
Cairo
Cairo deserves 3–4 nights, not a rushed day trip. Base yourself in Zamalek or Garden City (calmer, central, walkable) or near Giza itself if the Pyramids are your priority. Spend one full day at the Giza Plateau (arrive at opening, 8am), one at the Grand Egyptian Museum, and an evening wandering Khan el-Khalili bazaar and Islamic Cairo's mosques. Budget roughly $35–60/day per person before accommodation.
Cairo is loud, dusty, overwhelming, and one of the most rewarding cities in the world to just wander through for a few days. It's also the logistics hub for the whole country — nearly every international flight lands here — so most trips start or end with a few days of pyramids, museums, and traffic that has to be seen to be believed.
How many days do you need in Cairo?
Three to four nights is the sweet spot. One day for the Giza Plateau (Pyramids, Sphinx, and the Solar Boat Museum), one for the Grand Egyptian Museum, and one for Islamic Cairo and Khan el-Khalili bazaar plus a Nile-side dinner. A fourth day gives room for the old Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square or a half-day trip to Saqqara and Memphis, the older, less-crowded pyramid sites south of Giza.
Which neighborhood should you stay in?
| Neighborhood | Best for | Vibe |
|---|---|---|
| Zamalek | First-timers, a walkable base | Leafy island in the Nile, cafes, calmer than downtown |
| Garden City / Downtown | Central location, budget range | Older buildings, close to the Egyptian Museum and Tahrir |
| Giza (near the Pyramids) | Waking up to a Pyramid view | Touristy strip right at the plateau's edge, some rooftop-view hotels |
| New Cairo / Fifth Settlement | Modern comfort, further from the sights | Newer, quieter, requires more taxi time to reach the main sites |
Book at least one night at a hotel with a rooftop or window view of the Pyramids if it's in your budget — a handful of budget guesthouses right at the edge of the Giza Plateau offer this for surprisingly little, and waking up to that view is a genuine trip highlight.
What's actually worth seeing
- The Giza Plateau — the Great Pyramid, the Pyramid of Khafre, the Pyramid of Menkaure, and the Sphinx, all in one place. Arrive at opening (around 8am) to beat both the heat and the tour buses.
- The Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) — the new flagship museum near Giza, home to the complete Tutankhamun collection displayed together for the first time. Book timed tickets online in advance.
- Khan el-Khalili bazaar — a genuine, centuries-old market (not a tourist recreation) for spices, lanterns, jewelry, and people-watching, best in the early evening.
- Islamic Cairo — the Citadel of Saladin and the Mosque of Muhammad Ali, with sweeping views over the whole city.
Getting around
Ride-hailing apps (Uber and the local Careem) work well in Cairo and are the easiest way to get between sights without haggling over a taxi fare. The Cairo Metro is fast and cheap for a few specific routes (it doesn't reach Giza directly), and traffic is genuinely intense at almost all hours — budget extra time for any cross-city trip.
Mistakes worth avoiding
- Accepting an unsolicited 'guide' offer at the Pyramids entrance — legitimate guides are booked through your hotel or a licensed tour operator, not approached at the gate.
- Getting on a camel or horse at Giza without agreeing on the full price (including the 'getting off' fee) in writing or very explicitly beforehand — this is the single most common Cairo tourist complaint.
- Assuming the Grand Egyptian Museum and the old Egyptian Museum are the same thing, or interchangeable — they hold different collections and both are worth visiting if you have the time.
Find a place near Giza or on walkable Zamalek island
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