Dahabiya Nile Cruises 2026 · 8 sailing boats · Esna–Aswan

Dahabiya Nile cruise boats — 8 traditional sailing boats on the river.

Eight small, wind-powered dahabiya sailboats — 4 to 12 cabins each — crossing the quiet Esna–Aswan stretch of the Nile the big ships can't reach. From the $1,400 Amoura through Assouan, Merit, Malouka, Meroe, and up to the flagship Nour El Nil. No buffets, no 200-guest bustle. A small crew, real silence, Egyptologist on board. Booked direct with Maro.

8 dahabiyas · 3–7 nights
Only 4–12 cabins per boat
From $1,400 per person
1,200+ Nile trips since 2012
13+ years · Egypt travel specialists
Licensed · Egyptologist on every sailing
1,200+ Nile trips run since 2012
24/7 · WhatsApp support in-country
Direct · No third-party agent mark-up
Dahabiya Nile Cruises · Maro's notes

Why a dahabiya is the slowest, quietest way to sail the Nile.

A dahabiya is a two-masted, shallow-drafted, wind-powered sailing boat — the same small, elegant design that carried Flaubert and Lady Duff Gordon up the Nile in the 1800s, rebuilt today to five-star standard. The entire boat holds only 4 to 12 cabins. There is no thumping engine-room, no buffet line, no 200-guest timetable. Because they're shallow and small, dahabiyas can moor at river islands, traditional villages and wild riverbank stretches that the larger cruise ships simply can't approach — places like Gebel Silsila quarries, El Kab tombs, the pottery village at Fares and the island bird reserves between Edfu and Aswan.

All eight boats on this page sail the Esna–Aswan corridor, 3–7 nights, with a licensed Egyptologist on board. The same standard temple stops (Edfu, Kom Ombo, Philae) appear on the itineraries — but the day flows at walking pace, not cruise-ship pace. If you're choosing between a dahabiya and a standard Nile cruise, our honest framing: a dahabiya is the right answer when the how of sailing matters to you as much as the temples do. Also consider the luxury fleet or deluxe tier if you'd rather have a bigger ship with more facilities.

Boutique · Small-ship · Wind-powered

Best 8 Dahabiya Nile Sailing Boats in Egypt 2026.

Every dahabiya below is 5★ rated and sailing-date verified. Prices per person, shared cabin, full board. Each boat holds 4–12 cabins only — once it sells out, it's out. Most sailings are 5 nights Esna ↔ Aswan, with Sonesta Amirat and Merit offering the rare 7-night option.

MS Amoura Dahabiya Best Value

MS Amoura Dahabiya

★★★★★ (4)
3 nights — every Friday from Aswan4 nights — every Monday from Esna
Private or share group
10 cabins

Our most affordable dahabiya — 10 cabins, two sun decks, lateen sails raised every afternoon the wind allows. The gentlest way into the dahabiya experience.

From$1,400
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Assouan Dahabiya Top Rated

Assouan Dahabiya

★★★★★ (5)
5 nights — every Monday Esna ↔ Aswan
Private or share group
8 cabins

Consistently our best-reviewed mid-tier dahabiya — 8 spacious cabins, wooden interiors, open-air sun deck, attentive small-boat crew. A favourite for couples.

From$1,450
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Merit Dahabiya Boutique

Merit Dahabiya

★★★★★ (1)
5 nights — every Saturday from Aswan7 nights — every Saturday from Esna
Private or share group
8 cabins

Boutique dahabiya with 8 refined cabins, private bathrooms in each, a real library and 5- or 7-night options — rare flexibility for a boat this size.

From$1,550
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Malouka Dahabiya Intimate

Malouka Dahabiya

★★★★★ (2)
5 nights — every Monday Esna ↔ Aswan
Private or share group
7 cabins

Only 7 cabins — one of the most intimate dahabiyas on the river. Elegant interiors, panoramic sun deck, ideal for small groups who want the boat to feel private.

From$1,650
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Meroe Dahabiya Guest Favourite

Meroe Dahabiya

★★★★★ (4)
5 nights — every Monday Esna ↔ Aswan
Private or share group
9 cabins

9 cabins, two suites, handcrafted wooden detailing throughout — Meroe is our guests' most-requested dahabiya. Calm, stylish, and consistently 5★ reviewed.

