Cairo Travel Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before You Go
Cairo hits you before you’re ready. The call to prayer echoing between concrete towers, a taxi driver arguing passionately about nothing, the impossible silhouette of the Pyramids of Giza catching you off guard between apartment blocks. This isn’t a museum city โ it’s a living, breathing, 22-million-person organism that happens to sit on 5,000 years of history.
But here’s what most guides won’t tell you: Cairo rewards the prepared traveller. The difference between a frustrating trip and a transformative one often comes down to knowing which neighbourhood to stay in, when to visit certain sites, and how to navigate a city that doesn’t follow Western conventions.
This guide is built from years of on-the-ground experience in Cairo. Not from a desk in London โ from actually living here, guiding travellers through chaotic streets, and watching their faces shift from confusion to wonder.
In this guide, you’ll discover:
- โฆExactly how safe Cairo is for tourists in 2026 (with real context)
- โฆThe best areas to stay based on your travel style and budget
- โฆA neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown of what to see and do
- โฆLocal food spots, hidden gems, and mistakes every first-timer makes
Let’s dive in. ๐
โก Quick Summary (TL;DR)
- โ Safety: Cairo is safe for tourists with normal precautions. Tourist areas are well-policed. Petty scams are more common than crime.
- โ Best Time: October to April (15โ25ยฐC). DecemberโFebruary is peak season.
- โ Must-Do: Pyramids of Giza, Grand Egyptian Museum, Khan al-Khalili, Al-Muizz Street, Coptic Cairo, felucca on the Nile.
- โ Duration: Minimum 3 full days; 5โ7 days ideal to explore properly.
๐ Table of Contents
- Is Cairo Safe to Visit in 2026?
- Best Time to Visit Cairo
- Top Things to Do in Cairo
- Where to Stay: Neighbourhood Guide
- Getting Around Cairo
- Cairo Food Guide: What to Eat and Where
- Practical Information & Logistics
- Hidden Gems & Local Secrets
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Final Thoughts & Next Steps
Is Cairo Safe to Visit in 2026?
Cairo is generally safe for tourists who take standard precautions. Tourist areas including Giza, Downtown Cairo, and Zamalek are well-policed, and violent crime against visitors remains exceptionally rare. The primary concerns for travellers are petty scams, aggressive touts, and traffic โ not personal safety in the traditional sense.
What the UK Government Actually Says
The FCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office) advises against all travel to certain border regions and parts of the Sinai Peninsula, but considers Cairo, the Nile Valley tourist corridor, and Red Sea resorts safe for visitors. This advisory position has remained consistent for several years and is unlikely to change for standard tourist areas.
Real Safety Concerns for Tourists
The honest risks you should prepare for include petty scams (overcharging, fake guides, “gift” scams at the Pyramids of Giza), traffic (Cairo roads are genuinely dangerous for pedestrians unfamiliar with the flow), air pollution (particularly affecting those with respiratory conditions during summer months), and pickpocketing in very crowded areas such as the metro during rush hour or Khan al-Khalili on weekends.
Safety Tips from Local Experience
Use Uber or Careem instead of negotiating with street taxi drivers โ the preset fares eliminate all potential conflict. Agree on prices before any service, whether that’s a guide, a camel ride, or a boat trip. Cross roads where locals cross rather than trying to find gaps in traffic. Carry a photocopy of your passport and keep the original in your hotel safe. Women travellers will find that modest clothing covering shoulders and knees significantly reduces unwanted attention.
Best Time to Visit Cairo
The ideal time to visit Cairo is between October and April, when daytime temperatures range from 15ยฐC to 25ยฐC and outdoor sightseeing is comfortable throughout the day. Peak tourist season runs from December to February, bringing larger crowds but perfect weather for exploring the Pyramids of Giza, Islamic Cairo, and open-air markets like Khan al-Khalili.
Month-by-Month Breakdown
| Period | Temperature | Crowds | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| OctโNov | 20โ28ยฐC | Moderate | Excellent โ warm, manageable, shoulder season |
| DecโFeb | 14โ20ยฐC | Peak | Best weather but busiest |
| MarโApr | 20โ30ยฐC | Moderate | Good โ occasional khamsin sandstorms |
| MayโSep | 35โ40ยฐC+ | Low | Very hot โ museums fine, outdoor sites exhausting |
When to Avoid
The summer months (JuneโAugust) see temperatures regularly exceeding 38ยฐC, making extended outdoor visits to the Pyramids and open-air sites physically demanding. However, air-conditioned museums like the Grand Egyptian Museum and the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization remain comfortable, and you’ll benefit from significantly lower hotel rates and minimal queues.
