Month by month across Egypt — weather, crowds, closures, prices
When you travel to Egypt matters more than where, more than what you see, more than how you travel. The same Luxor temple is a different experience in February than in August. The same Cairo museum is a different museum on Eid al-Fitr than on a normal Tuesday. The same Nile cruise route is a different cruise during the November high season than during the May shoulder. The season guide below is the desk's month-by-month read on the country — temperatures, crowds, prices, closures, Egyptian school-holiday traffic, the cruise-season calendar and the Saharan dust-storm window. The numbers are taken from twelve consecutive months of editor visits and averaged across the year of the last rotation.
If you only read one summary: October-November and March-April are the sweet spots. The temples are tolerable, the museums are not empty but not overrun, the cruise season is running, and the prices have not peaked. December-January is high season — pleasant weather but full hotels and double the cruise rate. June-September is genuinely hot south of Cairo and best avoided unless you have constraint reasons. May and October are the shoulder months — slightly hotter than the sweet spots but with the lowest prices of the visitor year. The full month-by-month picture is below.
- JanuaryCairo 8–19 °C, Luxor 6–22 °C, cool and pleasant for sites. High season, hotels full at New Year (Western and Coptic) — book three months ahead for the Christmas-to-Orthodox-Christmas window. Cruise rates peak. The Coptic Christmas (7 Jan) is a national holiday; some museums close.
- FebruaryCairo 9–20 °C, Luxor 7–24 °C. The best month for Luxor temple-walking — cool mornings, no dust. Abu Simbel equinox (22 Feb) sells out three months ahead. Cruise rates still high but starting to soften late in the month.
- MarchCairo 11–24 °C, Luxor 11–28 °C. Sweet spot starts. Shoulder weather, fewer crowds than February, prices begin to drop. Watch for occasional khamsin (sandy) days — typically two or three in March, sometimes more. Spring rotation at Muse Quick happens this month.
- AprilCairo 13–28 °C, Luxor 16–34 °C. Still good for sites if you start early. Ramadan in 2026 starts mid-February and ends mid-March (it shifts year-on-year by about 11 days); confirm before planning food and afternoon visits. The post-Ramadan Eid al-Fitr week sees some museum closures and very full domestic flights.
- MayCairo 17–32 °C, Luxor 22–40 °C. Shoulder month. Low prices, low crowds. Luxor open-air sites uncomfortable after 11:00 — visit Karnak before 09:00 only. The cruise season runs at half capacity; rates are at the year's lowest.
- JuneCairo 21–35 °C, Luxor 26–42 °C. Hot. Avoid open-air sites between 10:00 and 16:00. Cairo museums are pleasant inside, but the GEM grand staircase is uncomfortable. Sinai diving is at peak — the Red Sea water is warmest in June-August.
- JulyCairo 22–36 °C, Luxor 27–43 °C. Genuinely hot. Egyptian school holidays — domestic family travel peaks. Many Cairo families decamp to Alexandria, making the corniche pleasant in the evenings but the city busy. Cruise season largely off; rates at the year's lowest.
- AugustCairo 22–36 °C, Luxor 26–42 °C. The hottest month south of Cairo. Saharan dust storms most common. Many small museums and tomb supplements have shortened hours. Alexandria is at peak holiday traffic and most hotels are full of Egyptian families. Avoid the south unless you can do open-air sites only at dawn.
- SeptemberCairo 21–34 °C, Luxor 23–41 °C. Heat begins to drop. Still warm; the temples are tolerable in the late afternoon. Egyptian schools start, domestic travel quiets. International cruise season starts again mid-month. The autumn rotation at Muse Quick happens this month.
- OctoberCairo 18–30 °C, Luxor 18–35 °C. Sweet spot resumes. Temples comfortable, museums pleasant. Abu Simbel equinox (22 Oct) — the second solar alignment ticket, sells out three months ahead. Hotel prices climb mid-month.
- NovemberCairo 14–25 °C, Luxor 13–30 °C. Best month overall, in the desk's combined view. Weather is reliable, crowds are present but not overwhelming, cruise season is at full capacity, and the high-season-pricing crunch has not yet hit. Book three months ahead for hotels.
- DecemberCairo 11–22 °C, Luxor 9–25 °C. High season starts. Pleasant, sometimes brisk in Cairo mornings. The Coptic Christmas Eve services (6 Jan) are atmospheric. Cruise rates climb fast through the month and peak between Christmas and New Year. Domestic flights heavily booked.
What the Egyptian heritage calendar looks like
The standard Western holiday calendar matters less in Egypt than the Egyptian one. The dates below are the events that affect museum hours, transport, hotel availability and the general atmosphere of the country in the months they fall in. Lunar dates shift each Western year by about 11 days; the table below shows the spring 2026 dates and a note about the trend.
| Date / window | Event | Effect on visit |
|---|---|---|
| 7 January | Coptic Christmas | Coptic Cairo busy, some museum closures, devotional atmosphere at Hanging Church |
| 22 February | Abu Simbel solar alignment | Temple sells out months ahead, atmosphere extraordinary, photography rules tighter |
| Late Feb–mid Mar 2026 | Ramadan | Restaurants close in the day, open after sunset; afternoon site visits feel slower; evenings vibrant |
| Mid-March 2026 | Eid al-Fitr (3 days) | Museum closures, domestic flights heavily booked, family travel |
| 25 April | Sinai Liberation Day | Sinai resort prices peak; Cairo museums normal |
| 1 May | Labour Day | Domestic offices closed, sites open |
| End May 2026 | Eid al-Adha (3–4 days) | Major closures, full domestic flights, expensive hotels |
| 23 July | Revolution Day | Some closures, fewer than on Eid |
| 11 September | Coptic New Year | Mostly observed inside Coptic communities |
| 6 October | Armed Forces Day | National holiday, some museum closures |
| 22 October | Abu Simbel solar alignment | Second equinox sell-out date of the year |
| December (variable) | Western Christmas / New Year | Tourist sites at peak crowding, cruise rates at peak |
Two practical notes. First, Ramadan shifts approximately 11 days earlier each Gregorian year — in 2027 it will fall mid-February to mid-March, in 2028 early February to early March, and so on. Build the dates into your trip planning. Second, Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha are the two biggest domestic-travel weeks of the year — domestic flights and intercity trains can be sold out a week ahead. If you happen to land in Egypt during an Eid, the museums and sites are mostly open and quieter than usual, but the transport is the bottleneck.
