Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise — Review, Itinerary & Prices | Aswan to Abu Simbel
Overview
Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise 2026 — Honest Review, Itinerary & Prices | Aswan to Abu Simbel
Bottom line: The Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise is the most exclusive and least-known cruise experience in Egypt — and arguably the most extraordinary. While Nile cruise ships follow the same Luxor–Aswan route visited by tens of thousands of travelers annually, the Lake Nasser cruise sails an entirely different waterway to temples that 95% of Egypt visitors never reach. If you have already done the Nile cruise and want the next level of Egypt exploration — or if you want to include Abu Simbel as a multi-day experience rather than a rushed day excursion — this cruise is the answer.
| Quick Facts — Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise | |
|---|---|
| Cruise Category | 5-Star Lake Nasser Cruise — Unique Route |
| Route | Aswan → Abu Simbel | Abu Simbel → Aswan |
| Duration Options | 4 days / 3 nights | 5 days / 4 nights |
| Departure | On request from Aswan — contact us for dates |
| Price | On request — contact us for current rates |
| Board Basis | Full board (breakfast, lunch & dinner included) |
| Guide Languages | English · Spanish · German · Portuguese |
| Luxury Level | 5-Star — Deluxe cabins, full board, Egyptologist guide |
| What Makes It Unique | Temples no other cruise visits · Abu Simbel as overnight · Lake Nasser wilderness |
| Sites Visited | Abu Simbel · Kalabsha · Beit El Wali · Wadi El Seboua · Amada Temple · Kasr Ibrim Citadel |
| Best For | Repeat Egypt visitors · Egyptology enthusiasts · history travelers · anyone who wants Abu Simbel as a destination not a day trip |
Is the Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise Worth It?
Yes — absolutely and without reservation, for the right traveler. Lake Nasser is one of the world’s great unexplored travel experiences. Created by the construction of the Aswan High Dam between 1960 and 1970, it is the world’s largest man-made lake — 550km long and up to 35km wide in places — and its shores contain some of Egypt’s most important Nubian temples, relocated from the rising waters by UNESCO in one of the greatest rescue operations in archaeological history. The Nubian Sea cruise takes you to all of them: Abu Simbel (arriving at dawn, before the day-trip crowds from Aswan), Kalabsha Temple, Beit El Wali, Wadi El Seboua, Amada Temple, and the Kasr Ibrim Citadel — the only ancient site in Egypt that was never relocated and remains standing on its original island. Most Egypt visitors who have done three or four trips to Egypt still have not seen these sites. This cruise changes that.
What Is Lake Nasser and Why Is It Different from the Nile?
Lake Nasser is not the Nile. When the Aswan High Dam was completed in 1970, the Nile was blocked and the water backed up for 550km, flooding ancient Nubia and creating an immense lake that reaches into Sudan. The Egyptian government, with UNESCO support, relocated 22 ancient temples from the rising waters — including the colossal temples of Abu Simbel, which were cut from the cliff and moved 65 metres uphill block by block. The lake that remains is vast, silent, and almost completely untouched by tourism. No felucca sailboats. No riverside towns. No crowds. Just the lake, the desert, the sky, and some of the most spectacular ancient monuments in the world on shores that only a handful of travelers ever reach.
Sites Visited on the Lake Nasser Cruise
Abu Simbel Temple — The defining highlight. Two rock-cut temples of Ramesses II, relocated by UNESCO. The Great Temple features four 20-metre colossal statues. On the Lake Nasser cruise, you arrive at dawn before any day-trip tourists from Aswan — the difference in experience is incomparable.
Kalabsha Temple — The largest freestanding ancient Egyptian temple in Nubia, dedicated to the Nubian god Mandolis. Relocated to its current island location near the High Dam by a team of German engineers in 1970. One of the most complete and least-visited Nubian temples in Egypt.
Beit El Wali — A rock-cut temple of Ramesses II near Kalabsha, with exceptionally well-preserved painted reliefs depicting military campaigns and offerings to the gods. The colours remain vivid after 3,200 years.
Wadi El Seboua — “Valley of the Lions” — a processional way lined with sphinxes leading to a temple of Ramesses II. The combination of the lake setting and the sphinx avenue creates one of the most atmospheric ancient sites in Egypt.
Amada Temple — The oldest Egyptian temple in Nubia, built during the reigns of Thutmose III and Amenhotep II in the 18th Dynasty (approximately 1450 BC). Contains some of the finest and most colourful painted reliefs of any Egyptian temple.
Kasr Ibrim Citadel — The only ancient Nubian site that was never relocated. It stands on its original island, partially submerged by Lake Nasser, exactly where it has stood since ancient Egyptian times. Seen from the cruise ship as it passes — an extraordinarily evocative sight of history half-claimed by the lake.
