Tour Code: FIT/3981

Jordan In Depth

8 Nights / 9 Days
Private Van Tour
Summer Special
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Cities : Amman (2N),Petra (2N),Wadi Rum (1N),Aqaba (1N),Sweimeh Dead Sea (2N)

Accommodation

  • 2 Night(s) in Amman at Geneva Hotel Amman or similar
  • 2 Night(s) in Petra at Petra Canyon Hotel or similar
  • 1 Night(s) in Wadi Rum at Rum Oasis Luxury camp or similar
  • 1 Night(s) in Aqaba at Marina Plaza Hotel, Tala Bay or similar
  • 2 Night(s) in Sweimeh Dead Sea at Ramada Resort Dead Sea or similar

Sightseeing

Amman, Jordan
  • Amman City Tour
  • Desert Castle
Madaba, Jordan
  • Visit To Madaba
  • Mount Nebo
  • Kerak Castle
Petra, Jordan
  • Famous Archeological Sites Petra
  • Little Petra
  • Wadi Rum Petra
  • A Short Horse Ride From The Main Gate Till The Beginning Of The Siq
  • Visit Wadi Rum with Jeep Safari
Aqaba, Jordan
  • Aqaba (Glass Boat Trip in Aqaba)
Jerash, Jordan
  • Visit Jerash Site & Dead Sea
Wadi Rum, Jordan
  • Bedouin Jeep Tour 2 Hours

Flight and transport

  • Meet & assist upon arrival to the airport
  • All Tours and Transfer on PVT Basis

Meals

  • 8 Breakfast
  • 1 Dinner
  • Hotel Included
  • Meal Included
  • Private Vehicle Included

Day wise travel itinerary

  • Day 1 :Arrival – Amman

    Airport pick up from Queen Alia International Airport with Meet & Assist service through our representative, transfer to Amman hotel for check in. Overnight stay in Amman. (As per Flight Time).

  • Day 2 :Amman – Jerash – Amman City Tour - Amman

    After breakfast, we head to visit the ancient Roman city of Jerash, including the paved and colonnaded streets, soaring hilltop temples, theatres, spacious public squares and plazas, baths, fountains and city walls, back to Amman to Enjoy Amman City tour; Tour the downtown part of capital city Amman for 2 hours, visiting sites and museums including the Archeological Museum, the Folklore Museum, The citadel, and the Amphitheatre. Everywhere you look there is evidence of the city's much older past (Museums are closed on Tuesday). Overnight stay in Amman 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 3 :Amman – Madaba – Mount Nebo – Kerak – Petra

    After breakfast, depart to Wadi Musa City via kings high way visiting Madaba, Mount Nebo and Kerak Castle en route, arrive to Petra for check in, overnight in Petra Hotel  Madaba, a city best known for the famous 6th century Mosaic map of Jerusalem & Holy Land and for its spectacular Byzantine and Umayyad mosaics and visit of St. George’s church, Mount Nebo - Moses Mountain, situated 10 kilometers west of Madaba, overlooking the Jordan Valley, Dead Sea, West Bank and Jerusalem, where believed the alleged sites of the tomb of Moses.,Last stop is Kerak Castle is a Crusaders’ Castle built on a triangular plateau dating back to the 12th century. Overnight stay in Petra 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 4 :Petra – Petra Vist – Petra

    After breakfast, Visit the Nabatean Red Rose city of Petra, one of the 7 world wonders and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Enter the city through 1KM long narrow gorge which is flanked either side by 80m high cliffs! Notice the dazzling colors and formations of the rocks. The site is massive, and contains hundreds of elaborated rock-cut tombs, a treasury, Roman-style theatres, temples, sacrificial altars and colonnaded streets. Overnight stay in Petra 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 5 :Petra – Little Petra – Wadi Rum Jeep Tour – Wadi Rum Camp

    After breakfast, proceed to visit Little Petra best known as Al Beidha (the White One) due to the pale rock colors . Little Petra, also known as Siq al-Barid (literally "the cold canyon") is an archaeological site located north of Petra and the town of Wadi Musa in, it is a Nabataean site, with buildings carved into the walls of the sandstone canyons. As its name suggests, it is much smaller, consisting of three wider open areas connected by a 450-metre (1,480 ft) canyon. It is part of the Petra Archeological Park, though accessed separately. We head further down in southern Jordan to visit other significant sites including Wadi Rum. Explore Wadi Rum on a 2  hour jeep ride into the Jordanian desert! Wadi Rum was best described by T.E. Lawrence as “Vast, echoing and god-like”, and by the locals as “Valley of the Moon”. Dinner & Overnight stay in Wadi Rum 

    • Breakfast
    • Dinner
  • Day 6 :Wadi Rum - Glass Bottom Boat Trip In Aqaba – Aqaba