Top Things to Do in Cairo
Cairo holds more historical layers than almost any city on earth. From the ancient Egyptian monuments of Giza to medieval Islamic architecture, early Christian heritage in Coptic Cairo, and a vibrant modern culture shaped by the Nile River, it delivers on every level. Here are the essential experiences.
Pyramids of Giza & the Sphinx
No amount of photos prepares you for the scale. The Great Pyramid stands 138 metres high, built from roughly 2.3 million limestone blocks, and has dominated the Giza Plateau for over 4,500 years. The site includes three main pyramids (Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure), the Great Sphinx, several smaller queens’ pyramids, and the recently opened Grand Egyptian Museum just minutes away.
Arrive at opening time (8:00 AM) to beat coach tour groups. The site is walkable but vast โ allow 3โ4 hours minimum. The panoramic viewpoint on the far side of the plateau gives the classic “three pyramids” photograph.
Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM)
The Grand Egyptian Museum โ the largest archaeological museum in the world โ sits adjacent to the Giza Plateau. It houses over 100,000 artefacts, including the complete Tutankhamun collection (5,000+ items, many never previously displayed) and a colossal statue of Ramesses II in the grand atrium. This is genuinely world-class museology and deserves a full day.
Combine your GEM visit with the Pyramids for a full day at Giza. The museum’s viewing terrace offers spectacular pyramid views with air-conditioned comfort โ a welcome contrast to the desert heat.
Islamic Cairo & Al-Muizz Street
Al-Muizz Street is the spine of medieval Cairo โ a pedestrianised kilometre lined with mosques, madrasas, mausoleums, and caravanserais dating from the 10th to 19th centuries. Walking its full length takes you past the Complex of Sultan Qalawun, Al-Azhar Mosque (founded in 970 AD), and Bab Zuweila gate. It’s the densest concentration of medieval Islamic architecture anywhere in the world.
Visit in the late afternoon when the light filters through the narrow streets, and continue into the evening when the lantern shops glow and the atmosphere shifts to something almost theatrical.
Khan al-Khalili Bazaar
This 14th-century bazaar is Cairo at its most atmospheric โ narrow alleys packed with metalworkers, spice sellers, perfumers, and papyrus vendors. Yes, it’s touristy in parts, but push past the main arteries and you’ll find workshops unchanged for centuries. El Fishawy cafe, operating since 1773, is the perfect spot to sit with a mint tea and watch the human current flow past.
Coptic Cairo
This compact neighbourhood within the old Roman fortress walls of Babylon holds some of Christianity’s earliest churches. The Hanging Church (Al-Mu’allaqa) dates to the 3rd century, while the Church of St. Sergius is traditionally believed to shelter the cave where the Holy Family rested during their flight to Egypt. Also here: the Ben Ezra Synagogue and the superb Coptic Museum. A half-day visit covers the area comfortably.
Felucca Ride on the Nile
A sunset felucca ride from Zamalek or Garden City is one of Cairo’s essential experiences and a welcome antidote to the city’s intensity. These traditional wooden sailboats drift silently along the Nile as the call to prayer echoes from both banks and the city skyline catches the last light. One-hour rides are common and easily arranged from the Corniche.
National Museum of Egyptian Civilization (NMEC)
Often overlooked by visitors focused on the GEM, the NMEC in Fustat houses the Royal Mummies Hall โ where you can stand face-to-face with Ramesses II and other pharaohs. The museum traces Egyptian civilisation from prehistory to the modern era. It’s less crowded than the GEM and offers a more contemplative experience.
Where to Stay: Neighbourhood Guide
Where you stay in Cairo dramatically affects your experience. The city sprawls across a vast area, and traffic means a “short” distance can take an hour by car during peak times. Choose your base based on your priorities.
Zamalek (Best for First-Timers)
An island in the Nile, Zamalek offers tree-lined streets, excellent restaurants, art galleries, and a distinctly calmer atmosphere than the mainland. It’s walkable, safe at all hours, and central enough to reach all major sites within 20โ40 minutes. The neighbourhood has a good range of boutique hotels and serviced apartments. This is where we recommend most first-time visitors stay.
Downtown Cairo (Best for Budget & Culture)
The heart of modern Cairo centres on Tahrir Square and the surrounding Khedivial-era streets built in the 1860s on Parisian lines. It’s grittier than Zamalek but far more atmospheric โ faded belle-รฉpoque architecture, rooftop bars, bookshops, and some of Cairo’s best street food. Budget hostels and mid-range hotels cluster here. Expect noise, energy, and immersion in real Cairene life.
