Greater Cairo
SUBREGION GUIDE

Greater Cairo

Ancient pyramids rise from the bustling heart of Arabia

Greater Cairo sprawls across the Nile Delta like a living museum where pharaohs' tombs share the skyline with minarets and modern towers. This isn't just Cairo proper — we're talking about the entire metropolitan area that includes Giza's famous pyramids, the ancient capital of Memphis, and neighborhoods that have watched empires rise and fall for five millennia.

The city hits you with sensory overload the moment you step outside. Car horns create a constant symphony, the call to prayer echoes from hundreds of mosques, and the smell of grilled kofta mingles with diesel fumes and jasmine. But here's the thing — once you find your rhythm in this chaos, Greater Cairo becomes addictive.

You can stand at the foot of the Great Pyramid in the morning and browse medieval manuscripts in Islamic Cairo by afternoon. The metro costs 7 Egyptian pounds (about $0.15), street food will fill you up for under $2, and many of the world's greatest treasures sit right here waiting for you to discover them.

Culture & Context

WARM, PERSISTENT, HAGGLING

Cairo moves on its own clock, and if you fight it, you lose. Egyptians are famously warm and genuinely curious about visitors, but hospitality here can shade into persistence quickly, especially around Khan el-Khalili and the Pyramid entrance. Learn to distinguish between someone being genuinely friendly and someone opening a sales pitch.

Most of the time it's both. Egypt is a predominantly Muslim country, so dress modestly outside resort areas. Women should cover shoulders and knees; men should skip the tank tops in the city.

Friday is the main prayer day — some sites and restaurants have altered hours. During Ramadan (February 28–March 29, 2026), restaurants close during daylight and the city transforms at night. Book hotels 60 days ahead for Ramadan and Eid periods.

Rooms sell out fast. Baksheesh (small tips) is genuinely part of daily life, not a tourist trap. Round up taxi fares, tip restroom attendants, and have small E£5–20 notes on hand constantly.

Haggling is standard at souks. Starting prices in tourist markets are often 2–3x the actual value, so don't feel bad negotiating hard.

Local Customs

BAKSHEESH CONSTANTLY REQUIRED

Baksheesh is real. Small tips of E£20–50 are expected from restroom attendants, guards who let you take photos in restricted spots, and anyone who carries your bags. Keep a constant supply of small notes..

Always greet before you transact. Walking up to a vendor or taxi driver and immediately saying a price without 'As-salamu alaykum' or at minimum 'hello' reads as rude.. Bargaining is the norm at souks and markets.

Starting prices at Khan el-Khalili are often 2–3x what sellers will actually accept. Don't feel bad negotiating. Smiling while you do it helps..

Photography of police stations, military barracks, and certain government buildings is illegal. Don't do it. Photographing people — especially women — without permission is also a fast way to cause offense..

Friday midday prayer affects operating hours across the city. Many businesses close for an hour or two. Plan museum visits and lunch accordingly..

Remove shoes before entering mosque prayer areas. Cover shoulders, knees, and (for women) hair when visiting mosques — scarves are often available at the entrance.. Street food stands are almost always cash-only.

ATMs are widely available but break small bills at a hotel or Carrefour before heading to a market.. Tap water is not safe to drink. Bottled water only.

This applies everywhere, including ice in cheaper venues.. Solo female travelers should expect persistent attention, including cat-calling, especially outside Zamalek, Garden City, and Maadi. Walking with purpose and ignoring comments without engaging is the standard local advice..

The metro has women-only cars (first two cars of each train). Use them or don't — it's your choice. During rush hour they're significantly less crowded.

Safety

PETTY THEFT, NOT VIOLENT

Cairo is generally safe for tourists in 2026, particularly in well-trafficked areas like Downtown, Zamalek, Giza, and Islamic Cairo. Violent crime against visitors is rare. The main concerns are petty stuff: pickpocketing at Khan el-Khalili, scams around Pyramids entrance (fake guides, 'closed museum' stories, unofficial camel operators), and persistent taxi overcharging.

Keep bags zipped in crowded markets. Stash small bills separately from your main wallet so you're not pulling out cash in front of crowds. The US State Department lists Egypt at 'Level 3: Reconsider Travel,' but this specifically targets North Sinai and border regions — not Cairo or the main tourist corridor.

Cairo itself is not near any active conflict zones; Luxor is over 500km from the Gaza border. At night, use Uber or Careem for longer distances rather than walking in unfamiliar areas. Streets outside tourist zones are often poorly lit.

The bazaar area of Old Cairo is well-lit and busy at night and is perfectly fine on foot. Solo women should expect cat-calling and persistent attention, including on public transport. The metro's women-only cars (first two cars) are less crowded and a practical option.

Report any crime to Tourist Police before leaving Egypt: dial 126. Carry a photo of your passport separately from the original. It is illegal to photograph police stations, military installations, or government buildings — take this seriously.

Getting Around

METRO & UBER

The Cairo Metro is your best friend for long cross-city trips. Three operational lines connect all the major tourist zones. Fares run E£8–20 ($0.

15–0.40) depending on how many stops. Line 1 hits Tahrir Square (Egyptian Museum) and Giza Station.

Line 3 goes toward the airport. Credit card machines are now installed at Line 1 and Line 2 stations, so you don't always need exact cash. January 2026 saw the official launch of the Cairo Monorail: two lines totaling 100km linking the New Administrative Capital to East Cairo and 6th of October City to Giza.