Who Is the Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise Best For?
✓ Repeat Egypt visitors who have already done the Nile cruise and want to see the part of Egypt most travelers never reach.
✓ Egyptology enthusiasts who want to see Nubian temples, UNESCO rescue sites, and ancient history beyond the standard tourist circuit.
✓ Travelers who want Abu Simbel as an experience — not a 3-hour road trip rushed from Aswan, but a morning arrival at dawn on the lake before any other visitors arrive.
✓ History and archaeology travelers who want the depth of Amada, Wadi El Seboua, and Kasr Ibrim — sites that rival Luxor and Aswan in historical significance but receive a fraction of the visitors.
✓ Travelers wanting total wilderness — Lake Nasser is one of the emptiest, most silent, most spectacular bodies of water on earth.
Who Should NOT Book the Lake Nasser Cruise?
✗ Do not book this cruise if you have not yet done the standard Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan — see the King of Thebes or M/S Nile Paradise first. The Nile cruise covers Karnak, Valley of the Kings, Edfu, Kom Ombo, and Philae — the essential Egypt. Lake Nasser is the next step.
✗ Do not book if a fixed weekly schedule matters to you. The Lake Nasser cruise departs on request — contact us for available dates as it requires a minimum number of passengers and specific scheduling with the ship.
✗ Do not book if you want nightlife, entertainment shows, or disco on board. The Lake Nasser cruise is a quiet, contemplative, historically focused experience. The evenings are the lake, the stars, and the silence of ancient Nubia.
Egypt For Travel Expert Assessment
“The Lake Nasser cruise is the best-kept secret in Egypt travel and we say this with genuine conviction. Most international travel agents do not even know it exists. The experience of arriving at Abu Simbel by boat at dawn — with the colossal statues of Ramesses II emerging from the mist over the lake before a single other tourist has arrived — is one of the most powerful Egypt experiences we have ever witnessed. We recommend it without hesitation to any traveler who has already done the Nile cruise and wants to discover the Egypt that almost no one sees.”
— Egypt For Travel Operations Team — ETA Category A Licence No. 1947
Lake Nasser Cruise vs Nile Cruise — Key Differences
| Lake Nasser Cruise | Standard Nile Cruise | |
|---|---|---|
| Route | Aswan → Abu Simbel | Luxor → Aswan |
| Waterway | Lake Nasser (man-made, 550km) | River Nile |
| Sites | Abu Simbel, Kalabsha, Amada, Wadi El Seboua, Kasr Ibrim | Karnak, Valley of Kings, Edfu, Kom Ombo, Philae |
| Crowds | Minimal — almost no other tourists | Busy at all major sites |
| Landscape | Wild Sahara desert, no settlements | Villages, farmland, desert cliffs |
| Ships available | Very limited — specialist vessels only | Many ships in all categories |
| Best for | Repeat visitors, Egyptology enthusiasts | First-time Egypt visitors |
| Schedule | On request — limited departures | Weekly fixed departures |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Lake Nasser and where does the cruise sail?
Lake Nasser is the world’s largest man-made reservoir, created when the Aswan High Dam was completed in 1970 and the Nile backed up for 550km into Sudan. The Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise departs from Aswan and sails south across the lake to Abu Simbel — the colossal rock-cut temples of Ramesses II relocated by UNESCO to save them from the rising waters. Along the way, the cruise visits Kalabsha Temple, Beit El Wali, Wadi El Seboua, Amada Temple, and the Kasr Ibrim Citadel — ancient Nubian temples that are among the most significant in Egypt yet among the least visited in the world. The lake itself is vast, empty, and extraordinarily beautiful — a complete wilderness of water and desert utterly unlike the Nile between Luxor and Aswan.
Is the Lake Nasser cruise better than the standard Nile cruise?
They are not comparable — they serve completely different purposes. The standard Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan is the essential Egypt experience and should be done on a first trip: Valley of the Kings, Karnak, Edfu, Kom Ombo, Philae, and the High Dam. The Lake Nasser cruise is for travelers who have already seen these sites and want to go deeper — visiting the Nubian temples that the standard cruise cannot reach, experiencing Abu Simbel as a dawn arrival by boat rather than a rushed day trip, and sailing one of the emptiest, most dramatic stretches of water on earth. We recommend combining both: the Nile cruise on one trip, the Lake Nasser cruise on a return visit, or for a longer trip combining both in the same journey via Aswan.
How do I book the Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise and what is the minimum group size?
The Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise departs on request — not on a fixed weekly schedule like the Nile cruise ships. Departures require a minimum number of passengers and are coordinated around the ship’s availability. Egypt For Travel handles all scheduling, cabin allocation, and Egyptologist guide arrangements. To book, contact us with your preferred travel dates and number of travelers. We respond within 2 hours during business hours. Solo travelers and couples can join departures with other guests to meet the minimum requirement — contact us and we will advise on the next available date that suits your itinerary. WhatsApp us to enquire about dates.
