This is the complete picture of what November feels like in Dahab — water, air, sea conditions, who else is there, what to pack, what it costs, and whether it is the right time for the trip you are planning. Updated against current 2026 conditions.
November in Dahab at a glance
| Water temperature | 24–26 °C |
|---|---|
| Air temperature | 22–27 °C |
| Underwater visibility | 20–30 m |
| Wind | moderate |
| Crowds at major sites | med |
| Accommodation prices | mid |
| Dive prices | Same year-round — $25–35 per fun dive, ${ Open Water $280–380 } |
What November actually feels like
Winter wetsuit weather starts. Comfortable diving, reasonable prices. That summary covers the headline, but the day-to-day rhythm of November in Dahab has more texture than a single sentence can hold.
The day usually starts cool and gets warmer through the afternoon. Air temperature ranges of 22–27 °C means morning dives are crisp, the seafront cafés warm up by 10am, and afternoons are when the town's social life peaks. Water temperature of 24–26 °C dictates the wetsuit conversation — the warmer end of that range lets divers wear less, the cooler end forces a 5mm-or-thicker decision.
If you have flexibility on dates, November pairs well with adjacent months in Dahab. Most travellers who visit in November either chose this month for a specific reason (school holidays, work calendar, deal pricing) or arrived because someone in their group has the time. There is no "wrong" month — the experience just changes shape.
Diving conditions in November
The water is 24–26 °C and visibility is 20–30 m. For most certified divers, that translates to:
- Wetsuit: Match the water temp — see our month-by-month dive guide for the full thickness chart. As a fast rule: cooler than 23°C use a 5mm; 23–26°C use a 3mm full; warmer than 26°C a 3mm shorty is fine for short dives.
- Visibility: 20–30 m is comparable to the best of the world's tropical dive sites. The Red Sea benefits from no river runoff and minimal rainfall.
- Wind: moderate. North wind in Dahab pushes some sites — particularly the open-water Blue Hole and Lighthouse — into rougher surface conditions on bad days. Sheltered sites like the Canyon and Eel Garden stay diveable in almost any wind.
- Crowd density at popular sites: med crowds. Even in busy months, Dahab's shore-diving model means you can drive 10 minutes north and find an empty entry.
The dive shops that run trips year-round and have the deepest local knowledge: see our dive centre comparison page.
Above-water in November
Air temperatures of 22–27 °C mean Dahab in November is comfortable for most outdoor activities — diving surface intervals, walking the seafront, bedouin tea on the beach, hiking in the Sinai canyons, kitesurfing the lagoon. The exception is the deep-summer months when midday heat exceeds 35 °C and most outdoor activity shifts to dawn or after 16:00.
Specific things you can do in November in Dahab:
- Kitesurf the lagoon — Dahab is one of the steadier-wind kitesurfing destinations year-round, with the windier months giving the best conditions for advanced riders.
- Hike to the Coloured Canyon or White Canyon — half-day trips reachable by jeep or scooter.
- Mt Sinai sunrise hike — leaves Dahab around midnight, summit by 05:00, sunrise at 05:30. Cooler months are easier on the climb.
- Snorkel the Eel Garden or Blue Hole rim — swim with reef fish in calm shallow water.
- Day trip to Ras Abu Galum by boat or camel — a remote Bedouin beach 30 minutes north.
Crowds, prices and what to book
November sits in the med crowd band and the mid price band. What that means in practice:
- Accommodation: See our hotels, hostels and apartments pages for the full options. In low/medium price months you can usually walk in. In high months — particularly Christmas/New Year, August, and Egyptian school holiday weeks — book at least 2–3 weeks ahead.
- Diving: Dive shop prices are remarkably stable year-round. The variability is in availability — peak season fills up boat trips and Open Water courses faster.
- Restaurants: Walk-in everywhere except Pasta Mia (always book — limited tables) and the new Ena's Table on busy weekend evenings. Full restaurant guide.
- Transfers: Sharm-Dahab transfers run year-round. Pre-book if you arrive late or have an early flight; otherwise the airport-microbus route works fine. Full transit guide.
What to pack for Dahab in November
For the water (24–26 °C):
- Wetsuit at the appropriate thickness (or rent one — every dive centre rents)
- Mask, snorkel, fins (or rent — $5/day from Blue Hole cafés)
- Reef-safe sunscreen (the seafront pharmacies sell European brands, sometimes the cheap stuff is harsh on coral)
- Rash vest for surface time and snorkelling — the sun reflecting off the water doubles the burn risk
For above water (22–27 °C):
- Light cotton clothing — Dahab is informal; you will not need anything dressy
- Modest cover for visiting Egyptian-only spots and St Catherine monastery (long sleeves, knee-length)
- Sun hat and proper sunglasses — UV is intense at this latitude year-round
- A warmer layer for cooler months (Nov–Mar evenings can drop to 12–15 °C)
- Walking shoes for canyon hikes — sandals do not cut it on uneven rock
- A small daypack — most Dahab activities involve carrying water, towel, snacks for the day
How November compares to other Dahab months
For a full month-by-month picture, see our best time to visit Dahab guide. The quick comparison:
- Best overall: September. Warm water, top visibility, moderate crowds, prices easing post-summer.
- Best for budget: February or March. Cool water, lowest prices, empty Blue Hole.
- Best for kitesurf: May, June, July — steadiest north winds.
- Best for snorkel + warm water: June through October.
- Best for new divers: April, May, October — calm seas, comfortable wetsuits, less competition for instructors.
- Avoid if you hate crowds: Christmas–New Year week, Egyptian school holidays (mid-Jan, late-July), August.
Plan your November trip
Tell us your dates and what you are after — we will send three matched picks for stays, dives and food. Use our planner or message us directly.