From$1,750
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Agatha Christie Dahabiya Themed

Agatha Christie Dahabiya

★★★★★ (1)
5 nights — every Monday Esna ↔ Aswan
Private or share group
8 cabins

Literary-themed dahabiya inspired by Christie's 1930s Nile sailings — antique styling, 8 cabins, period touches throughout. For guests who want atmosphere, not just a boat.

From$2,100
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Sonesta Amirat Dahabiya Full Week

Sonesta Amirat Dahabiya

★★★★★ (3)
7 nights — every Saturday from Aswan7 nights — every Saturday from Esna
Private or share group
6 cabins

Sonesta-operated dahabiya with just 6 cabins and a full-week itinerary reaching beyond the standard corridor — the longest dahabiya sailing we offer outside of charter.

From$2,300
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Nour El Nil Dahabiya Flagship

Nour El Nil Dahabiya

★★★★★ (1)
5 nights — every Monday Esna ↔ Aswan
Private or share group
10 cabins

The Nour El Nil fleet is the name most-quoted by travel journalists — boutique styling, Franco-Egyptian service, and a guest list that reads like a fashion magazine. Flagship dahabiya.

From$2,800
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Not sure which dahabiya? WhatsApp Maro →

Free consultation

Nour El Nil, Meroe, Merit — which dahabiya fits your trip?

Tell me your dates, number of travellers and travel style and I'll come back — usually within 4 hours — with two or three dahabiya options, honest pros and cons for each, and which sailings still have cabins open. No pressure, no sales pitch, no bot. Just me.

WhatsApp Maro →
Founder & Main Tour Consultant
Maro Saeed
Cairo-based · 13+ years · 1,200+ trips run
Why trust these dahabiya picks

How we vet every dahabiya on this page.

A dahabiya is a small-crew, hand-built boat — the difference between a great one and a disappointing one is the crew, not the brochure. We've sailed every boat on this list, we know which captains raise sail properly and which skip it, and we drop any boat whose standards slip.

1

We've sailed every boat

Our team has personally spent a full itinerary on every dahabiya on this page — cabin, galley, sun deck, sails — within the last 18 months.

2

Licensed Egyptologists

Every shore visit — Edfu, Kom Ombo, El Kab, Gebel Silsila, Philae — is led by a government-licensed Egyptologist, not a shared cruise-ship guide.

3

Real guest reviews

Star ratings come from 20+ independently posted Egypt Planners dahabiya reviews — TripAdvisor, Google, and direct post-trip surveys.

4

Direct, no middleman

You book with us, the operator — not an OTA reselling the cabin. That means priority on the cabins you actually want, and Maro on WhatsApp from day one.

Travel tips · Dahabiya sailing

Eight things we tell every dahabiya guest before they sail.

Practical, specific, honestly said — the small details that make the difference on a small boat.

🗓️

Best time to sail

October to April. Winter is peak — 22–28°C days, cool evenings, the wind that actually fills the sails. May–September is hot and windless; most dahabiyas don't sail through the hottest weeks.

⏱️

3, 5 or 7 nights?

5 nights Esna → Aswan is the standard and the sweet spot. Amoura also runs 3 and 4. Merit and Sonesta Amirat are the two boats with a 7-night option — worth it if you want the slowest version of the trip.

🛏️

Cabin count matters

4-cabin dahabiyas feel like you've chartered the boat. 10–12 cabin dahabiyas feel like a small, friendly house party. Both are great — pick your vibe before you pick the boat.

💵

Tipping on board

Plan on $10–$15 per person per day for the boat crew (captain, chef, waiter, housekeeping) — about $50–$75 total for a 5-night trip. Plus $10/day for your Egyptologist and driver. Cash preferred on dahabiyas.

🌬️

Sail vs motor days

Dahabiyas sail when the wind allows and are towed by a small tug when it doesn't — this is normal and expected. Ask to be let up on the sun deck during tow-downstream stretches; that's often the prettiest part of the day.

🥂

Drinks & inclusions

Most dahabiyas are half-board or full-board but drinks are extra — billed to cabin, paid at end. Nour El Nil and a couple of others include wine at dinner. Ask Maro for the exact per-boat inclusions list.

🎒

What to pack

No dress code. Pack relaxed — linen, long sleeves for evenings on deck, walking shoes for temples and village visits, a swimsuit (some dahabiyas have a plunge pool; others let you swim off the sun deck).

