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Doha 7-Day — The Full Qatar Experience

Doha's core + the desert + heritage and art + a Gulf neighbor + northern Qatar + a relaxed finish

Seven days does Qatar properly. Days 1-3 cover Doha's core and the desert safari; Day 4 is heritage and art; Day 5 is a Gulf-neighbor day trip; Day 6 explores northern Qatar (the UNESCO Al Zubarah fort, Zekreet, and the west coast); Day 7 is a relaxed beach-and-pool finish before departure. Visit November-March for comfortable weather. Book the desert safari, any neighbor-country flights, and a north-Qatar tour or rental car ahead.

A full week is enough to actually understand Doha. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$605

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,345

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$3,280

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Museum of Islamic Art + Corniche + Souq Waqif

Museum of Islamic Art - MIA Park - Corniche promenade - Souq Waqif evening - Karak tea

Activities

  1. 09:30 Museum of Islamic Art (MIA) 2h30

    Start at I.M. Pei's landmark building on its own island — one of the world's great collections of Islamic art across 1,400 years, with general entry free. The architecture and the skyline-across-the-water setting are as much the draw as the galleries.

    Cost: Free (temporary exhibits may charge) TIP: Go early to beat the midday heat and crowds. General admission is free. Allow time for the building and the views, not just the collection. It's closed on some days (often a weekly closure) — check current hours. IDAM by Alain Ducasse is on the top floor for a later splurge.
  2. 12:30 MIA Park + waterfront lunch 1h30

    Step outside to MIA Park, the green waterfront space wrapping the museum, with the West Bay skyline across the bay and a park café. A relaxed spot for a light lunch and photos before the afternoon.

    Cost: $10-20 per person TIP: Great skyline photos from the park, especially looking toward West Bay. There's a café and shaded areas. In cooler months it's pleasant to linger; in summer keep it short and move indoors. The giant '7' sculpture (Richard Serra) is nearby.
  3. 16:00 Corniche promenade walk 1h30

    Walk a stretch of the Corniche, the long crescent-shaped waterfront promenade that frames Doha Bay, with the skyline on one side and traditional dhow boats moored on the other. The classic Doha view.

    Cost: Free (dhow cruise $15-25 optional) TIP: Late afternoon into sunset is the best light and temperature. You can hop on a traditional dhow boat for a short bay cruise (around $15-25). In hot months, save this for the evening. Comfortable shoes — it's a long promenade.
  4. 19:30 Souq Waqif evening + dinner 2h30

    Spend the evening at Souq Waqif, the restored traditional market — spice, textile, and gold lanes, the falcon souk, street performers, and the city's best restaurant row. Dine on Levantine mezze and grills at Damasca One or authentic Qatari food at Shay Al Shomous.

    Cost: $20-50 per person TIP: Evenings (after about 7pm) are when the souq comes alive and the heat eases. The falcon souk behind the main market is a uniquely Qatari sight. Damasca One has live music most nights. Finish with a Karak tea. No alcohol in the souq.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

West Bay / city · $8-20

Fuel up before the museum; many hotels include breakfast.

Lunch

MIA Park café

MIA Park · $10-20

A light waterfront lunch with skyline views.

Dinner

Damasca One or Shay Al Shomous

Souq Waqif · $20-50

Levantine mezze and grills, or authentic Qatari machboos.

Transit:

The Doha Metro (around QAR 2-6 / $0.55-1.65 per ride) plus short taxis cover the day. MIA, the Corniche, and Souq Waqif are all near the waterfront and close together. Use taxis or rideshare in the midday heat.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $170 Luxury $420
DAY 2

National Museum + Katara + The Pearl

National Museum of Qatar - Katara Cultural Village - The Pearl-Qatar marina - Lusail skyline

Activities

  1. 09:30 National Museum of Qatar 2h30

    Jean Nouvel's spectacular 'desert rose' building near Souq Waqif tells Qatar's story — from the natural environment and Bedouin life to pearling, oil, and the modern nation — through large-scale, immersive galleries. One of Doha's most impressive newer attractions.

    Cost: ~$13 (QAR 50) TIP: The interlocking-disc architecture, inspired by the desert rose crystal, is a highlight in itself. The galleries are immersive and child-friendly. Allow 2-3 hours. Go in the morning. It's a short hop from Souq Waqif by metro or taxi.
  2. 13:00 Lunch + Katara Cultural Village 2h30

    Head to Katara, a purpose-built cultural district of galleries, an open-air amphitheater, mosques, a beach, and restaurants. Lunch among its dining options, then wander the heritage architecture and any current exhibitions or events.