    After breakfast, morning transfer to Aqaba City for a day of leisure and relaxation.  Jordan’s splendid Red Sea resort has a wealth of other attractions apart from being a delightful beach retreat; it is actually a great base from which to explore various places of interest in southern Jordan. Aqaba is a fun place and a microcosm of all the good things Jordan has to offer, including a fascinating history with some outstanding sites and excellent activities, superb visitor facilities, good shopping, and welcoming, friendly people, who enjoy nothing more than making sure their visitors have a good time., once we reach aqaba you will enjoy Discovery Glass bottom Boat trip in the Sea which includes 1 hour of snookering and 1 hour of coral viewing. Overnight stay in Aqaba 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 7 :Aqaba – Dead Sea

    Breakfast at the hotel, enjoy free time to relax, check out at noon, Proceed to the Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth deep in the Jordan Valley and 55 km southeast of Amman, is the Dead Sea, one of the most spectacular natural and spiritual landscapes in the whole world. It is the lowest body of water on earth, the lowest point on earth, and the world's richest source of natural salts, hiding wonderful treasures that accumulated throughout thousands of years. Overnight stay in Dead Sea 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 8 :Dead Sea – Free Day

    Kick back and relax at this free day in your resort at Dead Sea (No Vehicle). Overnight stay in Dead Sea 

    • Breakfast
  • Day 9 :Departure Dead Sea - Qaia

    After breakfast, departure from Dead Sea via Queen Alia international Airport), to your next destination.  (3:30 hours before each flight time).

    • Breakfast
Expand Full Itinerary 🡫

Sightseeing

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Amman City Tour

Amman is the great blend of old and new, and it is the largest and capital city of Jordan. It always holds a lot of surprises for travelers. The sky-high buildings blend very well with the ancient culture. Amman is literally an unspoiled destination, and it’s not everyone’s cup of tea; and those who get to sip it once long for more. You can also spend relaxed evening in one of terraces cafes of Amman or you can just walk up to watch incredible and breath-taking sunsets.

Amman, the capital of Jordan, is a modern city with numerous ancient ruins. Atop Jabal al-Qala’a hill, the historic Citadel includes the pillars of the Roman Temple of Hercules and the 8th-century Umayyad Palace complex, known for its grand dome. Built into a different downtown hillside, the Roman Theater is a 6,000-capacity, 2nd-century stone amphitheater offering occasional events.

Amman's layered history is reflected in its diverse people and its varied architecture. The city is home to a multidenominational and multicultural population. Even within the midst of the ultra-modern commercial Centre, there is evidence of its ancient roots, with colorful souks, Roman ruins, cultural museums and monuments painting a picture of the history of the region.

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Desert Castle

Jordan's desert castles, beautiful examples of both early Islamic art and architecture, stand testament to a fascinating era in the country's rich history. Their fine mosaics, frescoes, stone and stucco carvings and illustrations, inspired by the best in Persian and Graeco-Roman traditions, tell countless stories of the life as it was during the 8th century. Called castles because of their imposing stature, the desert complexes actually served various purposes as caravan stations, agriculture and trade centers, resort pavilions and outposts that helped distant rulers forge ties with local Bedouins. Several of these preserved compounds, all of which are clustered to the east and south of Amman.

The Umayyads erected a number of characteristic palaces, some in the cities, but mostly in the semi-arid regions, and some along important trading routes. The castles were built roughly between 660 and 750 under the Umayyad Caliphate, which had made Damascus, now in Syria, their new capital in 661. After the Abbasid Revolution of 750, the capital moved to the newly-built Baghdad and some of the buildings were never completed.

The typical desert castle is more than a single residence; rather it is a compound of various building including a substantial main residence along with other buildings such as a hammam (bath-house), storage areas and other agrarian structures and possibly a mosque, all within a large enclosure. Desert castles are typically situated near a wadi or seasonal water course.

The inner part of the main residence typically consists of two-stores, arranged around a central courtyard. The main residence is often richly ornamented with mosaics, frescoes and stucco reliefs.

Archaeologists have investigated the role of these desert castles, with the traditional view that they served as country estates or hunting lodges for the use of aristocratic families during the winter season. However, recent scholarship has suggested a much greater diversity of roles, including as agricultural estates or military forts. The complex at Qasr al-Hayr al-Gharbi (Syria), for example, sits within a vast agricultural estate and the buildings include structures associated with the production of olive oil.
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Hotels

Geneva Hotel Amman

Geneva Hotel Amman or similar

Included in trip
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Transfer :
Private
  • Land Package
  • Private Vehicle
  • Standard Hotel
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EMI Starts from ₹ 5,617/month
₹ 1,10,948

per person

* GST & TCS Extra