5-Day Dahabiya Nile Cruise | Luxor to Aswan
A private experience shaped around your time and interests.
⭐ 5.0 Rated | Licensed Egyptologist Guides | Free Cancellation | Hotel Pickup Included
Five days on the Nile, the way it was designed to be sailed.
A Dahabiya is a traditional Egyptian wooden sailing vessel — flat-bottomed, two-masted, built for the shallow upper Nile. The design has changed little since the 19th century, when European travelers and Egyptian royalty first used these boats to travel between Luxor and Aswan. It moves slowly and quietly, powered by sail when the wind allows. The river experience on a Dahabiya is different in kind from a standard cruise ship: smaller scale, closer to the water, and genuinely sailing rather than motoring.
This package books you a private cabin on a Dahabiya vessel with a private licensed Egyptologist for all site visits. The vessel carries other passengers in separate cabins. If you want the entire boat exclusively for your group, see our Exclusive Dahabiya Charter.
Highlights
- Valley of the Kings — private Egyptologist, three royal tombs, painted chambers in full context
- Esna Temple and the Esna Lock — a working river lock navigated by the Dahabiya, a detail large cruise ships bypass
- Edfu Temple — the best-preserved temple in Egypt, arrived at by horse-drawn carriage from the riverside dock
- Kom Ombo — the dual temple for Sobek and Horus, visible from the water as you approach
- Philae Temple — the island sanctuary of Isis, relocated stone by stone before the Aswan reservoir rose
- 5 days on the Nile at sailing pace — not the motorized transit of a large cruise ship
Who This Tour Is For
- Travelers who want the authentic Dahabiya sailing experience without chartering the entire vessel
- Those who prefer the smaller scale and slower pace of traditional Nile sailing over a large cruise ship
- Couples and solo travelers who want a private cabin and private guiding within a shared vessel environment
- Return visitors to Egypt who have done the standard cruise and want something qualitatively different
What Makes This Tour Different
- Dahabiya scale — typically 8–16 passengers, compared to 40–150 on a standard Nile cruise ship. Fewer people means shorter queues at sites, more space on deck, and a quieter dining experience.
- Esna Temple and the Lock — most standard cruise ships skip or rush Esna. The Dahabiya navigates the working Esna Lock, which gives you a close, unhurried look at a rarely-seen moment of the Nile in operation. Esna Temple's ceiling is one of the most decoratively intact in Egypt.
- Private Egyptologist — your guide accompanies you from site to site for the full five days. This is not the ship's group tour; your Egyptologist is assigned exclusively to your group.
- Sailing rhythm — the Dahabiya moves primarily at night, arriving at each temple in the morning before the day-tour crowds. The days are spent at sites; the evenings belong to the river.
What You'll Experience
Day 1 — Arrive Luxor · Board Dahabiya · Karnak Temple
Private transfer from Luxor Airport to the Dahabiya dock. Board your vessel, meet the captain and crew, and settle into your cabin. Afternoon visit to Karnak Temple with your private Egyptologist: the largest religious complex ever built, added to by thirty successive pharaohs over 2,000 years. The hypostyle hall — 134 columns, the tallest reaching 23 metres — is the single most visually overwhelming interior in ancient Egypt. Return to the Dahabiya for dinner as the boat prepares to sail.
Day 2 — Luxor West Bank · Sail to Esna
The Dahabiya is still docked in Luxor this morning. Valley of the Kings with your Egyptologist: three tombs selected based on your interests and the historical context built at Karnak the day before. Hatshepsut's Temple at Deir el-Bahari — the colonnaded terrace cut into the cliff, and the story of her erasure from the official record. The Colossi of Memnon on the return. The boat sails south after lunch. The Esna Lock in the late afternoon — a working river lock that the Dahabiya navigates slowly while you watch from deck level. The lock gates, the water level change, the other vessels waiting: a piece of the living Nile that large cruise passengers rarely see this closely.
Day 3 — Esna Temple · Sail to Edfu
Esna Temple in the morning — a Ptolemaic temple with one of the most intact decorated ceilings in Egypt. The astronomical calendar carved into the ceiling was used to calculate festival dates; your Egyptologist traces the imagery in sequence. Less visited than Edfu or Karnak, and worth the time. The boat sails south through the afternoon toward Edfu — upper deck, the Nile opening out, the desert approaching the water on both sides.
Day 4 — Edfu Temple · Kom Ombo
Edfu Temple in the morning, arrived at by horse-drawn carriage from the riverside dock — the best-preserved religious building in Egypt. Completed during the Ptolemaic period in a style deliberately reproducing ancient Egyptian architectural forms, its inner sanctuary walls carry the complete mythological cycle of Horus and Set in extraordinary carved detail. Your Egyptologist reads the reliefs in sequence in the inner sanctuary; this is one of the most legible temple interiors in the country.
Kom Ombo Temple in the afternoon: the dual temple for Sobek, the crocodile god, and Horus, built symmetrically so that every architectural element on one side is mirrored exactly on the other. The crocodile mummy museum is attached to the site. The boat continues south toward Aswan overnight.
Day 5 — Aswan: Philae Temple · Disembark
Philae Temple by motorboat from the Dahabiya dock — the island sanctuary of Isis, relocated stone by stone to its current island before the Aswan reservoir rose. One of the most beautiful sites in Egypt: human scale, a water setting, and an unusual architectural completeness. Your Egyptologist explains the UNESCO operation that saved it.
Disembarkation after Philae. Private transfer to Aswan Airport for departure, or to your Aswan hotel if you are extending the trip.
Abu Simbel: can be added as a Day 6 morning flight from Aswan before departure. Confirm when booking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the exclusive charter or a shared vessel? T
This is a shared vessel — you book a private cabin, and other passengers may occupy the remaining cabins on the boat. Your Egyptologist is private (assigned exclusively to your group), your cabin is private, but you share the common areas (deck, dining room) with other passengers. For a completely private vessel with no other guests, see our Exclusive Dahabiya Charter.
How is a Dahabiya different from a standard Nile cruise ship?
Scale and pace. A Dahabiya carries 8–16 guests compared to 40–150 on a standard ship. It moves primarily under sail, arriving more slowly at each site in the morning. The deck is intimate rather than crowded. The overall experience is closer to private sailing than to cruise ship tourism. The sites visited are the same as a standard cruise, but the journey between them is qualitatively different.
Can I combine this with a Cairo tour?
Yes. The standard structure is: Cairo (2–3 days) → domestic flight to Luxor → Dahabiya → disembark in Aswan → return to Cairo or depart internationally from Aswan. Contact us with your travel dates, and we will build the combined itinerary.
Explore the tours above. Read the details. Ask questions if needed. Book only when it feels right.
How pricing works
Prices are based on:
- Group size
- Duration
- Inclusions listed on the tour page
You will always know what is included before booking. There are no surprise additions.




















