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  • White Island & Ras Mohamed Boat Trip from Sharm El Sheikh — Sandbar, Lagoon & Reef

White Island & Ras Mohamed Boat Trip from Sharm El Sheikh — Sandbar, Lagoon & Reef

Sharm el-Sheikh, White Island, Ras Mohamed

(1,186 Reviews)
Boat trip to White Island Sharm el-Sheikh — anchored offshore from the sand spit
White Island & Ras Mohamed Boat Trip from Sharm El Sheikh — Sandbar, Lagoon & Reef
Ras Mohamed snorkeling stop — combined with White Island on the Sharm el-Sheikh boat trip
White Island lagoon Sharm — relaxation and swimming, combined boat trip with Ras Mohamed
White Island sandbar Sharm el-Sheikh — turquoise lagoon boat trip from the Red Sea coast
Boat trip to White Island Sharm el-Sheikh — anchored offshore from the sand spit
White Island & Ras Mohamed Boat Trip from Sharm El Sheikh — Sandbar, Lagoon & Reef
Ras Mohamed snorkeling stop — combined with White Island on the Sharm el-Sheikh boat trip
White Island lagoon Sharm — relaxation and swimming, combined boat trip with Ras Mohamed
White Island sandbar Sharm el-Sheikh — turquoise lagoon boat trip from the Red Sea coast

Overview

White Island is not, in the conventional sense, an island at all, but rather a striking white sand spit and shallow turquoise lagoon that emerges from the Red Sea within the Ras Mohamed National Park area, becoming most visible and most dramatically photogenic at lower tide levels. Combined with snorkelling stops at the surrounding reefs of Ras Mohamed itself, Egypt For Travel's White Island Boat Trip offers a slightly different emphasis from a pure reef-focused snorkelling excursion: a full day balancing genuine beach and lagoon relaxation time with reef snorkelling, making it a particularly popular choice for groups containing a mix of keen snorkellers and those who simply want a beautiful place to swim, sunbathe, and photograph.

The White Island Experience

The boat anchors offshore from the sand spit, and a smaller tender or direct wading access (depending on conditions) brings guests onto the brilliant white sand itself, surrounded on all sides by shallow, exceptionally clear turquoise water that has made this one of the most photographed locations accessible from Sharm el-Sheikh. The shallow lagoon area is calm and well suited to relaxed swimming and wading, offering a genuinely different rhythm to the day compared with reef-wall snorkelling, and the sandbar itself, with essentially no permanent structures, retains an unspoiled, almost desert-island quality that surprises many first-time visitors who did not expect to find this kind of scenery so close to a developed resort destination.

Combining with Ras Mohamed

Most White Island itineraries combine the sandbar visit with one or two snorkelling stops at the reefs of Ras Mohamed National Park itself, given the geographic proximity, offering the best of both experiences within a single day: the relaxed beach and lagoon time at White Island, and the more structured reef snorkelling for which Ras Mohamed is internationally celebrated. Visitors who have already booked our standalone Ras Mohamed trip and are looking for a complementary but distinct second Red Sea excursion often choose this tour specifically for its different pace and the unique White Island sandbar element, which the standard Ras Mohamed itinerary does not typically include.

Detail Information
Duration Full day, approximately 7 to 8 hours including transfers
White Island time Approximately 1.5 to 2 hours on the sandbar and in the lagoon
Snorkelling stops 1 to 2 reef locations within Ras Mohamed National Park
Best suited for Mixed groups, photography enthusiasts, families wanting beach time alongside snorkelling

What no other guide tells you: White Island's exact appearance and accessible area can vary considerably depending on the tide and recent sea conditions, since it is fundamentally a sand formation rather than a fixed landmass, meaning the experience genuinely differs somewhat from one visit to the next; boat captains and crews monitor conditions closely and time the visit to coincide with favourable tide levels wherever possible, but this natural variability is part of what makes the location feel authentic rather than a manufactured tourist attraction, and most repeat visitors report finding it slightly different and equally beautiful on each occasion.