🛂

Visa & boarding

Most nationalities get an e-Visa for $25 at visa2egypt.gov.eg. Boarding is Luxor or Aswan depending on direction — we fly you down from Cairo and drive to the dock.

Real guest reviews

What dahabiya guests say after sailing with us.

Verified Egypt Planners dahabiya guests from the last 12 months. Full reviews on TripAdvisor and our Google Business Profile.

★★★★★

"Meroe was exactly what a Nile trip should feel like. We stopped at little islands that big ships can't reach, swam off the sun deck, and watched the lateen sails raised at sunset. Nine cabins total — it felt like our own boat. We'd book it again tomorrow."

SH
Sophie H. · France 5-night Meroe Dahabiya · January 2026
★★★★★

"Nour El Nil deserves its reputation. The food was a notch above anything we've had on a river cruise anywhere, the crew felt like old friends by day three, and the Egyptologist knew exactly when to leave us alone. Worth every pound."

JW
James W. · United Kingdom 5-night Nour El Nil · November 2025
★★★★★

"We picked Amoura because it was the most affordable dahabiya option and honestly it was one of the best trips of our lives. Real silence at night. Stars you can see. Maro organised the whole Cairo + Nile combo perfectly — no stress, all the detail handled."

RA
Rachel & Alex · United States 4-night MS Amoura · March 2026

View all reviews on TripAdvisor →

FAQ · Dahabiya Nile cruises

Everything you need to know about dahabiya sailings.

