Attraction Details
Overview
Dakhla Oasis
Dakhla Oasis is a large fertile depression in the Western Desert approximately 800 km southwest of Cairo and 200 km west of Kharga Oasis, covering approximately 2,000 square kilometers of agricultural land, palm groves, villages, and ancient ruins beneath a dramatic pink sandstone escarpment. It is one of the most historically rich and scenically varied of Egypt’s Western Desert oases, with inhabited history spanning over 70,000 years — from Stone Age settlements through pharaonic, Roman, Islamic, and modern periods.
The oasis is known for its well-preserved medieval Islamic town of al-Qasr, whose mud-brick buildings, covered alleys, medieval mosque, and traditional door-lock carvings represent one of the finest surviving examples of Islamic vernacular architecture in Egypt. Beyond al-Qasr, Dakhla contains Roman-era temples at Deir al-Hagar and Ain Birbiya, a Roman necropolis at Muzawaka with painted tomb chambers, a pharaonic settlement at Ain Aseel, and dozens of natural hot spring pools distributed across the oasis floor.
Dakhla’s agricultural landscape — a patchwork of wheat fields, vegetable gardens, fruit orchards, and palm groves fed by artesian wells — gives it a greener and more inhabited character than the more arid Farafra or Siwa oases. The main town of Mut has hotels, restaurants, and tour operators providing access to the oasis’s scattered sites.
History & Significance
Dakhla Oasis contains some of the oldest evidence of human occupation in the Egyptian Western Desert — lithic scatters and camp sites of hunter-gatherers dating to over 70,000 years ago have been documented across the oasis floor and surrounding desert. The oasis was known in ancient Egypt as ‘Oasis of the Inner’ and was an important agricultural and administrative center from at least the Old Kingdom period.
The Roman period left the most visible ancient monuments: the Temple of Deir al-Hagar (built under Nero and Vespasian in the 1st century CE), with its well-preserved decorated sandstone sanctuary; and the painted tombs of Muzawaka, where two 2nd-century CE tomb chambers contain the most colorful and complete Roman-period painted ceilings surviving in any Egyptian desert oasis.
The medieval Islamic town of al-Qasr developed over a Byzantine-era settlement and reached its current form during the Ayyubid and Mamluk periods (12th–15th centuries CE). Its covered streets, multi-story mud-brick houses, and the minaret of the al-Nasr mosque — built in the 12th century CE and still standing — represent one of the best-preserved examples of pre-modern Islamic desert architecture in Egypt.
What to See
Al-Qasr Medieval Town
A surviving medieval Islamic mud-brick town with covered alleys, carved wooden door lintels with Arabic inscriptions, a 12th-century mosque minaret, and a traditional grain mill — one of Egypt's most complete historic desert settlements.
Muzawaka Painted Tombs
Two Roman-period tomb chambers with vividly painted ceilings showing Greco-Roman astronomical and mythological imagery — the most complete painted tomb interiors in any Egyptian oasis.
Temple of Deir al-Hagar
A 1st-century CE Roman sandstone temple with preserved Egyptianizing painted decoration and carved reliefs — partially buried in drifting sand that has protected its surfaces for 2,000 years.
Hot Spring Pools
Multiple natural artesian hot spring pools distributed across the oasis — open-air warm-water bathing surrounded by palm groves is one of Dakhla's most distinctive visitor experiences.
Escarpment Views
The dramatic pink sandstone escarpment rising above the northern edge of the oasis can be seen from across the agricultural plain — particularly vivid at sunrise and sunset when the rock face glows warm orange.
Photo Gallery



Visitor Information
Oasis accessible year-round; individual sites have varying hours
⛔ Closed: NeverModest dress required
Photography is free
Limited accessibility
💡 Visitor Tips
Location & Map
🚕 How to Get There
Located approximately 800 km southwest of Cairo; accessible by bus from Cairo (10–12 hours) via Kharga, or by bus from Kharga (3 hours). Private car or organized tour from Cairo or Luxor is the most flexible option.






