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Old Nov 15, 2005 | 1:50 pm
  #1  
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Tips in Egypt?

Search is not my friend today....

For the experts out there, what are you recommended tip amounts when travelling in Egypt?

We have arranged a private tour. Do we pay the company representative anything? Pay the driver - each day? or at the end?

Restaurant tips?

Anyone with some advice on what is proper level of tipping and for who?

Thanks,
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Old Nov 15, 2005 | 5:07 pm
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William, I know your trip is eminent, and I put my google skills to work.

This site had some guidelines that make sense to me from my own travel in Egypt.

This is a matter of personal discretion. Although bills normally include a service charge, it is customary to tip in restaurants and other places that cater to tourists. You may use the following as a guideline:



* Porters: 50 per bag
* Waiter/Waitress: $1.00 per person (dinner)
* Chamber Maid: 50 per person, per day
* Driver/Guide: $6.00 per person, per day
* Cruise Staff: $3.00 per person, per day
* Bus Driver: $2.00 per person, per day
* Group Tour Guide: $5.00 per person, per day
* Private Car Tour Guide: $10 - $15 per person, per day

Tipping is considered by locals to be a part of their normal remuneration and some may approach you for additional "compensation". There is no need to be intimidated by the request, nor should you feel pressured to pay more than recommended. If you become uncomfortable by any behavior you encounter, please advise your tour escort.
I have always paid drivers at the end of a trip as we are parting. I sometimes put the money in an envelope to leave with them. However, if your driver changes throughout the trip, you'll need to "tip as you go".
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Old Nov 18, 2005 | 9:25 pm
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Tips for Egypt

A few tips from one was there before and during 9/11, and I hope some things have changed.

1. Be prepared to tip people in museums and the like, even with a tour. We traveled there and had the locals volunteer to be in the pictures, only to want to have a tip immediately thereafter. Failure to tip was met with anger, and when we attempted (nicely) to shoo others out of frame *before* we took pictures, we had 3 different situations where the security and/or police would then prevent us from taking pictures altogether or outright taking the cameras/film until we agreed to having the locals 'pose'. Sometimes the security and/or police also wanted tips, too, for their trouble.

2. Take plenty of water and toilet paper with you on your visits. I am not kidding and cannot stress this enough. Otherwise, expect to have to pay additional tips for these necessities. As bad as this sounds, we supported the local children somehow by this...we never had the TP and they would charge us like 10 cents Egyptian for each sheet, which they would hand under the door. It was a bit tolerable at the beginning, but at the end it just got a bit much and good tippers just would cause a small group to form, wanting even more.

3. Learn and apply local customs. This means women do *not* go unaccompanied without men. This means wear proper attire, especially when visiting holy sites and/or historic ones. This means covering all applicable exposed skin areas, plus a few inches more. This means listening to your guide and asking questions *before* you leave the bus or the hotel. And not touching the numerous artifacts, columns, or architecture, even if you see others doing it.

4. Visit your local travel clinic before leaving, get all shots updated as needed and make sure you have backup meds just in case, esp for stomach ailments. Many things there, even in prosperous areas such as Cairo's Nazr City area, are highly unhygienic compared to US/Western European standards.

5. Know where and how your souvenirs are being made. We had 2 people order hand made rugs, only to find later the rugs were made by child labour for 2 meals/day and maybe $14.00 USD total per child. If that's a problem for you, ask questions first, *with* the help of your tour guide.

Trust me, I speak from experience on these: my group of 10 women did not for the first few days and learned the hard way. Took some getting used to being accompanied by guards with guns to protect us, but we were not given a choice. However, had we not learned quickly from these mistakes when 9/11 came around, Lord only knows what trouble we would have gotten ourselves into. Egypt was both enlightening and fascinating, but also highly combustible under inhospitable conditions for Americans.
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Old Nov 19, 2005 | 7:02 am
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Originally Posted by Fair Dinkum Flyer
A few tips from one was there before and during 9/11, and I hope some things have changed.


2. Take plenty of water and toilet paper with you on your visits. I am not kidding and cannot stress this enough. Otherwise, expect to have to pay additional tips for these necessities. As bad as this sounds, we supported the local children somehow by this...we never had the TP and they would charge us like 10 cents Egyptian for each sheet, which they would hand under the door. It was a bit tolerable at the beginning, but at the end it just got a bit much and good tippers just would cause a small group to form, wanting even more.

My experience is that these children are maintaining the toilet, not just standing outside demanding a tip. we found all such toilets to be quite clean.
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Old Nov 19, 2005 | 5:50 pm
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Originally Posted by wharvey
Anyone with some advice on what is proper level of tipping and for who?
I have made two trips to Egypt, which doesn't qualify me as an expert but gives me this piece of knowledge: a depressing part of traveling in Egypt is that EVERYONE is going to want some amount of money from you for the most trivial of services or assistance--whether you think those services were actually performed or not. I am quite uncomfortable with this whole scenario and therefore try to anticipate and fend off any "help" that I don't need. This can be as meaningless as the toilet paper situation that Fair Dinkum Flyer mentions, or a guy "guarding" your shoes in the huge rack of unattended footwear when you're visiting a mosque, or the guy who asks you if you need a taxi and then escorts you to the taxi rank where he points out the cabs, etc.

On the other hand, one thing I was happily surprised by was the lack of attention I received from the male population of Egyt. I had been scared silly by friends who'd traveled there before me regarding the hassles I would receive as a Western woman traveling alone. Nonetheless, I spent whole days wandering Cairo--mostly the non-touristy sections--without anyone saying boo to me. I wear long-sleeved floppy shirts and long skirts on such jaunts, but it's not like my hair/skin aren't a dead giveaway as to my origins. But no one cared at all. Very refreshing.
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