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Cap Bon, Tunisia
Cap Bon

North-east Tunisia

Cap Bon

Tunisia's main resort peninsula done honestly: where to base between Hammamet and Nabeul, what the orange-grove hinterland is actually worth, and getting around without a hire car.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Cap Bon at a glance

Cap Bon is the peninsula most UK package weeks actually land on โ€” Hammamet and its purpose-built Yasmine marina strip are the country's biggest concentration of all-inclusive resorts, 45 minutes from Enfidha airport and an hour from Tunis. It rewards you for leaving the pool: Nabeul's Friday market and pottery workshops, the orange and citrus groves the peninsula is famous for, the thermal village of Korbous on the gulf cliffs, and the Roman quarries at El Haouaria out at the tip. You don't need a hire car โ€” louages and pre-booked drivers cover everything โ€” and the resort coast sits well clear of any FCDO travel-advice line. Allow a 7-night base with two or three half-day trips off the strip.

Cap Bon is the peninsula most UK package weeks quietly land on without anyone calling it by name: the Hammamet bay, with its sealed Yasmine marina strip of all-inclusive resorts, is simply where the charter flights into Enfidha point. Treated as a pure beach week it does the job, but the peninsulaโ€™s pleasure is the bit just inland โ€” Nabeulโ€™s pottery workshops and its big Friday souk, the citrus and orange groves the cape is named for in every Tunisianโ€™s head, and the cliffside thermal village of Korbous on the Gulf of Tunis side.

The mistake first-timers make is assuming they need a hire car to reach any of it, then never leaving the resort because Tunisian driving looks chaotic from the coach window. You donโ€™t need the car: Nabeul is a twenty-minute louage from Hammamet for a couple of dinars, and the few spots the shared minibuses donโ€™t reach well โ€” Kelibiaโ€™s fort, the El Haouaria quarry caves, Korbous โ€” are better done with a pre-booked driver for the day. Base on the strip if you want everything easy, in the old town for the medina, or in Nabeul itself if youโ€™d rather a working town and cheaper rooms than a resort bubble.

The route

A relaxed 7-night peninsula week built around a Hammamet or Yasmine Hammamet base, with the medina, Nabeul and the tip of the cape as half-day trips off the resort strip. Transfer times are car/louage estimates from the resort coast; the louage stations in Nabeul and Hammamet cover most of it for a few dinars.

  1. Days 1โ€“2

    Settle into the resort coast

    Pre-book a transfer rather than haggling a taxi after the flight โ€” Enfidha to Hammamet is about 45 minutes, Tunisโ€“Carthage about an hour. Change a modest amount of money at the airport (you can't have brought dinars with you) and spend the first two days slow: the long sandy bay, the resort, and a first wander into Hammamet's compact medina and Kasbah by the sea.

  2. Day 3

    Nabeul market and pottery

    Nabeul is the peninsula's working capital and the pottery centre of Tunisia โ€” its big Friday souk is the regional market day, and the ceramics and rush-matting workshops are open most of the week. It's about 20 minutes and a couple of dinars by louage from Hammamet, or a short petit-taxi hop. Half a day is plenty; agree the taxi fare before you get in.

  3. Day 4

    The tip of the cape: Kelibia and El Haouaria

    Head out to the cape's end โ€” Kelibia's Byzantine-and-Ottoman fort sits above one of the peninsula's best beaches, and the Roman sandstone quarry caves at El Haouaria (Ghar el Kรฉbir) are cut into the cliffs near the Sicily-facing point. It's about 1h15โ€“1h30 by car from Hammamet, so this works best as a pre-booked driver day or a guided trip rather than louage-hopping.

  4. Days 5โ€“7

    Korbous, or slow down

    Either wind back down to the beach for the rest of the week, or take a half-day to Korbous, the cliffside thermal-spring village on the Gulf of Tunis side, about an hour from Hammamet. On a longer trip, Cap Bon also pairs naturally with a day north to Tunis, Carthage and Sidi Bou Saรฏd โ€” roughly an hour each way.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Hammamet (old town)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The characterful base: a walled medina and a 15th-century Kasbah right on the sea, low-rise hotels and a more Tunisian feel than the marina strip. Better if you want the town and the beach in walking distance rather than a sealed resort bubble. Some older hotels here are dated, so check recent reviews.

Best for: Medina, walkability, a less resort-bubble feel

Browse hotels Peninsula south

Yasmine Hammamet

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The purpose-built resort strip just south of the old town: a marina, a dense run of large all-inclusive hotels and the Medina Mediterranea theme-medina. Newer, more polished and more self-contained โ€” the default for a first all-inclusive week where you want everything easy and on-site.

Best for: First-timers and families on all-inclusive

Browse hotels Peninsula south

Nabeul

ยฃ value

The peninsula's working town, 15 km up the coast, with its own beach, the Friday market and the pottery quarter. Rooms and guesthouses run cheaper than the Hammamet resorts and you're in a real Tunisian town rather than a strip โ€” best if you want value and local life over an all-inclusive bubble.

Best for: Independent travellers wanting value and a real town

Browse hotels Peninsula east coast

Getting around Cap Bon

Cap Bon is small and you don't need a hire car for it. Within and between the coastal towns, louages โ€” shared minibuses that leave when full from a central station โ€” are the local way to move, costing a couple of dinars for the Hammametโ€“Nabeul hop and far more frequent than the bus. Inside the towns, use the yellow petits taxis but insist on the meter or agree the fare before you get in, as un-metered tourist fares are the most common overcharge. For the tip of the cape (Kelibia, El Haouaria) and Korbous, where louages are thinner, a pre-booked driver for the day or a guided tour is simpler than chaining connections. Self-drive only makes sense if you're touring beyond the peninsula, and even then Tunisian driving is more stress than it's worth on a short resort week โ€” bring your UK licence if you do hire. Carry small dinar notes, as drivers and louages rarely have change for large ones.

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Where to stay

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Tours & tickets

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Airport transfers

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Car hire

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Stay connected

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Trains & rail passes

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See the full Tunisia guide

Cap Bon FAQs

Where should you base yourself on Cap Bon?
For a first all-inclusive week, Yasmine Hammamet is the easy default โ€” a modern marina strip of large resorts with everything on-site. Hammamet old town is more characterful, with a walled medina and a seafront Kasbah. Nabeul, 15 km up the coast, is a working town with cheaper rooms and the Friday market if you want value and local life over a resort bubble.
How do you get from the airport to Cap Bon?
Enfidhaโ€“Hammamet is the closest airport at roughly 45 minutes by transfer to the Hammamet resorts, and it's the main charter and package gateway. Tunisโ€“Carthage is about an hour and useful if you're combining the peninsula with the capital. Pre-book a transfer rather than haggling a taxi after a three-hour flight, and change a little money at the airport since you can't bring dinars in.
Do you need a car on Cap Bon?
No. Louages (shared minibuses) and the yellow petits taxis cover the coastal towns cheaply โ€” Hammamet to Nabeul is about 20 minutes and a couple of dinars. For the cape's tip at Kelibia and El Haouaria, or the Korbous thermal village, a pre-booked driver or a guided day is simpler than louage-hopping. Skip self-drive on a resort week; Tunisian driving makes it more stress than it's worth.

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