Quick Summary: Egypt vs Jordan at a Glance
🇪🇬 Egypt
- Most ancient monuments on earth — Pyramids, Luxor, Abu Simbel
- Cheapest destination in the region
- World-class Red Sea diving & beaches
- Needs at least 7-10 days to do it justice
- Best for: history lovers, budget travellers, beach + culture combos
🇯🇴 Jordan
- Petra — one of the most jaw-dropping sites on earth
- Wadi Rum desert — otherworldly landscape
- Dead Sea — unique natural experience
- Compact — can see the highlights in 5-6 days
- Best for: adventure seekers, Petra pilgrims, short trips
Head-to-Head Comparison: 8 Key Factors
| Factor | Egypt 🇪🇬 | Jordan 🇯🇴 | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily Cost (budget) | $25-50/day | $50-90/day | Egypt |
| Historical Sites | 7,000 years, 100+ sites | Petra, Jerash, Kerak | Egypt |
| Most Iconic Sight | Pyramids of Giza | Petra (Treasury) | Tie |
| Beaches | Sharm, Hurghada, Dahab (1,000+ km coastline) | Aqaba (short coastline) | Egypt |
| Adventure / Trekking | Sinai, White Desert, Western Desert | Wadi Rum, Petra hikes, Dana Reserve | Jordan |
| Food Quality | Diverse, cheap, excellent street food | Smaller options, more expensive, very good | Egypt |
| Safety for Tourists | Very safe in tourist zones | Very safe, one of safest Arab countries | Both safe |
| Time Needed | 7-14 days minimum | 5-7 days covers highlights | Jordan (short trip) |
Cost Comparison: Egypt vs Jordan
Egypt is noticeably cheaper than Jordan across the board:
| Expense | Egypt | Jordan |
|---|---|---|
| Budget meal (street food) | $2-4 | $5-10 |
| Mid-range restaurant | $8-15 | $18-30 |
| 3-star hotel/night | $25-50 | $50-90 |
| 4-star hotel/night | $60-120 | $100-180 |
| Main attraction entry fee | $10-20 | Petra: $70+ (1-day pass) |
| Day tour with guide | $30-80 | $60-150 |
| Average daily budget | $40-80 | $80-150 |
Petra alone costs $70+ for a 1-day pass ($100+ for 2 days). This is one of the most expensive individual attraction tickets in the Middle East. Factor it into your Jordan budget carefully.
Historical Sites: Egypt Wins by Volume, Jordan Wins on Drama
Egypt has the sheer volume and antiquity — the Pyramids of Giza are the only surviving ancient wonder of the world. Luxor is essentially an open-air museum. Abu Simbel makes you feel like you’ve stepped into another civilisation entirely. You could spend two weeks in Egypt and barely scratch the surface.
Jordan counters with Petra, which many travellers say is the single most breathtaking thing they’ve ever seen — the narrow Siq gorge opening to reveal the Treasury is among travel’s great cinematic moments. Wadi Rum’s Mars-like landscape is equally stunning. Jordan wins on concentrated drama; Egypt wins on sheer breadth.
Choosing Egypt for Your Trip?
Our Egypt specialists design custom itineraries for first-time and returning visitors — private guides, Nile cruises, and no tourist traps.
Beaches: Egypt Is the Clear Winner
Egypt has over 1,000 km of Red Sea coastline with world-class diving, snorkelling, and beach resorts at Sharm El Sheikh, Hurghada, and Dahab. The underwater life of the Red Sea is consistently rated among the world’s top 5 dive destinations. Sharm and Hurghada have full resort infrastructure with all-inclusive options.
Jordan has Aqaba — a pleasant Red Sea town — but it’s a short coastline and the beach experience is limited by comparison. If beaches are a priority, Egypt wins decisively.
Verdict by Traveller Type
Can You Do Both Egypt and Jordan in One Trip?
Yes — and it’s one of the best itineraries in the Middle East. A 12-14 day combined trip works well:
- Days 1-4: Cairo — Pyramids, Egyptian Museum, Khan el-Khalili
- Days 5-7: Luxor & Aswan — Valley of the Kings, Karnak, Nile
- Days 8-9: Fly Cairo to Amman (1.5 hours direct)
- Days 10-11: Petra (minimum 2 days to do it properly)
- Day 12: Wadi Rum — overnight desert camp
- Day 13: Aqaba — relax, Red Sea dip, fly home
Direct flights between Cairo and Amman run daily with Royal Jordanian and EgyptAir (1.5 hours). Alternatively, you can travel overland Cairo → Aqaba by bus + ferry, but it takes 12+ hours. The flight is strongly recommended for time efficiency.
Frequently Asked Questions
Egypt is generally better for first-time Middle East visitors due to greater variety — ancient monuments, Nile cruises, Red Sea beaches, and a vibrant capital. Jordan is more compact and often preferred as a second trip, or when Petra is the primary goal.
Yes, significantly. Egypt street meals cost $2-5; Jordan meals run $8-15. Hotels, tours, and entry fees are all lower in Egypt. Daily budget in Egypt can be 30-50% less than an equivalent Jordan trip. Note: Petra’s entry fee alone (~$70/day) is one of the steepest single-site charges in the region.
Yes. A 12-14 day combined trip works well: Cairo (3-4 nights) → Luxor/Aswan (2-3 nights) → fly to Amman → Petra (2 days) → Wadi Rum (1 night) → Aqaba → fly home. Direct Cairo-Amman flights take just 1.5 hours.
Yes. Jordan is consistently rated one of the safest countries in the Middle East for international visitors. Petra, Wadi Rum, Amman, and the Dead Sea are all very safe tourist zones. The country has a stable government and a well-developed tourism infrastructure.
Egypt: minimum 7 days (Cairo 3 nights + Luxor/Aswan 4 nights), ideal is 10-14 days. Jordan: 5-6 days covers the main highlights (Amman 1 night + Petra 2 days + Wadi Rum 1 night + Dead Sea 1 day). Egypt needs more time because there’s so much more to see.