TripPick Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia

Riyadh in 7 Days — The Saudi Grand Tour: Riyadh, AlUla & Jeddah

Capital heritage + the Edge of the World + Hegra UNESCO + Jeddah's Red Sea & Al-Balad old town

Riyadh 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
7 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$2,150
Budget–luxury
$965–$4,920

As of 2026, the recommended Riyadh 7-day route runs Day1 Old Riyadh — fortress, museum & skyline · Day2 Diriyah — the Saudi state's birthplace · Day3 Edge of the World day trip · Day4 Fly to AlUla — Hegra UNESCO tombs · Day5 More AlUla + flight back to Riyadh · Day6 Fly to Jeddah — Al-Balad UNESCO old town · Day7 Jeddah Red Sea + departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $2,150 on a mid-range budget. Seven days is the classic Saudi grand tour. Days 1-3 cover Riyadh (old city, Diriyah UNESCO, Edge of the World). Days 4-5 fly north to AlUla for Hegra and the desert landscapes. Days 6-7 fly to Jeddah on the Red Sea coast for the Al-Balad UNESCO old town, the Corniche, and a more relaxed coastal close. Each leg is a domestic flight, so build in transit time and book internal flights early. The one Saudi eVisa covers all three cities. Travel November-March to avoid the desert heat (Jeddah is humid and hot for more of the year than inland Riyadh). Note that nearby Mecca and Medina are closed to non-Muslims.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$965

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$2,150

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$4,920

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Riyadh hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Old Riyadh — fortress, museum & skyline

Masmak Fortress - National Museum - Souq Al-Zal - Kingdom Centre Sky Bridge at sunset

Activities

  1. 09:00 Masmak Fortress 1-1.5h

    Start in the historic heart at the 1865 mud-brick Masmak Fortress, where Abdulaziz Ibn Saud launched the 1902 raid that began modern Saudi Arabia. The compact fort now holds exhibits on the kingdom's founding — a quick but meaningful introduction to the national story.

    Cost: Around SAR 25-50 ($7-13); some free periods (verify) TIP: Morning hours are typically 08:00-12:00, reopening late afternoon — check before you go, as it closes midday. It sits in the old Deira/Qasr Al-Hokm district near the Souq Al-Zal, so combine the two. Dress modestly.
  2. 11:00 Souq Al-Zal 1h

    Walk to Riyadh's oldest souk, a warren of stalls selling Arabian antiques, carpets, brassware, incense, and handicrafts. It's the most traditional shopping experience in the city — good for browsing, bargaining, and a sense of pre-oil Riyadh.

    Cost: Free to browse; bargain for purchases TIP: Haggling is expected — start well below the asking price. Cash (riyals) is handy here even though cards are common elsewhere. Mind the midday prayer-time pause when some stalls shutter briefly.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — traditional kabsa 1h

    Break for the national dish at a casual Saudi spot like Al Romansiah — generous kabsa or mandi at good value. A relaxed, air-conditioned midday meal is the smart way to dodge the worst heat, even in winter.

    Cost: SAR 30-80 ($8-22) per person TIP: Try the mathloutha to taste kabsa and mandi rice together. Restaurants pause table service briefly at prayer times, so time your arrival around the call.
  4. 15:00 National Museum of Saudi Arabia 2h

    Spend the hot afternoon in the air-conditioned National Museum at the Al-Murabba historical complex — eight galleries spanning pre-Islamic Arabia, the rise of Islam, and the founding of the modern kingdom. The best single overview of Saudi history and a comfortable midday option.

    Cost: General admission is free (verify current policy) TIP: Admission has generally been free in recent years — confirm on arrival. The adjacent Al-Murabba Palace, an early residence of King Abdulaziz, is worth a look. Allow extra time; the galleries are extensive.
  5. 18:00 Kingdom Centre Sky Bridge at sunset 1-1.5h

    End the day 300m up on the Sky Bridge, the glass-and-steel span across the top of the 302m Kingdom Centre tower. The wraparound view over Riyadh's spreading skyline is best as the desert light fades and the city lights come on.

    Cost: Around SAR 138 ($37) per adult (price rose in 2026 — verify) TIP: The Sky Bridge ticket roughly doubled to about SAR 138 in 2026 — check the current price. Buy online or at the ground-floor counter to skip the walk-up queue. Sunset is the prime slot, so it's busiest then. Spazio restaurant lower in the tower makes a fitting dinner.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Hotel · SAR 20-60 ($5-16)

Fuel up before the morning sights; old-Riyadh cafés are limited early.

