Best Beaches in Egypt
Introduction
Egypt might be known for its pyramids and ancient artifacts, but its burgeoning beach resorts have attracted tourists recently. Famous for fantastic diving opportunities bordered by the Red Sea’s wilds and the Mediterranean’s relaxation, Egypt may struggle with political upheaval at home and abroad. Still, its modern beach resorts provide solace for its tourism industry. The stunning coastline along the Red Sea is a magnet for sun-worshippers looking for year-round sunshine. At the same time, the incredible underwater wilds of the reefs attract keen divers from all over the world to sample Egypt’s coastline. Since there are so many to discover, here’s a list of the best beaches in Egypt:
Naama Bay
One of Egypt’s most famous sandy strips, Naama Bay’s scoop of white-sand beach sits at the epicenter of Egypt’s prime beach resort, Sharm el-Sheikh, on the Sinai Peninsula. Sun seekers from across Northern and Eastern Europe decamp here during the winter months to loll on sand lapped by the calm, aqua-blue waters of the Gulf of Aqaba and gaze out at the dusky, jagged silhouette of Saudi Arabia’s mountainous coastline in the distance. Before the beachgoers beelined here in vast numbers, Sharm el-Sheikh was already known for its scuba diving, with many coral reefs within easy reach, including the world-class dive sites of Ras Mohammed National Park. Today, this makes Egypt’s top choice for a beach break with added underwater action. Both complete beginners and more experienced divers will find plenty of dive trips that cater to their level.
You can snorkel off Naama Bay itself, though more colorful reefs need to be accessed by boat. Behind the beach is Sharm el-Sheikh’s lively main resort area, with plenty of restaurants and cafés, as well as accommodations ranging from large resorts like the Movenpick Sharm El Sheikh, which sits on the northern clifftop overlooking the bay, to cozy midrange hotels such as Oonas Dive Club, with its friendly, family-run feel. The Naama Bay shoreline is split into separate private sections owned by the resorts that line the shore. They offer full facilities for easygoing beach days, including restaurants, water sports operators, sun-loungers, and umbrellas.
Ras Abu Galoum, Dahab
Abu Galoum Beach is situated in the beautiful coastal town of Dahab. Dahab is one of the most popular beach towns in Egypt. Located in the Sinai Peninsula, the city borders the Red Sea coast. Ras Abu Galoum is a unique and famous beachfront in Dahab. Unlike other commercialized beaches in Egypt, this is a refreshing change and is a nature’s beauty. There are beautiful, serene coral reefs and fantastic fauna, and this beach is famous for this. There are mountain ranges nearby where one can enjoy hiking and trekking activities. The beach also offers camel safari rides along the beautiful, surreal coastline. The overall landscape around the beach is just surreal, enthralling, and out of the world.
El Gouna
The purpose-built beach town of El Gouna, 27 kilometers north of Hurghada, was made for easygoing, family-friendly sun-and-sand vacations. El Gouna is dedicated to resort-style holidays that offer plenty of diversions off the beach for those who want to do more than soak up the sun, with stand-up paddleboarding, kayaking, horse riding, and desert ATV tours all available, along with an 18-hole golf course. There are four main beach areas, including the broad swath of Mangroovy Beach, which is El Gouna’s kitesurfing central, and the soft white sand of Zeytouna Beach, with its 400-meter-long jetty allowing you to stroll out to the deeper water where the coral reefs lie to conserve your energy for snorkeling.
Most of the hotels here are large, low-slung resorts surrounded by mature gardens of palm trees that lead out to the beach, such as the Sheraton Miramar Resort. However, a couple of smaller midrange options focus on attracting visitors who’ve come here purely to kitesurf. Head here if you want to easily add a day trip to Luxor’s famous Valley of the Kings and Temple of Karnak into your beach break or dive in the many reefs offshore from Hurghada. El Gouna’s pastel-hued and immaculately manicured bijou town area is home to a range of cafés, shops, restaurants, and spas and often hosts family-focused entertainment in the evening.
Ras Um Sid Beach
Because the renowned Ras Um Sid reef, with its gorgonian forests, is just offshore, this is one of the best strips of sand in the Sharm el-Sheikh area for beach days that combine sun-soaked lounging with snorkeling. Sure, you’d need to head out on a dive trip to access the spectacular lower depths of the Ras Um Sid reef, but even snorkelers can see a myriad of soft corals and spot rainbow-hued, flitting reef fish close to the surface. It’s no wonder this golden-sand beach, backed by a cliff, is a popular outing for visitors in the more central Naama Bay area. While here, don’t miss hanging out in the clifftop Farsha Café, where the rambling terraces enjoy panoramic views. This is one of Sharm el-Sheikh’s most beautiful spots to watch the sunset and the moon rise across the Gulf of Aqaba and Saudi Arabia beyond.
