.5 hrs door-to-door | Always best for 14-day first trips |
| Luxor → Aswan | ~220 km | Train / private road | 3.0–3.5 hrs | Efficient and scenic enough overland |
| Aswan → Abu Simbel | 280–285 km each way | Private road excursion | 4.0–4.5 hrs each way | Only with 2+ Aswan nights |
| Luxor → Hurghada | ~210 km | Private road transfer | 4.0 hrs | Best transfer in the whole itinerary |
| Cairo → Hurghada | 462 km | Flight or private road | 1.0 hr flight / 5.5 hrs road | Road works for budget or flexible departures |
| Hurghada → Cairo | 462 km | Flight or private road | 1.0 hr flight / 5.5 hrs road | Keep big buffer if connecting onward |
Flights save meaningful time on Cairo–Luxor and on any same-day international connection involving Cairo. Private road transfers are more efficient on Luxor–Hurghada because airports add friction without delivering a major time saving.
Attraction Timings and How Long You Actually Need
Timing matters more than people expect in Egypt. The difference between a 07:30 entry and a 10:30 entry can be 6°C to 10°C in perceived heat, and it changes your photo quality and queue time significantly.
| Site / Museum | Published Hours / Key Timing | Realistic Visit Time | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Egyptian Museum | Complex 8:30 AM–7 PM; galleries 9 AM–6 PM; last ticket 5 PM; Wed/Sat galleries to 9 PM | 3.5–5.0 hrs | Book timed entry online; weekday morning is best (GEM, 2026) |
| NMEC | 9 AM–5 PM; Friday evening 6 PM–9 PM | 1.5–2.5 hrs | Strong paired visit with Old Cairo or Fustat (NMEC, 2026) |
| Egyptian Museum Cairo | Public hours vary by season; verify close to travel date | 2.0–3.0 hrs | Better for focused visitors than all-day wandering |
| Giza Plateau | Early morning strongly recommended | 2.5–4.0 hrs | Enter early for lower heat and fewer groups |
| Saqqara | Morning best | 2.0–3.0 hrs | Add 45–60 min if entering multiple tomb areas |
| Dahshur | Morning to midday | 1.0–1.5 hrs | Works best paired with Saqqara same day |
| Karnak Temple | Start early or near sunset | 2.0–3.0 hrs | Very exposed site; shade is limited |
| Luxor Temple | Dusk to evening excellent | 1.0–1.5 hrs | Best lit after sunset, easier than Karnak in heat |
| Valley of the Kings | First entry slot best | 2.0–3.0 hrs | Tomb selection matters more than total tomb count |
| Abu Simbel | Most visits early morning | 1.5–2.0 hrs on site | Long transfer day; keep rest of day light |
Sound-and-light shows are not essential on a 14-day first trip. They only make sense if you have high energy after a light sightseeing day and are staying close to the site.
Best Itinerary Variations
14 days with Abu Simbel
Best for travelers who want a complete historical arc. Keep 2 nights in Aswan minimum and reduce Red Sea time to 3 or 4 nights.
14 days with a Nile cruise
Best for couples and slower travelers. The trade-off is fewer flexible museum days and less control over pacing, especially if your cruise schedule bundles too many temple visits into short dock windows.
14 days with extra Red Sea relaxation
Best for families, honeymooners, and divers. Cut Aswan to 1 night or skip Abu Simbel, then add 1–2 extra nights in Soma Bay or Marsa Alam.
| Variation | Best For | Main Trade-Off | Recommended Split |
|---|---|---|---|
| With Abu Simbel | Archaeology lovers | Longest excursion day | 4 Cairo / 3 Luxor / 2 Aswan / 4 Red Sea |
| With Nile Cruise | Couples, first-time slower pace | Less flexibility, fixed schedule | 4 Cairo / 1 Luxor pre-cruise / 3 cruise / 5 Red Sea |
| With Extra Red Sea | Families, divers, beach-first | Less depth in Aswan | 4 Cairo / 3 Luxor / 1 Aswan / 5 Red Sea |
Local Insight
Two things that only Hurghada-based operators know from running these itineraries week after week:
- The Luxor West Bank is physically harder than it looks on paper. After 11:00 AM in warm months, the Valley of the Kings becomes genuinely punishing — not just warm, but disorienting. Operators who start their West Bank groups at 06:30 consistently get better reviews than those who start at 09:00, even when the sites visited are identical.
- Most travelers arriving from Luxor or Aswan underestimate how the Hurghada marina area operates in the evening. The marina strip in central Hurghada is busiest between 19:00 and 22:00, but the best seafood restaurants fill up by 20:00. If you arrive from a long transfer and want a proper dinner, book your restaurant in advance — walk-ins after 20:30 often wait 45 minutes or more during peak season.
- Hurghada boat days are rarely lazy mornings. Most hotel pickups start around 08:00, marina boarding is commonly around 08:30, and boats return near 17:00 — so plan your resort dinner and spa time for the day after, not the same evening.