Lunch

Al Romansiah (kabsa & mandi)

Central Riyadh · SAR 30-80 ($8-22)

Casual, good-value introduction to the national dish.

Dinner

Spazio (Kingdom Centre tower)

Al Olaya · SAR 190-490 ($50-130)

Italian fine dining with a skyline view to cap the tower evening.

Transit:

Use Uber or Careem between sights (most in-city rides SAR 15-50 / $4-13). The old-Riyadh cluster (Masmak, Souq Al-Zal) is walkable internally; everything else needs a car. Allow buffer time for prayer-time pauses.

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

Budget $95 Mid $240 Luxury $620
DAY 2

Diriyah — the Saudi state's birthplace

At-Turaif UNESCO mud-brick district - Diriyah heritage walk - Bujairi Terrace dinner

Activities

  1. 10:00 At-Turaif UNESCO district 2-3h

    Head 15-20 minutes northwest to Diriyah, the ancestral seat of the Al Saud family and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2010. At-Turaif is a restored quarter of 15th-century-onward mud-brick palaces — including Salwa Palace — in the distinctive Najdi architectural style. It's the historic heart of the first Saudi state.

    Cost: Ticketed heritage areas (verify current pricing); some open zones free TIP: At-Turaif typically opens around 10:00 (later on Fridays) and runs into the evening — evenings are cooler and atmospheric when the district is lit. Wear comfortable shoes and sun protection; much of it is open-air. Modest dress as everywhere.
  2. 13:30 Lunch & the wider Diriyah grounds 2h

    Eat at Bujairi Terrace beside the heritage site, then explore the surrounding Diriyah grounds and walking paths along the Wadi Hanifah. The whole area is being developed under Diriyah Gate, so expect new venues, cafés, and construction alongside the historic core.

    Cost: SAR 75-265 ($20-70) per person at Bujairi Terrace TIP: Bujairi Terrace gathers Saudi heritage and international restaurants in one place. Paid parking nearby runs around SAR 30 for a few hours. The pace is relaxed — this is a half-day-plus, not a rush.
  3. 16:00 JAX District (arts & cafés) 1.5h

    A short drive away, the JAX District is a cluster of converted warehouses turned art galleries, studios, and specialty-coffee cafés — the creative, contemporary counterpoint to the heritage quarter. It shows the modern, Vision 2030 side of the same area.

    Cost: Free to wander; café spend SAR 15-45 ($4-12) TIP: Gallery and venue hours vary, so check what's open. The third-wave coffee scene here is a social hub for younger Saudis — a relaxed way to spend the late afternoon before dinner.
  4. 19:30 Evening at At-Turaif (lit up) + dinner 2h

    Return to Bujairi Terrace for dinner with the floodlit At-Turaif district as a backdrop — Takya for refined Saudi heritage cuisine, or one of the international venues. The evening is when Diriyah is at its most atmospheric and the desert heat has eased.

    Cost: SAR 95-265 ($25-70) per person TIP: Reserve on weekend nights, when Diriyah is busy. Outdoor terrace seating is lovely on a cool winter evening. Alcohol-free, like everywhere — the mocktail menus are part of the appeal.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café

Hotel · SAR 20-60 ($5-16)

Eat before heading out to Diriyah; the morning is the cooler half.

Lunch

Bujairi Terrace

Diriyah · SAR 75-265 ($20-70)

Saudi or international dining right beside the UNESCO site.

Dinner

Takya (Bujairi Terrace)

Diriyah · SAR 95-225 ($25-60)

Upscale Saudi heritage cuisine with the lit At-Turaif as a backdrop.

Transit:

Diriyah is 15-20 minutes northwest of central Riyadh by Uber/Careem. The heritage site, Bujairi Terrace, and JAX District are short hops from each other but not all walkable; ride-hailing between them is easiest.

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

Budget $100 Mid $250 Luxury $600
DAY 3

Edge of the World day trip

4WD desert drive - Jebel Fihrayn cliffs - panoramic escarpment - sunset return

Activities

  1. 13:00 Depart Riyadh by 4WD tour 2h (travel)

    The Edge of the World (Jebel Fihrayn) lies about 90-100km northwest of Riyadh, roughly 1.5-2 hours away, with the final stretch on rough desert track that requires a 4WD. The standard, safest approach is a guided 4WD tour with hotel pickup — there is no public transport out here.

