12 Top Things to Do in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt

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12 Top Things to Do in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt

12 min readUpdated: May 5, 2026
Search in Sharm El SheikhMay 09 - May 102 guests
Tomas Achmedovas
Tomas Achmedovas

CEO and co-founder

This guide ranks the 12 top things to do in Sharm El Sheikh, the resort town on the southern Sinai Peninsula that built its reputation on Red Sea diving, year-round sunshine, and reefs that drop straight from shore into 80-metre walls of coral. Each entry includes the exact address, nearest transit, distance from town centre, and a Pro Tip you would normally only get from a local dive guide or hotel concierge.

We have grouped attractions to help you plan efficient routes. The Naama Bay strip, Soho Square, Old Market, and Sharks Bay reef are walkable or short-taxi rides inside the resort. The big day trips - Ras Mohammed National Park, Tiran Island, Coloured Canyon, Saint Catherine's Monastery, and Mount Sinai - each deserve a full day. Sharm El Sheikh suits a 5-7 day stay if you want to combine beach time with serious sightseeing rather than rushing between sites.

The Red Sea reefs in Sharm El Sheikh are the headline attraction, but the Sinai Peninsula's desert and mountain interior are equally impressive. Plan around the heat in summer (afternoon highs hit 38°C) and aim for the shoulder seasons of March-May or September-November for ideal conditions.

1
Naama Bay - The Vibrant Heart of Sharm El Sheikh

Naama Bay - The Vibrant Heart of Sharm El Sheikh

Topping every list of things to do in Sharm El Sheikh, Naama Bay is the resort area where most travellers stay. The crescent-shaped bay sits 6 km north of the airport and is fronted by a 1.5 km pedestrian promenade with palm trees, beach clubs, restaurants, and the famous Camel Bar where the nightlife strip really begins. The bay's gentle slope and shallow reef make it ideal for first-time snorkellers, while the centre offers easy access to dive boats heading to Ras Mohammed.

The promenade is fully illuminated after sunset, with hookah cafes, fish-and-chip pubs, jewellery shops, and dive centres operating until 2:00 AM. Most resort hotels (Hyatt, Ghazala, Sultan Gardens, Tropitel) sit either on the bay itself or one cliff back. Public beach access is free at the southern end near the Hard Rock Cafe.

Pro Tip: Walk the promenade end-to-end at 7:00 PM when the daytime heat fades and the lights come on but the clubs have not yet started thumping. The strip from Sanafir Hotel to the Hard Rock Cafe is the best people-watching window in Sinai.
Naama Bay Promenade, King of Bahrain Street, Sharm El Sheikh 46628
Microbus stop on King of Bahrain Street, central Naama Bay, walking promenade access
Central resort area, 6 km north of Sharm El Sheikh airport

2
Ras Mohammed National Park - Egypt's First Marine Reserve

Ras Mohammed National Park - Egypt's First Marine Reserve

Established in 1983 as Egypt's first national park, Ras Mohammed National Park sits at the very tip of the Sinai Peninsula where the Gulf of Suez meets the Gulf of Aqaba. The park covers 480 sq km of land and reef, and it is home to roughly 1,000 species of fish and 220 hard and soft corals. The Shark Reef and Yolanda Reef walls plunge from 5 m to over 750 m, making this one of the world's top 10 dive sites.

Boats depart from Sharm Travco port and Naama Bay marina between 8:00 and 9:00 AM, returning around 4:00 PM. Snorkellers visit Shark Observatory, Yolanda Reef, and the wreck of the Yolanda freighter (cargo of toilets and a BMW still on the seabed). The land entrance fee is USD 5, plus USD 5 per boat - typically included in tour prices of USD 50-80.

