All Destinations
10 of 576 guides match
Amman
Jordan
Amman is the gateway to Jordan's ancient wonders β Petra, Wadi Rum, and the Dead Sea are all within reach. The city itself rewards exploration: the Citadel and Roman Theater anchor the historic core, while the Rainbow Street area buzzes with cafes and galleries. Jordanian hospitality is legendary, and the mansaf (lamb with yogurt sauce) is a must-try.
Beirut
Lebanon
The Paris of the Middle East is a resilient Mediterranean city of ancient ruins, legendary cuisine, vibrant nightlife, and a creative spirit that persists through every challenge.
Doha
Qatar
Qatar's capital glints across the Persian Gulf β futuristic skyscrapers along the Corniche, I.M. Pei's Museum of Islamic Art on its own peninsula, and Jean Nouvel's desert-rose National Museum. Souq Waqif preserves the old market vibe with falconry shops + Persian-style restaurants. The Pearl-Qatar artificial island and Katara Cultural Village extend the modern face; the Inland Sea desert at the Saudi border delivers dune-bashing day trips. World Cup 2022 host. Hamad International is Qatar Airways' superhub β many travelers arrive on the stopover program.

Jeddah
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia's Red Sea gateway and the historic embarkation port for the Mecca pilgrimage β 4.7 million people on a humid coast where the architecture is older, the food is more Levantine, and the pace is gentler than Riyadh. Al-Balad, the UNESCO-listed old town, is a labyrinth of coral-stone houses with carved-wood rawasheen balconies that sealed in shade and modesty for 500 years. The 30-kilometre Corniche promenade runs north along the Red Sea past the King Fahd Fountain (the world's tallest at 312 metres) and the white minaret of the Floating Mosque. Offshore, the Red Sea has some of the planet's least-visited coral reefs. Hotter and stickier than Riyadh; same November-to-March visiting window.
Jerusalem
Israel
The most contested 0.9 kmΒ² on Earth β the Old City's four quarters hold the Western Wall, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Dome of the Rock, and the Via Dolorosa in such proximity that the city's air itself feels charged with 3,000 years of prayer. Beyond the walls: Yad Vashem is the world's most important Holocaust memorial; the Israel Museum holds the Dead Sea Scrolls; Mahane Yehuda market is one of the Middle East's best food markets. Check current advisories.
Muscat
Oman
Oman's elegant capital between mountains and sea β the stunning Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque, historic Muttrah Souk, pristine wadis, and genuine Arabian hospitality in one of the Middle East's safest cities.
Nizwa
Oman
The cradle of Islam in Oman and the country's capital under the imamate from 1624, sitting in a date-palm oasis 1.5 hours inland from Muscat at the foot of the Hajar mountains. The town is dominated by Nizwa Fort, the giant 1668 round tower built to defend the falaj-irrigated oasis, and by its Friday goat market where Bedouin traders parade live animals around a circular auction floor while silversmiths hammer khanjar daggers in the adjoining souq. Half an hour up the switchbacks lies Jebel Akhdar, the green mountain whose terraced villages distil rosewater each April and May from the Damascene roses that bloom on the cliff edges.

Riyadh
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia's capital is the most rapidly transforming city in the Gulf β a desert plateau metropolis of 14 million whose Vision 2030 reset has brought tourist eVisas (since 2019), women drivers, public concerts, and the city-scale Riyadh Season festival running each October to March. The skyline is dominated by the Kingdom Centre Tower with its 65th-floor Sky Bridge, the National Museum sits in the King Abdulaziz Historical Centre, and Diriyah β the mud-brick UNESCO seat of the original Saudi state β is being restored on the city's western edge. Ninety minutes northwest, the Edge of the World cliffs (Jebel Fihrayn) drop 300 metres into a pink desert. Summer is brutal at 45Β°C plus; visit November through March.

Salalah
Oman
Oman's southern Dhofar capital, a tropical anomaly on the Arabian Peninsula where the Khareef monsoon turns 1,000 km of desert green between June and September. While the rest of the Gulf is hitting 45Β°C, Salalah sits under a cool 25-30Β°C drizzle, drawing Saudi and Emirati families to its banana plantations, frankincense-scented mountains and Indian-Ocean beaches. The Frankincense Trail UNESCO sites run through the suburbs β Sumhuram on the Khor Rori lagoon, Al Baleed in the city, and the desert outpost of Wubar β and the Hilton and Anantara Al Baleed beach resorts anchor a coastline lined with date palms and old fishing villages.