Duration: Full Day (~8 hours) Type: Day Tour Run: Daily, sea conditions and tides permitting

Included

  • Private vehicle — hotel pickup and drop-off in Sharm el-Sheikh
  • Boat trip with experienced crew
  • Ras Mohamed National Park entrance fee (~$5 per person)
  • Snorkelling equipment (mask, snorkel, fins)
  • White Island sandbar and lagoon visit
  • Lunch on board
  • Soft drinks and water throughout the day
  • All government taxes and service charges

Excluded

  • Optional: scuba diving add-on for certified divers (additional cost, arranged on request)
  • Alcoholic beverages
  • Tips for boat crew and guide
  • Personal spending

Itinerary:

08:00 — Hotel pickup in Sharm el-Sheikh
08:30 — Arrive at the marina, board the boat
09:00 — Depart for the Ras Mohamed area
09:45–11:00 — Snorkelling stop at a Ras Mohamed reef site
11:00–13:00 — White Island: sandbar and lagoon time, swimming, photography, relaxation
13:00–14:00 — Lunch served on board
14:00–15:00 — Optional second snorkelling stop
15:00 — Return cruise to the marina
16:00 — Disembark, transfer to hotel

Prices:


Prices
2-3 Persons
$ 85 Per Person
4-6 Persons
$ 75 Per Person
7-9 Persons
$ 65 Per Person
10+
$ 55 Per Person

Notes:

Prices Policy

All prices are quoted per person and are inclusive of hotel transfers, the boat trip, the park entrance fee, snorkelling equipment, and lunch on board, 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

Bring swimwear, a towel, and reef-safe sunscreen, as standard sunscreens are discouraged or prohibited in the protected marine areas this trip visits. A hat and sunglasses are recommended, along with a change of clothes for the journey home. White Island offers minimal natural shade, so sun protection is particularly important during the time spent on the sandbar itself. If you are prone to seasickness, consider taking appropriate precautions before departure.

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. White Island's shallow lagoon is generally very well suited to families with children, offering calm, safe wading and swimming conditions, though constant adult supervision in the water is required at all times.

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 for group bookings or when this tour is combined with a broader Sharm el-Sheikh holiday package 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, the boat crew is typically tipped collectively in the range of $5–10 per person for a full-day trip. These amounts are paid directly and in cash at the conclusion of the trip, entirely at your discretion.

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 event that sea or tide conditions are deemed unsuitable for the White Island visit on the scheduled day, Egypt For Travel will reschedule the trip at no additional cost or offer a full refund.

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Alf Leila Wa Leila — Arabic for "One Thousand and One Nights" — is the title given to the storytelling tradition that produced some of the most enduring tales in world literature: Scheherazade, Aladdin, Sinbad the Sailor, and Ali Baba, framed by the story of a queen who postpones her own execution night after night by telling her husband, the Sultan, an unfinished story. In Sharm el-Sheikh, this tradition has been turned into a large-scale evening entertainment production — part dinner theatre, part variety show, part immersive Arabian Nights spectacle — and Egypt For Travel's Alf Leila Wa Leila Show tour arranges your complete evening, from hotel pickup through your seated dinner to the final curtain.

The Evening

Guests are seated at long communal or family tables in a purpose-built outdoor or semi-covered venue, typically decorated in an exaggerated, theatrical version of an Arabian palace — ornate lanterns, draped fabric, low seating areas, and an open performance stage or arena at the centre. As the evening unfolds, a multi-course seated dinner is served — generally a buffet or set menu of grilled meats, rice, mezze, salads, and traditional desserts — while a rotating programme of live performances takes place around and among the tables.

The performance line-up typically includes: a belly dancing show (Raqs Sharqi), performed by professional dancers in elaborate costume; a Tanoura performance, the hypnotic continuous-spinning Sufi-derived dance described in our other Egypt For Travel guides, performed here under coloured stage lighting for maximum visual effect; folkloric dance troupes performing traditional Egyptian and Bedouin dances; occasionally a fire show

Detail Information
Duration Approximately 3.5 to 4 hours including transfers
Dinner Seated buffet or set menu — grilled meats, rice, mezze, salads, desserts; soft drinks generally included
Entertainment Belly dancing, Tanoura, folkloric dance, theatrical narrative elements
Best for Families, groups, those wanting a lively, fun evening rather than a quiet experience
Atmosphere Loud, energetic, large-scale, festive — not an intimate or quiet venue

