[PLACEHOLDER: full-bleed first-hand photo of Hegra at golden hour — this is the lead image.]
AlUla is the reason most people’s idea of Saudi Arabia is about to change. Tucked into the Kingdom’s northwest, it is a 200-km valley of sandstone the colour of embers, dotted with 2,000-year-old tombs, a mud-brick old town, and some of the clearest desert night skies you will ever stand under. For decades almost no outsiders came here. Now it is the easiest, most rewarding place in Saudi Arabia to begin.
This hub links to everything we have written about visiting AlUla first-hand — how to see Hegra, how many days you actually need, when to come, how to get here, and what is worth your time once you arrive.
Start here
- How to visit Hegra — tickets, tours and the rules nobody tells you.
- AlUla in 2 days — a tested itinerary with real timings.
- Best time to visit — month by month.
- How to get to AlUla — from Riyadh and Jeddah.
- Things to do in AlUla — beyond Hegra.
AlUla in one paragraph
AlUla’s headline is Hegra (Madain Salih), Saudi Arabia’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site — 111 monumental tombs carved by the Nabataeans, the same people who built Petra. But AlUla is more than one site: the restored Old Town, the wind-sculpted Elephant Rock, the pinnacles of Gharameel, the mirrored Maraya concert hall, and desert nights made for stargazing. It is compact, well-run, and genuinely welcoming.
The basics
- Where: Medina Province, northwest Saudi Arabia.
- Airport: AlUla International (ULH), ~35 km from the Old Town, with direct flights from Riyadh, Jeddah and Dammam.
- Best time: October–March, when days are mild and the festival season runs.
- How long: two full days for the highlights; three to slow down.
- Getting around: a rental car or a hired driver — sites are spread out.
Planning the numbers? Try our travel tools — a trip-cost estimator, currency converter and visa checker.