Pro Tip: Book the smaller speedboat trips (8-12 passengers) rather than the large day boats. They reach the best mooring spots first and you avoid the 100+ snorkellers crowding the same reef section by 11:00 AM.
Ras Mohammed National Park entrance, 30 km southwest of Sharm El Sheikh, Sinai Peninsula 46628
Accessible only by boat from Sharm port or by 4WD via the Sinai 1 highway, no public transport
30 km southwest of Sharm El Sheikh by road, 1 hour by boat

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3
Soho Square - Open-Air Entertainment Hub

Soho Square - Open-Air Entertainment Hub

Soho Square opened in 2008 as a purpose-built entertainment plaza in the Shark's Bay district, 5 km north of Naama Bay. The square covers roughly 70,000 sq m and includes a dancing musical fountain that runs every 30 minutes after dark, an ice-skating rink (yes, in the desert), bowling, mini-golf, and dozens of restaurants and shops in colonial-style buildings. The Queen Vic English pub and the Little Buddha club are local fixtures.

Soho Square is family-friendly and busiest from 7:00 PM onwards, when the temperature drops and the fountain show begins. Hotel guests can usually get free shuttle transfers from Naama Bay or Hadaba. Entry to the square itself is free; individual venues charge their own prices.

Pro Tip: The dancing fountain runs roughly every 30 minutes after sunset until midnight, but the 9:00 PM and 10:00 PM shows are the best - the crowds have arrived and the song mix is more interesting than the early afternoon repeat.
Soho Square, Shark's Bay district, Sharm El Sheikh 46619
Hotel shuttle from most Naama Bay and Hadaba resorts, taxi 10-15 min from central Naama Bay
5 km north of central Naama Bay, near the airport

4
Old Market (Sharm Old Market) - Authentic Bazaar Experience

Old Market (Sharm Old Market) - Authentic Bazaar Experience

The Old Market (Sharm Old Market) sits in Sharm El Maya, the original fishing settlement that predates the Naama Bay tourism boom. The bazaar runs along Al Souk Al Qadeem street, with covered alleys lined by spice shops, leather and lantern stalls, papyrus sellers, and over 200 souvenir vendors. Compared to Naama Bay's polished resorts, the Old Market gives you a taste of bargaining-culture Egypt.

Standout finds include hand-blown glass pyramids, hand-rolled cigars at the El Masrien stalls, and Bedouin silver jewellery. The bazaar also hides some of the best fish restaurants in town - El Masrien Grill, Fares Seafood, and Shoufan Restaurant all serve fresh-caught Red Sea grouper, sea bass, and prawns at a fraction of resort prices.

Pro Tip: Bargain hard - vendors often start at 3-4x the real price for tourists. A polite walk-away usually halves the asking price within seconds. Aim for 50-60% of the opening offer for souvenirs, and never accept the first taxi quote back to your hotel.
Al Souk Al Qadeem, Sharm El Maya, Sharm El Sheikh 46619
Microbus from Naama Bay to Sharm El Maya (EGP 10-15), taxi 15-20 min from central Naama Bay
8 km southwest of Naama Bay, near the port

5
Tiran Island - Day Trip Snorkelling Paradise

Tiran Island - Day Trip Snorkelling Paradise

Tiran Island lies at the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba, 6 km off Sharm's eastern coast. The 80 sq km island itself is uninhabited, but the four reefs surrounding it - Jackson, Woodhouse, Thomas, and Gordon - form one of the Red Sea's most dramatic dive complexes. Each reef rises from 60-90 m walls and is famous for big fish: barracuda schools, eagle rays, sharks, and resident turtles.

Day boats leave Sharm marina at 8:30-9:00 AM, anchor at two or three reef sites for snorkelling, serve buffet lunch onboard, and return around 4:30 PM. Prices range USD 50-90 including transfers, gear, and lunch. Note that Tiran Island itself was returned to Saudi Arabia in 2017, so visitors only access the surrounding waters; the island is off limits.

