Valley of the Kings Private Tour — Expert Tomb Selection & Egyptologist Guide
Overview
The Valley of the Kings contains 63 royal tombs — but on any given day, only 20–25 are open to the public, and the standard ticket admits you to just three. Which three you choose determines your entire experience of this extraordinary place. The difference between three mediocre tombs and three great ones is the difference between mildly impressive painted corridors and some of the most extraordinary art ever produced by human beings. Egypt For Travel's Valley of the Kings Private Tour — led exclusively by a licensed Egyptologist who knows every open tomb and visits the valley several times a week — is built around a single guarantee: you will see the right tombs.
Why Expert Tomb Selection Matters
This is what your Egyptologist will know that you cannot determine from a travel website:
Which tombs are least crowded at your arrival time — the difference between standing alone in a painted chamber with time to absorb it, and shuffling through in a crowd that moves you past in 3 minutes.
Which tombs have the best-preserved paintings — not all royal tombs are equal. Some have suffered from humidity, ground water, and decades of tourist breath. Others are miraculously intact.
Which tombs have recently opened or reopened — the restoration programme periodically opens previously closed tombs, and these are always less crowded and often the most spectacular.
The Great Tombs — What to Know Before You Go
KV9 — Ramesses VI (One of the Best in the Valley)
The tomb of Ramesses VI — open, well-preserved, and consistently one of the best combinations of scale, painting quality, and accessibility in the valley. The astronomical ceiling of the burial chamber is the most complete sky map in any Egyptian tomb: the journey of the sun through the 12 hours of the day and 12 hours of the night, painted in vivid blue and gold, the solar disc moving from east to west across the curved ceiling. The Book of Caverns, Book of Gates, and Amduat texts cover every wall surface.
KV17 — Seti I (When Open — The Greatest Tomb in Egypt)
When open, the tomb of Seti I (father of Ramesses II) is considered by Egyptologists to contain the finest paintings in the Valley of the Kings — and some of the finest paintings ever produced in the ancient world. The style is early 19th Dynasty at its absolute peak: figures of extraordinary elegance, colours still vivid after 3,200 years, the theology of the underworld expressed with an almost musical visual rhythm. KV17 opens periodically for conservation assessment — your guide will confirm current access status at booking.
KV62 — Tutankhamun (Optional — Famous but Modest)
The tomb of Tutankhamun is the most famous in the world — but it is small, modestly painted, and its original treasures are all in the Egyptian Museum and the Grand Egyptian Museum. What remains is the mummified body of the king himself in his outermost gilded coffin, the painted burial chamber (four walls, vivid but minimal), and the extraordinary fact of standing in the space that Howard Carter opened on 26 November 1922. The additional ticket (300 EGP) is worth paying if you are interested in the history of Egyptology — the discovery story — as much as the paintings.
KV11 — Ramesses III (Spacious and Beautifully Painted)
One of the longest and most spacious tombs in the valley, with a complete set of Book of the Dead decorations and some of the finest blind harpist reliefs in any Egyptian tomb — the famous painted musicians playing for eternity in the side chambers.
KV2 — Ramesses IV (Large, Accessible, Well-Preserved)
A large, open, well-lit tomb with good accessibility and high-quality paintings — an excellent choice for visitors with mobility considerations or those who find the steep descent of other tombs challenging.
| Tomb | Pharaoh | Why Choose It | Extra Ticket? |
|---|---|---|---|
| KV9 | Ramesses VI | Best astronomical ceiling · open and spacious · consistently superb | No — standard ticket |
| KV17 | Seti I | Finest paintings in any tomb · when open, unmissable | Additional fee when open |
| KV62 | Tutankhamun | Famous · mummy present · small but historically overwhelming | 700 EGP extra |
| KV11 | Ramesses III | Spacious · beautiful harpist reliefs · good photography | No — standard ticket |
| KV2 | Ramesses IV | Accessible · large · well-lit · mobility-friendly | No — standard ticket |
This tour is designed for visitors who want to spend meaningful time in the Valley of the Kings — not rushing through three tombs in 90 minutes, but spending 3+ hours with their guide, absorbing the theology and the art of each tomb in depth. For visitors on a tight schedule who need the Valley plus other West Bank sites, see our Luxor West Bank Private Tour instead.
| Duration: Half Day (4–5 hours) or extended | Type: Privet Tour | Run: Everyday |
Included
- Private licensed Egyptologist guide (specialist in New Kingdom tomb art)
- Private air-conditioned vehicle — hotel or cruise ship pickup and drop-off
- Valley of the Kings standard ticket (750 EGP — 3 tombs)
- Colossi of Memnon stop en route (free — included)
- Bottled water throughout
- All taxes and service charges
Excluded
- Optional: Tutankhamun's Tomb KV62 (700 EGP extra — payable locally)
- Optional: Seti I KV17 when open (additional fee)
- Optional: extend to Hatshepsut Temple after the Valley (see West Bank tour)
- Lunch (recommended Luxor restaurant — own cost)
- Personal spending and tips
Itinerary:
07:00 — Hotel or cruise pickup
07:30 — Colossi of Memnon (brief stop — guide explains vanished temple)
08:00–11:30 — Valley of the Kings: guide selects 3 optimal tombs · unhurried time in each · full theological and artistic explanation
11:30 — Optional: extend to Hatshepsut Temple or return to hotel/cruise
Dedicated Valley-only option: 07:00–11:00, return to hotel by 12:00
Prices:
Prices
Notes:
Prices Policy
All prices per person. Private available at a premium for groups wanting exclusive use — contact Egypt For Travel for pricing. Weather cancellations receive a full rescheduling without penalty.
Departure Tips
Pickup is at 07:00 — the earliest of any Egypt For Travel tour. Set two alarms. Bring warm clothing — the desert at pre-dawn is significantly cooler than during the day (can be 12–15°C in winter). A fully charged phone or camera is essential. Wear closed-toe shoes. The gondola sides are approximately waist height — there is nothing to sit on during the flight.
Payment Policy
25% deposit to confirm booking. Balance due before the flight. Peak season (October–April): 50% deposit. The balloon slot must be confirmed well in advance during peak season — Luxor balloon operators fill up months ahead.
Installment Policy
Installments available for groups. Contact Egypt For Travel via WhatsApp (+20 155 555 2466).
Tipping Guide
Customary $5–10 per person, paid directly to the crew after the post-landing celebration. Boat captain: 20–50 EGP. Driver: $5–8 per day.
Cancellation Policy
61+ days: 10% · 31–60 days: 20% · 15–30 days: 50% · 1–14 days: 100%. Weather cancellations are rescheduled without charge — this is not a standard cancellation.