Garden City (Best for Luxury & Quiet)
This embassy district south of Downtown offers Nile-facing five-star hotels (Four Seasons, Kempinski) and a quieter pace. Its curved streets were designed to confuse potential invaders โ they now simply confuse taxi drivers. It’s a pleasant base for luxury travellers who want proximity to Downtown without the intensity.
Giza / Pyramids Area (Best for Pyramid Access)
Staying near the Pyramids means waking up to that iconic skyline and being first in when the site opens. Several boutique hotels and guesthouses now offer rooftop pyramid views. The trade-off: you’re 45โ60 minutes from central Cairo in traffic, and the immediate neighbourhood is less polished than Zamalek or Garden City.
Getting Around Cairo
Cairo’s traffic is legendary โ and not in a romantic way. The city was built for 2 million people and now serves 22 million. Understanding your transport options is essential for preserving both your time and your sanity.
Uber & Careem (Recommended)
Ride-hailing apps work brilliantly in Cairo and are our number one recommendation for tourists. Fares are preset (no haggling), payment can be cashless, the car’s route is tracked, and the service is reliable. A 20-minute ride typically costs a fraction of what you’d expect in London. Download both Uber and Careem before arriving.
Cairo Metro
The metro is fast, air-conditioned, and remarkably cheap. It connects key tourist points including Tahrir Square (Egyptian Museum area), Mar Girgis (Coptic Cairo), and Sadat (Downtown). Avoid rush hours (7โ9 AM, 4โ7 PM) when carriages become extremely crowded. Note that the first two carriages of every train are reserved for women.
Walking
Cairo is walkable in specific zones โ Zamalek, Islamic Cairo (Al-Muizz Street area), Coptic Cairo, and parts of Downtown are all best explored on foot. However, walking between these zones is rarely practical due to distances, traffic, and limited pedestrian infrastructure. Think of Cairo as “pockets of walkability connected by car rides.”
Cairo Food Guide: What to Eat and Where
Egyptian cuisine is vastly underrated internationally. Cairo’s food scene ranges from legendary street food (some stalls have operated for decades with queues around the block) to inventive modern restaurants reinterpreting traditional dishes. The city is paradise for vegetarians โ many Egyptian staples are naturally plant-based.
Essential Dishes to Try
Koshari โ Egypt’s national dish: layers of rice, pasta, lentils, and chickpeas topped with spiced tomato sauce, garlic vinegar, and crispy fried onions. It’s vegetarian, filling, and costs almost nothing. Abou Tarek in Downtown is the most famous koshari restaurant.
Ful Medames โ Slow-cooked fava beans with olive oil, lemon, and cumin. Eaten for breakfast across Egypt, usually scooped up with fresh baladi bread. Every neighbourhood has its ful cart.
Fattah โ Layers of crispy bread, rice, and meat in a garlicky vinegar broth, often served during celebrations. Rich, indulgent, and uniquely Egyptian.
Hawawshi โ Spiced minced meat stuffed inside baladi bread and baked until crispy. Cairo’s answer to a meat pie.
Um Ali โ Egypt’s legendary dessert: a warm bread pudding with nuts, raisins, coconut, and cream. Order it at any traditional restaurant.
Where to Eat: Local Recommendations
Street Food / Budget: Abou Tarek (koshari institution, Downtown), Felfela (Egyptian classics since 1963, Downtown), Kazouza (street food elevated, various locations), and any foul and ta’ameya cart with a queue of locals.
Mid-Range: Zooba (modern Egyptian street food reimagined, Zamalek), Koshary El Tahrir (elevated koshari, Downtown), Bab El Sharq (traditional Egyptian buffet, Zamalek).
Fine Dining: Zitouni at the Four Seasons (exceptional Egyptian cuisine, Garden City), Crimson (rooftop with Nile views), and Sequoia (Zamalek Nile-side terrace).
Practical Information & Logistics
Visa Requirements for UK Citizens
UK citizens need a visa to enter Egypt. You have two options: purchase a visa on arrival at Cairo Airport (USD $25, single entry, 30 days) or apply for an e-visa in advance through the official Egyptian e-visa portal. We recommend the e-visa to avoid queues on arrival, particularly during peak season.
Money & Currency
The currency is the Egyptian Pound (EGP). ATMs are widely available and dispense Egyptian pounds โ most accept UK cards with standard international transaction fees. Card payment is increasingly accepted at hotels, upmarket restaurants, and chain stores, but cash remains essential for taxis, street food, smaller shops, markets, and tipping.
SIM Cards & Connectivity
Pick up a local SIM at the airport (Vodafone, Orange, or Etisalat booths are in arrivals). Tourist packages with generous data allowances are inexpensive and essential for Uber/Careem, Google Maps, and translating menus. WiFi in hotels and cafes is generally reliable in tourist areas.
Tipping (Baksheesh) Culture
Tipping is deeply embedded in Egyptian culture. It’s not optional โ it’s how many service workers supplement genuinely low base wages. Carry small notes at all times. Tip restaurant servers 10โ15% (check if service charge is included), hotel porters per bag, bathroom attendants, helpful security guards who let you take photos in restricted areas, and anyone who provides a personalised service.
Hidden Gems & Local Secrets
Beyond the headline attractions, Cairo rewards curious travellers with layers of discovery that most visitors never reach. These are the places and experiences we share with travellers who want something deeper.
Al-Azhar Park
Built on a former rubbish tip by the Aga Khan Foundation, this beautifully landscaped park offers panoramic views over Islamic Cairo’s minarets on one side and the Citadel on the other. It’s an oasis of calm, popular with local families, and has an excellent lakeside restaurant. Come at sunset for the best light and the call to prayer echoing from dozens of mosques below.
The City of the Dead
Cairo’s vast medieval necropolis (the Northern and Southern Cemeteries) is a living neighbourhood where hundreds of thousands of people reside among Mamluk-era tombs, sultans’ mausoleums, and centuries-old mosques. It’s a profound, surreal experience โ part graveyard, part vibrant community โ and almost entirely free of other tourists. Visit respectfully, ideally with a knowledgeable guide.
Manial Palace
This exquisite early 20th-century palace on Rhoda Island was built by Prince Mohammed Ali and mixes Ottoman, Moorish, Persian, and Art Nouveau styles in a riot of decorative excess. The gardens are lush and peaceful, and you’ll likely have the place almost to yourself. It’s a 15-minute walk from the NMEC, making it easy to combine.
Tentmakers’ Alley (Sharia al-Khayamiya)
Cairo’s last remaining covered bazaar, just south of Bab Zuweila gate, is where artisans create vibrant appliquรฉ textiles โ a tradition dating back to Fatimid times when they made the ceremonial tent coverings for the sultan. Today they produce cushion covers, wall hangings, and bags in spectacular colours and patterns. It’s quieter and more authentic than Khan al-Khalili for genuine handcraft.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
After years of guiding visitors, these are the mistakes we see repeatedly โ and they’re all easily avoided with a bit of advance knowledge.
Trying to See Everything Too Quickly
Cairo demands more time than you think. Traffic, heat, sensory overload, and the sheer scale of sites mean that two major sites per day is realistic โ three at most. We see tourists try to do the Pyramids, the GEM, Islamic Cairo, and a Nile cruise in one day and end up exhausted and frustrated. Slow down. Cairo isn’t going anywhere.
Not Negotiating Before Services
Always agree on a price before accepting any service โ whether it’s a felucca ride, a taxi, a camel photo, or a guide. “How much?” should come before “yes.” This isn’t rude; it’s expected. Without a pre-agreed price, you’re guaranteed to face inflated demands at the end.
Eating Only at Tourist Restaurants
The restaurants immediately surrounding tourist sites (particularly near the Pyramids and at the Nile-side tourist boats) tend to serve overpriced, mediocre food. The rule of thumb: if the menu is in English with photos, you’re probably in a tourist trap. Follow where locals queue, ask hotel staff for their personal recommendations, and venture into Downtown or Zamalek for genuinely excellent Egyptian food.
Underestimating Traffic
A journey that takes 15 minutes at 6 AM can take 90 minutes at 5 PM. Plan your itinerary geographically โ group sites by area to minimise crosstown trips. Schedule major cross-city journeys (like Downtown to Giza) for early morning or early afternoon when traffic is lighter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts & Next Steps
Cairo isn’t a “easy” city. It doesn’t hold your hand, it doesn’t follow predictable patterns, and it will challenge every expectation you bring. But that’s precisely why it’s extraordinary. The city that built the Pyramids, housed the world’s greatest library, and has reinvented itself across 50 centuries still pulses with an energy you won’t find anywhere else on earth.
Come prepared โ with realistic expectations, practical knowledge, and an open mind โ and Cairo will reward you with experiences that redefine what travel can be. The Pyramids at dawn. The call to prayer at sunset over Islamic Cairo. A bowl of koshari at a street corner with locals who insist on sharing their table. These aren’t just tourist moments; they’re the kind of memories that reshape how you see the world.
Ready to Plan Your Cairo Trip?
Our local team creates bespoke Cairo itineraries tailored to your interests, pace, and budget. From private Egyptologist-guided tours to hidden food experiences, we handle the logistics so you can focus on the wonder.
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