Destinations: Egypt & Jordan

From the Pyramids of Giza to the Rose-Red City of Petra β€” the Essential Places Across Two Countries Bound by the Nile, the Desert, and the Red Sea.

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Countries Covered

Egypt & Jordan

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Combined UNESCO Sites

7 in Egypt, 7 in Jordan

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Best Season

October – April

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Currencies

Egyptian Pound (EGP) & Jordanian Dinar (JOD)

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Border

No Direct Land Link β€” Ferry or Flight via Aqaba

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Cairo ↔ Amman

~1.5 Hour Direct Flight

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Top Site, Egypt

Pyramids of Giza

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Top Site, Jordan

Petra (Al Khazneh)

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1. Introduction: Two Countries, One Ancient Corridor

Egypt and Jordan sit at opposite ends of a corridor that has carried traders, pilgrims, and empires for thousands of years. Egypt offers the deepest concentration of Pharaonic monuments on Earth, strung along the Nile from Cairo to Aswan, while Jordan compresses an equally staggering range of history, Nabataean, Roman, biblical, and Bedouin, into a country roughly the size of Portugal. Increasingly, travelers combine both in a single itinerary: a short flight or a Red Sea ferry crossing is often all that separates the Pyramids of Giza from the rock-cut facades of Petra.

This guide focuses deliberately on these two countries, covering the destinations most worth a traveler's time, how they connect to one another, and what to expect when moving between them.

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2. Why Egypt and Jordan Are Often Paired

Both countries border the same body of water, the Red Sea and its northern arm, the Gulf of Aqaba, which places Egypt's Sinai coast and Jordan's port city of Aqaba within sight of one another across the gulf. There is no direct land border between the two: Israel and the Palestinian territories sit between them, so travelers typically connect either by a short regional flight (commonly via Cairo and Amman, or via Sharm El Sheikh and Aqaba) or by a passenger ferry linking Nuweiba in Sinai with Aqaba.

A Practical Note on Crossing Borders

Visa requirements, ferry schedules, and border-crossing rules between Egypt, Jordan, and neighboring territories change periodically. Always confirm current entry requirements with the relevant embassy or an official tourism authority shortly before travel rather than relying on older guides.

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3. Egypt: The Nile Corridor

Egypt's essential destinations follow the Nile almost in a straight line, from the Greater Cairo metropolis in the north down to Aswan near the Sudanese border, with the Red Sea resort coast and the remote Western Desert oases as its main detours. Nearly every major site sits within a day's travel of the river that built the civilization around it.

Cairo & Giza

The Great Pyramid, the Sphinx, the Egyptian Museum, and the medieval alleys of Khan el-Khalili, all within Greater Cairo.

Luxor

Karnak and Luxor Temples on the east bank; the Valley of the Kings and Hatshepsut's temple on the west.

Aswan

Philae Temple, the High Dam, Nubian villages, and the gateway to Abu Simbel further south.

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4. Jordan: Desert, Stone, and the Dead Sea

Jordan's destinations cluster more tightly, allowing much of the country's highlights to be covered in a week or ten days along a single loop: south from Amman through the desert castles and Roman ruins, down to Petra and Wadi Rum, then west to the shores of the Dead Sea. Its landscapes shift dramatically over short distances, from the green hills around Amman to the near-Martian sandstone of Wadi Rum.

Amman

Jordan's capital, built across low hills, with a Roman theatre and citadel at its historic core.

Petra

The rock-cut Nabataean capital, entered through the narrow Siq gorge to reach the Treasury facade.

Wadi Rum & the Dead Sea

A protected desert valley of towering sandstone, and the lowest point on Earth's land surface.

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5. Planning a Combined Egypt & Jordan Trip

A common route runs Cairo β†’ Luxor β†’ Aswan (by internal flight or Nile cruise) β†’ back to Cairo, then onward by flight to Amman β†’ Petra β†’ Wadi Rum β†’ the Dead Sea β†’ back to Amman. Travelers with more time sometimes route through Sinai and cross by ferry from Nuweiba to Aqaba, arriving in Jordan already near Wadi Rum and Petra rather than in Amman. Two to three weeks allows a comfortable, unhurried pace across both countries; ten to twelve days is workable if the itinerary is tightened to the highlights.