Interested in the Lake Nasser Cruise? Departures are on request with limited availability. Our team responds within 2 hours. WhatsApp us now to ask about available dates. ETA Category A Licence No. 1947.
| Schedule: Every Monday From Aswan& Friday From Abu Simbel |
Cruise
On-Board Facilities
| ✓ Restaurant (international & Egyptian cuisine, full board) | ✓ Lounge and bar |
| ✓ Sun deck with panoramic Lake Nasser views | ✓ Swimming pool |
| ✓ Egyptologist lecture programme on board | ✓ Library with Egyptology and Nubia reference books |
| ✓ Daily housekeeping · 24-hour reception | |
Cabin Facilities
| ✓ Spacious cabin with panoramic lake views | ✓ Individually controlled air conditioning |
| ✓ Private bathroom with shower | ✓ Satellite TV |
| ✓ Mini bar · Safe deposit box · Hairdryer | |
Included
- Meet & greet by our representative at Aswan with a name sign
- Assistance from our tour manager during your stay and all excursions
- All transfers by private air-conditioned vehicle
- Accommodation on board the Nubian Sea on a full board basis (breakfast, lunch & dinner)
- Private licensed Egyptologist guide in English, Spanish, German or Portuguese for all excursions
- All guided excursions as per the 4-day or 5-day itinerary
- Entrance fees to all sites: Abu Simbel Temple · Kalabsha Temple · Beit El Wali · Wadi El Seboua · Amada Temple · Kasr Ibrim Citadel
- Free bottled water during all shore excursions
- All service charges and taxes
Excluded
- International flights to/from Egypt
- Egypt entry visa ($25 USD — available on arrival at Cairo Airport)
- Any optional extras or personal expenses
- Tips for guide, driver, and ship crew (optional but appreciated)
Itinerary:
5 Days - Aswan / Abusimbel Every Monday
Day 01: Embarkation in Aswan — Board Nubian Sea — Kalabsha Temple · Beit El Wali
Welcome aboard the MS Nubian Sea in Aswan. Your Egypt For Travel representative meets you at your Aswan hotel and escorts you to the vessel. Check in to your cabin, enjoy lunch on board, and meet your Egyptologist guide. Afternoon excursion to Kalabsha Temple — the largest freestanding Nubian temple in Egypt, dedicated to the god Mandolis, relocated from its original site by a German engineering team in 1970. Adjacent: Beit El Wali — a rock-cut temple of Ramesses II with extraordinarily well-preserved painted reliefs, including vivid scenes of military campaigns. Return to the ship. Dinner and overnight on Lake Nasser.
INCLUDED: Kalabsha Temple · Beit El Wali MEALS: Lunch · Dinner
Day 02: Sail South · Wadi El Seboua · Amada Temple
Breakfast on board as the Nubian Sea sails south across Lake Nasser. Morning visit to Wadi El Seboua — the Valley of the Lions, named for its processional avenue of sphinxes leading to a temple of Ramesses II. The combination of sphinxes, the temple, and the absolute silence of Lake Nasser is one of the most atmospheric ancient sites in Egypt. Afternoon: Amada Temple — the oldest Egyptian temple in Nubia, built in the 18th Dynasty approximately 1450 BC. The painted reliefs inside are among the most colourful and best-preserved of any Egyptian temple. Dinner and overnight sailing south toward Abu Simbel.
INCLUDED: Wadi El Seboua · Amada Temple MEALS: Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Day 03: Kasr Ibrim Citadel · Arrive Abu Simbel
Sail past the Kasr Ibrim Citadel — viewed from the ship as it passes. This is the only ancient Nubian site that was never relocated. It stands partially submerged on its original island exactly where it has stood since pharaonic times, occupied continuously from the 8th century BC through to 1812 AD. The sight of the citadel rising from the lake — ancient, intact, and utterly unreachable — is one of the most haunting images of any Egypt journey. Arrive Abu Simbel in the late afternoon. Dinner and overnight moored at Abu Simbel.
INCLUDED: Kasr Ibrim (view from ship) · Arrive Abu Simbel MEALS: Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Day 04: Abu Simbel Temples at Dawn
The defining day of the Lake Nasser cruise. Rise before dawn and walk to Abu Simbel as the light begins to touch the colossal statues of Ramesses II across the lake. No day-trip tourists from Aswan have arrived yet. No coaches in the car park. Just you, your guide, and the four 20-metre seated statues of Ramesses II emerging from the desert rock in the early morning light. Your Egyptologist guide takes you through the Great Temple and the Temple of Nefertari at length, explaining the astronomical alignment, the UNESCO relocation story, and the royal theology in extraordinary depth. Return to the ship for breakfast. Begin the . Dinner and overnight sailing.
