REVIEW · SHARM EL SHEIKH
Sharm El Sheikh: Red Sea Scuba Diving Experience
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Sinai Scuba diving centre · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Breathing underwater changes your whole day. In Sharm El Sheikh, you get expert-led scuba support and time in the Red Sea’s coral world, with options for first-timers up through PADI training.
Two things I really like: the strong emphasis on safety and personal attention, and how manageable the start is with a 15-minute introductory underwater session. One thing to consider is that this is not suitable if you’re pregnant, have heart problems, respiratory issues, or mobility impairments—and you’ll need to follow the marine rule of not touching sea life.
In This Review
- Key Highlights That Make This Worth Your Time
- Sharm El Sheikh’s Red Sea: Why This Area Works So Well
- The 15-Minute Intro Underwater Session: A Smart First Step
- Guided Underwater Time: Coral Reefs, Fish, and “Look Closely” Moments
- Choosing the Right Option: Intro, Fun Sessions, or PADI Training
- Instructor Support and Safety: What “Professional” Means in Practice
- Equipment and What’s Covered in the Price
- Boat Option Perks: Food and a National Park Ticket
- What to Bring (and the One Underwater Rule You Must Follow)
- Languages and Communication: Getting Clear Instructions
- Price and Value: Why $45 Can Be a Good Deal Here
- Who This Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Sharm El Sheikh Scuba Experience?
- FAQ
- How much does this Sharm El Sheikh experience cost?
- What’s included in the introductory underwater session?
- Is scuba equipment included?
- Does this experience include food?
- Is a national park ticket included?
- What options do I have for participation?
- What languages are available for instruction?
- What do I need to bring?
- Is touching marine life allowed?
- Who is this not suitable for?
Key Highlights That Make This Worth Your Time

- Professional, friendly instructors who help you get comfortable fast
- 15-minute intro underwater session for an easy first step
- Guided underwater time focused on coral reefs and colorful marine life
- PADI courses if you want to keep building skills
- Boat option perks like food and a national park ticket (when you choose it)
- Real wildlife potential, including one report of a whale shark sighting
Sharm El Sheikh’s Red Sea: Why This Area Works So Well

Sharm El Sheikh is one of those places where the “wow” is built into the setting. You’re in South Sinai, Egypt, and the water off the coast is famous for clear visibility and reef life. That matters because scuba success is often less about hype and more about simple conditions—good water clarity makes it easier to see what you came for, from coral shapes to fish behavior.
For your first session, that clarity also helps you stay calm. When you can see your surroundings clearly and your instructor can guide your position, you spend less time guessing and more time enjoying the experience. If you’re doing this as a couple or family activity, the structure (intro option plus guided time) helps everyone find a level that feels right.
You can also read our reviews of more scuba diving tours in Sharm El Sheikh
The 15-Minute Intro Underwater Session: A Smart First Step

The included “intro” is a 15-minute underwater session. That length is perfect for people who are curious but not sure how they’ll feel the first time they’re fully committed to scuba gear and buoyancy control.
Here’s how I think about it: you’re not paying for a long day where you might spend most of the time nervous. Instead, you get a focused taste of being underwater—enough to understand the rhythm and the basic skills—without turning the outing into a marathon. And because it’s instructor-led, it’s less like trial-and-error and more like learning with a plan.
The key benefit is confidence. One of the standout comments from recent divers emphasized how quickly the instructor helped them get into the right underwater mindset. That’s exactly what you want: calm guidance so you don’t waste your energy panicking or overthinking.
Guided Underwater Time: Coral Reefs, Fish, and “Look Closely” Moments

After the intro, you can choose guided fun underwater sessions, built around exploring the reef area and marine life. What you should expect is straightforward: you’ll be looking at coral formations, watching colorful fish, and taking in the feeling of being part of the underwater scene rather than just passing through it.
The Red Sea reef experience is special because coral isn’t just decoration—it’s habitat. You’ll often see fish that use specific coral structures for shelter, which makes the whole reef system feel active. One practical point: you’re not there to “collect” moments by touching everything. The experience is built around conservation, and touching marine life is not allowed. So instead of reaching out, you learn to watch—which is also safer for you and better for the reef.
A nice bonus from a recent review: a whale shark sighting. I can’t promise you’ll see one, but this tells you the reef ecosystem can deliver big surprises, not just small fish.
Choosing the Right Option: Intro, Fun Sessions, or PADI Training
One of the best parts of this experience is that it doesn’t force you into a single track. You can go for:
- Introductory underwater session (included, 15 minutes)
- Guided fun underwater sessions
- PADI certification courses, tailored to your comfort and skill level
Why this matters for you: it helps you match the day to your real goal. If you simply want the thrill of underwater views once, the intro + guided option is the low-risk way in. If you want something you can progress from, the PADI route gives you a clear path with standards and skill development.
Also, PADI courses can be the right choice if you’re the type who hates feeling uncertain. Certification training gives structure—what you practice, why you practice it, and how you build competence step by step. Even if you don’t continue long-term, you’ll usually leave with better instincts for buoyancy and calm movement underwater.
Instructor Support and Safety: What “Professional” Means in Practice

