Dahabiya Nile Cruise — Egypt’s Most Intimate Sailing Experience

6 to 14 cabins per boat · 0 engines, all wind & current · 5.0 stars on 1,056 TripAdvisor reviews

A dahabiya is a 6 to 14 cabin sailing boat, hand-built in the Egyptian tradition, that moves up and down the Nile with the wind and a small auxiliary motor. It is the closest thing to a 19th-century Nile journey that you can still book in 2026: same hull shape, same lateen sails, same slow rhythm, plus modern plumbing and air-conditioning.

If you have already been on a standard Nile cruise or you simply want a quieter, smaller, more private experience than a 5-star cruise ship, a dahabiya is the right answer. Egyptdaytours.com has booked Dahabiya cruises for travelers from 50+ countries since 2013, and we run the route most of our guests prefer: 5 to 7 nights between Esna and Aswan, with stops at temples and islands the big boats cannot reach.

What's Always Included on Every Dahabiya Cruise

  • Full-board on the dahabiyaBreakfast, lunch, dinner, afternoon tea, prepared by the on-board chef
  • Private licensed Egyptologist guideAt every temple and Nubian-village stop
  • All entrance feesEsna, El Kab, Edfu, Gebel Silsila, Kom Ombo, Philae
  • Domestic flights or sleeper trainCairo to/from Luxor/Aswan, included in the quote

What Is a Dahabiya?

A dahabiya is a traditional Egyptian sailing boat with two masts, lateen-rigged sails, and 6 to 14 air-conditioned cabins on a single deck or a deck-and-a-half. The name comes from the Arabic “dhahab” (gold), a reference to the gilded barges of the Ottoman-era pashas who first popularized the design. Modern dahabiyas use the same hull lines and sail plan, but every cabin has a proper bed, ensuite bathroom, and a window or French balcony over the river.

A dahabiya is sailed by a small crew (typically 8 to 12 people for a 12-cabin boat) and moves at the speed of the wind. On still days, a small motor moves the boat at a walking pace. There is no engine roar, no PA system, no schedule of buffet meals: just the captain calling sail orders, the chef preparing your lunch, and your Egyptologist guide narrating the bank as it slides past.

Dahabiya vs Standard Nile Cruise Ship

A standard 5-star Nile cruise ship carries 60 to 150 passengers, runs a fixed daily program, sails on engine power, and moors alongside the temples each evening with the rest of the cruise fleet. A dahabiya carries 6 to 28 passengers (when chartered privately, often 2 to 14), runs a flexible program built around your group, sails with the wind, and moors at islands and small Nubian villages where no cruise ship can dock. The dahabiya is slower, smaller, and 40 to 60 percent more expensive per night, but the experience is fundamentally different.

Full side-by-side comparison of cabins, meals, daily routine, and pricing: Nile cruise vs dahabiya.

Typical Dahabiya Route (Esna to Aswan)

The dahabiya route is shorter than the standard cruise route and runs between Esna (just south of Luxor) and Aswan, with daily stops at sites that the big cruise ships either skip or visit briefly. Esna is the put-in point because the Esna lock controls water levels and dahabiyas time their departure to the lock schedule. The journey is upstream most of the way (Esna to Aswan is south, against the current), which is why it takes 5 to 7 nights even though the distance is shorter than the standard Luxor-Aswan cruise.

Stops along the way include El Kab (Predynastic and Early Dynastic tombs), Edfu (the best-preserved Pharaonic temple in Egypt), Gebel Silsila (sandstone quarries with hieroglyphic graffiti from 18th and 19th Dynasty pharaohs), Kom Ombo (the double temple of Sobek and Haroeris), and Daraw camel market on Tuesdays. The dahabiya moors at small Nubian villages and uninhabited Nile islands each evening, where you have the riverbank to yourself.

What to Expect on Board

Mornings start with breakfast on the upper deck or in the dining salon, around 8am. The boat sails after breakfast, and your Egyptologist guide narrates the geography and history as you move. Temple visits are scheduled around the heat of the day: typically a morning visit before lunch and an afternoon or sunset visit after the boat moors. Lunch is served on board, usually a multi-course menu of Egyptian and Mediterranean dishes prepared by the chef.

Afternoons are slow. You can read on the sun deck, swim from the side of the boat where the captain says it is safe, or take a walk on whichever island the dahabiya has moored at. Sunset is observed with mint tea or a sundowner cocktail. Dinner is served family-style around 7:30pm at one long table on the upper deck, often by candlelight, sometimes with a local Nubian musician on board.