    Cost: $15-30 lunch + free entry TIP: Katara is pleasant to stroll, especially the amphitheater and the ornate Golden Mosque. Saffron Lounge (upscale Indian) is here if you want a refined meal. Check for events — Katara hosts festivals and shows. The beach is a nice add-on.
  3. 17:30 The Pearl-Qatar marina 1h30

    Move to The Pearl-Qatar, an upscale artificial island with a Mediterranean-style marina (Porto Arabia), luxury yachts, boutiques, and waterfront dining. A relaxed late-afternoon stroll with photogenic architecture and people-watching.

    Cost: Free (dining/shopping extra) TIP: The marina promenade is the spot for a sunset walk and a coffee. It's a glossy, modern contrast to the souq. Plenty of cafés and restaurants line the water. Easy to combine with dinner here or back in the city.
  4. 20:00 Dinner at The Pearl + Lusail skyline 2h

    Dine along The Pearl's marina or sample Indian street food at Jwala in Medina Centrale. Optionally continue to nearby Lusail to see the futuristic skyline and Place Vendôme mall lit up at night.

    Cost: $25-60 per person TIP: The Pearl has a wide range of waterfront restaurants. Lusail (a short drive north) is the country's newest city, striking after dark, with the Place Vendôme mall and the World Cup-era skyline. A relaxed, modern evening to balance the heritage of Day 1.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

City · $8-20

A quick start before the National Museum.

Lunch

Katara dining

Katara Cultural Village · $15-30

Lunch in the cultural village — Saffron Lounge for a step up.

Dinner

The Pearl marina or Jwala

The Pearl-Qatar · $25-60

Waterfront dining, or Indian street food at Jwala.

Transit:

Metro and taxis cover the day; The Pearl and Lusail are north of the center and easiest by taxi/rideshare or the metro plus a short connection. Katara has its own metro access via Legtaifiya.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $75 Mid $180 Luxury $450
DAY 3

Desert safari to the Inland Sea

4WD dune bashing - camel ride - Khor Al Adaid (Inland Sea) - Bedouin camp - return to Doha

Activities

  1. 08:30 Depart for the desert (4WD pickup) 1h30

    A guided desert safari picks you up from your hotel in a 4WD. Head south toward Khor Al Adaid (the Inland Sea), a UNESCO-recognized natural area near the Saudi border where the sea reaches deep into the dunes — a rare and dramatic landscape.

    Cost: Included in safari ($70-110) TIP: Book a reputable operator in advance; pickups are from hotels. Best November-March — summer heat makes it unpleasant. Bring sunglasses, sunscreen, water, and a light scarf for the sand. Confirm what your tour includes (camel ride, camp, lunch).
  2. 10:00 Dune bashing + camel ride 2h

    Experience 4WD dune bashing over the rolling sand dunes — an exhilarating ride — followed by a camel ride and time to take in the desert scenery. Some tours include sandboarding.

    Cost: Included in safari TIP: Dune bashing is bumpy and thrilling; sit securely and tell the driver if you'd prefer a gentler ride. The camel ride and photo stops are highlights. Hold onto loose items. Mornings are cooler and best for the experience.
  3. 12:30 Inland Sea (Khor Al Adaid) + Bedouin camp 2h30

    Reach the Inland Sea itself — calm water surrounded by towering dunes — and stop at a Bedouin-style desert camp for lunch, tea, and a chance to relax. Some camps offer swimming in the shallow inland water in the cooler months.

    Cost: Included in safari TIP: The Inland Sea is the scenic payoff — a landscape you won't find in many places. The camp lunch is typically a barbecue or Arabic spread with Karak tea. In the cool season you can paddle or swim. A genuinely memorable half-to-full day.
  4. 16:00 Return to Doha + relaxed evening 2h30

    Drive back to the city in the late afternoon. Wind down with a relaxed final evening — a Karak tea on the Corniche, a last wander through Souq Waqif, or dinner with a skyline view.

    Cost: Return included + dinner extra TIP: You'll be back by late afternoon or early evening depending on the tour. A gentle final night suits the long desert day. If your flight is that night, allow time to clean up — desert sand gets everywhere. Confirm your return time with the operator.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast

City · $8-20

Eat before the desert pickup; tours start early.

