EGYPT · TRAVEL
Key Facts
—Record pace: Egypt received 6.1 million visitors in the first four months of 2026, up 7 percent on a year earlier and a record for the period, per the State Information Service.
—Faster in Q1: Tourism Minister Sherif Fathy put first-quarter growth at 15.6 percent year on year, with revenues of about 5.1 billion dollars, up from 3.8 billion.
—The 2025 base: Egypt closed 2025 with roughly 19 million tourists, up 21 percent, its highest annual total on record.
—Museum effect: The Grand Egyptian Museum, opened near Giza in November 2025, houses more than 100,000 artifacts and draws about 15,000 visitors a day.
—The target: Cairo is aiming for about 21 million arrivals in 2026, with a longer-term goal of 30 million a year.
—Despite the war: Officials and Bloomberg reporting in June say Egypt still expects a record year even with conflict in the region.
Egypt tourism is running at a record pace in 2026: 6.1 million visitors arrived by the end of April, first-quarter revenue neared 5.1 billion dollars, and the new Grand Egyptian Museum is drawing about 15,000 people a day.
The numbers behind the boom
Egypt’s State Information Service says 6.1 million tourists arrived between January and April 2026, against 5.7 million a year earlier. That 7 percent rise sets a record for the first four months of any year.
The first quarter was stronger still. Tourism Minister Sherif Fathy reported arrivals up 15.6 percent year on year, with revenues climbing to about 5.1 billion dollars from 3.8 billion.
Revenue is rising faster than arrivals, a sign visitors are staying longer and spending more. That is precisely the shift the ministry has been trying to engineer.
The surge builds on a record base. Egypt closed 2025 with roughly 19 million visitors, up 21 percent on 2024, the best year in the industry’s history.
Officials credit improved security, a weaker pound that makes Egypt cheap in euros and dollars, and a wave of new attractions. The mix is pulling in first-time visitors as well as returning sun-seekers.
The Grand Egyptian Museum effect
The single biggest new draw sits beside the Giza pyramids. The Grand Egyptian Museum, opened in November 2025 after two decades of construction, houses more than 100,000 artifacts, including the complete Tutankhamun collection displayed together for the first time.
The museum now receives about 15,000 visitors a day, and its chief executive expects around six million a year. Officials credit it with reviving cultural tourism that had long trailed Egypt’s beach resorts.
The complex beside the pyramids cost well over one billion dollars and took some two decades to build. It is treated in Cairo as the centrepiece of a national bet on heritage as an export industry.
The Red Sea remains the volume engine, with resorts from Hurghada to Marsa Alam filling European charter flights. A weaker Egyptian pound has made those holidays cheaper in euros and dollars.
Egypt tourism targets for 2026 and beyond
The government wants about 21 million arrivals this year, roughly 10.5 percent more than the 2025 record. Minister Fathy’s first-quarter figures, reported by Daily News Egypt, show the pace needed to reach it.
The longer-term goal is 30 million tourists a year, backed by new hotels, airport upgrades and Mediterranean mega-projects such as Ras El Hekma.
Officials say the sector has held its momentum despite the war between Israel and Iran unsettling the region. Bloomberg reported in mid-June that Cairo still expects a record 2026.
Tourism is one of Egypt’s four main sources of foreign currency, alongside remittances, the Suez Canal and exports. Every extra million visitors eases pressure on a balance of payments the IMF still watches closely.
The industry is also a huge employer across hotels, guiding, transport and crafts. Its receipts arrive in hard currency, which Egypt needs more than almost anything else.
What could slow the run
Regional escalation remains the obvious risk, as flight cancellations can empty resorts within weeks. Egypt’s own capacity is the quieter constraint, with hotel rooms, not demand, capping growth in peak season.
Competition is not standing still either. Morocco, Türkiye and the Gulf are chasing the same European travellers with new capacity of their own.
There is also the economy beneath the boom. The IMF recently trimmed Egypt’s growth forecast even as tourism outperformed, a reminder that one strong sector cannot carry the whole recovery.
Sustaining the run will demand steady nerves and steady pricing. Tourists forgive many things, but not feeling squeezed.
For the continent, Egypt is becoming the counterexample: proof that African tourism can scale when the anchor attraction, the airlift and the exchange rate all pull in the same direction. Few markets manage to line up all three at once.
For now, though, the industry’s trajectory is unmistakable. Egypt is converting its antiquities into its most reliable modern export, and this year is on course to prove it.
Frequently asked questions
How many tourists has Egypt received in 2026 so far?
Official figures show 6.1 million visitors in the first four months of 2026, up 7 percent on the same period of 2025 and a record for that stretch, after first-quarter arrivals grew 15.6 percent year on year.
What is the Grand Egyptian Museum?
Opened near the Giza pyramids in November 2025, it houses more than 100,000 artifacts, including the complete Tutankhamun collection shown together for the first time, and draws about 15,000 visitors a day.
What is Egypt’s tourism target for 2026?
The government is aiming for roughly 21 million arrivals in 2026, about 10.5 percent more than the record 19 million of 2025, with a longer-term goal of 30 million annual visitors.
Why is Egypt’s tourism growing despite regional conflict?
Officials credit improved security, a weaker pound that makes trips cheaper, new resort capacity on the Red Sea and the pull of the Grand Egyptian Museum, and they still expect a record year despite the Middle East war.
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