Aswan Sunset Felucca to Elephantine Island — Nilometer & Nubian Village Tour
Overview
Unlike a general sunset sail along the Nile, this tour is built specifically around landing on and exploring Elephantine Island itself — the large island opposite central Aswan that has been continuously inhabited for more than five thousand years, making it one of the longest continuously occupied settlements anywhere in Egypt. Egypt For Travel's Sunset Felucca to Elephantine Island tour combines the journey by traditional sailboat with guided time ashore on the island, visiting the ancient Nilometer, the ruins of the Temple of Khnum, the small on-site Aswan Museum, and a Nubian village, before sailing back as the sun sets over the First Cataract.
Elephantine Island — Five Thousand Years of Continuous History
In antiquity, Elephantine Island was known to the Egyptians as Abu, meaning "elephant" or "ivory," reflecting its historical importance as the southern frontier trading post of pharaonic Egypt, where ivory and other goods from Nubia and further south in Africa were exchanged and taxed before continuing north into the Egyptian heartland. The island was also home to one of ancient Egypt's most important Nilometers — a graduated stone staircase descending into the river, marked with measurement lines used by priests and officials to record the annual flood height, information that was directly used to calculate agricultural taxes for the coming year across the entire kingdom.
What You Will See on the Island
Your guide leads you from the landing point through the ruins of the ancient settlement, including the foundations of the Temple of Khnum (the ram-headed god of the Nile's source, particularly venerated at this frontier location), and to the Nilometer itself, where you can descend the ancient measured steps toward the water level, much as ancient priests would have done to take their annual readings. The small Aswan Museum, housed in a colonial-era villa on the island, displays artefacts excavated from the site, providing useful context for what can otherwise be a somewhat scattered set of ruins. Beyond the archaeological area, a walk through the island's Nubian village quarter offers the same warm, colourful encounter with Nubian domestic architecture and daily life found at Soheil Island, but in a setting directly across the water from central Aswan rather than requiring travel further afield.
What no other guide tells you: The Elephantine Nilometer's measurement system used a standard unit called the cubit, and ancient Egyptian administrators developed a precise correlation between the recorded flood height at Aswan and the agricultural tax assessment for the entire country — a flood judged too low meant insufficient irrigation and a reduced harvest, triggering proportionally lower taxes that year, while an optimal flood level triggered the standard or higher assessment. This makes the unassuming stone staircase you descend on this tour, in effect, one of the world's oldest surviving pieces of economic infrastructure: a 3,000-year-old instrument that directly determined the tax burden of an entire nation based on a single annual measurement taken at this precise spot.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Duration | 3 hours total, including the felucca crossing both ways and time ashore |
| Time on the island | Approximately 1.5 hours, guided |
| What's included on the island | Nilometer · Temple of Khnum ruins · Aswan Museum · Nubian village walk |
| How it differs from the general felucca ride | This tour lands and explores Elephantine Island in depth; the general felucca ride sails past it without disembarking |
| Duration: 3 hours | Type: Day Tour / Evening | Run: Everyday |
Included
- Private licensed guide throughout, including time ashore on Elephantine Island
- Private vehicle — hotel or cruise ship pickup and drop-off to the Corniche dock
- Private felucca crossing to and from Elephantine Island
- Aswan Museum entrance fee
- Bottled water
- All government taxes and service charges
Excluded
- Optional: Nubian handicraft purchases in the village (own cost, direct to local families)
- Tips for guide and felucca captain
- Personal spending
Itinerary:
~1.5 hrs before sunset — Hotel or cruise ship pickup, transfer to Corniche dock
Dock — Board private felucca, sail to Elephantine Island
On arrival — Guided walk to the Nilometer, descend the ancient measured steps
Continuing — Temple of Khnum ruins, Aswan Museum, Nubian village quarter
Before sunset — Return to the felucca for the crossing back, timed for sunset over the First Cataract
Return — Transfer to hotel or cruise ship
Prices:
Prices
Notes:
Prices Policy
All prices are quoted per person and are inclusive of your guide, transport, the private felucca crossing both ways, and the Aswan Museum entrance fee, as detailed in the Inclusions section above. Single travellers pay the same per-person rate. Children aged 2 to 11 receive a discounted rate — please contact Egypt For Travel for current pricing.
Departure Tips
Comfortable, flat walking shoes are recommended, as the island visit involves walking on uneven ancient stone surfaces, particularly around the Nilometer steps, which can be slightly slippery near the waterline. A hat and sun protection are advisable, even for a late-afternoon departure, given the open exposure on both the felucca and the island. Bring a small amount of cash if you wish to purchase handicrafts directly from Nubian village families on the island. Photography of local residents always requires their consent; your guide will help facilitate this respectfully.
Children Policy
Children aged 0–1 travel free of charge. Children aged 2–11 receive a discounted rate — please contact Egypt For Travel for current pricing. The Nilometer steps require some care for young children given their proximity to the water; supervision is advised. The Aswan Museum and Nubian village sections of the tour are generally very well suited to families.
Payment Policy
A deposit of 25% of the total tour cost is required to confirm your booking. The remaining 75% balance is due before or on the day of the tour. During peak season, from October through April, and for group bookings of 6 or more people, a deposit of 50% is required at the time of booking. Egypt For Travel accepts payment by bank transfer, credit card, or cash in USD, EUR, or EGP.
Installment Policy
Flexible payment installments are available on request, particularly when this tour is combined with a broader Aswan or Egypt itinerary booked through Egypt For Travel. Please contact us via WhatsApp at +20 155 555 2466 or by email to discuss installment arrangements before confirming your booking.
Tipping Guide
Tipping is customary in Egypt but always at your discretion, and Egypt For Travel never adds automatic gratuities to invoices or applies any pressure to tip. As a general guideline, your guide typically receives $10–15 per day (pro-rated for this shorter experience, typically $5–8), and the felucca captain typically receives $5–10. These amounts are paid directly and in cash at the conclusion of the tour, in USD, EUR, or EGP as you prefer.
Cancellation Policy
Cancellations made 61 days or more before the scheduled departure incur a 10% cancellation fee. Cancellations made between 31 and 60 days before departure incur a 20% cancellation fee. Cancellations made between 15 and 30 days before departure incur a 50% cancellation fee. Cancellations made within 1 to 14 days of departure are non-refundable, representing a 100% cancellation fee. All cancellation requests must be submitted to Egypt For Travel in writing. In the rare event that wind conditions make the felucca crossing unsafe, Egypt For Travel will reschedule the tour at no additional cost or offer a full refund.