There is no entertainment program, no buffet, no nightclub. The dahabiya is built for travelers who want the river to be the entertainment.

Sample 5-Day Dahabiya Itinerary

Day 1: Esna → El Kab. Board the dahabiya in Esna in the late morning after transfer from Luxor (1 hour). Lunch on board as the boat moves through the Esna lock. Visit the Predynastic painted tombs at El Kab in the late afternoon. Moor overnight on an uninhabited Nile island.

Day 2: El Kab → Edfu. Morning sail with breakfast on deck. Visit Edfu Temple before the cruise-ship crowds arrive (we time your visit to land just as the temple opens). Long lunch on board, swim from the side, afternoon reading or walking. Sunset dinner.

Day 3: Edfu → Gebel Silsila. Sail to the sandstone quarries at Gebel Silsila, where Pharaonic workers carved stone for the temples of Karnak and Luxor. Walk through the ancient quarry, see the New Kingdom graffiti. Afternoon visit to a small Nubian village inland. Overnight moored on a quiet stretch of river.

Day 4: Gebel Silsila → Kom Ombo. Morning sail to Kom Ombo, the double temple of Sobek (crocodile god) and Haroeris (a form of Horus). Visit at golden hour when the temple is at its photogenic best. Continue south after dinner.

Day 5: Kom Ombo → Aswan. Final morning sail into Aswan. Disembark mid-morning. Optional add-ons: Philae Temple (afternoon), High Dam, Unfinished Obelisk, or fly to Abu Simbel for the day.

Most travelers combine this 5-night dahabiya with 2 to 3 nights in Aswan on the back end and 3 nights in Cairo on the front end.

Dahabiya Boat Options at Egypt Day Tours

We work with six dahabiyas. Each has a different size, age, and price point. We pick the right one for your dates, your group size, and whether you want to share the boat with other travelers or charter the whole thing privately.

Abundance Dahabiya

A modern 10-cabin dahabiya with a large upper deck and a small plunge pool. Strong fit for honeymoons and small family groups. View Abundance Dahabiya tour →

Three Pyramids Dahabiya

12 cabins, popular for groups of 18 to 24 travelers chartering the full boat. Spacious cabins with French balconies. View Three Pyramids Dahabiya tour →

Amoura Dahabiya

A boutique 8-cabin boat with a more intimate feel. Best fit for couples and small parties of 4 to 10. View Amoura Dahabiya tour →

Sacred Lotus Dahabiya

A larger 14-cabin dahabiya with a full crew of 12 and a dedicated chef. Good fit for full charters and multi-generational family trips. View Sacred Lotus Dahabiya tour →

Merit Dahabiya

A traditional 6-cabin dahabiya with the most authentic feel of the fleet. The smallest boat we sell. View Merit Dahabiya tour →

Jasmine Dahabiya

A mid-sized 10-cabin dahabiya, popular for autumn and spring sailings. Strong cabin layout with floor-to-ceiling windows. View Jasmine Dahabiya tour →

If your priority is a high-end traditional cruise ship instead of a sailing boat, see our luxury Nile cruise ships page for Sanctuary, Oberoi, and Movenpick options.

Best Time for a Dahabiya Cruise

October through April is the sweet spot. Weather is comfortable (22 to 28 degrees Celsius), winds are reliable for sailing, and the Nile water level is at its best for navigating between Esna and Aswan. November and February are particularly good: full fleet availability, cool evenings, and the holiday-week premium has eased.

May to September is sailable but hotter (38+ in Aswan at midday). Several dahabiyas dry-dock for maintenance in July and August so fleet choice is limited. December 20 to January 5 and the week before and after Easter are peak weeks, with prices 25 to 35 percent above shoulder season.

Pricing and Inclusions

A 5-night dahabiya cruise costs between $1,400 and $2,800 per person sharing a double cabin, depending on the boat (Merit and Amoura at the lower end, Sacred Lotus and Three Pyramids at the upper end) and the season. A 7-night dahabiya runs $1,900 to $3,800 per person. These rates include full-board meals, all temple entrance fees, a private Egyptologist guide, all transfers between Luxor/Aswan and the boat, and the boat charter.

Not included: international flights, the Egypt e-visa ($25), tips for the crew (typically $80 to $120 per person for a 5-night trip), optional excursions like Abu Simbel by flight ($250), and any drinks beyond the welcome cocktail and the table water at meals.

For comparison: a standard 5-star Nile cruise ship for the same number of nights costs $480 to $780 per person; a luxury Nile cruise ship (Sanctuary, Oberoi) is $1,200 to $2,400. The dahabiya premium reflects the smaller passenger count, the dedicated chef, and the charter-style service. For a shorter, faster, cheaper alternative, see our 3-night Nile cruise Aswan to Luxor page.