    Cost: Around $50-100 per person for a guided 4WD tour TIP: Book a guided tour rather than self-driving a standard car — people get stuck or lost on the off-road approach. An afternoon departure is timed so you reach the cliffs for sunset. Bring at least 1.5L of water per person, closed-toe shoes, and sun protection.
  2. 15:30 The Jebel Fihrayn escarpment 2h

    Arrive at the dramatic Tuwaiq escarpment, where a roughly 300m cliff drops abruptly to a vast plain that looks like the literal edge of the world. Walk the rim, take in the geology, and find the well-known viewpoints — it's Saudi Arabia's most iconic natural photo.

    Cost: Included with tour (the site itself is free) TIP: Stay well back from the unfenced cliff edges — there are no railings and the drops are sheer. The light is harsh until late afternoon, then softens beautifully. Watch your footing on loose rock.
  3. 18:00 Sunset over the escarpment 1h

    The reason to time the trip for late afternoon: sunset over the endless plain below the cliffs is the standout moment, with the rock turning gold and orange. Tours usually pause here before the drive back.

    Cost: Included with tour TIP: Bring a layer — the desert cools quickly after sundown, especially in winter. A headlamp or phone light helps for the walk back to the vehicles in the dark.
  4. 19:30 Return to Riyadh 2h (travel)

    Drive back into the city (1.5-2 hours), arriving in the evening. A relaxed late dinner in Olaya — kabsa, a tower restaurant, or a casual café — is a good way to end the trip.

    Cost: Included with tour TIP: If you have a later flight or an extra evening, the Boulevard / Riyadh Season entertainment zone (active roughly October-March) is the place for the city's modern nightlife-substitute scene.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Hotel · SAR 20-60 ($5-16)

Eat well before a long afternoon out in the desert.

Lunch

Early lunch before departure

Central Riyadh · SAR 30-80 ($8-22)

Fuel up in the city; there's no reliable food at the Edge of the World.

Dinner

Najd Village or Olaya restaurant

Al Olaya · SAR 55-150 ($15-40)

A traditional Najdi dinner back in the city after the desert.

Transit:

A guided 4WD tour ($50-100 pp) is the practical and safest way to reach the Edge of the World — there is no public transport, and the final approach is unpaved desert track needing a 4WD.

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

Budget $110 Mid $230 Luxury $480
DAY 4

Fly to AlUla — Hegra UNESCO tombs

Morning flight north - Hegra Nabataean tombs - desert landscapes - AlUla oasis

Activities

  1. 08:00 Morning flight Riyadh to AlUla Half day (travel)

    Fly from Riyadh to AlUla (Prince Abdul Majeed bin Abdulaziz Airport), about 1h45 in the air — AlUla is roughly 1,000km northwest, so this is a real flight, not a day trip. Saudia and others operate the route, with limited frequency, so book ahead. Pick up a rental car or arrange transfers, as AlUla's sights are spread across the valley.

    Cost: Domestic flight ~$100-250 round trip (varies); transfers extra TIP: Flights to AlUla aren't daily on every carrier — lock in dates early. The same Saudi eVisa covers AlUla. Hotels range from oasis guesthouses to luxury desert resorts; book early, as capacity is tight.
  2. 14:00 Hegra (Mada'in Salih) UNESCO site 3h

    AlUla's centerpiece: Hegra, Saudi Arabia's first UNESCO World Heritage Site (2008), the Nabataean kingdom's southern city with more than 100 monumental rock-cut tombs — the same civilization that built Petra in Jordan, but far less crowded. Visits are by guided/rawi tour from the welcome center.

    Cost: Guided Hegra experience ticket (verify current pricing) TIP: Access to Hegra is by official tour with a 'rawi' storyteller-guide, booked in advance through the Experience AlUla platform — you can't just wander in. Late afternoon gives softer light and cooler temperatures. Tombs like Qasr al-Farid (the lone 'castle') are the highlights.
  3. 18:00 AlUla old town & sunset 2h

    End the day at AlUla Old Town, a labyrinth of restored mud-brick houses along the historic incense-route oasis, and catch the sunset over the dramatic sandstone valley. The old town has cafés, craft shops, and lit-up evening atmosphere.

    Cost: Free to wander; café/dining extra TIP: The old town is best in the cool evening. AlUla's landscapes — towering eroded sandstone — are extraordinary at golden hour. Modest dress and water as always.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Riyadh hotel / airport

Riyadh · SAR 20-60 ($5-16)

Eat before the morning flight north.

