Abu Simbel Day Tour from Aswan — By Flight or Road, Private Guide
Overview
On the western bank of Lake Nasser, 280 kilometres south of Aswan, two temples carved into a sandstone cliff by Ramesses II around 1264 BC have stood for 3,300 years as the most impressive rock-cut monuments in the world. The Great Temple of Abu Simbel — guarded by four 20-metre seated colossi of Ramesses II, its interior penetrating 63 metres into the cliff — and the Small Temple dedicated to his queen Nefertari and the goddess Hathor, together form the greatest monument to royal power and divine self-identification in ancient Egyptian history. Egypt For Travel's Abu Simbel Day Tour from Aswan makes this extraordinary site accessible as a day trip — by 45-minute flight or by road convoy — with a private licensed guide and all entrance fees included.
The Two Temples of Abu Simbel
The Great Temple (Temple of Ramesses II)
Four colossal seated statues of Ramesses II — each 20 metres high, carved directly from the cliff face — flank the entrance to the Great Temple, their scale and authority undiminished by 33 centuries of desert sun. Inside, the hypostyle hall is lined with eight 10-metre statues of Ramesses as Osiris; the walls carry the most detailed battle reliefs in any Egyptian temple — scenes from the Battle of Kadesh (1274 BC, one of the earliest documented major battles in history) depicted in vivid, propagandistic detail. The innermost sanctuary contains four seated statues of Ramesses II and the three great gods — Amun, Ra-Horakhty, and Ptah — arranged so that on 22 October and 22 February each year, the rising sun penetrates the entire 63-metre length of the temple and illuminates the three seated gods (but not Ptah, god of darkness) in the innermost sanctuary: an astronomical engineering achievement of extraordinary precision.
The Small Temple (Temple of Nefertari)
Immediately to the north of the Great Temple, the Small Temple is dedicated jointly to Queen Nefertari (Ramesses II's most beloved wife) and the goddess Hathor. It is one of only two occasions in ancient Egyptian history where a pharaoh dedicated a major temple to his wife; and the facade — six standing colossal figures (four of Ramesses, two of Nefertari) all at the same scale — is a unique statement of royal equality and devotion. The interior reliefs show Nefertari in ritual roles normally reserved for the pharaoh himself, identified with Hathor as a divine being in her own right.
The UNESCO Relocation — An Engineering Miracle
Both temples were originally carved into cliffs that would have been submerged by the rising waters of Lake Nasser after the construction of the Aswan High Dam. Between 1964 and 1968, in one of the greatest cultural rescue operations in history, UNESCO coordinated the careful cutting of both temples into over 1,000 numbered blocks, their transport to a storage area, and their precise reassembly 65 metres higher and 200 metres further back from the original site — maintaining the original cardinal orientation so that the solar alignment events of 22 October and 22 February still occur as Ramesses II's architects intended. The operation cost approximately $40 million (equivalent to over $350 million today) and involved engineers and archaeologists from 50 countries.
The Solar Alignment Events: 22 October & 22 February
The most spectacular times to visit Abu Simbel are the twice-yearly solar alignment events on 22 October and 22 February — when the rising sun penetrates the full 63-metre depth of the Great Temple and illuminates the statues in the innermost sanctuary. These dates correspond (with a one-day margin introduced by the relocation) to the pharaoh's coronation and birthday according to some Egyptologists. The events attract thousands of visitors and require advance booking 6+ months ahead. Egypt For Travel arranges priority access and preferred positioning for the alignment viewing. Contact us immediately via WhatsApp if you wish to visit on these dates.
How to Get There: Flight vs Road
| Option | Journey Time | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| By flight (recommended) | 45 min each way | Much more time at the temples · less tiring · aerial view of Lake Nasser | Higher cost · flight times fixed · booking needed in advance |
| By road | 3 hours each way (convoy) | Lower cost · desert landscape driving · no flight booking needed | 6 hours driving total · tiring · limited temple time · convoy schedule required |
Egypt For Travel strongly recommends the flight option. The 90 minutes saved in each direction translates directly into more time at the temples — and Abu Simbel rewards a slow, unhurried visit. The flight from Aswan Airport takes approximately 45 minutes and provides an extraordinary aerial view of Lake Nasser and the surrounding desert landscape. Contact us via WhatsApp: +20 155 555 2466 for current flight availability and pricing.
| Duration: 09 Hours | Type: By Road- Private Tour | Run: Everyday |
Included
By flight option includes:
- Return domestic flight Aswan–Abu Simbel–Aswan (economy class, booked by Egypt For Travel)
- Airport transfers by private air-conditioned vehicle in Aswan
- Private licensed Egyptologist guide at Abu Simbel
- All entrance fees: Great Temple of Ramesses II · Small Temple of Nefertari
- Bottled water at the site
- All government taxes and service charges
By road option includes:
- Private air-conditioned vehicle — Aswan hotel to Abu Simbel and return
- Private licensed Egyptologist guide throughout
- All entrance fees (as above)
- Bottled water throughout
- All government taxes and service charges
Excluded
- Lunch at Abu Simbel (basic restaurant on site — cost payable directly)
- Personal spending and souvenirs
- Tips for guide and driver/pilot
- Travel insurance
- Photography permit for professional cameras (if applicable)
Itinerary:
05:00 — Hotel pickup in Aswan
06:00 — Aswan Airport check-in
07:00 — Depart Aswan by domestic flight (approx. 45 min)
07:45 — Arrive Abu Simbel Airport · meet private guide
08:00–11:00 — Abu Simbel temples: Great Temple of Ramesses II · interior reliefs · solar sanctuary · Small Temple of Nefertari · UNESCO relocation exhibition
11:00 — Optional lunch at Abu Simbel
12:00 — Depart Abu Simbel by return flight
12:45 — Arrive Aswan Airport · transfer to hotel
By road: depart Aswan 04:00, arrive Abu Simbel ~07:00, depart 11:00, arrive Aswan ~14:00
Prices:
Prices
Notes:
Tour price currency is set to USD, however, you can pay in Euro or GBP.The tour prices as stated per person are all-inclusive. Moreover, we always update prices to ensure you receive the lowest price possible. Once your tour is confirmed, no change to the prices is guaranteed from our part.
• Children Policy
0 - 05.99 Free of Charge
6 - 11.99 pay 50% of tour price
12+ pay full tour price as per adult person
If your tour includes airfare then an extra charge for child rate may apply.
• Deposit and Payment
A full payment will be required when confirming your booking as requested and can be paid by credit or debit card (Visa / MasterCard) via Verisign Secured payment system on our website.
• Tour Voucher
After your tour is confirmed we will email final confirmation and voucher to print and bring with you. Details will include contact numbers of your tour operator and customer care and additional information for your convenience.