Who Is a Dahabiya Right For?

A dahabiya is the right choice for travelers who fit one or more of these profiles.

Honeymooners and anniversary trips. A dahabiya is the most romantic Nile experience available, particularly when chartered privately. The intimate scale (you eat with the captain, you nap on the deck, you watch the sunset from your own balcony) is hard to match on any other boat.

Second-time visitors. If you have done a standard Nile cruise on a previous Egypt trip and want something different on the next one, a dahabiya is the answer. Different boat, different route, different pace, different temples and stops.

Multi-generational family groups. Charter the full boat (10 to 14 cabins) and turn the dahabiya into a private floating villa for grandparents, parents, and kids. The chef cooks to your menu and the daily program is yours.

Photographers. The Esna-to-Aswan route includes Gebel Silsila quarries, sunset moorings on uninhabited islands, and visits to small Nubian villages that the big cruise fleet skips entirely. Better light, fewer crowds, no fellow passengers in every shot.

If none of those describe you, a standard Nile cruise ship is likely a better fit. It is cheaper, faster, and visits the same major temples with a richer on-board program.

What Travelers Say About Our Dahabiyas

“Our private Dahabiya charter on Sacred Lotus was the highlight of our 12-day Egypt trip. The chef, the crew, the mooring spots no cruise ship could reach. Attar team handled everything.”

Deep B. 🇮🇳
Nov 2025 · 12-day tour · TripAdvisor

“Did the Amoura Dahabiya for our honeymoon. Eight cabins, so intimate, and the sunset dinner on deck was unforgettable. Worth every penny over a standard cruise.”

Emily F. 🇺🇸
Apr 2026 · 10-day tour · TripAdvisor

“Booked the Merit Dahabiya for our second Egypt trip. Smaller than the cruise we did the first time, but that is exactly the point. We moored at islands with no one else on them.”

Resort324206 🇬🇧
Dec 2025 · 9-day tour · TripAdvisor

“Three Pyramids Dahabiya for a family of 18 across three generations. Chartered the full boat. The chef cooked to our menu. The crew remembered everyone coffee order by day 2.”

Valerie H. 🇺🇸
Feb 2026 · 11-day tour · TripAdvisor

“Loved every minute of the Jasmine Dahabiya. Slower pace, smaller boat, better experience than the 5-star cruise I had done before. The temples are still the temples but you arrive differently.”

Samantha H. 🇨🇦
Apr 2026 · 8-day tour · TripAdvisor

Frequently Asked Questions

How is a Dahabiya different from a standard Nile cruise ship?

A dahabiya is a 6 to 14 cabin sailing boat that moves with the wind and a small auxiliary motor. A standard 5-star Nile cruise ship is a 60 to 150 cabin motorized vessel. The dahabiya is slower, smaller, more intimate, and 40 to 60 percent more expensive per night. Different product, different traveler.

How long is a typical Dahabiya cruise?

Five to seven nights between Esna and Aswan. The shorter 5-night option works for travelers on a tight overall itinerary; the 7-night option adds extra stops and more sailing time. Three-night dahabiya cruises exist but are rare; for a short cruise we recommend a standard cruise ship instead.

Can I charter a whole Dahabiya privately?

Yes. We arrange full charters on all six boats we work with. A private charter gives you the entire boat (6 to 14 cabins depending on which one), the crew works exclusively for your group, and the daily program is built around your dates and preferences. Charter rates vary; ask us for a quote.

Are there any engines or is it pure sailing?

Modern dahabiyas have a small auxiliary motor used when the wind is light or for precise maneuvering (entering locks, mooring). The boat sails for most of the journey under wind power. There is no engine roar; the auxiliary is quiet and used sparingly.

What is the food like on board?

Cooked by a dedicated on-board chef, typically a multi-course menu of Egyptian, Mediterranean, and international dishes. Dinner is family-style around one long table. Dietary requirements (vegetarian, halal, gluten-free, allergies) are accommodated easily; tell us at booking and we brief the chef.

Can I add Abu Simbel or Cairo to a Dahabiya trip?

Yes. Most travelers pair the dahabiya with 3 nights in Cairo (Pyramids, Grand Egyptian Museum, Khan el-Khalili) and an optional Abu Simbel flight from Aswan. We build the full itinerary as one package and quote it line-by-line. Average total trip length: 8 to 12 days.

Last reviewed by Attar on 2026-05-16. Reviewed quarterly.