Quick Summary: Hurghada is statistically very safe — violent crime is rare — but "annoyance crime" (taxi sharks, overcharging, pushy vendors, fake helpers) is common and predictable. This guide shows exact, street-level tactics: how to clear the airport without getting fleeced, where to buy a SIM before you leave the terminal, why Uber/ Careem are your friends, how the classic 50-Euro swap scam works, and why a private airport transfer is the simplest way to avoid the taxi shark tank.
Intro: The Reality Check
Let’s be blunt. Hurghada is not dangerous in the way travel warnings imagine. Violent incidents against tourists are extremely rare. The real risk is being naive about the local hustle economy. The city is structured around tourism income, and that creates predictable pain points: airport swarms, drivers who quote in euros to set a high anchor, shopkeepers who convert any “maybe” into a sale, and unofficial helpers who “find your driver” for a tip. Learn the playbook and you sleep fine; ignore it and your trip starts with stress.
Arrival Logistics: Surviving the Airport
Visa: Most nationalities pay $25 USD for a 30-day tourist visa on arrival. Buy it at the bank counters before passport control. Cash is easier; the card machines fail regularly. Have the exact cash available to avoid extra delays.
SIM card: Buy your SIM inside the terminal before you leave customs. For a detailed comparison of carriers and pricing, see our Hurghada Airport SIM Guide: Vodafone vs Orange. You’ll see Vodafone, Orange, and Etisalat kiosks. Vodafone tends to have the most stable coverage across Hurghada and the islands; Orange often has cheaper promos. Expect roughly 20–25 GB ≈ 400–500 EGP for a tourist bundle (prices fluctuate). If you don’t get a SIM inside the terminal, expect higher prices and more pressure outside.
First rule out the terminal: don’t exit the arrivals hall without data. It’s the moment you stop being anonymous and become a visible target for the taxi sharks.
Arrival hall: the last sane place to buy a SIM and pay the visa before the swarm begins.
The "Taxi Shark Tank": Transport Guide
For a detailed price comparison and real-world testing, check our Uber vs Careem vs Taxis price test. Step outside and you will be grabbed: drivers, porters, fake Uber reps, and “helpers” who offer to carry your bag and then expect a tip. They quote prices in euros or dollars because those anchors psychologically justify larger numbers.
Price realities:
- Airport → Hurghada Marina (Uber): ~150–170 EGP (rough ballpark depending on surge).
- Careem: Similar to Uber, slightly higher if demand is high (~160–190 EGP).
- Street Taxi from arrivals: drivers will start at 15–25 EUR and negotiate down. They quote euros to anchor the price high.
Translation: the street taxi will try to convert your ignorance into profit. Don’t play that game. If you want zero drama, pre-book or use the ride apps. If apps show no cars, request your hotel’s official taxi and agree a price before you step outside.
Street taxis: aggressive pricing and negotiation tactics—know the expected app price first.
| Transport | Price (Est) | Safety/Hassle | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uber | ≈ 120–170 EGP | High / Low | Best when available; transparent pricing |
| Careem | ≈ 130–190 EGP | High / Low–Medium | Good fallback to Uber |
| Private Transfer (pre-book) | ≈ 300–500 EGP or fixed USD price | Very High / Zero | Recommended for arrivals — no negotiations |
| Street Taxi (hail) | 15–25 EUR (anchors high) | Medium / High | Always negotiate and confirm price first |
| Hotel taxi (called by hotel) | ≈ 200–300 EGP | High / Low | Reliable, but slightly pricier |
Avoid the Sharks: Book Official Airport Transfer ($15-20)
The "Hassle" Factor & Shopkeepers
Markets and tourist streets are filled with friendly persistence. Expect to be approached constantly: “Where are you from?” → “Just look” → “Best price.” The correct response is calm, dismissive, and immediate: “La, shukran.” (No, thank you). Say it once and walk. If someone persists, repeat it firmly. Don’t smile and stop — that’s an invitation.
Markets: quick sales pitches, fast follow-ups, and the currency swap attempts happen here.
Women's Safety: The Honest Truth
Women can and do travel safely here. The main issue is attention, not physical danger. Dress for comfort and fewer stares in non-resort areas: long shorts, light scarf, or a T-shirt. In tourist beaches and resort zones you can wear swimwear. If someone crosses the line, say “Khalas!” (Enough) loudly and move to a populated area. The tourist police take complaints seriously — number: 126.
Health: Antinal & Pharmacies
Don’t drink tap water. Use bottled water for drinking and brushing. For stomach issues, buy Antinal at any pharmacy and rehydration salts. Pharmacies display government-printed prices on medicine boxes — if a shop quotes a higher price, point to the printed price and repeat the amount. Pharmacies at the airport and Marina are the safest bets for English-speaking staff.
Pharmacy: look for printed prices on medicine boxes and keep local cash for quick purchases.
Money Matters: Tipping & Scams
Tipping: Small notes matter. Recommended tipping: restaurants 5–10%, hotel porters 20–30 EGP, boat crew 50–100 EGP. Ask your hotel to break large notes into 20s and 10s.
The 50-Euro swap scam (classic): You hand over a 50 EUR note — the seller pretends you gave a 50 piastre or a different bill, then accuses you of short-changing them. Watch the bill until it’s in the vendor’s hand, and count change with them visible. Prefer to pay in EGP for local purchases to avoid confusion. If you must use foreign currency, get the exchange clearly on the table before handing notes over.
Marina area: safe and well-patrolled, but vendors and touts still attempt upsells to tourists.
FAQs
Is Hurghada safe in 2026?
Yes. Violent crime against tourists is rare. Most problems are economic (overcharging, hustles). Use common-sense precautions and you’ll be fine.
Who do I call for tourist complaints?
Tourist Police:126. They respond to complaints involving tourists and take these matters seriously.
How much is the visa?
$25 USD for most nationalities (buy at the bank counter before passport control).
Can I drink the tap water?
No. Use bottled water for everything.
Can I buy alcohol?
Alcohol is available but subject to local rules — duty-free purchases are typically allowed within 48 hours of arrival. Expect limited options in supermarkets outside tourist zones.
Closing: The Simple Survival Rules
1) Buy your SIM and pay the visa inside the terminal. 2) Use Uber/Careem when possible — pre-book a private transfer if you want zero drama. 3) Carry small EGP notes for tips. 4) Say “La, shukran” and keep walking. 5) If you must negotiate a taxi, fix the price before you get in. That’s the checklist. Follow it and Hurghada will feel easy instead of exhausting.
Essential Resources on Routri & Travel Guides:
- Routri — Private transfer from Hurghada Airport (book reliable transfer)
- Routri — Departure transfer from Hurghada hotels to Hurghada airport
- How to buy a SIM card at Hurghada airport — TravelTomTom
- Internet & SIM Cards in Hurghada 2026 — Discover Hurghada
- Tourist scams to watch for — VacayWork
- Tripadvisor forum — Scams and hassle in Hurghada (community reports)



