Upper Egypt / Nile Valley
Philae Temple
How to visit Philae Temple from Aswan: the boat ticket nobody tells you about, the best time to beat the cruise coaches, and whether the island temple of Isis is worth it.
Where
Aswan, Egypt
Opening hours
Roughly 07:00โ16:00 in winter and to 17:00 in summer; the evening Sound and Light show runs separately after dark. Confirm your date and the show times locally, as they shift with the season.
Tickets
Entry about EGP 450 (~ยฃ6.50); a return motorboat to Agilkia is roughly EGP 200โ300 per group (~ยฃ3โยฃ4.50), agreed before you set off. The separate Sound and Light show is about EGP 600 (~ยฃ8.70).
Time needed
About 1.5 hours on the island, plus the 10โ15 minute boat crossing each way and waiting for the boatman to fill up or agreeing a private hire.
In short
Visiting Philae Temple
Philae is the temple of Isis on Agilkia Island, a short motorboat hop off the Aswan dams โ and the boat is the part people get caught out on. The entry ticket gets you nothing without a separate motorboat fare, agreed before you board, so budget for both. Go first thing or after about 15:00 to miss the mid-morning cruise coaches, and allow around 1.5 hours including the crossing. The whole complex was lifted stone by stone from its original flooded island when the dams went up, which is why the boat ride is the experience, not an extra to skip.
The boat ticket nobody warns you about
The mistake people make at Philae is assuming the entry ticket is all they need. It isnโt: the temple sits on Agilkia Island, and the only way across is a motorboat thatโs charged separately, agreed with the boatman at the dock before you climb in. Buy the entry at the dockside office (about EGP 450, ~ยฃ6.50), then settle the return boat fare โ roughly EGP 200โ300 a group โ up front and in small notes, so thereโs no renegotiation when you want to come back. If youโd rather skip the haggling entirely, an Aswan tour or Nile cruise excursion usually bundles the entry and the boat into one price, which is why so many people arrive that way.
This isnโt a temple where the boat is a tedious add-on. The entire complex was cut apart and rebuilt block by block on higher ground when the dams flooded its original island, so the crossing over the water is the experience โ Philae rising out of the lake the way it was always meant to be seen.
Why Philae is the Aswan temple to prioritise
Come right at opening, around 07:00, before the mid-morning cruise coaches and before Aswanโs heat turns punishing, or swing back after about 15:00 once the day groups have cleared. The 10:00โ13:00 window is the crush, and the worst light. Allow about an hour and a half on the island plus ten or fifteen minutes each way on the boat, and carry water โ thereโs little shade.
Of Aswanโs own sights, Philae is the one to prioritise โ better preserved and far more atmospheric than the High Dam, and the approach by water lifts it above an ordinary temple stop. The only friction is the boatman haggling and the heat, both of which you defuse by going early and agreeing prices first. If you want to see it differently, the after-dark Sound and Light show is a separate ticket and worth it on a cooler night.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Aswan city guide.
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