Desert plans that actually feel like an adventure. This Hurghada Jeep Safari blends off-road driving, a Bedouin village visit, a camel ride, and ends with dinner plus an Oriental show. It’s the kind of day that feels busy in the best way, with a clear flow and staff who know how to keep everyone together, including guides like Hassan Fawzy and Mohammed Salah.
Two things I really like: the itinerary gives you both the action (jeep and camel) and the culture stops (tea, bread-making, herbal pharmacy). And the company leans hard into organization, safety, and comfort, with guides who stay attentive to kids and big groups. One consideration: it is not suitable for pregnant women and people over 95 years, and the off-road portion can feel bumpy.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll actually feel
- Starting Point: Warm Welcome, Safety Briefing, Then Off
- The 25km Off-Road Drive to the Bedouin Village
- Bedouin Tea, Bread-Making, and the Real Texture of Daily Life
- Herbal Pharmacy Stop: Wellness Through Natural Herbs
- Camel Ride in the Village: More Than a Photo Moment
- The Return Drive and Sunset: Why Timing Feels Like Magic
- Freshen Up, Then Dinner With a Proper End-of-Day Spread
- Oriental Show: Belly Dance and an Evening Finale
- Price and Value: What $36 Buys in the Real World
- The Best Part: Guides Who Keep You Comfortable and Together
- Who Should Book This (and Who Should Skip It)
- Practical Tips That Help You Enjoy Every Segment
- Should You Book This Hurghada Jeep Safari With Camel Ride, Dinner, and Show?
- FAQ
- What does the Hurghada jeep safari include?
- Where is this experience located?
- How far is the jeep driving during the day?
- What happens at the Bedouin village?
- Is the camel ride part of the tour?
- Does the tour include dinner and an Oriental show?
- What languages is the tour available in?
- Is the tour suitable for everyone?
- Can I pay later or cancel?
Key highlights you’ll actually feel

- Jeep offroading with a 25km drive to the Bedouin village and another 25km back
- Bedouin tea plus real-world cultural stops, including bread-making
- Camel ride as part of the village experience, not a quick photo-only detour
- Bedouin herbal pharmacy where you learn how herbs are used for wellness
- Sunset return drive during the trip back, turning transit into part of the show
- Dinner and Oriental show at the end, with dinner featuring Indian rice and grilled chicken
Starting Point: Warm Welcome, Safety Briefing, Then Off

The day begins at the station with a welcome drink and a quick rundown of safety rules. I like this approach because it sets expectations before the engines rev, and you get a real sense of how the group will move during the ride and activities.
From there, you’re taken into the desert by jeep. The tour is built around two main chunks: an outbound drive to the Bedouin village and a return drive timed with sunset. That structure matters because it keeps the day from feeling random or rushed.
Also, this is offered in several languages, including Arabic, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish. If you’re traveling with friends or family who don’t share your language, this multi-language setup helps everyone stay on the same page.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hurghada
The 25km Off-Road Drive to the Bedouin Village

The first big moment is the off-road ride: a 25km stretch toward a traditional Bedouin village. This is the heart of the safari part. If you came for desert views and the thrill of bouncing over uneven ground, this is where you’ll get it.
Here’s why the drive feels more valuable than just transportation. You’re not only getting somewhere—you’re entering the setting. The tour turns travel time into an experience, and you’ll feel it most during those outbound miles when the desert opens up around you.
And since it’s off-road, plan to be mentally ready for movement. You don’t need to be an extreme sports person, but comfort and balance matter more than on a smooth highway.
Bedouin Tea, Bread-Making, and the Real Texture of Daily Life

Once you arrive at the Bedouin village, you get greeted with traditional Arabian tea. It’s a small ritual, but it’s a good one. It slows the pace right after the jeep portion, and it sets the tone for what you’ll learn next.
One of my favorite parts of this stop is the bread-making demonstration. You’ll see how bread is made using a simple, traditional method. That sounds basic, but it’s exactly the point: this isn’t a staged performance for tourists. It’s tied to daily survival skills, the kind that make Bedouin life practical, not just symbolic.
This stop also helps you understand why the cultural pieces matter. When you’re taught something as everyday as bread, you’re not just collecting photos. You’re gaining a sense of how people solve real problems—heat, food, timing—using what’s available.
Herbal Pharmacy Stop: Wellness Through Natural Herbs

After bread-making, the tour moves to a Bedouin herbal pharmacy. The focus here is on how natural herbs are used for healing and wellness.
This is one of those stops that can go either way on tours: sometimes it’s too short to matter. Here, it’s positioned as a meaningful learning moment right in the middle of the village experience, so you’re more likely to connect the dots between plants, traditional knowledge, and day-to-day living.
Even if you’re skeptical about folk remedies, I think it’s worth paying attention to the explanations. You’ll get a window into a different way of thinking about health—one grounded in natural resources and lived experience.
Camel Ride in the Village: More Than a Photo Moment

Next comes the camel ride. In a lot of tourist areas, camel rides can feel like a quick loop for souvenirs. Here, it’s placed inside the Bedouin village portion of the day, which changes the vibe.
You’ll ride as part of the experience, not as a separate sales stop. That matters because the camel ride becomes another way to experience the rhythm of the village setting—slower, steady, and very desert-real.
If you’re traveling with kids, I’d consider this thoughtfully. One guide, Mohammed Salah, was specifically praised for keeping a 4-year-old entertained when the child tired out. That kind of pacing and attention is a big deal on a camel segment, where patience and comfort can make the difference between a good ride and a frustrating one.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hurghada
The Return Drive and Sunset: Why Timing Feels Like Magic

