Private Karnak & Luxor Temple Tour

A private experience shaped around your time and interests.


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

Private Karnak & Luxor Temple Tour

5 hours

Easy


Karnak is not a single temple. It is an accumulation of temples, chapels, pylons, and sanctuaries built and expanded by thirty pharaohs across a period of two thousand years.

Walking through Karnak without context is like reading a book with half the pages removed and no chapter headings. Impressive fragments, but no coherent story.

This tour gives you the story. Your Egyptologist guides you through the complex in chronological order — explaining which pharaoh built which section, what the competing temples reveal about religious politics in ancient Egypt, and why the hypostyle hall is one of the most astonishing architectural spaces in the world.

Who This Tour Is For

  • Travelers with a specific interest in Egyptian temple architecture and New Kingdom history
  • Those who want to understand Karnak as a political and religious institution, not just as a monument
  • Visitors who have been to Karnak before and felt they didn't see it properly — this tour addresses that directly

Karnak: What Your Guide Will Show You

The Hypostyle Hall

134 columns arranged in 16 rows, the tallest reaching 23 meters. Built under Seti I and completed by Ramesses II. Originally roofed, painted, and lit by clerestory windows — a cavernous interior space that dwarfs every cathedral ever built. The columns are carved with reliefs so detailed and so high that most visitors never see the upper registers. Your guide will explain what is up there and why it matters.

The Sacred Lake

Used by priests for ritual purification and astronomical observation. Around its edges, the evidence of Karnak's 2,000-year construction history is visible in the layering of architectural styles. Your guide uses this vantage point to explain the timeline of the entire complex.

The Temples of Amenhotep III and the Inner Sanctuaries

The oldest sections of Karnak are the ones that most tour groups walk past on the way to the hypostyle hall. Your guide reverses the standard direction of travel to cover these first, which means you see Karnak's history in the order it was built, not in the order modern tourists arrive.

Luxor Temple

Connected to Karnak by the three-kilometer Avenue of Sphinxes. Built primarily by Amenhotep III and Ramesses II, Luxor Temple was used for the annual Opet Festival — when the cult statue of Amun was carried from Karnak to Luxor in a sacred procession. Your guide explains the festival and its political significance. Late afternoon light on the sandstone is extraordinary.

✦ Inside the first pylon of Karnak — the massive gateway entrance — there is an unfinished section of mud-brick ramp on one side. The ancient builders used mud-brick ramps to raise stones to height, then dismantled the ramps as they finished each course. This one was left when the pharaoh died, and construction stopped. It has stood for 3,300 years — not as a ruin, but as the moment the work paused, preserved in place. Your guide stops here before entering the complex and asks you to think about what you are looking at. The ramp is not on any tourist map. Almost no one who visits Karnak ever sees it.

Common Questions 

Is the Karnak Sound and Light Show different from this tour? 

Yes — the evening Sound and Light Show is a theatrical experience of the same site in darkness and illumination. This daytime tour is a historical and architectural guided visit. They complement each other. See Tour 8 in this document for the Sound and Light Show. 

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?
    •  You will be picked up and return from your accommodation hotel/ Nile Cruise.
    •  Entrance fees are a part of the journey for the mentioned sites in the itinerary.
    •  An Egyptologist travel guide and will be part of your tour to guide you and furnish important details of all the sites you visit.
    •  Mineral Water onboard will get provided.
    •  A delicious lunch.
    • Your transportation will get ensured in personal air-conditioned vehicles
    •  All the services, taxes, and charges require on the trip will get included.
    Exclusions
      •  The additional charges like tipping are excluded from the tour package.
      • ·Few entries like inside the solar boat and Egyptian pyramids and the inside entry to the Royal Mummy room of the Egyptian museum will get excluded. If you want a visit then need to get paid on the spot.
      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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