Aerial view of the Orange Bay sandbank near Hurghada, turquoise Red Sea waterAerial view of the Orange Bay sandbank near Hurghada, turquoise Red Sea water
Hurghada Guide

The Best Things to Do in Hurghada

The islands, the reef, the desert and the day trips worth planning your whole trip around, chosen by people who live here, not a marketplace of tickets.

3 min readUpdated July 2026The Solara Editors

Hurghada is really two places at once: a stretch of Red Sea resorts, and a launch point for some of Egypt's most extraordinary days. The trick is knowing which experiences are worth your time, when to go, and how to do them without the crowds. This is our shortlist, curated the way we'd plan it for our own guests.

1. Sail to Orange Bay Island

If you do one thing, make it this. Forty-five minutes offshore, Orange Bay is a thread of white sand where the shallows glow an impossible turquoise between roughly 10am and 2pm. Go early on a small or private boat and you can have the sandbank almost to yourself before the day-boats arrive. For the full playbook, see our Orange Bay vs Paradise Island comparison.

Travel tip

Book a boat that departs by 8:30am. You'll reach the island ahead of the crowds and catch the brightest water for photographs, with a lounger waiting before the rush.

2. Swim with wild dolphins at Dolphin House

At Sha'ab El Erg, a horseshoe reef north of Hurghada, pods of wild spinner dolphins rest and play in the shallows. A dawn Dolphin House trip gives you the calmest water and the best chance to share it quietly, on the dolphins' terms. It is the kind of morning people talk about for years.

3. Snorkel or dive the Red Sea reef

The Red Sea is one of the planet's great reef systems, warm and astonishingly clear. You do not need to be certified: a mask and a slow float over the house reef reveal anthias, parrotfish and unbothered turtles. Certified divers can drop into coral walls and drift dives just offshore. Our guide to the best snorkeling spots in Hurghada maps out where to go.

A snorkeler over a coral reef in the clear Red Sea near Hurghada
The reef begins a few fins' kicks from the boat, no experience required.

4. Cross the Eastern Desert at dusk

Twenty minutes inland, Hurghada gives way to open desert. A desert safari pairs quad bikes and, if you like, a camel across the dunes with Bedouin tea, dinner under the stars and a sky untouched by light pollution. Go for the late-afternoon departure so you ride into the sunset and stay for the stars.

5. Take a day trip to Luxor or Cairo

Hurghada is closer to ancient Egypt than most people realise. Luxor, the world's greatest open-air museum, is a private day away by road; read our Luxor day trip guide before you go. Cairo and the Pyramids are a short flight, best done by plane to spend your day at the monuments rather than on the motorway.

The difference between a ticket and an experience is everything that happens around it: the car on time, the captain who knows your name, the table set in the shade.Field notes · The Solara Journal

How many days do you need?

Three days is enough for a taste: one at sea, one in the desert, one for a day trip. Five days lets you do all of the above unhurried, with a slow morning or two on the reef. Our advice is to book no more than one big experience per day and leave room to do nothing beautifully. If you are still shaping the trip, our complete Hurghada travel guide covers the rest.

  • Day 1: Orange Bay or Paradise Island, out early.
  • Day 2: Dolphin House at dawn, reef in the afternoon.
  • Day 3: Desert safari from late afternoon into the night.
  • Day 4–5: A private day trip to Luxor, or Cairo by plane.
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Good to know

Frequently asked

What is the number one thing to do in Hurghada?

A boat trip to Orange Bay Island. Its glowing turquoise shallows and offshore reef are the signature Red Sea experience, and going early on a small or private boat keeps it uncrowded.

Is Hurghada good for non-swimmers and families?

Yes. The island sandbanks have calm, shallow water, dolphin and glass-boat trips need no swimming, and the desert safari suits all ages. Private trips let you set the pace around children.

Can you visit Luxor or Cairo from Hurghada?

Both. Luxor is a private day trip by road; Cairo and the Pyramids are best reached by a short flight so your time is spent at the monuments, not travelling.

When is the best time to visit Hurghada?

Hurghada is a year-round destination. Spring and autumn bring warm, comfortable days and pleasant sea temperatures; summer is hot but ideal for the water; winter is mild and quieter.

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