Lunch

AlUla café or hotel

AlUla · SAR 50-150 ($13-40)

A light lunch on arrival before the afternoon at Hegra.

Dinner

AlUla Old Town or resort

AlUla · SAR 75-265 ($20-70)

Dine in the lit old town or at your desert resort.

Transit:

Riyadh to AlUla is ~1h45 by air (about 1,000km) — a domestic flight, not a drive or day trip. In AlUla, a rental car or hotel transfers/shuttles are needed; sights are spread across the valley.

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

Budget $180 Mid $380 Luxury $850
DAY 5

More AlUla + flight back to Riyadh

Elephant Rock - desert canyons - oasis trails - evening flight south

Activities

  1. 08:30 Elephant Rock & desert landscapes 3h

    Spend the cooler morning among AlUla's natural icons — Jabal AlFil (Elephant Rock), a giant elephant-shaped sandstone formation, plus the canyons and rock formations that make the valley feel otherworldly. Easy to combine several stops by car or tour.

    Cost: Free to view; guided tours extra TIP: Morning is best before the heat builds. Elephant Rock has a small seated lounge area at its base — pleasant for a coffee. Keep to marked areas and bring water.
  2. 12:00 AlUla oasis & Dadan / Jabal Ikmah (optional) 2-3h

    If time allows, visit the ancient Dadan kingdom site and Jabal Ikmah, an open-air 'library' of pre-Arabic inscriptions carved into the rock — a quieter, deeply historic counterpoint to Hegra. Or simply walk the date-palm oasis trails.

    Cost: Site tickets via Experience AlUla (verify) TIP: Dadan and Jabal Ikmah are also booked through Experience AlUla. They're less famous than Hegra but reward history enthusiasts. Pace the day around your return flight time.
  3. 17:00 Evening flight back to Riyadh Half day (travel)

    Return to AlUla's airport for the flight back to Riyadh (about 1h45). Arrive in the evening; if your international flight is the next day, a final relaxed dinner in the city is a good close.

    Cost: Included in round-trip flight TIP: Confirm your return flight time in advance and leave buffer for the drive to AlUla's airport. If you fly internationally out of Riyadh, allow the next morning rather than connecting tightly the same night.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

AlUla hotel

AlUla · SAR 30-90 ($8-24)

Eat before the cool morning out among the rock formations.

Lunch

AlUla café or resort

AlUla · SAR 50-150 ($13-40)

A relaxed lunch before the afternoon sites and flight.

Dinner

Riyadh — Najd Village or Olaya

Al Olaya · SAR 55-150 ($15-40)

A final traditional Najdi dinner back in the capital.

Transit:

AlUla back to Riyadh is ~1h45 by air. Within AlUla, a rental car or tour transfers cover the spread-out sites; allow time to reach the airport for departure.

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

Budget $170 Mid $360 Luxury $800
DAY 6

Fly to Jeddah — Al-Balad UNESCO old town

Flight to the Red Sea coast - Al-Balad historic district - coral-stone houses - Corniche evening

Activities

  1. 09:00 Flight to Jeddah Half day (travel)

    From AlUla (or via Riyadh) fly to Jeddah, the Red Sea port city and the kingdom's most cosmopolitan, relaxed metropolis. Jeddah is the traditional gateway for Mecca pilgrims and has a markedly different, coastal feel from inland Riyadh — more humid, more open, with centuries of Hejazi trading history.

    Cost: Domestic flight (varies); transfers extra TIP: Routings vary — some itineraries connect via Riyadh rather than flying AlUla-Jeddah directly. Check schedules. Jeddah is more humid than Riyadh; even in winter it's milder and stickier. The same eVisa applies.
  2. 16:00 Al-Balad historic district 2-3h

    Explore Al-Balad, Jeddah's UNESCO-listed old town (inscribed 2014), a warren of centuries-old coral-stone merchant houses with carved wooden 'rawasheen' balconies, old mosques, and traditional souks. It's the best-preserved old Hejazi townscape and the historic heart of the city.

    Cost: Free to wander; some restored houses ticketed TIP: Late afternoon into evening is best — cooler, and the lanes come alive. Some historic houses are open as museums. Modest dress; the old souks are good for spices, perfumes, and crafts.
  3. 19:30 Jeddah Corniche & King Fahd Fountain 2h

    End on the waterfront Corniche, the city's long seaside promenade, with views of the King Fahd Fountain — the world's tallest of its kind, jetting seawater hundreds of meters into the air, lit at night. A relaxed coastal evening that contrasts with Riyadh's inland intensity.

