You’ve packed your bags, booked your Nile cruise, and you’re ready for the pharaohs — but one question keeps coming up: how much do you tip in Egypt?
Tipping in Egypt, known locally as baksheesh (بقشيش), isn’t just good manners — it’s a cornerstone of the service economy. For many Egyptians in tourism, tips are not a bonus; they are a primary income source. Getting it right means smoother service, warmer hospitality, and a clear conscience. Getting it wrong (too little or too much) can cause awkward situations.
This guide is built on current 2026 exchange rates and feedback from dozens of Ahmose Travel clients. We give you specific amounts in both EGP and USD, scenario by scenario.
As of June 2026: approximately 50 EGP = $1 USD. All amounts below use this rate. Check rates on your arrival day — the pound has been stable but monitor xe.com for shifts.
Understanding Baksheesh: The Golden Rule
Before diving into numbers, understand the why. Service workers in tourism — guides, drivers, felucca captains, hotel bellboys — earn base wages that assume tips will supplement them significantly. A Luxor temple guard earning a government wage of perhaps 3,000–4,000 EGP/month ($60–$80) depends on tourist gratuities to reach a living income.
This doesn’t mean you should tip for nothing or be extorted. The principle is simple: if someone provides a real service, tip them. If someone just approaches you for money without rendering a service, a polite “la shukran” (no, thank you) is perfectly acceptable.
At the Pyramids, men in traditional costumes or with camels will offer a “free photo.” Accept, and they will demand $10–$20 aggressively afterward. Either agree on a price before the photo, or decline clearly. This is the #1 tourist complaint about tipping in Egypt.
Quick Reference: Tip Amounts at a Glance
Tour Guide (private)
Driver / Transfer
Restaurant Server
Hotel Porter
Housekeeping
Temple Guard
Tipping by Situation — Detailed Breakdown
Tour Guides
Your guide is the single most important person to tip well. A knowledgeable, engaging guide who spends 8 hours bringing history to life at Karnak or the Egyptian Museum deserves a generous tip. It also shapes their motivation for the rest of your tour.
| Situation | Recommended Tip (per person) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Private guide, full day (8h+) | $10–15 USD | Per person, per day. Excellent guide → $20 pp |
| Private guide, half day (4h) | $5–8 USD | Per person |
| Group tour guide (8–15 people) | $5–8 USD | Per person per day; the group total adds up |
| Large group tour (15+ people) | $3–5 USD | Minimum; guide earns from volume |
| Multi-day Nile cruise guide | $10–15 USD/day | Tip on final day of tour |
Always hand tips directly and separately to your guide and your driver. Don’t give one lump sum to “split.” Guides and drivers have different roles and may have awkward arrangements if money passes between them.
Drivers & Airport Transfers
Your driver works just as hard as your guide — navigating Cairo traffic, waiting patiently, loading luggage, managing logistics. Don’t forget them.
- Day driver (full day with guide): $5–8 USD per person
- Airport transfer (one way): 50–100 EGP ($1–2 USD)
- Airport transfer (long, e.g., Cairo to Giza, 1h+): 100–150 EGP
- Uber / Careem: Not expected — the platform fee covers it. A small tip (20–30 EGP) for good service is appreciated but not required.
- Local taxis (metered or negotiated): Round up to nearest 50 EGP; no additional tip needed.
Restaurants
Egypt’s tourist restaurants almost universally add a 12% service charge plus 14% VAT to your bill — that 26% can be a surprise. However, this service charge is a tax collected by the restaurant, not a tip paid to your server. It is customary to leave additional cash.
- Mid-range tourist restaurant: 50–100 EGP ($1–2 USD) per table
- High-end hotel restaurant: 100–200 EGP per table, or 10% of pre-service-charge subtotal
- Local Egyptian ful/falafel shop: 10–20 EGP (rounding up the change is enough)
- Delivery / takeaway: No tip expected
- Juice bars / coffee shops: 10–20 EGP if service was attentive
Hotel Staff
At 4-star and 5-star hotels — which is where most international travelers stay — tipping is very much expected. Budget it separately; it adds up over a week but builds genuine goodwill that can unlock upgrades, early check-ins, and extra amenities.
| Role | Amount | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Porter (bags to room) | 20–50 EGP per bag | On delivery |
| Housekeeping | 30–50 EGP per night | Daily (not checkout — staff rotates) |
| Concierge (booking a tour) | 50–100 EGP | After they help you |
| Pool/beach attendant | 20–50 EGP per day | At end of day |
| Spa therapist | 10–15% of treatment cost | After service |
| Room service waiter | 30–50 EGP | On delivery (beyond tray charge) |
Leave housekeeping tips on the pillow or a visible surface daily with a note “Thank you.” Hotel rooms are cleaned by different staff on different shifts. A tip left on checkout day benefits only that day’s cleaner — the person who cleaned every other day of your stay gets nothing.