Lunch

Bedouin camp lunch

Desert (Khor Al Adaid) · Included in safari

A desert barbecue or Arabic spread with Karak tea.

Dinner

Corniche or Souq Waqif

City · $20-50

A relaxed final-evening meal back in the city.

Transit:

The desert safari includes 4WD transport with hotel pickup and drop-off — no self-driving (the Inland Sea requires dune-driving experience). Back in the city, metro and taxis as usual.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $110 Mid $200 Luxury $460
DAY 4

Heritage, art & a slower Doha day

Msheireb Museums - Souq Waqif by day - art galleries - mall + skyline evening

Activities

  1. 09:30 Msheireb Museums + downtown 2h

    Explore the Msheireb Museums — four restored heritage houses in the regenerated Msheireb Downtown district that tell the story of Doha's early families, the oil era, and social history. Free and thoughtfully done, in Qatar's first sustainable downtown.

    Cost: Free TIP: Msheireb Downtown is a clean, modern, walkable area built on heritage foundations, with its own metro station. The museums are compact and free. A good cooler-hours indoor option. Combine with a coffee in the district's cafés.
  2. 12:00 Souq Waqif by daylight + lunch 2h30

    Return to Souq Waqif in daytime to browse the spice, textile, and handicraft shops at a calmer pace than the evening crowds, and have lunch at one of its restaurants. See the falcon souk and the Gold Souk nearby.

    Cost: $15-30 lunch TIP: Daytime is quieter for shopping and photos, though some stalls open later. The falcon souk and the spice lanes are highlights. Good for souvenirs — spices, oud, textiles. Bargaining is expected in the souks. Al Aker Sweets for a kunafa break.
  3. 16:00 Art galleries or Katara Beach 2h

    Spend the afternoon on art (the Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, or galleries in Katara and the Fire Station arts center) or relax at Katara Beach. Choose culture or downtime depending on energy.

    Cost: Free-$15 TIP: Mathaf is Doha's modern Arab art museum — a quieter, rewarding stop. The Fire Station is a contemporary arts center in a former civil-defense building. Or simply unwind at Katara Beach in the cooler hours. Mix and match to taste.
  4. 19:30 Mall evening + skyline dinner 2h30

    Round off with a visit to a flagship mall — Villaggio (with its indoor canal and gondolas) or Place Vendôme in Lusail — and dinner with a West Bay or Lusail skyline view.

    Cost: $25-60 per person TIP: Doha's malls are destinations in themselves, especially in the heat — Villaggio's Venetian theme and Place Vendôme's scale are worth seeing. Plenty of dining. A relaxed, air-conditioned evening, with the lit skyline as a backdrop.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast

Msheireb Downtown · $8-15

Coffee and a pastry in the modern downtown district.

Lunch

Souq Waqif restaurant

Souq Waqif · $15-30

A calmer daytime souq lunch — mezze or Qatari dishes.

Dinner

Mall or skyline restaurant

Villaggio / Lusail · $25-60

Dinner with a skyline view to cap the day.

Transit:

Metro covers Msheireb and Souq Waqif easily; taxis/rideshare for Katara, the malls, and Lusail. A relaxed day, so the heat is easy to manage with air-conditioned stops.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $165 Luxury $420
DAY 5

Day trip to Dubai or Abu Dhabi (or a beach day)

Short flight to a Gulf neighbor - landmark sights - return to Doha, or a relaxed Doha beach/pool day

Activities

  1. 07:30 Fly to Dubai or Abu Dhabi (optional) 2h (incl. airport)

    Catch an early short flight (about 1 hour) to Dubai or Abu Dhabi for a packed day-trip — or skip the travel and enjoy a relaxed final day in Doha by the beach and pool.

    Cost: $150-300 round-trip flight TIP: A same-day Gulf hop is ambitious but doable with early flights — Dubai for Burj Khalifa/Dubai Mall, Abu Dhabi for the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. If you'd rather relax, a Doha beach/pool day is a fine alternative. Decide based on your energy and budget.
  2. 10:30 Headline sights in the neighbor city 4h

    In Dubai, see the Burj Khalifa and Dubai Mall or the historic Al Fahidi district; in Abu Dhabi, the breathtaking Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. A taste of a contrasting Gulf city in a day.

