Morocco and Egypt are the two destinations that define the North African travel imagination, and they attract visitors for fundamentally different reasons. Morocco is alive with a layered Islamic and Amazigh (Berber) culture expressed through living medinas — Marrakech, Fes, Chefchaouen — that have been continuously inhabited for over a thousand years. Its landscapes range from the Atlantic coast and the High Atlas (North Africa's highest peak) to the Saharan dunes of Erg Chebbi. The country is compact enough to experience serious variety in 10 days and safe enough for solo travellers, including solo women, across nearly all destinations. Egypt carries an entirely different weight: the Pyramids of Giza, the temples of Luxor and the Valley of the Kings represent one of the most concentrated collections of ancient monuments on Earth — nowhere else can you encounter 5,000 years of continuous civilisation so directly. The Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan is one of the world's great journeys, and the Red Sea coast around Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheikh offers some of the finest reef diving outside the Indo-Pacific. The two countries share the Arabic language and Sunni Muslim traditions but have almost nothing else in common in terms of landscape, architecture, food or travel experience.
Option A
Morocco
Atlantic and Mediterranean kingdom — medinas, mountains, desert and coast
Best for
Culture seekers, foodies, city explorers, outdoor enthusiasts, first-time Africa travellers
Option B
Egypt
Nile Valley civilisation — pharaonic monuments, the Red Sea and Luxor
Best for
History and archaeology enthusiasts, divers, those drawn by ancient civilisations