Read More About Planning an Egypt Trip β†’
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6. Conclusion

Whether the goal is a single-country deep dive or a combined journey across both, Egypt and Jordan reward travelers with an unusually dense concentration of ancient history within reach of modern infrastructure. Use the destination guide below to explore each country in detail before mapping out an itinerary.

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Destination Guide by Country

Browse the essential destinations of Egypt and Jordan, one country at a time.

The Essential Destinations of Egypt

Cairo Region

Cairo & Giza

Home to the Great Pyramid of Khufu, the Sphinx, the Egyptian Museum's Tutankhamun collection, and the winding markets of Khan el-Khalili. Most Egypt itineraries begin and end here.

Upper Egypt

Luxor

Ancient Thebes, the largest open-air museum on Earth: Karnak and Luxor Temples on the east bank, the Valley of the Kings and Hatshepsut's mortuary temple on the west.

Upper Egypt

Aswan

A calmer Nile city with the Philae Temple, the Unfinished Obelisk, Nubian villages by boat, and the gateway south to the temples of Abu Simbel.

Mediterranean Coast

Alexandria

Egypt's second city, layered with Greco-Roman history: the Qaitbay Citadel, the modern Bibliotheca Alexandrina, and the underground Catacombs of Kom El Shoqafa.

Red Sea

Hurghada & Sharm El Sheikh

Egypt's principal Red Sea resort towns, built around some of the world's most accessible coral reef diving and snorkeling.

Western Desert

Siwa Oasis

A remote, culturally distinct oasis near the Libyan border, known for its salt lakes, mudbrick fortress, and the ancient Oracle Temple of Amun.

The Essential Destinations of Jordan

Capital

Amman

Jordan's hillside capital, anchored by the Amman Citadel and a well-preserved 2nd-century Roman Theatre still used for events today.

South Jordan

Petra

The rock-cut Nabataean capital reached through the narrow Siq canyon, opening onto the iconic Treasury facade, with the Monastery and Royal Tombs further inside.

South Jordan

Wadi Rum

A UNESCO-listed desert of towering sandstone mountains and ancient petroglyphs, explored by jeep or camel and often visited with an overnight Bedouin camp stay.

Dead Sea Region

The Dead Sea

The lowest point on Earth's land surface, famous for its mineral-rich water dense enough to float in, and lined with wellness resorts.

North Jordan

Jerash

One of the best-preserved Greco-Roman provincial cities anywhere, with a colonnaded oval plaza, temples, and two theatres, a short drive north of Amman.

Red Sea

Aqaba

Jordan's only coastal city and Red Sea port, offering diving and a direct gateway south to Wadi Rum and Petra, or across the gulf toward Egypt's Sinai coast.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Practical questions travelers ask when planning a trip across Egypt and Jordan.

Do Egypt and Jordan share a land border? +

No. Israel and the Palestinian territories lie between them. Travelers typically connect by a short flight between Cairo and Amman, or by ferry across the Gulf of Aqaba between Nuweiba in Sinai and Aqaba in Jordan.

What is the best time of year to visit both countries? +

Roughly October through April, when daytime temperatures across the Nile Valley, the Jordanian desert, and Petra are far more comfortable than the intense heat of the summer months.

Can I realistically combine the Pyramids and Petra in one trip? +

Yes. It is one of the more popular combined itineraries in the region, typically built around a domestic Egypt loop (Cairo–Luxor–Aswan) followed by a short flight to Amman and a loop south to Petra, Wadi Rum, and the Dead Sea.

Do I need separate visas for Egypt and Jordan? +

Generally yes, as they are separate countries with their own entry rules, though both offer visa-on-arrival or e-visa options for many nationalities. Requirements change periodically, so confirm current rules with an official source before booking.

How long does it take to get from Cairo to Amman? +

A direct flight takes roughly an hour and a half. The Nuweiba–Aqaba ferry option takes considerably longer once travel time to Sinai is included, but suits travelers already routing through the Red Sea coast.

Do Egypt and Jordan share the same coastline? +

Both border the Red Sea, and specifically the Gulf of Aqaba, where Egypt's Sinai coast and Jordan's city of Aqaba face each other across a narrow stretch of water.

How many UNESCO World Heritage Sites do the two countries have combined? +

Egypt has seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites and Jordan has seven, for fourteen combined, including the Pyramid Fields of Giza and Dahshur, Ancient Thebes, Petra, and the Wadi Rum Protected Area.

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Sources & Further Reading

This guide draws on the following reference materials.

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