How the prices move through the year
The price-volatility shape of an Egyptian holiday is reliable enough to plan around. Hotel rates roughly double between November and February versus May-September. Cruise rates can triple. Domestic flight prices move 20–40% across the year but are more sensitive to the booking window than to the month. Site ticket prices are fixed by the SCA and do not move with the season.
- Cheapest months overall: May, June, September. Hotels at 50–60% of high-season rates; cruises at 40%.
- Most expensive weeks: Christmas-to-New-Year, Coptic Christmas week, the two Eid weeks, the Abu Simbel equinox days.
- Best value windows: mid-October before the high season peaks, mid-March after the school-holiday rush, early November before Christmas pricing.
- When to book: three to four months ahead for October-February, six to eight weeks for shoulder months, two to three weeks for the off-season.
Crowd-volume by site through the year
Site visitor numbers in Egypt are seasonal but not extreme. The Giza pyramids see roughly 4× the visitor traffic in December than in June; the Egyptian Museum Tahrir is more like 2× ratio. The crowding is concentrated in the first two hours of the morning and on Fridays and Saturdays. Below is the desk's best read on the worst times to be at each major site in a high season month.
| Site | Worst time | Best time |
|---|---|---|
| Giza pyramids | 10:00–12:00 daily Nov-Feb | 06:30–08:30 or 16:00–17:30 |
| Egyptian Museum Tahrir | 10:00–12:00 weekends | 09:00 opening on a weekday |
| Grand Egyptian Museum | 11:00–14:00 weekends | 08:30 opening any day |
| Karnak | 09:00–11:00 daily Nov-Mar | 06:45–08:30 |
| Valley of the Kings | 09:30–11:30 daily Nov-Mar | 06:00–08:00 |
| Abu Simbel | 07:30–10:00 during convoy arrival | 11:00–14:00 (the site is hot but quiet) |
| Khan el-Khalili | 20:00–22:00 weekends | 17:00–19:00 weekdays |
The simplest crowd-avoidance rule is to invert the tour-bus schedule. Tour buses arrive at sites between 09:00 and 11:00 and again between 14:00 and 16:00. If you are at a site at 06:30 or at 17:00, you will see the place without the buses. The cards in pharaoh sites include the specific best-window recommendation for each site; the cards in day itineraries are timed around this principle.
Six season questions, briefly answered
Is Ramadan a bad time to visit?
Not bad — different. Sites are open as normal. Restaurants are closed during the day in non-tourist neighbourhoods but most tourist-zone restaurants stay open. The evenings are vibrant, particularly the iftar (sunset breaking-fast) atmosphere in Cairo and Alexandria. The country slows down in the afternoon during Ramadan — that is the actual difference. Some readers find the slower pace pleasant; others find it inconvenient. Eid al-Fitr at the end of Ramadan is the harder window (closures, full trains).
When is the dust-storm season?
The khamsin season runs roughly from March to May, with most of the dust events concentrated in late March and April. A bad khamsin day in Cairo means visibility down to 200 metres and the sites are unpleasant. Two or three bad days per spring is the typical year. The forecast is reliable 24 hours ahead — if a khamsin is coming, swap an open-air day for a museum day.
How hot is too hot for the south?
40 °C ambient is the threshold the desk uses. Below 40 the open-air sites are doable before 11:00 with shade and water; above 40 they are not. Luxor and Aswan are above 40 most of June, July and August. If you have constraint reasons to visit in those months, plan dawn-only site visits and afternoon hotel rest.
Does the Nile cruise run year-round?
Yes, but at very different intensities. November-February is full season — most boats run, often booked out. March-May and October are at 60–80% capacity. June-September is at 30–40%; some boats are dry-docked and crews take leave. The water level is constant (the Aswan High Dam controls flow) so the cruise itself is the same; only the on-board energy varies.
Is Cairo air pollution a season issue?
Cairo has noticeable air pollution year-round and it is worse in winter (November-February) because temperature inversions trap exhaust. The pollution is not enough to derail an ordinary visit but it is enough that readers with asthma should pack their inhalers and consider an N95 mask for downtown walking. The west of the city (Mohandessin, Sheikh Zayed, Giza) is consistently better than the east (Heliopolis, Nasr City).
What about Christmas at the pyramids?
Christmas Day at the pyramids is a normal tourist day in Egypt — the pyramids are open, the GEM is open, the Egyptian Museum is open. Hotels run Christmas dinners at chain rates. Some boutique hotels in Cairo organise specifically Western-style Christmas events. New Year's Eve is more eventful, with most hotels running a paid gala dinner; bookings are typically four months ahead.
Pair this season guide with the prep notes for the practical visa/SIM/money basics that do not change seasonally, with day itineraries for the city-by-city plans timed around these realities, and with city cards for the neighbourhood-level recommendations.
The season guide is rotated twice a year
March update covers the spring and summer season; September update covers autumn and winter. Subscribers see the new tables in the monthly compendium PDF as soon as the rotation closes.
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