Skip to main content
The Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx

The Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx

Home Egypt AttractionsThe Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx
Gate8 Global Team

The Giza Plateau — the Great Pyramid, the Pyramid of Khafre, the Pyramid of Menkaure, and the Sphinx — is the single most-visited site in Egypt, and it earns it. General entry runs around $10–12; separate paid add-ons let you go inside the Great Pyramid's burial chamber (roughly $18–20 extra) or visit the Solar Boat Museum. Arrive right at opening (around 8am) to beat both the midday heat and the tour-bus crowds, and agree on any camel or horse ride price in full, in writing, before you get on the animal.

The Pyramids of Giza are the last surviving ancient wonder of the world, and — a fair worry for a lot of travelers — they're also one of the most photographed, most hyped sites on Earth, which raises the question of whether they can possibly live up to it. They do. Here's how to visit them well.

How to visit

Arrive right at opening, around 8am, before both the day's heat builds and the tour buses arrive en masse from Cairo hotels. Plan on 2–4 hours at the plateau depending on how many optional add-ons (going inside a pyramid, the Solar Boat Museum, a camel ride) you want to fit in.

Tickets and prices

TicketWhat it coversApprox. price
General plateau entryAccess to the site, exterior views of all three pyramids and the Sphinx$10–12
Inside the Great PyramidClimb into the burial chamber (separate, limited-capacity ticket)+$18–20
Solar Boat MuseumA 4,500-year-old full-size wooden boat found buried beside the Great Pyramid+$8–10
Sound and Light Show (evening)An outdoor evening narration show projected onto the monuments$20–25
⚠️

The area around the ticket gates has a genuine, long-running hassle problem: unofficial 'guides,' camel and horse handlers, and photo-op vendors will approach persistently. A firm 'no, thank you' and continuing to walk works; if you do want a camel or horse ride, agree on the complete price — including the fee to get back off — clearly and in advance, ideally through your hotel or a licensed operator rather than a plateau tout.

Best time of day

Morning (8–10am) for the clearest light, coolest temperatures, and thinnest crowds. Sunset is also popular and beautiful, though the crowds pick back up as tour groups return for photos. Midday, especially April–October, is genuinely brutal — minimal shade, high heat, harsh flat light for photos.

What else to see at the plateau

  1. The Sphinx — walk around to the front for the classic view; it's smaller in person than most photos suggest, which surprises almost everyone.
  2. The Solar Boat Museum — a genuinely remarkable, intact 4,500-year-old wooden boat, buried to ferry the pharaoh's soul in the afterlife.
  3. A viewpoint on the plateau's edge — a short walk or camel ride south gives the classic wide shot of all three pyramids together, worth the extra time for photos.

Getting there

The plateau sits on Cairo's western edge — a 20–40 minute drive from most central hotels depending on traffic (which, this being Cairo, is unpredictable). Ride-hailing apps or a hotel-arranged driver are the easiest options; a metro line now reaches close to Giza but still requires a short taxi or walk to the gates.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Booking the 'inside the pyramid' ticket without knowing it's a steep, low, narrow, warm climb — not for anyone with claustrophobia or mobility concerns.
  • Wandering off with an unofficial 'guide' who approaches near the entrance — arrange guiding in advance through a licensed operator or your hotel instead.
  • Skipping sun protection — there's minimal shade anywhere on the plateau; a hat, sunscreen, and water are non-negotiable, even in the cooler winter months.

Questions people actually ask

How much does it cost to visit the Pyramids of Giza?
General entry to the plateau runs about $10–12. Going inside the Great Pyramid's burial chamber, visiting the Solar Boat Museum, or attending the evening Sound and Light Show are separate, additional-cost tickets.
What time should I visit the Pyramids?
Right at opening, around 8am — the light is best, the heat hasn't built up yet, and the big tour groups from Cairo hotels haven't arrived. Sunset is the second-best option.
How do I avoid scams at the Pyramids?
Politely but firmly decline unsolicited 'guide' or camel-ride offers near the entrance, and if you do want either, arrange it through your hotel or a licensed operator with the full price agreed in advance and in writing.

Related searches