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Luxor

Ancient Thebes of the pharaohs: Karnak, Valley of the Kings, Valley of the Queens, Deir el-Bahari — the largest open-air museum on the planet, on both banks of the Nile.

4.90Vallée du Nil

Luxor is, alongside Giza and Cairo, one of the great rendezvous of any Egyptian journey — and probably the most enchanting. Built on the site of ancient Thebes, capital of the New Kingdom for five centuries (around 1550-1077 BC), the modern city holds on its two Nile banks the densest concentration of pharaonic monuments on the planet. Herodotus already called it in the fifth century BC 'the city of a hundred gates'; twenty-five centuries later, the wonder remains intact.

On the east bank (city of the living for the ancient Egyptians), two colossal temples rise: the Temple of Karnak, the largest religious temple ever built (123 hectares, equivalent to more than 80 Notre-Dame of Paris cathedrals), whose hypostyle hall with 134 papyrus-shaped columns 23 metres high leaves visitors literally speechless; and the Temple of Luxor, more modest but of rare elegance, linked to Karnak by a 2.7 km avenue lined with 700 ram-headed sphinxes (fully restored and reopened in 2021). On the west bank (city of the dead), the Valleys of the Kings and Queens shelter the tombs of New Kingdom pharaohs and queens — including that of Tutankhamun, discovered intact by Howard Carter in 1922, which revealed to the world the unsuspected richness of Egyptian funerary art. The Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari, carved into the cliff and forming a monumental three-terrace staircase, is one of the most striking architectural works of antiquity. Luxor is lived slowly, over 3-4 days, ideally combined with a Nile cruise to Aswan.

What we love

  • Pharaonic heritage without equal in the world: Karnak, Luxor, Valleys of the Kings and Queens, Deir el-Bahari
  • Karnak, largest religious temple ever built, incomparable architectural experience
  • Tomb of Tutankhamun discovered in 1922, mummy still visible in situ
  • Hot-air balloon flight at sunrise over the Valley of the Kings — a magical moment
  • Ideal starting point for Nile cruises to Aswan (3-7 nights)

What to know

  • Extreme heat from April to October (up to 48 °C in July)
  • Frequent commercial harassment on the east bank and around sites
  • Visible security (tourist escorts, checkpoints)
  • Modern city of limited interest outside pharaonic sites

Situation

Où se situe Luxor ?

Ouvrir la carte en grand sur OpenStreetMap →

Frequently asked questions

How many days should I plan for Luxor?+
Three days minimum to cover the essentials: one day for the east bank (Karnak + Luxor Temple), one for the west bank (Valley of the Kings, Valley of the Queens, Deir el-Bahari, Colossi of Memnon) and one breathing day for the sunrise balloon, the Luxor Museum and an excursion to Dendera or Esna. With 4-5 days you can add Abydos (Temple of Seti I, 2h north) and enjoy the river slowly by foot or felucca.
Hotel base or cruise in Luxor?+
Both work. The cruise (3 or 4 nights Luxor-Aswan or 7 nights round trip) offers incomparable visit comfort: you sleep on board, visit sites along the river, avoid logistical hops. A hotel base in Luxor (3-4 nights) plus the train to Aswan offers more flexibility and costs less. Our advice: combine the two — 2-3 nights at a Luxor hotel, then board for 3 nights to Aswan.
Is the hot-air balloon over the Valley of the Kings worth the price?+
Yes, without hesitation. One of the most memorable experiences of any Egyptian trip. Flight lasts 45-60 minutes, starts 30 minutes before sunrise (hotel pickup 4-5 am depending on season), and overflies Hatshepsut's Temple, the Colossi of Memnon, the Valley of the Kings and the Nubian villages. Count €80-130 per person depending on operator. Book strictly through a reputable operator (Sindbad, Magic Horizon), not a street tout. Cancelled in strong wind — keep two possible slots in your stay.
How many tombs should I visit in the Valley of the Kings?+
The basic ticket gives access to 3 tombs among those open (periodic rotation for preservation). Prioritise Ramesses III (KV11, vast painted scenes), Ramesses IX (KV6, well preserved and easy access) and Merenptah (KV8). The tombs of Tutankhamun (KV62), Seti I (KV17, the finest) and Nefertari (Valley of the Queens, considered the most beautiful pharaonic painting in the world) require an additional fee (€10-50 each). Don't miss Nefertari if budget allows: an absolute peak.
How do I get to Luxor?+
Three main options: (1) domestic flight from Cairo (1h, €70-150 round trip depending on season, multiple daily flights with EgyptAir, Air Cairo and Nile Air); (2) overnight train Cairo-Luxor (10h, air-conditioned sleeper cabins, €90-110 in first class — booking essential, Watania Sleeping Trains); (3) day train Cairo-Luxor (9-10h, ENR or Spanish train, €25-40 in first class). The plane remains the most practical option for short trips.
Do I need a guide in Luxor?+
Highly recommended for Karnak, Valley of the Kings and Deir el-Bahari. Without a guide, you miss half the reading of the bas-reliefs, cartouches and funerary scenes. Count €40-80 per day for a qualified English- or French-speaking guide, booked via your hotel, a reputable agency or directly with an independent guide registered with the syndicate. Avoid guides who approach you at site entrances.
Is Luxor a safe destination?+
Yes, Luxor is broadly safe for tourists. Police and military presence is very visible around sites and hotels — reassuring and sometimes oppressive. Tourist convoys are no longer compulsory since 2017 but escorts still accompany some excursions (Abydos, Dendera). The main annoyance is commercial harassment on foot around Luxor Temple and the Nile Corniche. Solo women should favour modest clothing.

Our verdict

Luxor is probably the cultural peak of any Egyptian trip. The density and quality of the sites — Karnak first, followed by the Valley of the Kings, Deir el-Bahari and Luxor Temple — have no equal in the world. Plan 3-4 days on site, ideally combined with a 3-4 night cruise to Aswan. Come strictly between October and March, start visits at 6-7 am to escape heat and crowds, treat yourself to the sunrise balloon flight (€80-130 well spent, an enduring memory), and accept that Luxor demands logistical effort to yield its treasures. One of those places you don't return from quite the same.

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The Editors
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"Saison sèche idéale, 22°C journée."

Expert on Luxor · 1 contributions

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