ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH

REVIEW · GIZA

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH

  • 5.072 reviews
  • From $18.80
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Operated by Nefertiti Tours · Bookable on Viator

That first look at the Giza plateau is unforgettable. This private day packs the Great Pyramids of Giza into a smooth, guided route with time to roam, plus a big-ticket optional moment: going inside the Great Pyramid. You’ll also get the Sphinx stop and a ride break at the panoramic high point.

What I like most is the human touch. The tour guide for Nefertiti Tours, including names like Waled from guest feedback, is praised for being professional, kind, and patient with questions, which matters when you’re standing in the middle of history. Second, the pacing builds in real viewpoints: panoramic area first, then the camel ride, then the Great Sphinx, so you’re not just shuffling between crowds.

One thing to watch: the inclusions list is a little mismatched with the selling points. Camel riding and lunch are described as part of the experience, but they’re also marked as not included, and entrance fees to the pyramids area are listed as not included too. So you’ll want to confirm what you’ll pay on top, especially if you want the inside-pyramid option.

Key Points If You Want the Best Version of This Day

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - Key Points If You Want the Best Version of This Day

  • Private hotel pickup with A/C transportation, so you’re not doing the scatter-brain taxi shuffle
  • English Specialist archeologist guide who answers patiently and keeps you oriented at each stop (Waled is a name you’ll hear)
  • Panoramic high point at the Giza plateau followed by a camel ride for about 20 minutes
  • Great Pyramids area with free time to look around before you head to the next highlight
  • Option to go inside the Great Pyramid (note: inside access can affect what you pay)
  • Sphinx + Egyptian food lunch stop, built into the day after the main sightseeing

Private Giza Day: What You’re Really Getting for $18.80

At $18.80 per person, the big question is value: what’s included, what’s extra, and what kind of experience that buys you.

This tour is private, with A/C transportation and a guide who’s an English Specialist archeologist. You also get one bottle of mineral water per person. That’s a solid base, because getting to Giza and moving between the sights can eat time fast when you’re not traveling with a plan.

Where the value can shift is in the add-ons. The description emphasizes camel riding and lunch, but the exclusions list says camel riding and lunch are not included, and it also flags entrance fees to the pyramids area as not included. In plain terms: the tour price looks affordable, but your final cost may rise if you want everything advertised. I’d treat the headline price as the guided day, then confirm the exact extras you’ll want.

If you love structure (pickup, guide, set stops) but still want flexibility, this fits well. It’s also a smart choice if you want your own group only, not a big shared bus day.

You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Giza

Hotel Pickup and A/C Comfort Before the Sights

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - Hotel Pickup and A/C Comfort Before the Sights
You start with pickup from your hotel, and that’s more than a convenience detail. In Cairo and Giza, the drive can be the difference between starting your day calm or starting stressed.

This is private A/C transportation, which helps in the heat and keeps the day moving. You’ll also have a guide who can handle the flow once you’re on-site: where to stand, what to look for, and how to get your bearings quickly when the scale gets unreal.

If you have limited time in Egypt, pickup also reduces decision fatigue. You don’t have to negotiate your way into a “good enough” plan. You just show up and go.

Great Pyramids of Giza and the Khufu Complex: More Than Photos

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - Great Pyramids of Giza and the Khufu Complex: More Than Photos
The core of the day is the Pyramids of Giza area, where you focus on the Great Pyramid of Khufu and then visit the other pyramids. You’ll have time for a bit of wandering around the grounds too, which I consider essential.

Why? Because Giza is one of those places where your first 10 minutes are about scale and direction, not facts. A guide helps you connect what you’re seeing to what it means, but free time lets you do the human part: pause, look, take photos from your preferred angle, and notice details at your own speed.

The tour also includes an option to go inside the Great Pyramid. That can be a major upgrade if you want a more personal, hands-on connection to the site. Since entrance fees to the pyramids area are listed as not included, and inside access depends on ticketing rules and scheduling, you’ll want to confirm this when you book.