Pro Tip: Pick a tour that visits Jackson Reef first - it has the strongest currents and the best chance of seeing big fish like trevally and tuna. Bring a thin lycra rashguard even in summer; the wind chill on the boat ride back can be brutal.
Tiran Island reefs, Strait of Tiran, accessible by boat from Sharm El Sheikh marina, Travco Port
Boat departure from Travco Marina, free hotel pickup with most operators
6 km offshore, 60-90 minute boat ride from Sharm marina

6
Sharks Bay - Snorkelling Without a Boat

Sharks Bay - Snorkelling Without a Boat

Despite the alarming name (no sharks - it just curves like one), Sharks Bay is one of the easiest shore-snorkelling spots in Sinai. The bay sits north of Naama Bay just past the Hyatt Regency and Marriott resorts. A wooden jetty leads over the shallow shore reef to a sudden drop-off where you snorkel above hundreds of butterflyfish, fusiliers, parrotfish, and the occasional moray eel hiding in the wall.

Day-pass access at the public beach costs around EGP 200-350 depending on the season, including a sun lounger and umbrella. The reef sits in 5-25 m of water with calm conditions for most of the year. Several dive schools - Sinai Divers and Camel Dive Club - run Sharks Bay introductory dives for non-certified divers.

Pro Tip: Snorkel in the morning before 11:00 AM when the wind is calmer and visibility hits 30 m. The bay can get choppy after lunch as the afternoon thermal kicks in along the coast.
Sharks Bay public beach, off Peace Road, north of Naama Bay, Sharm El Sheikh 46619
Microbus along Peace Road from Naama Bay (EGP 10-15), taxi 15 min from central Naama Bay
8 km north of Naama Bay, in the Hadaba/Sharks Bay resort area

7
Coloured Canyon - Hiking the Sinai Desert

Coloured Canyon - Hiking the Sinai Desert

The Coloured Canyon (Wadi Al Wishwashi in Arabic) is a 700 m sandstone gorge near Nuweiba, 175 km north of Sharm El Sheikh. The walls rise 40 m on either side and shimmer in shades of red, yellow, ochre, and pink as the sun moves overhead. The full hike takes 60-90 minutes through narrow chimneys and over short scrambles - moderately challenging but doable for anyone with average fitness.

Day trips combine the canyon hike with a Bedouin lunch (grilled chicken, salads, sweet tea) and usually finish with a swim and snorkel at Ras Abu Galum or Dahab's Blue Hole on the way back. Tours cost USD 65-90 including transfers, guide, and lunch, leaving Sharm at 6:00-7:00 AM and returning by 7:00 PM. Wear sturdy trainers - flip-flops are unsafe on the rock scrambles.

Pro Tip: Time the hike for late morning, around 11:00 AM, when the sun is high enough to light the full canyon walls but you are still inside before the afternoon heat. Bring 2 litres of water per person - the gorge has zero shade once you are inside.
Coloured Canyon trailhead, Sinai Peninsula, near Nuweiba 46680
Accessible only by 4WD or organized tour from Sharm El Sheikh, no public transport
175 km north of Sharm El Sheikh, 2.5-3 hours drive

8
Saint Catherine's Monastery - Sixth-Century Christian Heritage

Saint Catherine's Monastery - Sixth-Century Christian Heritage

Saint Catherine's Monastery sits 1,570 m above sea level at the foot of Mount Sinai, founded in 565 CE under the orders of Byzantine emperor Justinian I. It is the world's oldest continuously inhabited Christian monastery and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The monks - 25 Greek Orthodox brothers from the Brotherhood of Sinai - still maintain the original library of 4,500 manuscripts including the famous Codex Sinaiticus.

Inside the walls you can visit the 6th-century Basilica of the Transfiguration, see the Burning Bush (a living bush descended from the original biblical plant), and tour the Sacred Sacristy with its golden icons. Entry is free but the monastery only opens 9:00 AM-12:00 PM Monday to Thursday and Saturday (closed Friday, Sunday, and Greek Orthodox holidays). Modest dress required.

