Is Aswan Safe in March 2026?

March is shoulder season in Aswan. Shoulder season provides a good balance — tourist areas are active but not overwhelmed, and scam operators are present but less aggressive than peak months. Our database documents 12 verified scam reports for this destination year-round — this guide contextualises that data for March travel specifically.

Season

Shoulder Season

Crowd level

Moderate

March scam risk

High

Year-round scams

12

March travel

Safety tips for Aswan in March

Season-specific guidance based on shoulder season conditions and how they interact with documented scam patterns.

01

March is shoulder season in Aswan — a practical window with moderate crowds and mostly fair weather. Scam pressure exists but is less concentrated than peak months.

02

Accommodation prices are generally more reasonable during shoulder season. Still verify reviews and addresses before booking — scam operators are active year-round.

03

Shoulder season means many popular sites are accessible without peak-season queues, reducing the crowded conditions that facilitate pickpocketing and distraction scams.

04

Weather can be less predictable in shoulder months. Carry contingency plans for outdoor activities and transport disruptions that can create vulnerability to opportunistic scams.

05

Regardless of season, the documented scams for Aswan remain the same — review the full list of 12 warnings before you travel.

06

Travel insurance is recommended for any trip to Aswan. Policies covering theft, medical emergencies, and trip disruption are essential regardless of when you visit.

What to watch for

Top scams in Aswan (active in March)

These scams operate year-round and remain active during March. Moderate crowds keep activity at standard levels.

Unofficial Abu Simbel Tour Overcharging

high

Street touts near the Aswan train station and budget hotels sell Abu Simbel day trips at inflated prices, often misrepresenting the quality of transport and guide services. Some operators use shared minibuses without air conditioning despite advertising private vehicles, and the "licensed guide" turns out to be the driver. Complaints about last-minute price increases after departure are common.

How to avoid: Book Abu Simbel tours only through your hotel, a licensed travel agency, or the official Egyptian Tourism Authority counters. Confirm all inclusions in writing, including vehicle type and guide credentials.

Perfume Shop Oil Bait-and-Switch

high

Aswan has a dense concentration of essential oil and perfume shops — with names like Cleopatra Palace Perfume Bazaar, Elite Perfumery, and Essence of Life — that operate a systematic bait-and-switch scam reported extensively on TripAdvisor and Fodor's forums. Staff demonstrate a high-quality oil, filling the room with genuine fragrance, then package a different bottle of diluted glycerine or low-grade substitute for the customer to take home. Some shops perform a fake "water test" (dropping oil into water to prove authenticity), but glycerine also sinks — making the test meaningless. Tour guides who bring tourists to these shops receive commissions and are complicit in the fraud.

How to avoid: Never let the bottle leave your sight during purchase. Watch staff pour directly from the demonstration bottle you approved into the container you will take home. Smell the sealed product before paying. Avoid any shop your guide insists on visiting, and be aware that government-certified or museum-approved claims for private shops are always false.

Souvenir Vendor Aggressive Pressure and Inflated Prices

medium

Souvenir vendors in the Aswan bazaar and near temple sites follow tourists persistently, blocking paths and physically placing items in their hands. Prices quoted to foreigners are typically 5–10x what locals pay, and vendors use guilt tactics ("I made this myself," "my family needs the money") to prevent negotiation from failing. Some vendors claim items are "genuine Nubian antiques" when they are mass-produced.

How to avoid: Engage only when genuinely interested in buying. State your maximum price once and walk away if refused — vendors frequently call you back at your price. Never feel obligated to buy because an item was placed in your hands. Antiques cannot be legally exported from Egypt without permits.

Philae Temple Unofficial Guide Commission Shops

medium

Men presenting themselves as official guides near the Philae Temple boat dock offer "free orientation" and then steer visitors into nearby papyrus shops and alabaster factories where they earn commissions on purchases. Tourists are told these shops are "government quality-controlled" or "museum certified," which is false. Prices in commission shops are typically 3–5x market rate.

How to avoid: Decline unsolicited guide offers at the Philae boat dock. Official guided tours must be arranged in advance with licensed agencies. If shopping, compare prices in the Aswan bazaar before buying at any shop a guide recommends.

Felucca Boat Price Inflation

high

Felucca captains at the Aswan Corniche dock quote one price verbally, then demand significantly more at journey's end — sometimes double or triple the agreed fare. The scam is most common on sunset cruises around Elephantine Island. Captains may claim the original price was per person rather than for the whole boat, or add on "government fees" that do not exist.

How to avoid: Agree on a total price in writing before boarding. Clarify explicitly whether it is per person or per boat and for the full duration. Pay only the agreed amount on departure.

Common questions

Aswan in March — answered

Is Aswan safe to visit in March?

Aswan is high risk for tourists in March. This is shoulder season for the North Africa region. Our database documents 12 scams year-round — during March, shoulder season provides a good balance — tourist areas are active but not overwhelmed, and scam operators are present but less aggressive than peak months. The most common risks are tour & activities, taxi & transport, street scams.

Is March a good time to visit Aswan?

March is a balanced shoulder season for tourists in Aswan. Moderate crowds, reasonable prices, and scam activity that is present but less intense than peak months make this a practical travel window.

What scams are most common in Aswan during March?

The documented scam types in Aswan are consistent year-round: Tour & Activities, Taxi & Transport, Street Scams, Money & ATM Scams. During March (shoulder season), activity levels are moderate. The specific scams and their locations remain the same regardless of season.

Is it crowded in Aswan in March?

Tourist crowd levels in Aswan during March are moderate. Moderate crowds mean accessible attractions without the extreme density of peak season.

Should I get travel insurance for Aswan in March?

Travel insurance is recommended for Aswan regardless of when you visit. Shoulder season is generally lower-risk but standard travel emergencies can occur any time. Look for policies covering medical emergencies, theft/mugging, trip cancellation, and 24/7 emergency assistance.

What should I pack for Aswan in March?

Beyond weather-appropriate clothing for March in North Africa, pack with scam prevention in mind: a cross-body bag with RFID-blocking (pickpocketing is documented in Aswan), photocopies of your passport stored separately from the original, a phone case with a wrist strap (phone theft is reported), and a portable charger to maintain access to transport apps and maps. Avoid visibly expensive jewelry or electronics in high-risk areas.

Editorial note: Seasonal risk assessments for Aswan are based on 12 year-round scam reports cross-referenced with regional travel patterns. Scam data is compiled from government travel advisories (US State Dept, UK FCDO, Australian DFAT), verified news sources, and traveler reports. Conditions change — always check current advisories before travel. Read our methodology →