Private Luxor West Bank Half-Day Tour
A private experience shaped around your time and interests.
⭐ 5.0 Rated | Licensed Egyptologist Guides | Free Cancellation | Hotel Pickup Included
The West Bank of Luxor is where ancient Egypt buried its pharaohs for five hundred years — not in pyramids, which had proven too visible to robbers, but in hidden tombs cut deep into the limestone cliffs of the Valley of the Kings.
Every tomb is painted. Every surface of every burial chamber carries a complete visual program: the journey through the underworld, the gods encountered in the twelve hours of night, the spells required for resurrection. Seen with a guide who can read the imagery, the paintings stop being decoration and become the most complete record of ancient Egyptian religious thought that exists anywhere.
This half-day focuses entirely on the West Bank — the sites that make Luxor unlike anywhere else in Egypt.
Who This Tour Is For
- Travelers based in Luxor who want to focus on the West Bank properly before covering the East Bank separately
- Cruise passengers with a half-day stop who want the most significant sites covered at the right pace
- Those who find tomb art more compelling than temple architecture and want maximum time here
What You Will See
Valley of the Kings
The royal necropolis of the New Kingdom — 63 known tombs, of which approximately 10–15 are open to visitors at any time. Your guide selects the three included tombs based on current access and significance on your visit date. The goal is not quantity — it is understanding what you are looking at inside each one.
Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari
The mortuary temple of Egypt's most successful female pharaoh was built into the natural amphitheatre of the Theban cliffs around 1470 BC. Its design — three colonnaded terraces against the cliff face — is architecturally extraordinary and in perfect visual harmony with the landscape behind it.
Colossi of Memnon
The two massive seated statues of Amenhotep III that once guarded his mortuary temple have now largely disappeared. They stand 18 meters high and have been sitting in the Luxor floodplain for 3,400 years. A brief stop on the route back.
✦ At Deir el-Bahari, your guide will point out something most visitors miss: on the upper terrace of Hatshepsut's temple, the faces of Hatshepsut have been systematically chiselled off every relief — her name erased, her image destroyed. This was done by her successor, Thutmose III, possibly decades after her death. The question of why continues to occupy Egyptologists to this day. What makes the West Bank version of this story powerful is that you are standing in the building he could not erase — the building proves she existed, regardless of what he removed from it.
Common Questions
Can I choose specific tombs in the Valley of the Kings?
Yes — if you have a specific tomb priority (Tutankhamun, Seti I, Ramesses VI are common requests), tell us when booking. Premium tombs require separate tickets purchased in advance. Your guide confirms current availability before the tour.
Is this combinable with the East Bank on the same day?
Yes — see our full-day East and West Bank tour. The half-day format is the right choice if you want genuine depth on the West Bank and are covering Karnak and Luxor Temple separately.
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.
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.