    Cost: $30-60 entries TIP: Pick two or three landmarks, not a full itinerary — it's a day trip. Pre-book timed tickets (Burj Khalifa, Louvre Abu Dhabi). Dress modestly for the Grand Mosque (abayas provided). Use taxis/metro within the city. Keep an eye on your return flight time.
  3. 16:00 Late lunch + free time 2h30

    Have a relaxed late lunch and a little free time — a souk, a waterfront, or a café — before heading back to the airport for the short hop to Doha.

    Cost: $20-40 per person TIP: Don't overpack the schedule; build in buffer for traffic and check-in. A waterfront lunch (Dubai Marina, the Abu Dhabi Corniche) is a pleasant wind-down. Confirm your return flight and allow airport time.
  4. 20:00 Return to Doha + farewell dinner 2h30

    Fly back to Doha and finish with a farewell dinner — a Souq Waqif feast, IDAM atop the Museum of Islamic Art, or a skyline restaurant in West Bay.

    Cost: $25-100 per person TIP: If you skipped the day trip, this is simply a relaxed last evening in Doha. IDAM or a Pearl-marina restaurant makes a memorable send-off; book ahead. Keep your final morning free for departure logistics.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Airport or early breakfast

Doha / en route · $8-15

A quick bite before the early flight (or a leisurely Doha breakfast if staying).

Lunch

Neighbor-city waterfront

Dubai / Abu Dhabi · $20-40

A relaxed lunch between landmarks (or a Doha beach-club lunch).

Dinner

Farewell dinner in Doha

Souq Waqif / West Bay · $25-100

A Souq Waqif feast or a skyline restaurant to finish.

Transit:

The day trip uses a short (about 1-hour) flight each way between Doha and Dubai/Abu Dhabi; within those cities, taxis and metro. If you stay in Doha, metro and taxis as usual for a beach/pool day.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $280 Luxury $650
DAY 6

Northern Qatar — Al Zubarah, Zekreet & the coast

Al Zubarah Fort (UNESCO) - Zekreet desert & Richard Serra sculpture - Purple Island - west-coast scenery

Activities

  1. 08:30 Drive north to Al Zubarah Fort (UNESCO) 2h

    Head about an hour north to Al Zubarah, Qatar's only UNESCO World Heritage Site — a restored early-20th-century fort and the archaeological remains of a once-important 18th-19th-century pearling and trading town on the northwest coast.

    Cost: Free (tour or rental car) TIP: It's a quiet, atmospheric site — the fort plus an excavated town in open desert. A rental car or a guided north-Qatar tour is needed; there's no easy public transport. Go in the cooler hours. Bring water and sun protection — it's exposed.
  2. 11:00 Zekreet + the Richard Serra sculpture 2h

    Drive to the Zekreet peninsula on the west coast for its eerie mushroom-shaped rock formations and Richard Serra's 'East-West/West-East' — four towering steel plates standing in the empty desert, a striking land-art installation.

    Cost: Free TIP: The Serra sculpture is remote and reached by desert track — best with a 4WD or a tour. The Zekreet 'film city' set and rock formations are nearby. A surreal, photogenic stop. Confirm road conditions; this is genuinely off the beaten path.
  3. 14:00 Purple Island (Al Khor) or west-coast lunch 2h

    On the way back, stop at Purple Island near Al Khor — mangroves, shallow turquoise water, and walking trails named for an ancient purple-dye industry — or have a relaxed coastal lunch.

    Cost: $15-30 lunch TIP: Purple Island (Bin Ghanim) is a low-key nature spot with mangroves and birdlife — good for a stroll at low tide. Al Khor is a quieter coastal town. A calmer, scenic contrast to the city. Check tide times if you want to walk the mangroves.
  4. 18:00 Return to Doha + relaxed dinner 2h30

    Drive back to the city in the evening for a relaxed dinner — a Souq Waqif meal, a Corniche stroll, or a quiet hotel dinner after the long day out.

    Cost: $20-50 per person TIP: It's a full day of driving and exposed sites, so a low-key evening suits. If you took a guided tour, you'll be dropped back at your hotel. A good day to appreciate Qatar beyond the capital. Hydrate after the desert hours.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast

City · $8-20

Fuel up before the drive north.

Lunch

Al Khor / coast

Northern Qatar · $15-30

A relaxed coastal lunch near Al Khor or Purple Island.