- Do not schedule a same-day Red Sea boat trip after arriving from Luxor or Aswan. Even if the transfer is only 4 hours on paper, the loss of sleep plus hotel check-in plus marina timing makes the day inefficient and the experience worse.
Seasonality for 2026 Travel Planning
Egypt works year-round, but not every stop peaks at the same time. Cairo is a walking city; the Red Sea is a weather-and-wind destination.
Best months for Cairo sightseeing
October, November, February, March, and April are the strongest months. January is good for museums and pyramids but evenings can feel cool, especially on rooftops and river cruises.
Best months for Red Sea beach weather
April to June and September to November are the sweet spot. July and August deliver the hottest sea temperatures and strongest beach certainty, but inland sightseeing becomes punishing.
Diving visibility and water temperature
PADI reports Egypt water temperatures of 21°C to 28°C, with visibility often 20–50 meters. That makes spring and autumn especially strong for mixed itineraries because the coast is already excellent while Cairo is still comfortable (PADI, 2026).
Wind conditions for boat trips
Winter can bring more wind interruptions on exposed boat routes, especially in January and parts of February. Shore days still work, but keep one flexible coast day in case a sea excursion is moved.
When hotel pricing spikes
European school holidays and Easter periods usually push Red Sea rates up first, especially family resorts in Hurghada, El Gouna, and Soma Bay. If booking for April 2026 or late December 2026, lock resort inventory early.
Common Planning Mistakes
Overpacking temple days
Luxor West Bank plus Karnak on the same day looks efficient and feels miserable. Keep East Bank and West Bank separate whenever possible.
Underestimating road transfers
A 4-hour desert transfer is not a 4-hour sightseeing day. Add hotel checkout, fuel stop, arrival delay, and lunch, and half the day is gone.
Choosing the wrong Red Sea base
Hurghada is not automatically best for everyone. Divers wanting better reef access and quieter resorts should not default to central Hurghada if Marsa Alam or Soma Bay fits better.
Booking Cairo museums on the wrong day or time
Do not stack GEM, NMEC, and the Egyptian Museum into one day. GEM alone can take 3.5 to 5 hours for serious visitors, and timed-entry logistics matter.
Leaving too little buffer before departure
Never schedule a same-day international departure directly after an Abu Simbel excursion or a full-day sea trip. If you must connect via Cairo, aim for at least 6 hours of buffer on the same day, and more during peak travel periods.
Recommended 14-Day Egypt Itinerary in Full
Days 1–4: Cairo, Giza, Saqqara, Dahshur
Use Cairo as one base for 4 nights. Put GEM on one day, Giza on one day, and Saqqara/Dahshur on one day, leaving the final city day for NMEC, Islamic Cairo, Coptic Cairo, or downtime.
This split gives you depth without museum fatigue. GEM galleries are open 9 AM–6 PM and extended to 9 PM on Wednesdays and Saturdays, making it one of the easiest premium cultural visits to schedule well (GEM, 2026).
Days 5–7: Luxor
Fly to Luxor and dedicate one day to the East Bank and one to the West Bank. Luxor Temple works best near dusk, while the Valley of the Kings should be first thing in the morning.
Three nights is the right amount for first-timers. Two nights is possible but too compressed if you care about pacing, photography, or a guide-led interpretation of the main temple complexes.
Days 8–9: Aswan with Abu Simbel option
Transfer south to Aswan and spend one day on Philae and the riverfront rhythm of the city. Use the second day for Abu Simbel only if the historical payoff matters more than rest.
Aswan is slower than Luxor and should stay that way. Do not try to fill every hour.
Days 10–13: Red Sea finish
For the easiest finish, choose Hurghada, El Gouna, Sahl Hasheesh, or Soma Bay. For the strongest reef-driven finish, choose Marsa Alam and accept the longer transfer.
Keep one boat day, one free resort day, and one optional activity day. That structure is better than three fixed excursions because weather, wind, and energy vary. For snorkeling tours in Hurghada, book at least 48 hours in advance during peak season. For diving excursions from Hurghada, verify PADI-certified operators and check recent diver reviews before committing.
Day 14: Departure
If departing from Cairo, use Hurghada rather than Marsa Alam unless the hotel or diving payoff is clearly worth it. If departing from the coast, your itinerary becomes materially better and less risky.
Sources
- PADI (Professional Association of Diving Instructors): Egypt Red Sea water temperature and visibility data, 2026. padi.com
- Egyptian Tourism Authority: Entry visa requirements and archaeology site fee schedules, 2026. egypt.travel
- Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM): Official opening hours and timed-entry ticketing, 2026. gem.gov.eg
- National Museum of Egyptian Civilization (NMEC): Official opening hours and Friday evening session, 2026. nmec.gov.eg
- Rome2Rio: Cairo–Luxor overland distance and journey time estimates, 2026. rome2rio.com
- Experience Egypt: Abu Simbel distance and excursion logistics from Aswan. experienceegypt.eg
- mein-aegypten.com: Abu Simbel road distance and convoy timing from Aswan, 2026.
- distancefromto.net: Luxor–Hurghada road distance reference, 2026.