Pro Tip: Combine the monastery with the Mount Sinai sunrise climb - tours leave Sharm at 11:00 PM, climb to the summit by dawn, then visit the monastery on the descent. Booking the combination saves around USD 30 versus separate trips.
Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai, Saint Catherine 46612
Organized tour or private 4WD only, no public bus service
210 km north of Sharm El Sheikh, 3 hours by 4WD

9
Mount Sinai - Sunrise Climb Above the Desert

Mount Sinai - Sunrise Climb Above the Desert

Mount Sinai (Jebel Musa, 'Mountain of Moses') stands at 2,285 m and is traditionally identified as the peak where Moses received the Ten Commandments. The classic experience is the night climb to catch sunrise from the summit. Two routes lead up: the easier Camel Path (3 hours, 7 km of switchbacks) and the steep Steps of Repentance (3,750 stone steps cut by a single monk in the 6th century).

Most tours leave Sharm El Sheikh at 11:00 PM, reach the trailhead at 1:30 AM, and start climbing at 2:00 AM to summit before sunrise around 5:30 AM. The summit chapel is small and packed at dawn - bring a windproof jacket and a torch. Camels can carry you up the easier route for around USD 25 each way if you'd rather not walk.

Pro Tip: Wear three layers - the summit can drop to 5°C even in summer, but you'll be sweating during the climb. Walking poles help on both routes, especially on the descent down the 3,750 steps of repentance.
Mount Sinai trailhead, Saint Catherine 46612
Organized overnight tour from Sharm El Sheikh, no public transport
210 km north of Sharm, 3 hours by 4WD plus 3-hour climb

10
Nabq Protected Area - Mangroves and Bedouin Beaches

Nabq Protected Area - Mangroves and Bedouin Beaches

Nabq Protected Area covers 600 sq km of coastal desert and mangrove between Sharm El Sheikh and Dahab. The reserve includes the northernmost mangrove forest in the world, fringing reefs, and the wreck of the Maria Schroeder, a German cargo ship grounded on the reef in 1956 that now sits half above water. The area is much quieter than the resorts further south, with only a small Bedouin settlement at El Gharqana.

Quad bike, jeep, and 4WD safari operators run half-day trips from Sharm to Nabq for around USD 30-50, usually combined with snorkelling at the Maria Schroeder wreck and a Bedouin tea stop. Entry to the reserve is EGP 100. Independent visitors can drive in via the Sinai 1 highway, but you need a 4WD for the sand tracks.

Pro Tip: Visit at low tide (check tide times before you go) to walk between the mangroves and see the fiddler crabs that come out on the wet sand. Bring sunglasses and a buff or scarf - the wind kicks fine sand into the air on most afternoons.
Nabq Protected Area entrance, Sinai 1 Highway, 35 km north of Sharm El Sheikh
4WD or organized safari tour only, no public transport
35 km north of Sharm El Sheikh, 45 min by 4WD

11
Far Garden and Middle Garden Reefs - Snorkelling Without a Boat

Far Garden and Middle Garden Reefs - Snorkelling Without a Boat

The 'Garden' reefs - Near Garden, Middle Garden, and Far Garden - lie just north of Naama Bay along a 5 km stretch of coast. Each garden is reached by a wooden jetty over the shore reef, then you swim out to a coral-encrusted drop-off teeming with anthias, butterflyfish, and Napoleon wrasse. Far Garden has the deepest wall (40 m) and the most dramatic table corals, while Middle Garden is calmest for nervous snorkellers.

Most beach access is via the Hyatt Regency, Iberotel, or Sultan Gardens hotels with a day pass (EGP 250-500). The Tower Reef and Pinky Wall sit at the southern end and are technically inside the Tower Garden compound. Visibility runs 20-30 m most of the year, dropping briefly during summer plankton blooms.