After the village activities, you jump back into the jeep for another 25km drive toward the station. The tour is built so you can enjoy the sunset during this return portion.
This is where the tour gets quietly brilliant. You’re already in motion, already in desert air, and now the light changes. Sunset turns a straightforward ride into a visual payoff, and it’s a moment many people remember long after the dinner plate is gone.
Also, that sunset timing helps the day feel complete. You started with action, you learned something in the middle, and you end with a natural closing scene before the evening program begins.
Freshen Up, Then Dinner With a Proper End-of-Day Spread
Back at the station, there’s time for guests to freshen up before dinner. I like that because it makes the day feel like a full experience, not just a long outing.
Dinner is served with items like Indian rice, grilled chicken, meatballs, vegetables, salads, fresh fruits, and soft drinks. The menu is straightforward and filling, built for groups that want something satisfying after a full day in the desert.
And yes, this is the point where you’ll appreciate the earlier structure. You didn’t spend the day waiting around. You moved, learned, rode, drove, watched sunset, and now you get food and a show.
Oriental Show: Belly Dance and an Evening Finale

The evening concludes with an Oriental show that includes a belly dance performance. This part is included if you select the option for the show, so double-check your booking choice to match what you want.
A show is a bit of a wildcard on any tour, depending on the venue and audience. Still, when it’s paired with dinner right after a desert day, it works as a satisfying capstone. It gives the outing a clear ending and keeps the energy up without requiring you to go hunt for entertainment afterward.
Price and Value: What $36 Buys in the Real World

At $36 per person, this tour is priced for people who want the highlights without paying luxury-tour prices. The value isn’t only the camel ride or the show. The value is the total package: hotel pickup and drop-off, jeep transport, welcome drink, village activities (including bread-making and herbal pharmacy learning), dinner, and optionally the show.
For a day that includes both transport through the desert and multiple cultural stops, $36 feels like a fair deal—especially if you’re comparing it to paying separately for desert transport, animal rides, and evening entertainment.
One smart way to evaluate value for your own trip: decide how important the show is to you. If you want dinner plus performance, select the show option. If you’re mostly there for the jeep and village, you can decide whether paying for the evening program matches your style.
The Best Part: Guides Who Keep You Comfortable and Together
This tour shines when it comes to people. In the feedback, staff and guides are repeatedly praised for being caring, considerate, and attentive to different needs.
Two names come up strongly:
- Hassan Fawzy, described as caring and attentive, helping everyone feel welcome
- Mohammed Salah, praised for support and humor, and for making sure families, including a tired 4-year-old, stayed comfortable and entertained
There’s also a key practical theme: guides work to keep the group together during the jeep safari and camel riding so nobody gets lost. That may sound basic, but it’s exactly what you want in desert conditions.
If you hate feeling like you’re on a loose schedule, this kind of organization is a real quality marker.
Who Should Book This (and Who Should Skip It)
This tour fits best if you want:
- a desert jeep day with real off-road driving
- a Bedouin village visit that includes tea, bread-making, and herbal pharmacy learning
- an evening plan handled for you, with dinner plus an Oriental show option
It’s also a decent choice for families, as long as you’re prepared for a full day. The specific praise for care toward a child suggests the guides pay attention to comfort and pacing.
Skip it if:
- you are pregnant (it’s not suitable)
- you’re over 95 years (it’s not suitable)
If you’re unsure about your own limits, base your decision on the off-road driving and camel ride portions, since those are core parts of the experience.
Practical Tips That Help You Enjoy Every Segment
I’ll keep this grounded in the reality of this tour, not generic desert fantasy.
- Expect a full schedule: you’ll be moving from jeep to village, then camel ride, then more driving, then dinner and show.
- Plan for warmth and movement: off-road means the ride can feel rougher than road travel, and you’ll want to stay comfortable during transitions.
- If you’re booking the evening, confirm whether you selected the show option. It’s listed as included if that option is chosen.
- If you’re traveling in a mixed-language group, the availability of Arabic, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish makes it easier to follow what’s happening and when.
Should You Book This Hurghada Jeep Safari With Camel Ride, Dinner, and Show?
I’d book this if you want one ticket that covers the classic Hurghada desert day: jeep adventure, Bedouin cultural stops, camel ride, and an evening finale. At $36, it’s strong value because you’re getting multiple experiences stitched into a single day, with pickup and drop-off and a guide focused on keeping things smooth.
You should think twice if the camel ride and off-road driving don’t sound appealing, or if you’re in a group for whom the tour isn’t suitable, like pregnant travelers or people over 95.
If you do book, pick the show option only if you genuinely want a dinner-and-performance ending. Otherwise, go for the daytime experiences and treat the evening as a bonus, not the main event.
FAQ
What does the Hurghada jeep safari include?
It includes hotel pickup and drop-off, a welcome drink, a jeep, a camel ride, and dinner. The Oriental show is included if you select the option for it.
Where is this experience located?
It takes place in the Red Sea Governorate, Egypt, with the experience run in the Hurghada area.
How far is the jeep driving during the day?
The drive includes 25km off-road to the Bedouin village, and then another 25km back to the station.
What happens at the Bedouin village?
You’re greeted with authentic Arabian tea, you get a camel ride experience, you learn about making bread using a traditional method, and you visit a Bedouin herbal pharmacy.
Is the camel ride part of the tour?
Yes, camel ride is included as part of the village experience.
Does the tour include dinner and an Oriental show?
Dinner is included. The Oriental show (including belly dance) is included if you choose the show option.
What languages is the tour available in?
Arabic, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish.
Is the tour suitable for everyone?
No. It is not suitable for pregnant women and not suitable for people over 95 years old.
Can I pay later or cancel?
You can use Reserve & Pay Later to book your spot without paying today. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






