What no other guide tells you: The Alf Leila Wa Leila storytelling tradition that gives this show its name is not, in its original literary form, a single fixed text from ancient Egypt as many visitors assume — it is a centuries-long compilation of stories drawn from Persian, Indian, Arabic, and Egyptian folk traditions, gradually assembled into something resembling its familiar modern form between roughly the 9th and 16th centuries AD, with the most famous European translations and adaptations (including many of the most well-known tales, such as Aladdin and Ali Baba) only added to Western editions in the 18th century and not present in the earliest Arabic manuscripts at all. The show you attend in Sharm draws loosely on the spirit and aesthetic of this tradition as popular entertainment, rather than presenting it as a historically precise cultural performance — useful context for setting the right expectations before you go.

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The Quad Bike Safari

After collection from your hotel and transfer to the safari starting point, a full safety briefing is given, helmets are fitted, and a traditional Bedouin scarf is wrapped around your head and face to protect against dust — itself part of the experience. The quad bike route covers approximately 30 to 45 kilometres of genuine desert terrain: open sandy stretches where speed and confidence build quickly, rockier mountain pass sections requiring more careful, technical riding, and at least one significant photo stop along the way. A popular stop on most routes is the Echo Mountain, a rock formation where guides demonstrate the genuinely striking natural echo effect produced by the surrounding rock walls, a moment that consistently delights visitors of all ages.

The Camel Ride

Following the quad bike section, the pace slows considerably for a camel ride — typically a shorter segment of 15 to 20 minutes, led by an experienced Bedouin handler, offering a completely different, more contemplative way of experiencing the same desert landscape that was just crossed at speed. This combination of fast and slow, mechanised and traditional, is one of the reasons this particular tour format has become the most consistently popular single activity booked by visitors to Sharm el-Sheikh.

The Bedouin Dinner

As the sun sets, the tour concludes at a Bedouin camp — low seating around a central fire, traditional rugs and cushions, and a dinner of grilled chicken or meat, rice, salads, and flatbread prepared over the fire. Tea is served throughout, and many evening departures include a brief cultural performance or demonstration of traditional Bedouin music. As the desert sky darkens, away from the light pollution of the resort strip, the stars become genuinely spectacular, and many guides will point out visible constellations and planets as part of the evening's conclusion.

Element Duration What It Involves
Quad bike safari ~1.5 hours 30–45 km desert and mountain pass terrain, Echo Mountain stop
Camel ride 15–20 minutes Guided ride with Bedouin handler at a relaxed pace
Bedouin dinner ~1.5–2 hours Campfire meal, tea, music, stargazing

What no other guide tells you: The Bedouin tribes of South Sinai — primarily the Muzeina, Tarabin, and Aleigat tribes in the area around Sharm el-Sheikh — have a centuries-old relationship with this specific desert landscape that goes far beyond the entertainment value offered to tourists; many of the routes used on quad bike and camel safaris follow ancient trade and travel paths that connected coastal communities to interior wells and grazing areas long before tourism existed in the region. Asking your Bedouin guide about a specific rock formation, a particular wadi name, or the traditional use of a plant you might notice along the route often opens a far richer conversation than the standard safari commentary alone provides.

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Deep in the granite mountains of central Sinai, at an elevation of over 2,200 metres, two of the most significant religious sites in the world stand side by side: Mount Sinai — traditionally identified as the mountain where Moses received the Ten Commandments, sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam alike — and the Monastery of St Catherine, founded in the 6th century AD and continuously inhabited ever since, making it the oldest continuously operating Christian monastery in the world. Egypt For Travel's private tour from Sharm el-Sheikh combines a pre-dawn or daytime ascent of Mount Sinai with a full guided visit of the monastery, in a single demanding but profoundly rewarding day.

