Visiting Alexandria in March
Visiting Alexandria in March
# Alexandria in March: What You’re Actually Getting Into
Here’s the thing about Alexandria in March – you’re catching Egypt’s second city in a genuinely decent window, but it’s not the golden ticket some travel sites make it sound like.
The weather is mild and honestly a bit unpredictable. Temperatures hover around 14-19°C, which is pleasant enough for walking the Corniche without sweating through your clothes, but pack a layer because the Mediterranean wind off the water has a real bite to it, especially in the evenings. Rain is possible – Alexandria gets more precipitation than Cairo, and March sits in that shoulder season where you might get bright sunny days or a grey, drizzly afternoon that makes the whole city feel a bit melancholy. Not unpleasantly so, just honestly.
Crowds are manageable. This isn’t peak Egyptian tourism season, which means the Bibliotheca Alexandrina won’t have tour groups stacked three deep at every exhibit. The catacombs of Kom el-Shoqafa, genuinely one of the more underrated ancient sites in the whole country, are walkable without feeling like you’re in a queue. Local life feels more accessible in March than in summer when domestic Egyptian tourists flood the beaches.
Everything is open. That’s a genuine plus. The Bibliotheca, the National Museum, Pompey’s Pillar, the Roman Amphitheatre – all running normally. Seafood restaurants along the waterfront are in full swing, and the fish here is legitimately some of the best you’ll eat in the region.
Is it worth it? If you’re someone who prefers atmosphere over sunshine guarantees, absolutely yes. Alexandria has this wonderful faded grandeur – Greco-Roman ruins sitting next to Ottoman architecture next to crumbling Art Deco apartment buildings – and mild weather actually suits that mood. It rewards curious, unhurried travellers.
If you’re chasing beach days or guaranteed blue skies, wait until May.
**Practical tip:** Take the train from Cairo rather than a bus. It drops you right in the city centre, takes about two hours, and costs almost nothing. The views crossing the Delta are quietly beautiful.
Plan Your Trip
- Hotels: Search accommodation in Alexandria on Booking.com
- Tours & Activities: Browse Alexandria experiences on GetYourGuide
- Day Trips: Find Alexandria tours on Viator