Private Edfu & Kom Ombo Day Trip from Aswan

A private experience shaped around your time and interests.


⭐ 5.0 Rated | Licensed Egyptologist Guides | Free Cancellation | Hotel Pickup Included

Private Edfu & Kom Ombo Day Trip from Aswan

1 day

Moderate


Most Nile cruise passengers visit Edfu and Kom Ombo on the ship's schedule — an hour at each, in a large group, with narration delivered over a microphone to forty people moving at the pace of the slowest member.

A private day trip from Aswan gives you both temples with a guide, at your own pace, with the time to actually understand what you are looking at.

The temples are the same. The experience is not.

Edfu — Temple of Horus

The most completely preserved ancient Egyptian temple in existence. Buried under 12 meters of Nile silt and a later village until 1860, it emerged into the 19th century in a state of preservation that exposed temples could never match. The entrance pylon, hypostyle hall, offering hall, and inner sanctuary are all intact — roof, walls, floors, inscriptions. Your guide covers the myth of Horus and Set, the annual festival cycle, and the architectural logic of the Ptolemaic temple plan.

Kom Ombo — Temple of Sobek and Haroeris

The double temple on the Nile bank was built for two gods simultaneously, with twin sanctuaries mirroring each other across the central axis. The Crocodile Museum, adjacent to the temple, houses the mummified crocodiles found buried nearby. Kom Ombo has the best Nile-facing position of any temple in Upper Egypt — the outer court opens directly to the river.

✦ At Edfu, on the outer wall of the hypostyle hall, there is a carved calendar of the temple's annual festivals — 52 separate celebrations listed by date, with the correct ritual procedure for each one. It is the complete annual programme of a living temple. Your guide will read selected entries — the Festival of the Beautiful Meeting, the New Year ceremony at the roof chapel, and the Feast of the Victory of Horus over Set. What becomes clear is that the temple was not a monument. It was a working institution, staffed daily for centuries, running to a schedule as precise as any modern calendar.

Common Questions 

What is the best sequence — Edfu first or Kom Ombo first? 

Travelling north from Aswan, Kom Ombo comes first (45km north) and Edfu second (115km north). Most drivers cover Edfu first on the way north and Kom Ombo on the return. Your guide will advise on the sequence to avoid peak cruise-ship docking hours at each temple. 

Is this tour available for Nile cruise passengers? 

Yes — we can meet you at the dock at Edfu or Kom Ombo if your cruise schedule docks at either location. Tell us your cruise ship name and docking times when booking. 

Can the pacing or order be adjusted? Yes — all tours are private. The itinerary adapts to you, not the other way around. If you want more time at one site and less at another, tell your guide. 

Will there be pressure to buy anything? 

No. This is a private tour with no commission arrangements. Your guide will not redirect the itinerary for shopping stops.


What's included?
    • Private Aswan hotel/cruise pickup and drop off
    • Private qualified Egyptologist tour guide
    • Entrance fees
    • Lunch at a local restaurant
    • Bottled water
    Exclusions
      • Gratuities
      • Personal items
      Please note

        Pickup & Timing: Your guide contacts you the evening before your tour via WhatsApp to reconfirm the exact pickup time and your hotel details. Pickup is from the lobby of any hotel in Cairo or Giza (Luxor or Aswan for southern tours). If you're staying in an Airbnb or non-hotel accommodation, share your location pin when booking so your driver can find you easily.

        What You'll Pay On-Site: All entry fees listed in the itinerary are included. If you choose optional upgrades during the tour — such as entering the Tutankhamun tomb, the Seti I tomb, or the Great Pyramid interior — these are paid on-site by credit or debit card. Your guide will advise whether each upgrade is worthwhile before you decide. Cash is no longer accepted at most major archaeological sites in Egypt.

        Weather & Sun Egypt is hot and dry for most of the year. From October to March, daytime temperatures in Cairo are comfortable (18–25°C / 65–77°F), but mornings can be cool. From April to September, expect 35–45°C (95–113°F) at open-air sites. The Giza Plateau, Valley of the Kings, and Karnak have almost no shade. Your guide schedules site visits to avoid the worst midday heat, but sun protection is essential regardless of season.

        Dress Code: Dress comfortably and modestly. At mosques (Al-Hussein, Al-Azhar, Alabaster Mosque), shoulders and knees must be covered — this applies to all genders. At archaeological sites, there is no dress code, but lightweight long sleeves protect against the sun better than sunscreen alone. Comfortable closed-toe shoes with grip are essential — sites involve walking on sand, uneven stone, and rough terrain.

        Photography: Photography is permitted at most outdoor archaeological sites. Inside tombs (Valley of the Kings), photography is generally prohibited unless you purchase a separate photography ticket. Inside the Grand Egyptian Museum, photography rules vary by gallery — your guide advises on the day. Drone photography at all archaeological sites requires permits that are extremely difficult to obtain. Do not fly a drone without confirmed authorization.

        Payments & Currency Egypt's currency is the Egyptian Pound (EGP). Most tourist-facing businesses accept credit/debit cards and USD. Your guide and driver accept tips in EGP, USD, or EUR. ATMs are widely available in Cairo, Luxor, and Aswan. Recommended tipping: $5–10 per person for your guide on a half-day tour, $10–15 on a full day. $3–5 for your driver.

        Health & Safety: Drink only bottled water (provided on your tour). Tap water in Egypt is not safe for tourists. Carry any personal medications you need — pharmacies are available but may not stock specific brands. Apply sunscreen before departure, not on-site — you'll be in the sun within minutes of arriving at most sites. Travel insurance is required for all tours and is not provided by Pyramids Land.

        Cultural Notes: Egyptians are genuinely welcoming. "Shukran" (thank you) and "Salaam alaikum" (peace be upon you) go a long way. At tourist sites, you may be approached by local vendors or people offering unsolicited help (leading you to a viewpoint, taking your photo). A polite "la, shukran" (no, thank you) works. Your guide manages these interactions so you don't have to.

        What to bring
          • Comfortable closed-toe shoes with grip (sand, uneven stone, rough terrain at all sites)
          • Hat with a brim — essential at Giza, Saqqara, Valley of the Kings, Karnak, and all open-air sites
          • Sunscreen (apply before departure — you'll be in the sun immediately on arrival)
          • Sunglasses
          • Camera or smartphone (charged — there are no charging points at sites)
          • A light scarf or shawl for mosque visits (shoulders and knees covered)
          • Small daypack for water, camera, and sun protection
          • Any personal medications you need during the day

          We provide bottled water throughout the tour. You do not need to bring your own.

          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.

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