Mount Sinai

Most visitors choose to climb Mount Sinai before dawn, departing Sharm el-Sheikh in the middle of the night in order to reach the summit in time for sunrise — an experience that has drawn pilgrims and travellers for well over a thousand years. The ascent follows the Camel Path, a longer but more gradual route of approximately 7.5 kilometres each way, climbing steadily through the dark granite landscape with Bedouin tea stalls positioned at intervals along the way. The final stretch involves a steeper section of stone steps known locally as the Steps of Repentance, leading to the small chapel at the summit. From the top, as the sky lightens and the sun breaks over the surrounding mountain range, the view extends across an extraordinary landscape of bare granite peaks stretching in every direction, a sight that has moved religious pilgrims and secular travellers alike for centuries.

For travellers who prefer not to undertake a pre-dawn climb in darkness, a daytime ascent is also available, departing later in the morning and reaching the summit by mid-morning, missing the sunrise but offering daylight visibility throughout the climb and a more comfortable schedule for those who find very early starts difficult.

The Monastery of St Catherine

Following the descent from the mountain, the tour continues to the Monastery of St Catherine, built on the site traditionally identified as the location of the Burning Bush, where God is said to have spoken to Moses. Founded under the patronage of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I in the 6th century AD, the monastery has functioned continuously for nearly 1,500 years, surviving waves of regional conflict and political change largely due to a tradition of protection said to have been granted by the Prophet Muhammad himself in a document known as the Ashtiname, a copy of which is preserved within the monastery.

The monastery complex includes the Church of the Transfiguration, its interior decorated with Byzantine mosaics of exceptional age and quality; a small chapel built around what is identified as the original site of the Burning Bush; and an extraordinary library and icon collection, considered second in significance only to the Vatican's own collection in terms of its preserved early Christian manuscripts and artwork, much of which is displayed in a dedicated on-site museum that visitors can access as part of the standard tour.

What no other guide tells you: St Catherine's Monastery holds the world's second-largest collection of early Christian manuscripts after the Vatican Library, including portions of the Codex Sinaiticus — one of the oldest surviving substantially complete manuscripts of the Christian Bible, dating to the 4th century AD. The bulk of the codex was controversially removed from the monastery in the 19th century by a German scholar and is now held primarily in the British Library in London, a matter that remains a point of sensitivity for the monastic community; portions and fragments still held at St Catherine's itself are occasionally displayed, and the monastery's continued role as a centre of manuscript preservation and recent digitisation projects makes it an active site of ongoing scholarship rather than simply a historical relic.

Detail Information
Mount Sinai climb ~7.5 km each way via the Camel Path, 2,285m summit elevation, 2.5–3 hours ascent
St Catherine's Monastery Founded 6th century AD, oldest continuously operating Christian monastery in the world
Entrance fees Mount Sinai climb free; monastery entrance ~150 EGP — included
Difficulty level Moderate to challenging — steep final section, cold pre-dawn temperatures, high altitude
Camel option Camels available for hire along the Camel Path for most of the ascent, at the rider's own cost, for those who prefer not to walk the full route

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How the Day Works

The flight from Sharm el-Sheikh to Cairo takes approximately one hour, and Egypt For Travel arranges the full logistics: airport transfers at both ends, your domestic flight booking, and a private Egyptologist guide and air-conditioned vehicle waiting for you on arrival in Cairo. The early departure is essential to maximise your time at the sites before the return flight in the evening, and the entire day is structured to deliver the maximum possible Cairo experience within the constraints of a single-day round trip by air.

What You Will See

The Giza Pyramids and Great Sphinx

The Great Pyramid of Khufu, the Pyramid of Khafre, and the Pyramid of Menkaure — the only surviving Wonder of the Ancient World — together with the Great Sphinx, carved from a single limestone outcrop and standing guard over the plateau for over 4,500 years. Your guide explains the construction techniques, the astronomical alignments of the complex, and the broader historical and theological context, and ensures you visit the best photographic viewpoints across the plateau.

The Grand Egyptian Museum

Opened in November 2025 adjacent to the Giza Plateau, the Grand Egyptian Museum is the largest archaeological museum in the world, housing the complete treasure of Tutankhamun — over 5,000 objects displayed together for the first time in history — alongside more than 100,000 other ancient Egyptian artefacts across a vast exhibition space. Visiting the GEM directly after the Pyramids themselves, with the museum's translucent stone facade revealing views back toward the monuments you have just stood before, creates a particularly powerful sense of continuity between ancient and modern Egypt.

Detail Information
Flight duration Approximately 1 hour each way
Total day length Approximately 16 to 18 hours, door to door
Giza Pyramids entrance 700 EGP — included
Grand Egyptian Museum entrance 1,590 EGP — included
Time at the sites Approximately 7 to 8 hours of actual sightseeing time in Cairo

What no other guide tells you: Because this tour involves a genuinely long day with two domestic flights bracketing a packed sightseeing schedule, the single most important factor in whether it feels like a triumph or an exhausting slog is the quality of pacing your guide applies on the ground. Egypt For Travel deliberately limits this itinerary to the Pyramids, Sphinx, and Grand Egyptian Museum rather than attempting to add further stops such as Saqqara or the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square, which some lower-cost operators do in an effort to appear more generous on paper; in practice, this additional content typically only compresses time at every site and leaves guests rushed and fatigued. Egypt For Travel's view is that a focused, unhurried day at fewer world-class sites delivers a far better experience than a longer list visited at a sprint.

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Why Ras Mohamed Is Different

The reefs of Ras Mohamed benefit from a genuinely unusual oceanographic situation: the confluence of the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aqaba at this precise headland creates strong, nutrient-rich currents that support an exceptionally dense and varied marine ecosystem, including sheer coral walls dropping to significant depths immediately offshore in several locations, a feature relatively rare so close to easily accessible shorelines elsewhere in the Red Sea. The park's protected status since 1983 has also allowed coral formations and fish populations here to develop with a density and health that is genuinely noticeable even to first-time snorkellers with no prior reef diving experience.

What You Will See

Snorkelling and diving stops typically include some combination of the park's most celebrated sites: Shark Reef and Yolanda Reef, a connected dive and snorkel site featuring a dramatic coral wall and, at Yolanda, the scattered cargo of a wrecked cargo ship still visible on the seabed; Ras Ghozlani, known for calmer, shallower conditions well suited to beginner snorkellers and families; and various points along the fringing reef where large schools of reef fish, occasional reef sharks, sea turtles, and a wide variety of hard and soft coral formations are commonly encountered. Boat crews and guides are experienced in adjusting the day's specific stops based on current sea conditions to maximise visibility and the likelihood of significant marine life sightings.

Detail Information
Established 1983 — Egypt's first national park
Duration Full day, approximately 8 hours including transfers
Snorkelling stops Typically 2 to 3 different reef locations, sea conditions permitting
Suitable for All snorkelling levels, including complete beginners; certified divers can arrange dive add-ons separately
Park entrance fee ~$5 USD per person — included

What no other guide tells you: Visitors travelling on a Sinai-only entry stamp, issued free of charge at Sharm el-Sheikh Airport for many nationalities and valid for travel within the South Sinai region including Sharm, Dahab, Nuweiba, and Taba, are generally not covered to enter Ras Mohamed National Park on that stamp alone, since the park technically falls outside the Sinai-only permitted zone for the purposes of this specific entry category; a full Egyptian visa is typically required. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood visa points among Sharm el-Sheikh visitors, and Egypt For Travel always confirms your specific visa status at the time of booking to avoid any complications on the day of the tour.

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Tiran Island, positioned at the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba between the Sinai Peninsula and Saudi Arabia, is surrounded by four of the most celebrated dive and snorkel reefs in the entire Red Sea, collectively considered by many experienced divers and snorkellers to represent the single finest cluster of accessible reef sites anywhere near Sharm el-Sheikh. Egypt For Travel's Tiran Island Snorkeling Boat Trip is a full-day excursion to this protected marine area, combining the genuinely scenic 45-minute to one-hour boat crossing (frequently rewarded with dolphin sightings) with multiple snorkelling stops across the reef system's most famous formations.

The Four Reefs of Tiran

Tiran Island is encircled by four named reef systems, each with a distinct character, and a typical day trip will stop at two or three of them depending on sea conditions and the day's specific itinerary: Jackson Reef, the most northerly and frequently the most pristine, known for steep coral walls and excellent visibility, often exceeding 20 to 30 metres; Woodhouse Reef, a narrower, elongated formation offering dramatic drop-offs close to the surface, popular among more experienced snorkellers and divers; Thomas Reef, the smallest of the four but renowned for a spectacular fissure or canyon cutting through the reef structure, creating a uniquely atmospheric swim-through experience; and Gordon Reef, generally the calmest and most sheltered of the group, well suited to families and less confident swimmers, with a partially exposed sandbank at low tide that has become a popular photo stop.

What You Will See

The reef systems around Tiran support an exceptional density and diversity of marine life: vibrant hard and soft coral formations in a wide range of colours and structures, large schools of reef fish including butterflyfish, parrotfish, and angelfish, frequent sightings of moray eels in coral crevices, and regular encounters with sea turtles feeding along the reef edges. The crossing to and from the island itself often produces sightings of dolphins, which are commonly seen riding the bow wave of boats travelling this stretch of water, an experience that many visitors describe as one of the unexpected highlights of the day.

Reef Character Best Suited For
Jackson Reef Steep coral walls, exceptional visibility Confident snorkellers and divers
Woodhouse Reef Narrow, dramatic drop-offs near the surface Experienced snorkellers and divers
Thomas Reef Spectacular fissure and canyon swim-through Adventurous, photography-focused visitors
Gordon Reef Calm, sheltered, sandbank visible at low tide Families, beginners, less confident swimmers

What no other guide tells you: Tiran Island itself, the landmass at the centre of this reef system, has been administratively under Saudi Arabian sovereignty since 2017 following a long-running territorial agreement between Egypt and Saudi Arabia, although the surrounding reefs remain part of the established Egyptian dive and snorkel tourism circuit operated from Sharm el-Sheikh, and access for recreational boat trips of this kind continues entirely as normal. Most visitors are entirely unaware of this background, but it is a genuinely interesting piece of regional geopolitical context for an island whose name nearly every Sharm el-Sheikh visitor will hear repeatedly during their stay without necessarily knowing where, precisely, its current sovereignty lies.

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North of Sharm el-Sheikh, the Sinai Peninsula offers a markedly different landscape and atmosphere from the resort coastline: dramatic desert canyons carved through layered sandstone, one of the most famous and storied dive sites in the world, and the relaxed, alternative-leaning town of Dahab, long favoured by independent travellers, divers, and those seeking a slower pace than Sharm's larger resort strip. Egypt For Travel's Colored Canyon, Blue Hole & Dahab Day Trip combines all three into a single full day, travelling by private vehicle north along the coast and into the desert interior.

The Colored Canyon

The Colored Canyon is a narrow desert gorge cut through layered sandstone over thousands of years, its walls displaying a genuinely striking range of natural colour — deep reds, oranges, yellows, and purples — created by mineral deposits within the rock strata, with the narrow walls at points rising dramatically overhead and the passage in places becoming narrow enough to touch both sides simultaneously. The walk through the canyon takes approximately 1 to 1.5 hours, involving some scrambling over rocks and uneven terrain but requiring no technical climbing skill, and is consistently rated by visitors as one of the most visually extraordinary landscapes accessible as a Sinai day trip.

The Blue Hole

The Blue Hole, located just north of Dahab, is one of the most famous dive sites on Earth — a near-circular underwater sinkhole reaching extreme depths and forming a striking, intensely blue formation visible even from the shoreline, surrounded by shallower reef areas that are well suited to snorkelling for those not undertaking a dive. While the Blue Hole's deepest sections are reserved for highly experienced technical divers given the site's challenging conditions and notable history, the surrounding shallow lagoon and reef offer excellent and considerably safer snorkelling, with clear water and healthy coral formations close to the surface.

Dahab

The day typically concludes with time in Dahab itself, a small coastal town with a markedly different character from Sharm el-Sheikh's larger resort strip: low-rise buildings, beachside cafés, a relaxed pace, and a long-established reputation among independent travellers and the diving community as one of the most laid-back destinations on the Red Sea coast. Free time is typically allocated for browsing the town's market stalls, relaxing at a beachfront café, or simply experiencing the contrast with the more developed Sharm el-Sheikh resort environment.