Nile Cruise Staff
A Nile cruise has an entire crew: captain, stewards, kitchen staff, felucca crew, sound & light hosts. Most cruise companies recommend a tipping envelope system, distributed by the cruise director at the end.
- Standard tip envelope (4-night cruise): $10–15 USD per person total for general crew
- Your personal cabin steward: $10–15 USD extra for exceptional service
- Felucca/motorboat captain: 30–50 EGP per trip
- Sound & Light Show host: 20–30 EGP if they guided your group
Temple Guards & Site Helpers
Egypt’s ancient sites are staffed by guards and workers who often position themselves as informal helpers — showing you a hidden tomb entrance, allowing a photo in a restricted zone, or pointing out hieroglyphs. This is a legitimate part of site culture.
- Guard who lets you into a less-crowded corridor or takes your photo: 20–50 EGP
- Guard who opens a sealed room or provides special access: 50–100 EGP
- Bathroom attendant: 5–10 EGP
- Shoe attendant (at mosques): 5–10 EGP
If a guard begins explaining things unprompted and you don’t want to pay, say “la shukran” (no thank you) before they invest too much time. Once they’ve spent 10 minutes guiding you, it becomes uncomfortable to tip nothing. Prevention is easier than refusal.
Currency: EGP vs USD — Which is Better?
Both are widely accepted in tourist contexts. Here’s how to decide:
| Scenario | Best Currency | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Tour guide tip | USD ✓ | Guides prefer USD — easier to save/exchange |
| Driver tip | USD ✓ | Same preference as guides |
| Restaurant server | EGP | Easier for them to use immediately |
| Hotel housekeeper | EGP | Small staff may struggle to exchange $1 bills |
| Temple guard / bathroom | EGP | Small amounts; EGP is more practical |
| Nile cruise crew envelope | USD ✓ | Cruise staff prefer USD |
Avoid euros — the exchange rate at local money changers is often poor, costing the recipient 10–15% in the conversion. Avoid torn, written-on, or pre-2009 US dollar bills — some Egyptian money changers refuse old series notes.
Budgeting for Tips: How Much to Set Aside
For a typical 7-day Egypt tour (Cairo + Luxor + Aswan), here is a realistic tip budget for a couple:
| Category | Per Person (7 days) | For 2 People |
|---|---|---|
| Tour guide (private, 5 days active) | $60–75 USD | $120–150 |
| Driver (5 days) | $30–40 USD | $60–80 |
| Hotel staff (7 nights) | $15–20 USD (≈750–1000 EGP) | 30–40 USD total |
| Restaurants (14 meals out) | 700–1400 EGP | Combined |
| Site helpers / misc | 200–400 EGP | Combined |
| Total per person | ~$120–150 USD | ~$240–300 USD for 2 |
Bring a mix of small USD bills ($1, $5, $10, $20) and a stack of 50 and 100 EGP notes. Withdraw EGP from Banque Misr or CIB ATMs — they have the best rates and the widest ATM network near tourist sites.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Tipping (baksheesh) is a deeply embedded social custom in Egypt, not merely optional. For tour guides, drivers, and hotel staff, it forms a significant part of their income. You are never legally obligated, but withholding tips entirely is considered rude and will affect service quality on multi-day tours.
For a private full-day tour guide, tip $10–$15 USD per person per day. For a group tour (8+ people), $5–$8 per person per day is appropriate. Always tip the guide directly and separately from the driver.
Both are accepted. Egyptian pounds (EGP) are preferred for small tips (restaurant servers, bathroom attendants, temple guards). USD is fine for larger tips to guides and drivers. Avoid euros — most Egyptians get a poor exchange rate on euros.
Yes — most tourist restaurants add a 12% service charge plus 14% VAT. However, this rarely goes directly to your server. It is still customary to leave an additional 50–100 EGP in cash for the waiter.
Yes, if they help you with photos, open restricted areas, or guide you to hidden spots, 20–50 EGP per person is standard. If you don’t want their help, politely say “la shukran” (no thank you) before they start — it’s harder to refuse after the service is rendered.