Towns and Tourist Sites in Jordan -
Aqaba

See also town plan of Aqaba

Page 1 : Amman - Jerash
Page 2 :
The Dead Sea, - Mount Nebo
Page 3 :
Madaba
Page 4 : The Kings' Highway, -
Kerak, - Wadi Mujib - Dana
Page 5 :
Ma'an, - Petra - Wadi Mousa
Page 6 :
Aqaba

Aqaba is crammed into a little strip of land between the mountains and the sea. Across the water one can see the mountains of Sinai, and Eilat in Israel is only a few miles away to the west. Indeed, when arriving in Aqaba from the Desert Highway, it is not immediately obvious that one is looking at two towns (and countries) and not a single one. Just 25 kilometers to the south is Saudi Arabia.

Here is an aerial photo of the head of the Gulf of Aqaba, showing the port on the left and to the south. Higher up, the town that you see is Eilat, while Taba in Egypt is immediately opposite to the port of Aqaba. This is a "thumbnail" photo, you can click on it for a larger version.

I find this a nicer town than Amman. It is a free trade area (the "Aqaba Special Economic Zone"), so many people from south Jordan come here to shop. Most prices are lower than elsewhere, but you are subject to customs duty when you take goods outside the area - there is a control point. However, the officials are reasonable, and if you have low taxed items for your own consumption, you are unlikely to be asked to pay. This does NOT necessarily apply to electrical goods. For those who are thirsty, the off-duty prices also apply to alcohol, beer and wine! Have a look at Sami's Supermarket, opposite to the Cairo-Amman Bank. Imported cigarettes are also cheaper here but tend to be rather dried up.

Free ASEZ visas

The Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA for short) has introduced a special Economic Zone visa for Jordan, to be known as an "ASEZ visa". This is a new rule, and the details have already been changed several times since its introduction in April 2002. Right now the conditions are these:

Anybody arriving in Aqaba, whether at the port, at the airport or at the Arava crossing from Israel can get a free visa for Jordan. There is no obligation associated with this visa, providing they leave the country within one month and do not need to register their visa for "renewal". Their passports are not subject to any special checks when they leave the Economic Zone.

People arriving at any entry point other than Aqaba, who say to the authorities that they are going to Aqaba can claim a free visa, but with the obligation to register with the ASEZA visa office in Aqaba within 48 hours of their arrival in Jordan. Failure to do this brings liability to pay for the visa plus a fine of 1.5JD/day for each day non registered. (When I say "48 hours" I mean 48 hours, minute to minute! If weekends or holidays come into this, then you are unlucky...)

Anybody arriving in Aqaba can if they wish, ask for a normal visa (usual price=10JD) instead of the free ASEZ visa. In this case if they want to stay longer than one month they can register at their local police station as per current practice.

Anybody holding an ASEZ visa, and wishing to stay longer than one month must extend it at the ASEZA office in Aqaba and not with their local police station as holders of a normal visa can do, so remember this and be careful about claiming the ASEZ visa if you will be in Jordan for longer than one month.

Everybody without a specific exemption must pay the 5JD exit tax whether holding an ASEZ visa or not and wherever leaving the country. Travellers staying in Jordan less than 24 hours are considered to be "in transit" and are exempt from the tax, as are certain cruise ship passengers.

In other words, if you are staying less than one month in the country and arrive in Aqaba, you can ask for a free visa without hesitation. If you arrive somewhere else, you must decide if you want the hassle of getting to Aqaba within 48 hours or if you prefer paying the 10JD (approx 16USD) for a normal visa.

Please note that these visas differ from the usual Jordanian visa in that they expire when you exit Jordan at any border. They CANNOT be used to re-enter Jordan at the Allenby/King Hussein Bridge in the same way that Jordan visas can.

The background is that  ASEZA visas are issued in order to attract business and investment into Aqaba. Tourists are then not restricted from using them to travel around Jordan, although ASEZA do, apparently, reserve the right - if, for instance, someone enters Aqaba on a free ASEZA visa then immediately leaves Aqaba in order to travel around Jordan - to rescind their ASEZA visa on the 'border' (Wadi Yitm road/Wadi Araba road etc) and ensure they buy a Jordan visa for 10 JD. In practice, this never happens - but that is the principle on which the ASEZA visa system was set up.

They are intended to benefit Aqaba, and Aqaba alone - not the whole of Jordan. ASEZA visas are for entering Aqaba only, and not at any other point.

The ASEZA offices incidentally are a little way out of town on the road leading to Amman and the airport. I should be hard put to it to give an exact address, ask a taxi for the "acleem" offices, few of them seem to know the abbreviation ASEZA. It's a little bit further up and on the other side of the road from the Arab Bridge Maritime offices, which unlike ASEZA are well signposted. If you need your visa registered for a stay of more than 3 months you can have it done here if you are in Aqaba. The phone number of ASEZA is 03.209.1000 and the visa office extension number is 3515. They are not in the main office building, but just on the other side of the road and are open from 8am to 4pm.