Pro Tip: If you are staying in Naama Bay, walk north along the coastal path to Far Garden rather than taking a taxi - the 30-minute walk is shaded and you pass several great viewpoints. Snorkel before 10:00 AM when the boats from town haven't arrived yet.
Far Garden Reef, Hyatt Regency Beach, Sharks Bay Road, Sharm El Sheikh 46619
Walk 30 min from Naama Bay along coastal path, or microbus along Peace Road (EGP 10)
3-5 km north of Naama Bay along the coast

12
Sharm El Sheikh Aquarium - Family-Friendly Marine Life

Sharm El Sheikh Aquarium - Family-Friendly Marine Life

The Sharm El Sheikh Aquarium opened in 2010 in Hadaba and houses around 250 species of Red Sea marine life across 28 tanks. Highlights include the lionfish display, a walk-through tunnel with reef sharks and stingrays, and a touch-pool where children can handle starfish and sea cucumbers. The aquarium is small enough to cover in 60-90 minutes, making it perfect for a half-day with kids when the heat outside is too much.

Admission is around USD 15 for adults, USD 10 for children, with discounts for resort guests. The aquarium opens 10:00 AM-7:00 PM daily. Combine your visit with the nearby Hard Rock Cafe and Hadaba viewpoint, which has the best free panorama of Naama Bay below.

Pro Tip: Time your visit for the 11:00 AM or 3:00 PM shark feeding shows in the central tunnel. Skip the aquarium gift shop - prices are 2x what you'd pay in the Old Market for the same souvenirs.
Sharm El Sheikh Aquarium, Hadaba, Sharm El Sheikh 46619
Microbus from Naama Bay (EGP 10-15) or 10 min taxi ride
4 km southwest of Naama Bay, in the Hadaba district
Tomas Achmedovas
About Tomas Achmedovas

CEO and co-founder

Tomas is the co-founder and director of trip1, an European company specializing in reservation services. He launched the company in 2025 with a focus on building scalable, efficient operations.

12 Top Things to Do in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt - FAQ

No - this guide is built for a 5-7 day stay. Sharm El Sheikh's attractions split into resort-area sights (Naama Bay, Soho Square, Old Market, Sharks Bay reef) and day trips that need a full day each (Ras Mohammed, Tiran Island, Coloured Canyon, Saint Catherine's, Mount Sinai). Plan one day trip per day max.

Start with the resort area to settle in: Naama Bay promenade and Sharks Bay snorkelling on Day 1, Old Market and Soho Square on the evening of Day 2. Schedule big day trips next: Ras Mohammed by boat Day 3, Tiran Island Day 4, Coloured Canyon Day 5. Saint Catherine's and Mount Sinai usually pair as a single overnight excursion.

Boat trips to Ras Mohammed National Park and Tiran Island sell out in peak season (Christmas, Easter, July-August), so book 1-2 days ahead through your hotel or a licensed operator. Saint Catherine's Monastery has visitor caps and entry windows (typically 9:00-12:00, closed Fridays and Sundays). Coloured Canyon and Mount Sinai treks require pre-booked guides for safety.

Budget around USD 350-500 per person for the full list. Ras Mohammed boat trip USD 50-80, Tiran Island day USD 50-90, Coloured Canyon trek USD 65-90, overnight Saint Catherine's plus Mount Sinai USD 80-130, Sharm Aquarium entry USD 15. Resort area sights (Naama Bay, Soho Square, Old Market, Sharks Bay snorkelling) are free or low-cost.

If you have extra time, consider a quad bike sunset desert safari with Bedouin dinner, the Hollywood-style Sharm El Sheikh shopping at Genena Mall, or a day trip to Dahab (90 minutes north) for a quieter, backpacker-style alternative with the Blue Hole dive site. Free-divers should also look into the Tower Reef south of Naama Bay.

Mostly no - Sharm El Sheikh has no metro and limited buses. Within the resort area, blue local microbuses run Naama Bay to Old Market and Soho Square (EGP 10-20), and taxis cost EGP 80-150 inside town. Day-trip sights like Ras Mohammed, Saint Catherine's, and the Coloured Canyon are accessible only by organized tour, hotel transfer, or private driver.

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