Nuweiba-Taba Coastline
If you’re looking for a simple life, far away from the bright lights of the resorts, the thin strips of beach that edge the coastline between Nuweiba and Taba in South Sinai could be for you. This beach life harks back to the days before the Sinai Peninsula’s tourism boom. Facilities are few, and for those who head here, that’s just how they like it. Most camps consist of a main restaurant area, strewn with low cushioned sitting areas, where guests can order food and drink, and simple huts, made from date palm fronds, that sit directly on the sand only steps from the lapping waves. Bathroom facilities are usually shared, and electricity in many is only available for a set number of hours daily. This is the perfect place for those seeking a digital detox to tune out from life entirely for a few days.
Soma Bay
One of the most exclusive beaches in Egypt, the vast stretch of Soma Bay’s white sand is backed by just five resort hotels dedicated to an all-inclusive, luxurious beach holiday experience, far away from any town bustle. The beach is only steps away from whichever resort you choose, meaning vacations here are about severe relaxation and sandy bliss. With Hurghada 61 kilometers to the north, this is not the place to come if you like to pop into town, but beachgoers here still have plenty of options if they feel like spending some time off the sand. Traveling families are well catered for, with plenty of regular entertainment events focused on kids, and the resorts have a full array of facilities, including water sports offices, which offer kitesurfing lessons, stand-up paddle boarding, and diving and snorkeling boat trips.
Marsa Alam
Marsa Alam was the beach destination divers whispered about for years in the far south of Egypt’s rambling Red Sea coastline (289 kilometers south of Hurghada). While Hurghada, to the north, and Sharm el-Sheikh, on the Sinai Peninsula, became booming diving hot spots, regularly featuring on top ten lists for diving worldwide, Marsa Alam remained an obscure destination little known outside the diving community. The secret is now firmly out, and the resorts have moved in to develop this long strip of coastline. For experienced divers, Marsa Alam is the best base to access the astonishing kaleidoscope-colored reefs of the Red Sea’s far south, but the hotels now hugging the shore have snapped up the strips of white sand, meaning a vacation in Marsa Alam can now combine sun-lounging in resort comfort as well as diving.
Taba Beach
In the most northern of South Sinai’s beach resort towns, Taba sits adjacent to Egypt’s border crossing with Israel and has been used for years by overland travelers. Taba itself, though, is worth a stop for its beach life. Lesser known than Sharm el-Sheikh, 215 kilometers south, the central Taba area has just one resort hotel plus the self-contained Taba Heights complex just to the south of Taba town. At Taba Heights, a handful of family-friendly, all-inclusive resorts front swaths of white-sand beach looking out onto the calm waters of the Gulf of Aqaba. Diving is available, though it’s better for beginners rather than experienced divers, and most people head here for relaxed sun-and-sand holidays rather than activities.
Sahl Hasheesh
The sweeping bay of Sahl Hasheesh, 30 kilometers south of Hurghada, is a beauty, so it’s no surprise that it battles it out with Soma Bay, the number one place in Egypt for upscale beach vacation living. The vast stretch of soft white-sand beach, dotted with date palms, trails for the entire length of the bay, backed by a handful of luxurious resorts and a purpose-built “Old Town” center providing shopping and eating options outside the resort gates. Facilities are top-notch, catering to couples seeking a romantic getaway and families seeking a beach break. Diving, horse riding, and boat trips are the most popular things to do if you can manage to drag yourself off your patch of sand, and if you want to mix some history into your vacation, Luxor day trips are easily arranged.
Makadi Bay
Just 39 kilometers south of Hurghada, Makadi Bay is all about family-friendly beach vacations, with a bundle of large resort hotels, often offering good-value package deals and plentiful facilities (multiple swimming pools, nighttime entertainment, kids’ clubs, and water parks) to attract families. The hotels here hug the bay, each fronted by a strip of golden sand. The family theme continues onto the beach, where beach volleyball and beach football are offered, along with snorkeling and dive trips to see the Red Sea’s famed reefs, while many staying here also choose to add some off-the-sand sightseeing into their beach time and head inland to Luxor’s Pharaonic temples and tombs on day trips. As this is one of the Hurghada area’s most well-set-up beach destinations, the beach can get crowded in the winter high season, with sun-loungers packed quite close together on the sand.
Mamoura Beach
Alexandria is a prime historical destination for most international visitors rather than a beach town. Still, Egyptians decamp here in huge numbers every summer, not for the museums or catacombs but for their beach vacation. The city, which sprawls across the coastline, is fronted by various small pockets of sand, most crammed to the rafters with beachgoers during July and August. The best piece of sand is Mamoura Beach on the eastern side of town, which has both a public and private beach strip. There’s a nominal entrance fee to the public beach and a higher ticket price to access the private segment, which is worth paying for, as it’s less crowded and more groomed.