Dahab

On the Gulf of Aqaba, where the Sinai’s golden cliffs meet waters of deepest blue, lies Dahab—a place whose name means “gold.” Once a Bedouin fishing village, it grew into a crossroads for wanderers, divers, and dreamers drawn by the rhythm of sea and desert.

Dahab offers coral gardens and the famous Blue Hole, where the water drops into mystery. Along the shore, cafés and camps look out to Saudi Arabia’s mountains, glowing at sunset across the gulf. Inland, camel paths lead to oases and canyons, where the silence of the desert stretches wide. A backpackers dream, a divers wishes come true.

Explore the Red Sea

Just off Dahab’s shore, the reef drops into a circle of deep blue—an abyss that has become legend, both beautiful and unforgiving.

A narrow passage of pale limestone, its smooth walls glowing with light as it winds like a secret through the desert.

Kick up sand and chase the horizon—quad bikes carry you over dunes and desert plains where silence meets speed.

Slip beneath the Red Sea’s surface and a new world opens—reefs alive with color, fish drifting like clouds, and light falling through blue depths as endless as the desert sky.

A rugged peak revered for revelation, where pilgrims climb through the night to watch dawn break across the desert’s endless ridges.

Sandstone walls streaked with red, gold, and violet—nature’s own artwork carved into a twisting desert labyrinth.

Swaying to an ancient rhythm, camels carry you across desert tracks—slow, high, and timeless, the way travelers once crossed Egypt.