Pyramids of Giza FAQs — 25 Most Asked Questions Answered for 2026
The Pyramids of Giza are open daily from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. The general area entry ticket costs EGP 700 for foreign adults. You can enter the Great Pyramid with a separate ticket (EGP 1,000). Children under 6 enter free. The site is approximately 20 km from central Cairo, most easily reached by taxi, Uber, or guided tour. Camel rides are available but require firm price negotiation. The best time to visit is October to April, arriving at 8:00 AM opening.
This page answers the questions visitors ask most frequently about planning and experiencing a trip to the Pyramids of Giza. For deeper coverage of any topic, each answer links to our full dedicated guide.
Tickets & Entry
The general area entry ticket costs EGP 700 for foreign adults and EGP 350 for foreign students with valid ID. This covers the open-air Giza Plateau including the Sphinx and all three pyramid exteriors. Interior access to the Great Pyramid costs an additional EGP 1,000; Khafre’s interior costs EGP 750; the Solar Boat Museum costs EGP 100. Children under 6 enter free. For a full breakdown, see our ticket prices guide.
Yes — the interior of the Great Pyramid of Khufu and the Pyramid of Khafre are open to visitors with a separate ticket purchased in addition to the general area entry. The interior involves a steep, narrow ascending passage and is physically demanding. The Pyramid of Menkaure interior is also accessible. Numbers are limited daily — arrive at 8:00 AM to secure interior tickets before they sell out. See our VIP interior tour guide for the pre-arranged option.
General area entry can be purchased at the gate on arrival, though advance online booking saves time in the ticket office queue — particularly during peak season (November–February). The Great Pyramid interior ticket is limited in daily numbers and can sell out; arriving at opening is the most reliable way to secure one. See our skip-the-line tickets guide for advance booking options.
Photography with a mobile phone is free throughout the site. Do not accept “photography permits” from unofficial individuals — no permit is required for personal photography.
Foreign students with valid ID (maximum age 24) receive 50% off all ticket prices. Children under 6 enter free. Egyptian nationals with special needs and Egyptians aged 60 and above also receive free entry. There is no general senior discount for foreign visitors.
Opening Hours & When to Visit
The site is open daily from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, with last entry at 4:00 PM. During Ramadan, hours are reduced — typically 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM. The site is open every day of the year including public holidays. See our full opening hours guide.
October to April offers the most comfortable temperatures for an outdoor visit. Within any day, arriving at 8:00 AM opening gives you the lightest crowds and the best photography light. The worst time is 10:00 AM–2:00 PM when tour groups peak and heat is most intense. See our best time to visit guide.
A half-day visit of 4–5 hours covers all the main monuments comfortably. A full day (6–8 hours) allows for interior pyramid access, the Solar Boat Museum, and unhurried photography. Most guided tours from Cairo spend 2–2.5 hours on the plateau itself. See our how long to spend guide.
Getting There
The most practical options are: taxi (35–60 minutes, EGP 150–350 depending on traffic and starting point), Uber or Careem (same journey time, price shown upfront in the app), or guided tour with hotel pickup. The Cairo Metro reaches Giza Station, from which a local microbus runs west along Al Haram Street to the site. See our full how to get there guide.
Yes — either by flight day trip (approximately 45 minutes each way, 10–12 hours total) or by overland tour (4–5 hours each way, 14–16 hours total). The flight option is significantly more time-efficient. See our day trip from Hurghada by flight review and full-day overland tour from Hurghada review.
Yes — by domestic flight day trip (approximately 55 minutes each way). The overland option from Sharm requires a ferry crossing and is not practical as a day trip. See our day trip from Sharm El Sheikh review.
What to See
The main monuments are the Great Pyramid of Khufu (the largest and only surviving Wonder of the Ancient World), the Pyramid of Khafre (identifiable by its limestone cap), the Pyramid of Menkaure (smallest of the three), the Great Sphinx, the Solar Boat Museum, and the Queens’ Pyramids. A panoramic desert viewpoint to the south provides the iconic photograph of all three pyramids aligned.
Yes — the Great Sphinx is located within the Giza Plateau complex and is included with the general area entry ticket. It sits adjacent to the Valley Temple of Khafre, approximately 500 metres east of the Great Pyramid. For full details, see our Great Sphinx guide.
The Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) is the world’s largest archaeological museum, opened in 2023 adjacent to the Giza Plateau — approximately 2 km from the main pyramid entrance. It houses the complete collection of Tutankhamun’s tomb treasures and over 100,000 ancient artefacts. It requires a separate entry ticket and is not included with the Giza Plateau area ticket. Many guided tours combine both sites in a single day.
Tours & Guides
A guide is not required but is strongly recommended. The monuments carry minimal interpretive signage — without historical context, the experience is visually impressive but historically thin. A licensed Egyptologist guide transforms the visit. See our best guided tours guide for options.
A private tour gives your party dedicated guide and vehicle, full pace control, and the ability to customise the itinerary. A group tour shares costs across multiple participants on a fixed schedule. See our full private vs group tours comparison.
Yes — the most popular multi-site combination is Giza + Saqqara + Memphis, which covers three major ancient Egyptian sites in one full day. Giza + Grand Egyptian Museum is another common full-day pairing. See our combo tickets guide.
Safety & Practical
Yes — the Giza complex is safe for tourists. The entrance area on Al Haram Street involves persistent vendors and several well-documented scam patterns, but these are manageable with preparation and do not constitute a safety risk. The plateau itself is calm once you are through the gate. See our full scams and safety tips guide.
Lightweight, breathable clothing covering shoulders and knees, comfortable closed-toe walking shoes, and a hat. Egypt’s dress code for archaeological sites is conservative — shorts and sleeveless tops without a cover layer are not recommended. See our what to bring guide.
With significant limitations. The main monuments can be reached by vehicle on the internal site roads; standard wheelchairs cannot self-propel on sandy plateau terrain. Pyramid interiors are not accessible. Private tour transport is strongly recommended. See our full accessibility guide.
Yes — camel rides are available from independent operators around the plateau perimeter. Prices are negotiated rather than fixed; agree on a firm price before mounting. Booking a camel ride as part of a guided tour removes the negotiation entirely. See our camel rides guide.
Yes — the Pyramids of Giza Sound & Light Show runs most evenings after dark at an open-air amphitheatre facing the Sphinx. Shows are in multiple languages across multiple sessions per evening. Tickets cost approximately EGP 350–550 for foreign adults. See our Sound & Light Show guide.
Children under 6 years old enter free. Children aged 6 and above pay the standard adult entry rate for foreign visitors unless they qualify as students with valid ID. For family planning advice, see our visiting with kids guide.
The official government source is managed by Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities at egymonuments.gov.eg. For a guide to what it covers and its limitations, see our official website guide.