Uber and Careem are the standard recommendation for door-to-door movement. Uber averages $2–3 for a 30-minute trip. Download both before you arrive — Careem accepts cash if your card setup is complicated.

For first-time arrivals at Cairo International Airport, go straight to the app rather than the taxi queue. Airport taxi touts are persistent and prices fluctuate. Official airport taxis to Giza or Downtown run 200–300 E£ ($7–10).

The white taxi fleet: metered, widely available, but drivers frequently claim the meter is broken or round up dramatically on tourist-looking passengers. If you use one, agree on a price before you get in, and hoard small bills — 'mafeesh fakkah' (no change) is a documented national sport. Public buses and microbuses are cheap but complicated to navigate without Arabic.

The river bus runs around $0.31 (E£17) and offers a genuinely different perspective on the city. Don't drive yourself.

Cairo traffic is legitimately dangerous, lane markings are decorative, and navigation apps lag behind ongoing construction projects.

Useful Phrases

As-salamu alaykumas-sa-LAH-moo a-LAY-koom
Peace be upon you
the universal greeting. Use it every time you approach someone new. The response is 'Wa alaykum as-salam.'
Shukran (شكرا)SHOOK-ran
Thank you. Probably the single most useful word you'll use. Say it constantly.
La shukran (لا شكرا)LAH SHOOK-ran
No thank you. Essential for declining vendor offers politely without causing offense.
Bikam? (بكام)bee-KAM
How much? Your opening move at any market, taxi negotiation, or food stall. Just knowing this one phrase signals you're not a pushover tourist.
Mashy (ماشي)MAH-shee
Literally 'walking,' but universally used as 'OK' or 'alright.' You'll hear it constantly and use it just as much.
Yalla (يلا)YAH-lah
Let's go, hurry up, come on
all depending on context. Egyptians drop this one into nearly every sentence.
Aiwa (ايوا)AY-wah
Yes. Very Egyptian. Alternatively just 'ah' (like ah-hah). Softer than a flat yes.
La (لا)LAH (with a glottal stop at the end)
No. Short and clipped. Don't overthink the pronunciation
context does most of the work.

Explore Cities

Explore the Region

Map showing 2 destinations
Cities
2 destinations
Zamalek sits on Gezira Island in the Nile and feels like Cairo's answer to Manhattan. Tree-lined streets, art galleries, and rooftop bars make it popular with expats and travelers who want some breathing room. The Four Seasonshere overlooks the river, but you'll find decent mid-range hotels for $40-60 per night. Downtown Cairo puts you in the thick of things near Tahrir Square and the Egyptian Museum. The architecture screams early 20th century — think faded European grandeur with Arabic flourishes. Hotels range from backpacker hostels ($8-15) to the legendary Old Winter Palace. Islamic Cairo is where you want to be if you're serious about history. Stay near Khan el-Khalili bazaar and you can walk to Al-Azhar Mosque, the Citadel, and dozens of medieval monuments. The noise level here is intense, but so is the authenticity. Giza makes sense if the pyramids are your main draw. You'll pay tourist prices for everything, but waking up with the Great Pyramid in your hotel window has its perks. The Mena House hotel sits right at the pyramid complex — expensive but unforgettable.

Money-Saving Tips

  • 1.The Egyptian pound fluctuates wildly — check current exchange rates and bring US dollars or euros to exchange locally for better rates than airport booths
  • 2.Many sites have separate pricing for foreigners vs. locals — the Great Pyramid costs 900 pounds for tourists but 30 pounds for Egyptians with ID
  • 3.Tipping (baksheesh) is expected everywhere — 10-20 pounds for small services, 50-100 pounds for tour guides, round up taxi fares
  • 4.Credit cards work at hotels and upscale restaurants but bring cash for street food, markets, and local transport — many places are cash-only
  • 5.Bargaining is mandatory in markets and with taxi drivers — start at 30-40% of the asking price and work up slowly
  • 6.Student IDs (even expired ones) sometimes get discounts at museums and archaeological sites — worth trying
  • 7.Avoid currency exchange at hotels which typically offer poor rates — banks and official exchange bureaus give better deals

Travel Tips

  • Download offline maps before exploring — GPS can be spotty in dense urban areas and data is expensive for short visits
  • Dress conservatively especially when visiting mosques — long pants and covered shoulders for everyone, headscarves for women in religious sites
  • Learn basic Arabic numbers for prices and addresses — many street vendors don't speak English and signs aren't always translated
  • Carry tissues and hand sanitizer — public restrooms often lack supplies and cleanliness varies widely
  • Book pyramid interior tickets online in advance during peak season (December-February) — daily quotas sell out quickly
  • Avoid tap water and ice — stick to bottled water which costs 5-10 pounds and is available everywhere
  • Photography inside museums and tombs usually costs extra (50-300 pounds depending on the site) and flash is prohibited
  • Traffic is chaotic but follows its own logic — watch how locals cross streets and follow their lead rather than waiting for clear crossings

Frequently Asked Questions

Greater Cairo is generally safe for tourists who use common sense. Petty crime like pickpocketing happens in crowded areas like Khan el-Khalili market, but violent crime against tourists is rare. The biggest risks are traffic accidents and aggressive vendors. Women may face more harassment, especially when traveling alone, but millions of female tourists visit safely each year.

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