What is a dahabiya Nile cruise?
A dahabiya is a two-masted, shallow-drafted sailing boat — the traditional design used on the Nile for two centuries, rebuilt today to 5★ standard. Each boat holds only 4 to 12 cabins, sails by wind (towed by a small tug when the wind drops), and can moor at small islands and villages that the 70–150-cabin cruise ships simply can't reach. The result is a slower, quieter, far more intimate Nile trip.
How much does a dahabiya Nile cruise cost?
Standard 4–5 night dahabiya sailings run roughly $1,200–$2,500 per person (shared cabin, full board, Egyptologist included) depending on boat and dates. Our range starts at MS Amoura at $1,400 and goes up to Nour El Nil at $2,800. Ultra-luxury and private-charter dahabiyas can reach $3,000–$5,000 per person. Standard big-ship Nile cruises start around $600–$1,200 and are a different category.
Is a dahabiya Nile cruise worth it?
If the on-board experience matters as much to you as the temples do — absolutely yes. Dahabiyas deliver what most Nile travellers say they want: small group size, actual silence, flexible schedules, real riverbank stops and a crew that knows your name by day two. If you'd rather have multiple restaurants, a pool, a spa and a busier social atmosphere, a luxury big-ship cruise is a better fit. The temples visited are the same; the way you visit them is very different.
What's the difference between a dahabiya and a standard Nile cruise ship?
A dahabiya has 4–12 cabins and sails by wind; a standard Nile cruise ship has 60–160 cabins and runs by engine. Dahabiyas moor at small villages, islands and wild riverbank stretches that big ships can't approach. Service is intimate, meals are served à la carte to the guest list rather than buffet-style. Dahabiyas sail mostly Esna–Aswan (shallower water); big ships run Luxor–Aswan. Standard ships have pools, gyms, bars and lounge entertainment; most dahabiyas skip all of those deliberately.
How many cabins does a dahabiya have?
It varies sharply — and this is the number that most shapes your trip. On this page: Sonesta Amirat has 6, Malouka has 7, Assouan, Merit and Agatha Christie each have 8, Meroe has 9, Amoura and Nour El Nil each have 10. A 6-cabin dahabiya feels like you've semi-chartered the boat; a 10-cabin dahabiya feels like a small, friendly house party. Whole-boat charter is available for all of them — WhatsApp Maro for charter rates.
When is the best time for a dahabiya cruise?
October through April is the sailing season. Winter (December–February) is peak — comfortable 22–26°C days, cool evenings, and the northerly wind that actually fills the lateen sails. March, April and October are sweet-spot shoulder months. May–September is 38°C+ and almost windless; most dahabiyas don't run during the hottest weeks. Book 4–6 months ahead for the prime winter dates on Meroe, Nour El Nil, Sonesta Amirat — they sell out.
Do dahabiyas have private bathrooms and air conditioning?
Every dahabiya on this page has private bathrooms in every cabin and air conditioning. Cabin size ranges from roughly 12 m² on the smaller boats up to 28 m² on the suites of Meroe, Nour El Nil and Sonesta Amirat. Hot water, Wi-Fi on most boats, 220V power. These are modern, fully equipped 5★ cabins in a traditional shell — not historical roughing it.
How do I choose the best dahabiya?
Four things matter, roughly in order: (1) cabin count — 6 cabins feels very different from 12; (2) itinerary length — 5 nights is standard, 7 nights only on Merit and Sonesta Amirat; (3) style — Nour El Nil is journalist-favourite boutique, Agatha Christie is themed/atmospheric, Meroe and Assouan are crowd-pleasing classics, Amoura is the value pick; (4) who else is on board — share-group or whole-boat charter. WhatsApp me your answers to those four and I'll narrow it to two boats.
Do dahabiyas get seasick or rough?
No. The Nile is a river, not the sea — no waves, no swell, no real motion at all. When the dahabiya is under sail it leans gently; most guests find it relaxing rather than unsettling. The water is always calm enough that meals are served at full table settings without anything sliding. Guests who get travel-sick on ocean cruises do fine on dahabiyas.
How much should I tip on a dahabiya?
Plan on $10–$15 per person per day for the full boat crew — captain, chef, waiter, housekeeping, deck hands (usually 6–10 people). For a standard 5-night trip that's roughly $50–$75 total per person. Plus $10/day for your Egyptologist and $5–$10/day for the driver on shore days. Cash (USD or EGP) is preferred on dahabiyas — many boats can't process card tips. An envelope at the end of the sailing is standard.
Can I charter a whole dahabiya privately?
Yes — every dahabiya on this page can be chartered as a full boat for families, friends groups, honeymoons, corporate retreats or multigenerational trips. Charter pricing is roughly the per-person rate × cabin count, minus a small share-group discount that goes away. For a 6-cabin boat like Sonesta Amirat, charter starts around $14,000–$18,000 for the 7 nights; for a 10-cabin like Amoura, around $14,000–$20,000 for 5 nights. WhatsApp Maro for a firm quote on your dates.
What's included in a dahabiya Nile cruise?
Included: cabin, breakfast, lunch and dinner (full board), all shore excursions with a licensed Egyptologist, dock transfers, Wi-Fi on most boats. Usually not included: drinks beyond water and coffee (billed to cabin on most dahabiyas; Nour El Nil includes wine at dinner), Luxor hot-air balloon (~$110), Abu Simbel day tour from Aswan (~$160), crew and guide tips. Ask Maro for the exact per-boat inclusions list before booking.
Can I combine a dahabiya with Cairo or the Red Sea?
Yes — and most of our dahabiya guests do exactly that. The classic shape is 3 nights in Cairo (Pyramids, GEM, Coptic Cairo) then fly to Luxor or Aswan for a 5-night dahabiya sailing, optionally closing with a Red Sea stay at El Gouna or Sahl Hasheesh. See classical Egypt tours or WhatsApp Maro with your dates and we'll build the combination.
A note from Maro

Who a dahabiya is actually right for — and who should pick a big ship instead.

I'll say this honestly: a dahabiya is not the right boat for everyone. If you're travelling with kids who need a pool and a waterslide, if you want multiple dining rooms and lounge entertainment, or if a larger ship's range of facilities is the point of the trip for you — a standard or luxury big-ship Nile cruise is genuinely a better fit. I don't push dahabiyas on guests whose trip won't suit the quieter pace.

But if you read the words silence, slow, village moorings and twelve cabins or fewer and something in you said that's exactly what I want — then a dahabiya is the single best Nile experience on offer. For most first-timers, I'd steer you to Meroe or Assouan as the safe, highly-reviewed picks. If you want the name-brand boutique experience, Nour El Nil. If you want the longest version of the trip, Sonesta Amirat's 7-night itinerary. If budget matters, Amoura at $1,400 is genuinely excellent. WhatsApp me with your dates and I'll work from there.

Maro Saeed, Egypt Planners

Ready to sail the Nile on a traditional dahabiya?

Pick a boat above or tell me your dates — I'll reply with two dahabiya options within four hours. WhatsApp is fastest.