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Turquoise water and coral reef on Egypt's Red Sea coast

Red Sea Coast · Destination guide

Red Sea

Egypt's reef coast — warm, clear water over some of the best coral on earth, and an easy beach finish after the temples and the Nile.

Region
Red Sea coast
Best for
Reefs · beach · diving
Ideal stay
3–4 nights
When to go
Year-round
Airports
Hurghada (HRG) · Marsa Alam (RMF)
Pairs with
Luxor · a Nile cruise · Cairo

Get your bearings

What the Red Sea actually is

Egypt's Red Sea runs more than a thousand kilometres down the east coast, with some of the clearest, warmest, most coral-rich water in the region. It's the beach-and-reef counterweight to the Nile — an hour's flight from Luxor, and direct charters from the UK make it one of the easiest winter-sun coasts to reach.

The coast splits into characters. Hurghada is the established hub, close to Luxor and full of family resorts and day-boat reefs. Marsa Alam, further south, trades nightlife for pristine house reefs, dugongs and dolphins. And across the water in Sinai, Sharm El Sheikh sits beside Ras Mohammed, the marine national park that put Egyptian diving on the map.

Three or four nights is the usual stay — long enough to dive or snorkel properly, do a desert excursion, and still spend a day flat on a lounger. The water is swimmable all year, which makes the Red Sea the one part of Egypt with no real off-season.

What you're really here to see

The landmarks that make the Red Sea

White sandbar and turquoise shallows at Orange Bay near Hurghada 01

Giftun Island & Orange Bay

A protected island off Hurghada ringed by white sandbars and shallow reef — the postcard Red Sea. A day-boat gets you there in under an hour for snorkelling straight off the back and lunch on the sand.

Full day by boat

Spinner dolphins in the clear water of Dolphin House reef 02

Dolphin House (Sha'ab Samadai)

A horseshoe reef off Marsa Alam where a resident pod of spinner dolphins rests by day. Numbers are capped to protect them, so you swim quietly on the reef's edge and let the dolphins come to you — no chasing.

Full day · Marsa Alam

Steep coral wall and reef fish at Ras Mohammed in Sinai 03

Ras Mohammed National Park

At the southern tip of Sinai, Egypt's first marine park drops away in sheer coral walls thick with fish — the dive site that made the Red Sea famous. Reached by boat from Sharm El Sheikh.

Full day · Sinai

Desert and mangrove coastline at Wadi El Gemal national park 04

Wadi El Gemal

South of Marsa Alam, a land-and-sea national park of mangroves, dugong-grazing seagrass and empty beaches — the wild, quiet end of the Egyptian coast for travellers who want reef without resorts.

Full day · Marsa Alam

Time to allow

How many days in the Red Sea?

How long depends on whether you're here to dive or just to switch off.

2 nights The add-on

A quick coastal breather after the Nile — one reef day, one beach day, then home or onward.

3–4 nights The right amount

Time to dive or snorkel a couple of sites, fit a desert excursion, and still have a full day doing nothing. The usual Red Sea stay.

5–7 nights A proper beach week

For divers chasing wrecks and walls, or families settling into a resort — long enough to slow right down.

Liveaboard On the water

A dive boat out to the offshore reefs and the SS Thistlegorm wreck, for divers who want the best sites back to back.

Where it fits

the Red Sea in your itinerary

The Red Sea is the finale — the part of the holiday you tack on after the history.

From Luxor

Hurghada is a 4-hour drive or short flight — the natural beach finish after the temples.

From Cairo

A 50-minute flight to Hurghada or Marsa Alam, or a longer drive to the closer Sinai and Ain Sokhna coast.

Reef days

Day-boats reach Giftun, Dolphin House and the offshore reefs; dive centres handle all levels, from first-timer to technical.

Desert on the side

Quad bikes, Bedouin dinners and stargazing fill the non-water days without leaving the coast.

Best time to visit

When to go to the Red Sea

The one part of Egypt with no real off-season — the water stays swimmable year-round.

March–May & Sep–Nov · best

Warm air, warm water and calm seas (25–32°C). The sweet spot for diving and beach days alike, without the peak of summer heat.

June–August · hot but fine

35–40°C on land, but the sea breeze and the water make it bearable, and the diving is superb. Busy with the European summer holidays.

December–February · mild winter sun

Air cools to the low 20s and a wetsuit helps in the water, but it's sunny, quiet and a warm escape from a British winter — a few hours direct from the UK.

Water temperature

Ranges from about 22°C in winter to 28°C in late summer — comfortable year-round, with a 3mm wetsuit nice in the cooler months.

The practical part

Getting there & around

Two main gateways, an easy hop from the Nile — the practical part.

01

From the UK

Hurghada (HRG) and Marsa Alam (RMF) both take direct charter and scheduled flights from UK airports, around five to six hours. Sharm El Sheikh (SSH) serves Sinai.

02

Which town

Hurghada for convenience and proximity to Luxor; Marsa Alam for quieter, better house reefs; Sharm for Ras Mohammed and Sinai. We match the resort to your trip.

03

Getting around

Resorts are self-contained; reef and desert trips are organised excursions with hotel pickup. A car is rarely needed unless you're exploring the coast.

04

Diving & snorkelling

Every level is catered for, with multilingual instructors and well-run centres. We line up the dive school or snorkel boat before you arrive.

Common questions

Red Sea, answered

01 Which Red Sea resort should I choose — Hurghada or Marsa Alam? +

Hurghada is closer to Luxor, livelier and full of family resorts and day-boat reefs. Marsa Alam, further south, is quieter with better house reefs and dolphins. Sharm El Sheikh, across in Sinai, is the base for Ras Mohammed. We match the town to your priorities.

02 How many days do I need on the Red Sea? +

Three or four nights is the usual stay — enough to dive or snorkel a couple of sites, do a desert excursion, and still have a lazy beach day. Divers chasing wrecks and walls often stay a week or take a liveaboard.

03 Can I combine the Red Sea with a Nile cruise? +

Easily — it's the classic pairing. Most people do Cairo and a Luxor–Aswan Nile cruise first, then fly or drive to Hurghada or Marsa Alam for a beach finish.

04 Is the Red Sea good for non-divers? +

Yes. The snorkelling is strong straight off the boats and house reefs, the beaches are excellent, and there's desert adventure, dolphin swims and glass-bottom boats for anyone who'd rather stay dry.

05 When is the best time to visit the Red Sea? +

Spring and autumn (March–May, September–November) are ideal — warm water and calm seas without peak summer heat. But the water is swimmable year-round, so there's no truly bad time, and winter is a reliable warm escape from the UK.

06 Is the Red Sea safe for families? +

Yes — the resort coast is geared for families, with shallow protected bays, kids' clubs and easy snorkelling. The reefs are stunning and accessible, and the all-inclusive resorts make it low-effort with children.

Plan your trip

Build your Red Sea trip with our Egyptologists

Tell us your dates and what you want out of the Red Sea – we'll send a private, tailored itinerary within 24 hours. Cairo · Luxor · Aswan · Hurghada · Marsa Alam · Sharm El Sheikh, on the ground since 1988.

Plan my Red Sea trip