INCLUDED: Abu Simbel Great Temple · Temple of Nefertari MEALS: Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Day 05: Disembarkation from the Lake Cruise
After breakfast, you will disembark from the Lake Cruise, concluding your memorable journey. Your Egypt For Travel representative assists with transfer to Abu Simbel Airport. Your Lake Nasser cruise is complete. You have visited temples that most Egypt travelers — even those who have been to Egypt many times — have never seen.
MEALS: Breakfast
4 Days - /
Day 01: Embarkation on Lake Nasser Cruise
Your Lake Nile Cruise Vacation begins with embarkation around 11:00 AM. Once aboard, enjoy a delightful lunch before visiting the majestic Abu Simbel Temple. After your exploration, relax with tea time, followed by dinner on board. You'll spend the night docked at Abu Simbel. Meals Included: Lunch, Dinner
Day 02: Sail to Kasr Ibrim
Start your day by sailing to Kasr Ibrim, where you'll have a 15-minute photo opportunity from the sundeck. Next, visit the historic sites of Amada, including Amada Temple, Derr, and the Tomb of Pennut. Continue sailing to Wadi El Seboua. In the evening, enjoy a cocktail party and a Nubian show, and spend the night at Wadi El Seboua. Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Day 03: Visit Wadi El Seboua
Begin your day with a visit to the Wadi El Seboua Temples. Afterward, sail towards Aswan, where you will spend the night. Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Day 04: Disembarkation
On your final day, visit the Kalabsha Temples. After your visit, disembark from the cruise. Meals Included: Breakfast
Prices:
Notes:
Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise — Prices & Booking 2026
The Nubian Sea Lake Nasser Cruise departs on request from Aswan — not on a fixed weekly schedule. Prices are on request and depend on the number of passengers, departure date, and cabin category. All prices are in USD; EUR and GBP also accepted. Contact Egypt For Travel for a personalised quote within 2 hours.
4-Day vs 5-Day Lake Nasser Cruise — Which to Choose?
The 4-day Lake Nasser cruise (3 nights) covers all the essential sites: Abu Simbel, Kalabsha, Wadi El Seboua, Amada, and Kasr Ibrim. It is the recommended choice for travelers combining the Lake Nasser cruise with a wider Egypt itinerary that also includes Cairo and/or a Nile cruise. The 5-day Lake Nasser cruise (4 nights) allows more time at each site, an additional day for smaller temples and archaeological sites along the lake shore, and a more relaxed pace overall. For serious Egyptology enthusiasts and travelers whose primary reason for the trip is Lake Nasser itself, the 5-day is strongly recommended — the extra day transforms the experience from a comprehensive visit into a genuinely deep immersion. Contact us and we will advise based on your overall Egypt itinerary.
Best Season for the Lake Nasser Cruise
October–April: Ideal. Temperatures at Abu Simbel and along the lake are comfortable (18–28°C). The early morning light on the lake and temples in winter is extraordinary. This is high season — book as early as possible.
February 22 & October 22: The Abu Simbel Sun Festival — the two days of the year when sunlight penetrates the inner sanctuary of the Great Temple and illuminates the statues of Ramesses II. If your travel dates are flexible, arriving at Abu Simbel on one of these days by lake cruise is one of the most remarkable events in world archaeology. Contact us to arrange.
May–September: Very hot (40°C+ at Abu Simbel). Lower prices but physically demanding sightseeing.
How Does Booking Work?
Contact Egypt For Travel by WhatsApp (+20 155 555 2466) or through our inquiry form. Tell us your preferred travel dates and number of passengers. We confirm available departures within 2 hours and issue a full quotation. A 25% deposit (50% for Christmas/New Year/Easter) secures your cabin. Balance due one week before departure or cash on boarding.
Cancellation Policy
| Notice Before Departure | Charge |
|---|---|
| 61+ days | 10% of total price |
| 31–60 days | 20% of total price |
| 15–30 days | 50% of total price |
| 1–14 days | 100% of total price |
Travel insurance strongly recommended. Egypt For Travel holds ETA Category A Licence No. 1947. WhatsApp: +20 155 555 2466
Children Policy
0–2 years free · 2–6 years = 25% · 6–12 years = 50% · 12+ = full adult rate. All sharing parents’ cabin.
Tipping
Optional but appreciated. $5–10/day for your Egyptologist guide · $3–5/day for your driver · $15–20 per person for ship crew on final day.
Egypt For Travel — Egypt Today Travel Group — ETA Category A Licence No. 1947 — 39 Zohair Sabry St., Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt