Attraction Details

LocationGiza, Greater Cairo
Visit Duration1 hour
Best TimeOctober to April
Difficulty🟢 Easy
Entrance
🎟️ Included with Saqqara complex ticket ($15 USD adults, $8 students); interior access may require extra ticket🎓 50% off with valid student ID

Overview

Pyramid of Teti

The Pyramid of Teti is the northernmost pyramid at Saqqara and one of the most accessible interiors in the entire Egyptian pyramid field. Built during the reign of Pharaoh Teti, founder of the 6th Dynasty (c. 2345–2323 BCE), it stands close to the main Saqqara visitor area and its interior can be entered with relatively little physical difficulty compared to other pyramid descents. The exterior has substantially collapsed and today appears as a natural-looking hill of rubble — an appearance that earned it the local Arabic name Haram el-Shawwaf (‘the watchman’s pyramid’).

The interior is the main reason to visit. Like the pyramid of Unas, Teti’s burial chambers are covered with Pyramid Texts — the religious spells designed to guide and protect the king in the afterlife. The texts in Teti’s pyramid are exceptionally well preserved, with hieroglyphs carved in precise relief and painted in the characteristic blue-green color that was used consistently in this period. The burial chamber ceiling is carved to replicate a night sky, covered with painted stars.

Teti’s complex also includes two queens’ pyramids — those of Iput I and Khuit — and a large cemetery of mastaba tombs belonging to officials of his court, including the decorated tombs of Mereruka and Kagemni, which are among the largest and most detailed private tombs from the Old Kingdom.

✦ Teti's pyramid was the second royal pyramid to contain Pyramid Texts, inscribed around 2345 BCE — the same religious corpus that forms the world's oldest religious literature✦ The burial chamber ceiling is covered with carved and painted stars, replicating the night sky and designating the chamber as a symbolic cosmic space✦ The pyramid's exterior has collapsed so completely that it resembles a natural hill — earning it the local name 'the watchman's pyramid'✦ The adjacent mastaba tomb of Mereruka, Teti's vizier, has 32 decorated chambers making it the largest private tomb of the Old Kingdom✦ Teti founded the 6th Dynasty after the last 5th Dynasty pharaoh Unas, and may have been the first king to carry the epithet 'son of Ra' in its full form

History & Significance

Teti founded the 6th Dynasty following the death of the last 5th Dynasty pharaoh, Unas, and is thought to have consolidated power partly through strategic marriages. He ruled for approximately 12 years and was, according to Manetho’s later king lists, assassinated — though this cannot be confirmed from contemporary evidence.

The Pyramid Texts in Teti’s pyramid were first documented by Gaston Maspero in 1881–82, shortly after he opened several pyramids at Saqqara and discovered the inscribed interior walls. The texts in Teti’s pyramid form part of the same corpus as those in the pyramids of Unas, Pepi I, Merenre, and Pepi II — collectively constituting the oldest known religious literature in the world.

The adjacent mastaba tomb of Mereruka, Teti’s vizier and son-in-law, is one of the largest private tombs of the Old Kingdom with 32 decorated chambers covering various aspects of daily life, official duties, and funerary ritual. It was discovered and published by Jacques de Morgan in the late 19th century.

What to See

Pyramid Texts Chamber

The sarcophagus hall and antechamber are lined with vertical columns of hieroglyphic Pyramid Texts in crisp carved relief, painted blue-green and exceptionally well preserved.

Star Ceiling

The burial chamber ceiling carries a painted sky of five-pointed stars, creating a symbolically celestial space for the king's eternal rest.

Mastaba of Mereruka

Adjacent 32-room tomb of Teti's vizier, containing painted reliefs of fishing, fowling, athletics, and craftsmen — the most comprehensive pictorial record of Old Kingdom daily life in any private tomb.

Mastaba of Kagemni

Another official's tomb nearby with detailed painted reliefs of animal husbandry and river scenes, also open to visitors.

Visitor Information

🕐
Opening Hours

Daily 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

⛔ Closed: Never
👕
Dress Code

No dress restrictions

📸
Photography

Photography is free

🔶
Accessibility

Partially accessible

💡 Visitor Tips

Teti's pyramid is close to the main Saqqara visitor area and the mastaba tombs of Mereruka and Kagemni are a short walk away — group all three in a single 90-minute circuit
📷Inside the burial chamber the carved texts photograph well without flash; bring a torch or use your phone light to see the star ceiling properly
🥾The interior descent is less steep than Khufu's or the Step Pyramid galleries, but the low ceilings in the antechamber require crouching
🎫The mastaba tombs of Mereruka and Kagemni may require separate tickets from the pyramid interior — check at the Saqqara main ticket office on arrival

Location & Map

Saqqara, Badrashin, Giza Governorate, EgyptOpen in Google Maps →

🚕 How to Get There

Located at the northern end of the Saqqara necropolis, approximately 30 km south of Cairo near the Step Pyramid visitor area; reachable by private taxi or as part of an organized Saqqara day tour.

Plan Your Visit

Visit The Pyramid of Teti

Quick Facts

📍
LocationGiza, Greater Cairo
Visit Time1 hour
🎟
EntranceIncluded with Saqqara complex ticket ($15 USD adults, $8 students); interior access may require extra ticket
🕐
HoursDaily 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

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