Stop Time Allocated Highlight
Colored Canyon ~1.5 hours Vivid layered sandstone, narrow desert gorge walk
Blue Hole ~1.5–2 hours Famous dive landmark, excellent shallow-water snorkelling
Dahab ~1–1.5 hours Relaxed market town, beachfront cafés, alternative atmosphere

What no other guide tells you: The Blue Hole's reputation among the global diving community is genuinely dual-sided: it is one of the most photographed and celebrated dive sites in the world, but it has also acquired a sober reputation for diving fatalities over the decades, almost exclusively associated with experienced divers attempting an extremely challenging deep passage known as "the Arch" without the training, equipment, or local guiding this technical dive demands. None of this affects the safety of the standard snorkelling and shallow-reef experience offered on this tour in the slightest, but understanding the distinction between the dramatic depths that have made the site famous in diving folklore and the genuinely safe, beautiful shallow areas that this tour actually visits is useful context many visitors find reassuring once explained.

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Not every visitor to Sharm el-Sheikh wants, or is able, to snorkel or dive, and Egypt For Travel's Semi-Submarine Tour offers a genuinely effective alternative way to experience the Red Sea's celebrated coral reefs and marine life: a specially designed vessel with a lower observation deck positioned well below the waterline, fitted with large panoramic windows that provide a clear, comfortable view of the underwater world without requiring guests to enter the water at all. This is consistently one of the most popular options for families with young children, older travellers, non-swimmers, and anyone simply seeking a relaxed alternative to a full snorkelling excursion.

How the Semi-Submarine Works

Unlike a true submarine, a semi-submarine, sometimes marketed under names such as Sea Scope, does not fully submerge; rather, the main hull remains on the surface while a lower observation chamber, accessed by an internal staircase from the main deck, sits several metres below the waterline, sealed and pressurised at normal atmospheric conditions, with rows of seating arranged along both sides facing outward through large glass windows. As the vessel cruises slowly over reef areas, passengers in the lower chamber have an unobstructed, stable, and entirely dry view of coral formations, tropical fish, and other marine life passing directly outside the glass, an experience that many guests describe as similar to visiting a large public aquarium, but with the genuine novelty of the marine life being entirely wild and the reef being real and unconfined.

What You Will See

The route typically covers a section of reef within easy reach of the marina, allowing for a relatively short overall duration compared with a full-day boat excursion, while still providing meaningful viewing time over genuinely healthy coral and a good variety of reef fish species, including parrotfish, butterflyfish, and angelfish, along with occasional larger pelagic species or rays depending on the day's conditions. Some operators also include a short surface-level cruise along the coastline before or after the underwater viewing section, offering views back toward the Sharm el-Sheikh resort strip and the surrounding mountains from the water.

Detail Information
Duration Approximately 1.5 hours on the water, around 2.5 to 3 hours total with transfers
Swimming required None — entirely dry experience throughout
Best suited for Non-swimmers, young children, older travellers, those with mobility considerations, or anyone preferring a more relaxed marine life experience
Visibility Excellent through large panoramic windows in the lower observation chamber

What no other guide tells you: The lower observation chamber of a semi-submarine sits at a fixed, relatively shallow depth, typically only a few metres below the surface, which is precisely why this kind of vessel can operate safely without the specialist hull engineering, certification, and crew training required of a true submersible; the genuine technical achievement here is less about depth and more about creating a stable, comfortable, dry viewing platform that brings a meaningfully large number of visitors, including those who could never otherwise access it, into direct visual contact with a healthy living reef, a conservation-adjacent benefit that is sometimes overlooked in the marketing of these tours but that genuinely does broaden public appreciation of marine environments among visitors who would never put on a mask and fins.

$ 35 | Per person

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Egypt For Travel

Egypt For Travel Is A Young Innovative Travel Company Yet Matured And Experienced. Founded In 2005, Egypt For Travel Has Made A Considerable Impact On The Egyptian Tourism Sector By Promoting Egypt As One Of The Fascinating Destinations In The World.

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