Private Valley of the Queens & Luxor West Bank Deep-Dive
A private experience shaped around your time and interests.
⭐ 5.0 Rated | Licensed Egyptologist Guides | Free Cancellation | Hotel Pickup Included
Every visitor to Luxor goes to the Valley of the Kings. Far fewer reach the Valley of the Queens, Deir el-Medina, Medinet Habu, or the Ramesseum — and the difference in experience is significant.
These sites are less visited, in some cases better preserved, and carry stories that the royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings don't tell. The workers' village at Deir el-Medina contains the most detailed record of everyday life in ancient Egypt. The tomb of Queen Nefertari is the most beautifully painted room in the ancient world. Medinet Habu's battle reliefs depict a naval engagement so precisely that modern historians use them to understand Sea Peoples warfare.
This tour is for travelers who have seen the Valley of the Kings — or who want the West Bank story that goes beyond it.
What the Day Covers
Valley of the Queens
The royal wives and princes were buried here — 90 known tombs, of which a small number are open. The tomb of Queen Nefertari (wife of Ramesses II) is the most celebrated — a premium ticket site with visitor numbers strictly controlled. The paintings inside, restored by the Getty Conservation Institute over twelve years, are in a condition that the Valley of the Kings tombs cannot match. Your guide navigates ticket availability when you book.
Deir el-Medina — The Workers' Village
The village where the craftsmen who built and decorated the royal tombs lived for over 400 years. Their own tombs — smaller, privately funded, but spectacularly painted — are here. The documentary record of their lives is extraordinary: work rosters, sick leave records, the minutes of village courts, love poetry, and medical treatments. No other site in Egypt brings ordinary ancient Egyptians this close.
Medinet Habu — The Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III
The best-preserved mortuary temple on the West Bank and one of the most complete in Egypt. The outer wall carries reliefs of the Battle of the Delta — Ramesses III's defeat of the Sea Peoples, depicted in a level of narrative detail unusual even in Egyptian art.
The Ramesseum
The mortuary temple of Ramesses II, now partially collapsed — but the fallen colossus that once stood here (the largest statue ever carved in Egypt) is believed to have inspired Shelley's Ozymandias. Your guide places it in both literary and historical contexts.
✦ In the Deir el-Medina village records — preserved on ostraca (limestone flakes) found in the 1920s and now in museums in Cairo and Turin — there is a document from around 1159 BC recording what may be the first recorded workers' strike in history. The tomb workers refused to continue work until their grain rations, overdue by weeks, were delivered. They succeeded. Your guide will set you up in the village and read the substance of this document — not from a book, but from knowledge. The moment when ancient Egyptians become recognisably human happens for most travelers at Deir el-Medina.
Common Questions
Is Nefertari's tomb worth the premium ticket price?
For most travelers with a genuine interest in Egyptian art: yes, unequivocally. The paintings are in a state of preservation that nothing in the Valley of the Kings matches — vivid color, intact detail, room after room of the most sophisticated religious imagery in ancient Egypt. We recommend it honestly, not commercially.
Can this be combined with the Valley of the Kings on the same day?
It is a very full day if combined. For travelers with only one day on the West Bank, we recommend choosing: the Valley of the Kings with Hatshepsut Temple, or this deeper tour. Both cannot be done properly in one day. We will advise based on your interests.
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.