Possible drawback: inside-pyramid time can feel tight if you’re also hoping to do camel riding and multiple viewpoints. If you’re planning on everything, it’s worth pacing your energy at the start so you’re not rushing later.

The Panoramic High Point and a 20-Minute Camel Ride

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - The Panoramic High Point and a 20-Minute Camel Ride
After the main pyramid time, you head to a panoramic area described as the highest point at the Giza plateau. This is the kind of stop that turns your pictures into something more than postcards because you’re elevated above the scene.

Then comes the camel ride, about 20 minutes. Even if you’ve seen camels in photos your whole life, the real value here is the combination: you’re above the plateau, you’re moving slowly, and you can look back and take in the whole layout.

Two practical notes I’d keep in mind:

  • Camel riding is listed as not included, so it may cost extra. Confirm how it’s handled before the day starts.
  • If you’re not thrilled about riding animals, you can still enjoy the panoramic viewpoint and skip the ride if that’s a personal preference. The guided stops still make the day worth it.

This is a good “bucket list meet practical reality” moment. It’s short enough that you won’t lose the rest of your sightseeing, but long enough to feel like more than a quick photo stop.

Great Sphinx Stop: How to Make It Worth the Time

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - Great Sphinx Stop: How to Make It Worth the Time
The Great Sphinx is where the day turns from wide views to something more intimate and symbolic. After the panoramic point and camel ride, you’ll go to discover the Sphinx.

What I like about placing the Sphinx after the earlier stops is mental momentum. You’ve already seen how the pyramids sit in the landscape and how the plateau opens up. So when you reach the Sphinx, you’re ready to focus. You’re not just arriving fresh and overwhelmed.

If you’re photo-focused, this is also a good moment to slow down. The best angles take a few minutes of walking and repositioning, and a guide helps you avoid wasting that time trying to figure out where the good viewing lines are.

One consideration: if your group is doing the inside-pyramid option, build in patience here. Sphinx time is best when you’re not sprinting between stops.

Egyptian Food Lunch: Plan for an Extra Stop Cost

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - Egyptian Food Lunch: Plan for an Extra Stop Cost
Your day includes a lunch stop at a local restaurant for Egyptian food. This is one of the parts of the tour name that sounds like it’s included in the package.

But the exclusions list says lunch is not included. That’s the key detail. I’d treat lunch as a likely add-on unless your booking confirmation clearly states otherwise.

The good news: having lunch built into the schedule is often better than scrambling around once you’re hungry. Even if you need to pay for lunch on top, you’ll have a guide and a set plan, which reduces the risk of ending up somewhere inconvenient or time-wasting.

If you’re picky about timing, consider eating a light breakfast. Giza is a place where heat and walking add up, and a guided day can leave you with less wiggle room than a DIY day.

The Guide Factor: Why Waled’s Style Gets Mentioned

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - The Guide Factor: Why Waled’s Style Gets Mentioned
A highlight in past feedback is the guide’s manner. Waled, specifically, is praised for being professional, knowledgeable in the sense of facts, and kind, with the ability to answer questions patiently.

That’s not a small thing. At Giza, people often ask practical questions like what you’re looking at, why certain structures are where they are, and how the different monuments connect. A guide who stays calm and answers thoroughly changes the whole experience from sightseeing to understanding.

I also like the “specialist” setup. This tour lists an English specialist archeologist speaking tour guide, which means you’re not relying on vague explanations. You get someone trained to talk about what you’re seeing, in a way that makes the sights easier to remember.

And since this is private, you’re less likely to feel like you’re being rushed through someone else’s group tempo.

How Long This Takes (3 to 8 Hours) and How to Schedule Around It

ALL INCLUSIVE PRIVATE DAY Giza Pyramids ,CAMEL ride, LUNCH - How Long This Takes (3 to 8 Hours) and How to Schedule Around It
The tour length is listed as 3 to 8 hours. That range is wide, so it pays to think in scenarios.