Safety isn’t just a checkbox here—it shows up in how the experience is described and in what people praise. You’ll work with professional and friendly instructors, and the day is designed around personal attention. That combination is gold for first-timers, because the scariest moments are usually not “something went wrong,” but rather “I don’t understand what I’m supposed to do.”
From the reviews, two themes repeat:
- Crew members were accommodating and made the experience feel smooth
- Instructors helped people get comfortable quickly
For you, this translates into a better learning curve. When instructions are clear and the team is patient, you spend less time fighting your gear and more time enjoying what you can see.
And there’s a conservation angle too. National park considerations and the rule against touching marine life suggest the operator is working within a protected environment mindset, not a “grab souvenirs from the reef” attitude.
Equipment and What’s Covered in the Price

The price is $45 per person, and one of the reasons it feels like value is what you get without nickel-and-diming yourself.
Your included items cover:
- Introductory underwater session (15 minutes)
- Guided fun underwater sessions
- Professional instructors
- Introductory scuba support
- Diving equipment included
- Food is included only with the Boat option
- A national park ticket is included only with the Boat option
That equipment piece matters. If you’ve ever tried to price out scuba rentals on your own, you know how quickly costs climb when you add mask, regulator, buoyancy gear, and more. Here, equipment is part of the package, so your budget is easier to control.
Also, one review specifically said there were no hidden costs or fees. That’s the kind of detail that matters when you’re comparing experiences. You want a clear total, not surprise add-ons once you’re already committed.
Boat Option Perks: Food and a National Park Ticket

If you choose the Boat option, the experience includes food and a national park ticket. That’s a meaningful difference, not a minor line item.
Food inclusion helps because a full day underwater work can make you hungry fast. It also improves the overall flow—less time hunting for snacks and more time staying relaxed. The national park ticket inclusion is useful too because it signals your time underwater is being handled under the right rules for the reef area.
If you’re choosing between “with food and ticket” versus not, think about your day plan. If you’re coming straight from travel and you don’t want to stop for meals, the Boat option can make the outing feel more complete.
What to Bring (and the One Underwater Rule You Must Follow)

This is a simple packing list:
- Passport
- Towel
That’s it for the provided requirements, but I’ll add practical logic from experience: bring your towel so you’re not stuck drying off with whatever you have in a bag. And keep your passport ready because you’ll need it for identification and park-related processing.
One rule is non-negotiable:
- Touching marine life is not allowed
If you’ve never snorkeled or scuba’d responsibly, this is the mindset shift. Instead of reaching out, you watch. Look with your eyes, not your hands. It keeps you safe from stings and scratches, and it helps preserve the reef ecosystem you came to see.
Languages and Communication: Getting Clear Instructions

Communication helps your safety and enjoyment, especially on your first underwater session. This provider offers multiple languages: Arabic, English, Italian, and Russian.
So if you’re not fully comfortable in English, you may still be able to get instruction in a language you understand. That’s a big deal because the underwater “what to do next” moments need clarity right away.
Price and Value: Why $45 Can Be a Good Deal Here
At $45 per person, this experience can feel like strong value because it includes:
- a 15-minute intro underwater session
- equipment
- instructor support
- and, if you select it, food plus a national park ticket
The best way to judge the price is not just the number, but the package. If you were to build your own plan—find instructors, coordinate gear, and cover entry considerations—you’d likely pay more in time and money than you expect.
Also, the reviews emphasize professionalism and no hidden costs. When you combine “clear pricing” with a safe, instructor-led format, you’re buying peace of mind, not just a short outing.
Who This Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
This is a good fit if you want:
- a first underwater experience with a short, structured intro
- expert instruction and supportive guidance
- coral reef and colorful marine life exploration
- the option to go further with PADI courses
It’s also described as fun for couples and families, which makes sense given the intro + guided structure. Different comfort levels can still share the same day plan.
But don’t book if you’re:
- pregnant
- dealing with heart problems
- dealing with respiratory issues
- using a wheelchair or having mobility impairments
If any of those apply, it’s worth taking the “no” seriously. Scuba is physically demanding, and you want the safest choice for your body and risk profile.
Should You Book This Sharm El Sheikh Scuba Experience?
Book it if you want a clear first step into underwater life, with friendly, professional instructors and equipment included. Choose the Boat option if you want food taken care of and you like the idea of having a national park ticket handled for you.
Skip it (or ask for alternatives) if you fall into the health or mobility categories listed. And if you’re the kind of person who hates rules, remember the reef etiquette is part of the deal—no touching marine life.
If your goal is coral, sea life, and a day that feels well run from the start, this is the kind of outing that can deliver more than just a quick thrill.
FAQ
How much does this Sharm El Sheikh experience cost?
It’s priced at $45 per person.
What’s included in the introductory underwater session?
The package includes an introductory underwater session for 15 minutes.
Is scuba equipment included?
Yes. Diving equipment is included.
Does this experience include food?
Food is included only with the Boat option. Food and snacks are listed as not included otherwise.
Is a national park ticket included?
A national park ticket is included only with the Boat option.
What options do I have for participation?
You can choose introductory underwater time, guided fun underwater sessions, or PADI certification courses.
What languages are available for instruction?
Languages offered are Arabic, English, Italian, and Russian.
What do I need to bring?
Bring your passport and a towel.
Is touching marine life allowed?
No. Touching marine life is not allowed.
Who is this not suitable for?
It’s not suitable for pregnant women, people with mobility impairments, people with heart problems, or people with respiratory issues.


























