
Jeddah
Jeddah is Saudi Arabia's most relaxed major city, and its historic soul — Al-Balad, the UNESCO-listed old town of coral-stone merchant houses, is one of the most atmospheric neighborhoods in the Gulf. It's also the country's Red Sea gateway, with world-class diving and snorkeling a short boat ride from the Corniche. One practical note worth knowing before you book: Jeddah is the entry point for Mecca and Medina, both off-limits to non-Muslims — the ring road around Mecca has a clearly marked checkpoint for exactly this reason.
If Riyadh is Saudi Arabia's ambition, Jeddah is its history and its coastline — a port city that's been trading with the wider world for over a thousand years, with a noticeably easier-going pace than the capital.
How many days in Jeddah?
Two to three days covers it well: a half-day wandering Al-Balad, an evening on the Corniche watching King Fahd's Fountain (one of the tallest fountains in the world), and at least one day out on the Red Sea if diving or snorkeling interests you at all.
Al-Balad — the historic heart
Jeddah's old town, a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2014, is built from Red Sea coral stone with distinctive carved wooden balconies (rawasheen) designed to catch the sea breeze before air conditioning existed. It's atmospheric, walkable, increasingly full of galleries and cafes moving into restored merchant houses, and best explored in the late afternoon and evening once the heat breaks.
| What to do in Al-Balad | Notes |
|---|---|
| Wander Al-Alawi and Souq Al-Alawi streets | The core of the old commercial district, still a working market |
| Naseef House | A restored 19th-century merchant mansion, one of the best-preserved examples |
| Bait Al Baghdadi and nearby galleries | Contemporary art spaces inside restored heritage buildings |
Al-Balad is genuinely atmospheric at night, when the heat drops and the old streets light up — don't treat it as a rushed daytime checklist item.
The Red Sea — diving and the Corniche
Jeddah's coast has some of the least-dived, best-preserved coral reefs left in the region, since large-scale tourism only arrived recently. Day trips and PADI courses run from several dive centers along the coast; visibility and reef health are frequently compared favorably to the more crowded Egyptian Red Sea sites.
An important practical note: Mecca and Medina
Both Mecca and Medina, Islam's two holiest cities, are open only to Muslims — non-Muslims are not permitted to enter either city. This isn't a soft guideline; there are clearly marked checkpoints on the highways around Mecca specifically to enforce it, with a signed bypass route for non-Muslim travelers. It has no practical effect on a Jeddah, Riyadh, or AlUla itinerary, since none of those require passing through — just be aware of it if your route to Jeddah's airport or elsewhere happens to pass nearby.
What it costs
| Item | Approx. cost |
|---|---|
| Mid-range hotel, per night | $85–150 |
| Seafood dinner | $15–30 |
| Half-day Red Sea snorkeling trip | $50–90 per person |
| PADI Open Water course | $350–500 |
Where to stay in Jeddah — hotels
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