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Egypt's Red Sea Coast: Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh

Egypt's Red Sea Coast: Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh

Home Egypt Beaches & Red SeaEgypt's Red Sea Coast: Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh
Gate8 Global Team

Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh are Egypt's two main Red Sea resort towns, both built specifically around some of the most accessible world-class diving and snorkeling on the planet — coral reefs a short boat ride from shore, warm water nearly year-round, and every hotel category from budget dive-focused guesthouses to five-star all-inclusives. Sharm's reefs (especially Ras Mohammed National Park) are generally rated more dramatic; Hurghada is generally cheaper and has a wider spread of accessible dive and wreck sites.

It surprises a lot of first-time Egypt travelers that the same country with the Pyramids also has some of the best diving in the world — clear, warm, reef-packed water, with resort towns built entirely around getting you into it easily and comfortably.

Hurghada or Sharm El Sheikh?

HurghadaSharm El Sheikh
ReefsWide spread of dive/wreck sites, including the famous Thistlegorm wreck (day trip)More dramatic, better-protected reefs, especially Ras Mohammed National Park
CostGenerally cheaper across hotels and dive packagesSlightly higher average prices, more upscale resort feel
Getting thereOwn international airport, roughly 4.5–5h flight from EuropeOwn international airport, roughly 5h flight from Europe, historically a very popular European charter destination
VibeBigger, more spread-out town, wider range of independent dive shopsMore concentrated resort strip (Naama Bay), polished and walkable

Diving and snorkeling

This coast is why serious divers put Egypt on their list independent of the ancient history. Visibility regularly exceeds 20–30 meters, water stays warm (roughly 22–29°C / 72–84°F depending on season), and reefs sit close to shore rather than requiring long boat transfers. The SS Thistlegorm, a WWII cargo wreck near Sharm, is one of the most famous wreck dives in the world and reachable as a day or overnight trip from either town.

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Not a certified diver? Both towns run 'discover scuba' introductory dives for complete beginners with an instructor, and the snorkeling straight off many house reefs or on a day boat is genuinely spectacular on its own — you don't need certification to see why this coast has a reputation.

Best beaches and areas

  • Naama Bay (Sharm El Sheikh) — the main resort strip, walkable, dive shops and restaurants along the promenade.
  • Ras Mohammed National Park (near Sharm) — a protected marine park with some of the best reef diving/snorkeling on the whole coast, day-trip access.
  • El Gouna (near Hurghada) — a quieter, more upscale lagoon-town alternative to central Hurghada, popular with a slightly younger, design-conscious crowd.
  • Giftun Island (off Hurghada) — a popular day-trip boat destination for snorkeling in clear, shallow water.

When to go

This coast is genuinely a year-round destination — air temperatures stay pleasant to hot nearly every month, and water temperature rarely drops below diving-comfortable. December–February is coolest (and busiest, since it's also peak season for European winter-sun travelers); June–August is hottest on land (well into the high 30s°C/upper 90s°F) but the water stays excellent for diving and swimming.

What it costs

ItemApprox. cost
Mid-range beachfront hotel, per night$50–120
All-inclusive resort, per night$100–250+
Single boat dive with gear$40–70
PADI Open Water certification course$300–450
Day-trip snorkeling boat tour$25–45

Where to stay in Egypt's Red Sea Coast: Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

Is the Red Sea good for beginner divers?
Yes — both Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh have dive centers offering introductory 'discover scuba' sessions with no experience required, alongside full certification courses for those who want to keep diving afterward.
Hurghada or Sharm El Sheikh — which is better for diving?
Sharm's reefs, especially inside Ras Mohammed National Park, are generally rated more dramatic and better protected. Hurghada offers a wider spread of dive sites (including the famous Thistlegorm wreck) and is generally the more budget-friendly option overall.
What's the water temperature like in the Red Sea?
Warm nearly year-round — roughly 22–24°C (72–75°F) in winter (January–February) up to 28–29°C (82–84°F) in summer (August–September), making it diveable and swimmable in every season.