Dinner

Souq Waqif or hotel

Doha · $20-50

A relaxed evening meal back in the city.

Transit:

Northern Qatar needs a rental car or a guided tour — there's no convenient public transport to Al Zubarah, Zekreet, or Purple Island. Zekreet's Serra sculpture is best reached with a 4WD. Allow a full day with driving.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $90 Mid $200 Luxury $480
DAY 7

Relaxed finish + departure

Beach/pool morning - last souvenirs - final Karak - DOH departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 Beach or pool morning 2h30

    Take it slow on the final morning — a hotel beach club or pool, or a quiet walk along the Corniche or Katara Beach. A gentle wind-down after a full week.

    Cost: Hotel facilities / free TIP: Most hotels have good pool and beach facilities — a relaxed way to spend a departure morning. In summer this is the most comfortable option anyway. Keep it easy and leave time for packing and check-out.
  2. 12:30 Last souvenirs + Karak tea 1h30

    Pick up final souvenirs — spices, oud, textiles, or sweets from Souq Waqif or a mall — and have one last Karak tea, the quintessential Qatari drink, before heading out.

    Cost: Shopping + $1-2 tea TIP: Souq Waqif is best for characterful souvenirs (spices, oud perfume, textiles); malls are easy for sealed gifts. A final Karak is the right send-off. Keep some small cash for souk stalls. Don't leave it too late before the airport.
  3. 15:00 Head to Hamad International Airport (DOH) 1h

    Travel to the airport — about 20-30 minutes by metro (Red Line) or taxi. Hamad International is highly rated and worth arriving a little early to enjoy, with its art installations, lounges, and shopping.

    Cost: Metro ~QAR 4 / taxi ~QAR 50-70 TIP: The metro Red Line runs straight to the airport for around QAR 4. Hamad International is a destination in itself — leave time for the iconic Lamp Bear sculpture, the gardens, and the lounges. Arrive 3 hours before long-haul flights.
  4. 17:00 Departure (or onward stopover)

    Depart from DOH — or, if Doha was a stopover, continue your Qatar Airways connection onward, ending the week with a smooth airport experience.

    Cost: — TIP: Hamad International's transit facilities are excellent if you have a connection. Duty-free, lounges, and quiet zones make a layover comfortable. A fitting end to a week that began with the city's stopover appeal.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

City · $8-20

A relaxed final breakfast.

Lunch

Souq Waqif or mall

Doha · $12-25

A last casual lunch while souvenir shopping.

Dinner

Airport or in-flight

DOH / en route · $10-25

A bite at the highly rated airport before departure.

Transit:

Metro Red Line or taxi to Hamad International Airport (DOH), about 20-30 minutes. Allow 3 hours before long-haul departures.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $150 Luxury $400

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Packing Checklist

Doha 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long for Doha?
Not if you use the extra days well. Beyond the city core and the desert, seven days adds a heritage-and-art day, a Gulf-neighbor day trip (Dubai or Abu Dhabi), a day exploring northern Qatar (the UNESCO Al Zubarah fort, Zekreet's land art, Purple Island), and a relaxed beach finish. It turns a stopover city into a full Qatar-and-Gulf experience. If you only want the highlights, 3 days suffices.
What's worth seeing in northern Qatar?
Al Zubarah Fort is Qatar's only UNESCO World Heritage Site — a restored fort and the remains of an old pearling town. Zekreet on the west coast has surreal rock formations and Richard Serra's monumental 'East-West/West-East' steel sculpture in the open desert. Purple Island near Al Khor offers mangroves and turquoise shallows. You'll need a rental car or a guided tour, and ideally a 4WD for the Serra sculpture.
Can I combine Doha with the wider Gulf in a week?
Yes — a roughly 1-hour flight links Doha with Dubai and Abu Dhabi, so a day trip (or a longer split stay) is easy. This 7-day plan includes one neighbor-city day, but you could equally spend 4-5 days in Doha and 2-3 in Dubai. Check entry rules for each country separately, and pre-book headline attractions like the Burj Khalifa or the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque.
How do I handle a week in Doha's summer?
Restructure around the heat (42-44°C, June-September): make it indoor-and-pool-focused — museums, malls, Msheireb Museums, hotel beach clubs — with outdoor sights only early morning or after dark, and skip the desert and exposed northern sites. The reward is the year's lowest hotel prices. For a comfortable week of sightseeing and day trips, visit November-March.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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