ASEZA is very active in the development and the promotion of the Aqaba region and there are a number of ambitious building projects in the course of realisation. The Tala Bay resort along the South Beach (www.talabay.jo) will be a millionaire's playground as will be the Aqaba Lagoon to the west. Plans for these include a golf course, a yacht marina, and a dolphinarium where those with special needs (and others) can swim with the dolphins. In March 2006 these projects were a long way from completion.

A number of shopping malls are either finished or on the way to being so, so you can take the fullest advantage of the off duty prices.

The Aqaba Tourist Office is at the Aqaba Municipality Service Centre where the Corniche Road joins the road from Amman. It is in the middle of the circle just opposite the Ali Baba Restaurant on the one side and the big MacDonalds on the other - see nr 12 on the town plan of Aqaba.

Aqaba itself


This is a photo of the main beach in Aqaba. You can see a couple of glass bottomed boats waiting for customers - they are the white ones with the awnings.

There are frequent buses between Aqaba (the central bus station) and most of the towns in south Jordan including Wadi Rum - 2 services a day except Fridays - and of course to Petra and to Amman. This latter is one route where the Jett buses do come in useful, they leave from the Jett office on The Corniche, phone 03.201.5222. The Trust International Transport (An-Nahda Street) also offers six services to and from Amman every day including Fridays, their phone number is 03.203.2300. Locals much prefer their buses to the Jett ones. I have given the full timetables in the "Hard Facts" page under "buses".

Please note that WHATEVER THE GUIDE BOOKS SAY there is no early morning bus from Aqaba to Wadi Rum!! The buses from Aqaba to Rum are  not very convenient for a tourist. See the page on Wadi Rum for details.

The main bus station is just below the police station. You can go straight downhill from the bus station to reach the shops. You pass beside one of the public gardens, it's a pity that the entrance to the garden is closed up at the top, and you can only get into it from opposite the shops. There is a children's playground here, complete with swings and simple roundabouts.

The sea makes a big difference in the atmosphere. The public beaches are a bit grotty and are much frequented by locals looking to ogle tourists - it is better to pay a small sum and use the hotel beaches. Many small hotels have an arrangement with one of the larger ones for a reduced price access to their beach. South of the port there are a couple of private places for hassle free bathing and sunbathing, that come equipped with snorkelling facilities and transport from the town (see below). The only problem here is that there isn't all that much transport back to the town.

The Ali Baba restaurant is probably the best known sea food restaurant in Jordan, another good place for seafood is the Captains'. Cheaper than these two are the numerous restaurants on the town beach on the edge of the water : the only occasional problem is getting one's feet splashed when a larger or faster boat than usual goes by (rather fun, this!). No special recommendations here, they change ownership and cooks fairly often! You pay your money and you take your chances!

Hanni Ali's place, next door to the Ali Baba is the best place in Aqaba to buy "sweets" or Arab pastries, the ice cream is also very good there. I enjoy indulging in their "continental breakfast" if I come to Aqaba by the early bus from Wadi Mousa.

I have to admit that Hanni Ali can be considered as an "upmarket" restaurant, also they only open at 10am. If you want a cheaper place to eat, brimming over with local colour, try Al-Mohandes on the Al-Hammamet al-Tunisieh Street (there are many banks and ATMs along this street!). This is the Jordanian equivalent of a fast food place, with lots of filafel being taken out. You can also get omelettes and salad, and if you should find the main dining room noisy and crowded there is a "women and families' room" upstairs, where women can find a bit of quiet. The service here (upstairs) isn't marvellous, either make sure that somebody knows that you are going up, or leave an order at the counter first.

There is also a good place tucked away behind the main market street, the Al Shami restaurant, which has a terrace with a great view. It's in an alley with steps running down between the Zahran and Raghadan Streets and although it looks "touristy" it is very attractive with air conditioning, which has revived me on more than one occasion. In fact the clientèle is mostly local.

If you are less interested in Arabic food, check out the Aqaba Gateway complex, on the crossroads of the Corniche and the main road from Amman, next to the Aqaba Municipality Service Centre (nr 12 on the town plan of Aqaba). There is a whole assortment of restaurants here, from the big and gaudy MacDonalds, to an ice cream parlour via The Rover's Return, presumably transplanted from Coronation Street to Aqaba. The Lebanese restaurant is quiet and cool and has an attractive dhow moored alongside it, which looks ancient and completely authentic.

One of the nice things about Aqaba is the gardens. There is a good one alongside Mohandes with a big fountain and tables and seats in the shade, so you can take your filafel sandwich here to eat. There is another opposite to the main souk, between the Arab bank and the Mobilcom offices, also with seats and tables in the shade (this is the one I mentioned higher up, below the bus station). Very useful if you are into picknicking.

The food market, incidentally, is here, just behind the big photographer's studio Hagoub (If you need your photos developed, they do excellent work and are very reliable). When you come out from the studio turn to the left and a few meters down there is a little alley leading off the left. This is where you can buy as much fruit as you like, meat and fish are to be found a bit further on in the same alley. There is also a shop selling spices - some wonderful aromas!