If you keep it simple—pyramids, panoramic point, Sphinx, and you either skip camel riding or treat it as optional—it can run closer to the shorter side. If you add the inside-pyramid option and include camel riding plus time to linger, it stretches out.

Here’s the practical way to schedule your day:

  • Book it on a day when you’re not forced to rush to another major appointment right after.
  • If you’re doing the inside-pyramid option, plan to feel a bit slower afterward. You’ll want time to reset before the camel and Sphinx stops.
  • Bring patience for crowds, because Giza can be busy, especially during peak hours.

The good part: this is private. If you need adjustments for your pace, you’re more likely to get them than on a large group bus ride.

Price and Logistics: The “All-Inclusive” Label You Should Verify

This experience is marketed as all-inclusive private day with Giza pyramids, camel ride, and lunch. But the official inclusions/exclusions show a few gaps you should confirm before you go.

Here’s what the provided details clearly state:

  • Included: private A/C transportation, an English Specialist archeologist speaking tour guide, and one bottled mineral water per person
  • Not included: tipping, camel riding, lunch, personal expenses, and entrance fees (noted as entrance fees to the pyramids area)

So how do you read the value? You’re paying for a guided private day and transportation, while the biggest site costs and activity add-ons likely come separately.

My advice is simple: ask for a clear breakdown of what you’ll pay on-site if you want:

  • the inside Great Pyramid option
  • the camel ride
  • lunch at the restaurant

Then you can decide if the total still feels like a bargain for you. At the base price, it can be great value. If you add everything, compare it to other guided packages that truly bundle those costs.

Also note: there’s free cancellation up to 24 hours before the experience for a full refund. That gives you some breathing room if your schedule shifts.

Who This Tour Is Best For (and Who Might Prefer Another Option)

This is a strong fit if you:

  • Want private pacing and pickup from your hotel
  • Like the idea of an English specialist archeology guide
  • Want major Giza highlights in one organized day without figuring out transport between stops
  • Are excited about the inside Great Pyramid option and the panoramic camel ride moment

It may be less ideal if you:

  • Want a fully guaranteed package with no extra payments for camel riding and lunch
  • Prefer to control every stop and skip guided timing completely

If you’re traveling with kids, it can work well because the day includes built-in highlights like the camel ride and time around the area. One guest feedback note mentions kids enjoying the experience and even the chance to go into a tomb interior on their visit. Still, that’s not something you should assume will be available every time, so keep your expectations flexible.

Should You Book This Giza Private Day? My Decision Rule

Book it if you want an efficient, guided way to hit the pyramids, Sphinx, and a panoramic viewpoint with your own private group. The guide’s style (including Waled’s name in feedback) sounds like it genuinely improves the day, not just recites facts.

Don’t book blindly if you care about cost certainty. Because camel riding, lunch, and entrance fees are listed as not included, you’ll want confirmation on what the admission ticket covers and what will be paid separately.

My rule of thumb:

  • If you’re okay with paying add-ons to get the full experience, this can be a great value.
  • If you want a fully priced, no-surprises bundle, confirm the full total before you commit.

If you get that clarification and you’re ready for a private, well-paced Giza day, this is the kind of tour that makes the first time you see the pyramids feel real.

FAQ

What’s included in the tour price?

The tour includes private A/C transportation, an English Specialist archeologist speaking tour guide, and one bottle of mineral water for each person.

Is camel riding included?

Camel riding is listed as not included, even though it’s described as part of the experience. Confirm the cost and timing when you book.

Is lunch included?

Lunch is listed as not included, even though the day description includes Egyptian food at a local restaurant. Ask for confirmation on lunch in your booking details.

Does the tour include entrance fees to the pyramids area?

Entrance fees to the pyramids area are listed as not included. Also, there is an option to go inside the Great Pyramid, which may affect what you pay.

How long is the tour?

The duration is listed as approximately 3 to 8 hours.

Is this a private tour?

Yes. It’s a private tour/activity where only your group participates. Pickup is offered.

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