Visiting Wadi Rum in June
Visiting Wadi Rum in June
# Wadi Rum in June: What You’re Actually Getting Into
Let me be straight with you: June in Wadi Rum means heat. Serious, unrelenting, bake-your-brain heat. Daytime temperatures regularly sit between 35-40°C, and the desert doesn’t offer much in the way of shade unless you’re inside a tent or a Bedouin camp. Rainfall is essentially nonexistent this time of year, so the landscape stays dry and stark. That’s not necessarily a complaint — the red sandstone looks genuinely extraordinary under fierce sun, and the skies at night are absurdly clear.
The honest reality of daytime is this: between about 10am and 4pm, you won’t want to do much. Jeep tours become exercises in endurance rather than enjoyment, and hiking feels genuinely unwise unless you’re experienced and very well hydrated. If you’re hoping to scramble around the formations and really explore, you’re going to be frustrated. Early mornings and evenings are a completely different story though — the light is spectacular and the temperature becomes actually manageable.
Crowds are lighter than the peak autumn season (October-November), which some people genuinely appreciate. You’re not fighting for that sunrise photograph or waiting for other jeeps to clear the shot. The camps and operators are fully open and running — this isn’t a shoulder season where things get spotty. Everything’s available, staff are there, overnight experiences are completely doable.
So is it worth it? For the right person, absolutely yes. If you’re flexible with your schedule, happy to sleep late, wander at dusk, and spend midday horizontal in a camp, you’ll find a version of Wadi Rum that feels almost private. Photographers, night sky obsessives, and people who genuinely love extreme heat will be in their element.
If you’re travelling with young kids, have health conditions affected by heat, or really want to *do* active stuff, June is going to fight you at every turn.
**Practical tip:** Book a camp with proper shade structures and ideally air conditioning in sleeping areas. Don’t assume “desert camp” means comfortable daytime temperature — ask specifically before you pay.
Plan Your Trip
- Hotels: Search accommodation in Wadi Rum on Booking.com
- Tours & Activities: Browse Wadi Rum experiences on GetYourGuide
- Day Trips: Find Wadi Rum tours on Viator