There are a number of hotels in Aqaba suitable for all budgets. For the cheap end, the Red Sea Hotel (+962.3.201.2156, Fax 5789) and the Nairoukh One Hotel (tel. +962.3.201.9284, Fax 9285)are quite pleasant.  You can sleep on the roof of the Petra Hotel (+962.3.201.3746), which is strictly backpacker type accommodation but which does have a lovely view.

A quick warning : we nearly always want a room with a sea view (me too!). But in Aqaba the sea is due south of the town and a view of it means that you are going to get a hot sun on your window all day. If this is going to bother you, then decide if the sea view is worth it.

An enormous number of five star hotels are either being built or have just been finished. The Royal Diving Club is now accommodated in one of these and if you should be looking for luxury accommodation, check out the Coral Bay Hotel at http://www.rdc.jo/coralbay.htm

This is one of the new hotels that is called in fact a "resort" and it is perfectly possible to spend all your time in the hotel, diving, snorkelling or just lazing, without ever going into the town if you wish! It is some 18kms from Aqaba itself on the coast to the south and a taxi fare would be about 5JD. There are also Movenpick, Radisson and other luxurious hotels closer in, mostly along the Corniche.

Some typical taxi fares "out of town" from Aqaba :

Swimming, snorkelling and diving

Average surface sea temperatures in Aqaba

The Royal Diving Club private beach is a fair way out of town, but they have a bus between the two. They will pick up outside most of the big hotels at about 9am and charge 1/2JD one way. The bus returns to Aqaba at 5pm. It would be a good idea to check with the RDC where the pick up spot is that is closest to where you are staying The Royal Diving Club contact details are Tel +962.3.201.2323 Fax 03.201.8969 Address: PO Box 21, Aqaba. Remember that when you are in the RDC premises, however attractive it is (swimming pool, small beach and snorkelling facilities as well as diving courses) you will have a problem for returning to Aqaba in the middle of the day. Unless you are lucky enough to find somebody going back, you should ask the reception to call you a taxi, which will come from Aqaba with the probable double charge attached. A one way charge shouldn't go over 5JD. On the credit side this is one of the places where you should be able to sunbathe in a bikini without being leered at. The simple entrance fee is 5JD.

Another good spot for hassle-free bathing is the Club Murjan run by the Hotel Alcazar (Tel. 03.201.4131), which is very active in the promotion of outdoor activities in Jordan. It is well away from the town, and therefore much pleasanter, with a swimming pool, toilets/showers and a bar and restaurant. Guests at the hotel enter free, non-guests are charged a 4JD fee which includes transport to and from the town so that it works out cheaper than the RDC. If you are diving with Seastar the entrance to the club is included in the dive price. Getting back to the town is a bit easier from here. I do agree that the beach itself is not very pleasant for sunbathing.

Transport leaves the Hotel Alcazar for the Club at 8h30am, 11h30 (12h00) and 1h30pm. The first and the last is transport intended for divers but non-divers/non hotel guests are welcome to use any of them - see note above about transport included in the price of entry. At any other time a taxi to the Club Murjan should cost about 2-3JD, ask the driver to put his meter on, and in no circumstances pay more than 3JD, 2JD should be normal.

Both of these two clubs are close to coral reefs and have a jetty built out over the water to facilitate entry into the water for easy snorkelling and diving - see pages on Snorkelling and Diving.

The glass bottomed boats are a big attraction and you shouldn't miss going out on one. They usually wait for customers on the public beach, but several (the best equipped and the less easily bargained for!) are to be found on the hotel beaches. The price does depend on how well you bargain and how brisk business is. A two hour trip is likely to cost between 10 and 15JD FOR THE BOAT. A one hour trip doesn't go much further than inside the harbour where the coral, however picturesque, is mostly dead. If you can find the money for a longer trip, you will be taken out parallel to the coast towards the Power Station coral reef where there are numerous fish to be seen, including flying fish of course, and a lot of coral, but you are looking at somewhere around 20JD here - again for the boat. If you just want to go out for a ride on the water, then a half hour is plenty, and in that case the boatman will usually go towards the west. Please see the page on diving/snorkelling if you should be interested in snorkelling excursions.

You might like to check www.aqaba.jo for general information about Aqaba. It's a nice site and pretty complete, but it does take a longish time to load.

"JORDANJUBILEE" is now available as a book, which is much more convenient for reference if you are travelling around. You can buy it online if you wish by clicking on our securized site, or it is on sale in a number of places in Jordan

Town plan of Aqaba - Diving in Aqaba
Plan of the dive sites of Aqabq

Dive sites in Aqaba - Plan of the Wreck of the Cedar Pride

Next (Wadi Rum)

Page 1 : Amman - Jerash
Page 2 :
The Dead Sea, - Mount Nebo
Page 3 :
Madaba
Page 4 : The Kings' Highway, -
Kerak, - Wadi Mujib - Dana
Page 5 :
Ma'an, - Petra - Wadi Mousa
Page 6 :
Aqaba

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©Ruth Caswell 2002