    Cost: Free; dining extra TIP: The Corniche is a popular evening hangout for families. Plenty of casual seafood and Hejazi restaurants line the area. A laid-back finish to the day.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

AlUla hotel / airport

AlUla · SAR 30-90 ($8-24)

Eat before the flight to the coast.

Lunch

Jeddah arrival lunch

Jeddah · SAR 40-120 ($11-32)

Try Hejazi specialties — different from inland Najdi food.

Dinner

Al-Balad or Corniche seafood

Jeddah · SAR 60-200 ($16-53)

Red Sea seafood or a traditional Hejazi dinner.

Transit:

AlUla/Riyadh to Jeddah is a domestic flight (routing varies — sometimes via Riyadh). In Jeddah, use Uber/Careem; Al-Balad is walkable internally, the Corniche is a short drive.

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

Budget $160 Mid $360 Luxury $820
DAY 7

Jeddah Red Sea + departure

Red Sea morning - coastal relaxation - last shopping - international departure

Activities

  1. 09:00 Red Sea morning 3h

    Spend the morning on the Red Sea — Jeddah is a gateway to some of the world's clearer coral reefs, with snorkeling and diving trips from the coast, or simply a relaxed beach-club morning. A gentle, coastal change of pace to close a heritage-heavy trip.

    Cost: Beach club / dive trip varies TIP: Diving and snorkeling trips need booking ahead. Mixed-gender beach clubs exist but dress norms still apply outside private resort beaches — check the venue. The water is warm and clear much of the year.
  2. 13:00 Last lunch & shopping 2h

    A final Hejazi lunch and any last shopping — Al-Balad souks for traditional crafts, or a modern Jeddah mall. Wind down before heading to the airport.

    Cost: SAR 40-150 ($11-40) TIP: Jeddah's King Abdulaziz International Airport (JED) is a major hub with good international connections, often easier than Riyadh for some routes. Allow time for traffic to the airport.
  3. 16:00 Departure Travel

    Head to King Abdulaziz International Airport for your onward or homeward flight, or transfer back to Riyadh if your international departure is there. Allow a comfortable buffer for check-in and any prayer-time considerations.

    Cost: Airport transfer SAR 50-120 ($13-32) TIP: Reconfirm whether you fly home from Jeddah (JED) or need to return to Riyadh (RUH) — plan the internal leg accordingly. International check-in lines can be long; arrive early.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Jeddah hotel

Jeddah · SAR 30-90 ($8-24)

Fuel up before a Red Sea morning.

Lunch

Hejazi lunch

Jeddah · SAR 40-150 ($11-40)

A last taste of coastal Hejazi cooking before departure.

Dinner

Airport or onward flight

Jeddah / in transit · SAR 30-100 ($8-27)

A quick meal before or during your departure leg.

Transit:

Jeddah's King Abdulaziz International Airport (JED) is a major international hub. Confirm whether you depart from Jeddah or return to Riyadh; use Uber/Careem or airport transfers and leave a generous buffer.

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

Budget $150 Mid $330 Luxury $750

Book Riyadh Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Riyadh 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Why include Jeddah as well as Riyadh and AlUla?
The three cities show three different sides of the kingdom: Riyadh is the conservative inland capital and heritage core, AlUla is the ancient Nabataean and natural-landscape highlight, and Jeddah is the relaxed, cosmopolitan Red Sea port with the Al-Balad UNESCO old town and coral-reef diving. Together they make the classic seven-day Saudi grand tour. Each leg is a domestic flight, so the week moves between three bases rather than touring from one.
Can I visit Mecca and Medina on this trip?
No — Mecca and Medina, the two holiest cities of Islam, are closed to non-Muslims, and the highways into Mecca have checkpoints. They are near Jeddah but are not part of a tourist itinerary unless you are Muslim and traveling for pilgrimage. This grand tour stays with the sites open to all visitors: Riyadh, AlUla, and Jeddah's Al-Balad and coast.
Is seven days a comfortable pace?
It's full but workable. Three internal flights in a week mean several half-days lost to airports and transfers, so the sightseeing days are intentionally not over-packed. If you'd rather slow down, drop Jeddah and spend the extra time in AlUla, or add a rest day. Travel November-March — Jeddah's coastal heat and humidity extend later into the year than Riyadh's dry inland heat, making winter the clear choice for all three cities.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

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.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
📅 Published: