
Best Time to Visit Egypt
October through April is the comfortable window for most of Egypt, with December–February being the coolest (and busiest, priciest) stretch. May through September gets genuinely extreme in Upper Egypt — Luxor and Aswan regularly exceed 40°C (104°F) in summer, which can make midday sightseeing at outdoor sites like the Valley of the Kings punishing rather than pleasant. The Red Sea coast is the exception: it's a comfortable, divable destination essentially year-round, since sea breezes temper the heat.
Egypt's climate isn't uniform, and 'best time to visit' really depends on which part of the itinerary you're weighing most heavily — Cairo, the Nile/Luxor temple circuit, or the Red Sea coast all have slightly different sweet spots.
Month-by-month overview
| Months | Cairo & Nile Valley | Red Sea coast |
|---|---|---|
| December–February | Coolest and most comfortable (roughly 18–22°C / 64–72°F days); also peak season, busiest and priciest | Warm and pleasant (air ~20–25°C), coolest water of the year but still diveable |
| March–April, October–November | Warm, comfortable, fewer crowds than peak winter | Excellent — warm air and water, shoulder-season pricing |
| May–September | Hot to extreme, especially Upper Egypt (Luxor/Aswan can exceed 40°C/104°F) | Hot on land but the sea stays excellent for diving and swimming; a popular season for beach-focused trips specifically |
Upper Egypt's summer heat is not an exaggeration. Luxor and Aswan routinely see daytime highs above 40°C (104°F) from June through August, with minimal shade at outdoor sites like the Valley of the Kings and Karnak Temple. If your trip includes Luxor or a Nile cruise, aim for October–April; if you're set on summer dates for cost or scheduling reasons, plan all outdoor sightseeing for early morning and treat midday as strictly indoor/pool time.
Nile cruise season vs. Red Sea season
Nile cruises between Luxor and Aswan run essentially year-round, but the comfortable window for actually enjoying the included shore excursions (which involve real walking in the sun) is October through April — the same window as the rest of Upper Egypt. The Red Sea coast flips this logic: because sea breezes moderate the heat and the whole draw is water-based, summer (June–September) is a genuinely popular, often better-value season for a beach-and-diving-focused trip, even though it's the worst window for Luxor sightseeing.
Ramadan and Egypt travel
Ramadan shifts about 11 days earlier each year on the Gregorian calendar; in 2026 it's expected to run roughly mid-February to mid-March (exact dates depend on moon sighting). Egypt remains very much open to tourists during Ramadan — major sites, hotels, and tourist-area restaurants operate normally — but some local restaurants keep shorter daytime hours before the evening iftar meal, and it's respectful to avoid eating or drinking very visibly in public during fasting hours in more local, non-tourist neighborhoods. Many travelers actually enjoy Ramadan evenings, when cities come alive after sunset with lit streets and festive food stalls.
Crowds and prices
- December–February is peak season for both Nile Valley sightseeing and Red Sea winter-sun travelers from Europe — expect the highest hotel prices and busiest sites of the year.
- October–November and March–April are the sweet-spot shoulder seasons: comfortable weather, noticeably thinner crowds at major sites, and better hotel rates than peak winter.
- June–August is the cheapest window for Nile Valley hotels specifically (due to the heat keeping crowds down), while remaining a popular, well-priced season for the Red Sea coast.












































