REVIEW · TOZEUR
From Tozeur: 3-Day Desert Trip
Book on Viator →Operated by Tunisie Rêves Day Tours · Bookable on Viator
The Sahara has a way of rewriting your calendar. This 3-day trip from Tozeur mixes salt-flat scenery, a village stop, and real time in the Grand Erg Oriental—plus camel trekking around sunrise and sunset. You also get an overnight in a desert camp, not just a quick ride-through.
What I like most is the way the schedule keeps you moving through the best natural moments: Chott Djerid for the salt lake and then the Erg Oriental for those long, empty horizon views. I also appreciate that meals and bottled water are handled, so you’re not doing extra logistics at the end of a long day.
One consideration: desert days require a moderate fitness level, and you’ll want to be comfortable with sleeping outside the comfort zone of a hotel bed.
In This Review
- Key highlights that make this trip worth your time
- A Sahara Circuit From Tozeur That Gives You Real Desert Time
- Price and Logistics: What Your $368.81 Covers
- Day 1: Chott Djerid Salt Lake and Debebcha Village Stops
- Day 2: Camel Trek Through the Grand Erg Oriental (Sunrise and Sunset)
- Night Under the Stars: Bedouin Camp Dinner and Desert Camping
- Guide Quality and Private Format: Ali and Sami Set the Tone
- Comfort, Meals, and What to Expect on Desert Time
- Who Should Book This 3-Day Desert Trip From Tozeur?
- Should You Book This From Tozeur: 3-Day Desert Trip?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the From Tozeur 3-Day Desert Trip?
- What does the tour include?
- What is not included in the price?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- Do I need to be in good physical shape?
- Is this a private tour?
- Does the trip include time at the salt lake Chott Djerid?
- What camel trekking experiences are included?
- Are meals provided during the trip?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Key highlights that make this trip worth your time

- Hotel pickup and drop-off in Tozeur so you’re not juggling taxis
- Chott Djerid salt lake and a stop in Debebcha for variety beyond just sand
- Guided camel trekking in the Grand Erg Oriental with sunrise and sunset timing
- Overnight in the desert so you actually see night fall and sunrise again
- Bedouin camp dinner under the stars as part of the same experience, not an add-on
- Trek insurance and tourism registration included for peace of mind on a multi-day route
A Sahara Circuit From Tozeur That Gives You Real Desert Time

This is the kind of desert trip that makes sense if you want more than a photo stop. You start in Tozeur, head out to the salt lake of Chott Djerid, then continue toward the Grand Erg Oriental where the dunes do the talking. The big payoff is that you’re not just riding camels for a couple hours. You build toward sunrise, sunset, and one full night camping in the desert.
The stars are a major part of the appeal, and the tour is set up to make that happen. You’ll have that Bedouin camp dinner in the evening, and you’ll spend enough time outdoors that the night sky becomes part of the evening plan—not a random bonus if the timing works out.
If you’re the type who likes structure but still wants room to breathe, this trip fits. There are defined stops, but the real hours are spent in the desert with the guide and your group—quiet time is built in.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Tozeur.
Price and Logistics: What Your $368.81 Covers
At $368.81 per person for a 3-day trip, the value depends on how you break down what’s included. Here’s what you get without adding extra line items:
- Pickup and drop-off at your hotel in Tozeur
- Overnight in the desert
- Guided camel trekking to the camp
- Breakfasts and dinners
- Trek insurance and tourism registration (mandatory)
- Bottled water
What’s not included is also clear: tips for camleers and drivers and personal expenses.
So you’re paying for the full day-to-day running of a desert experience: transport from Tozeur, the multi-day catering, and the guided trekking component that would be hard to assemble solo. Add the insurance and mandatory registration, and it starts to feel less like a random excursion and more like a managed route through remote terrain.
Also, you’ll usually want a trip like this to be straightforward if you’re short on time. From the start, the emphasis is on eliminating stress: pickup is included and the tour format is private for your group, so you’re not trying to coordinate with strangers at every step.
Day 1: Chott Djerid Salt Lake and Debebcha Village Stops

Day one is about getting your eyes tuned to southern Tunisia before you chase dunes. You’ll visit Chott Djerid, the salt lake area. Even though it’s not always the same look at every season, the big idea is the surreal, flat, pale scale. It’s one of those places where the horizon looks too long, and it makes the desert feel even closer.
Then you move to Debebcha, a village stop that gives you a human-scale break from the emptier scenery. You’re not spending this day only in the sand; you’re mixing environments. That matters because the camel trek days can be intense, and it helps to have an earlier dose of culture and daily life.
This mix also helps with pacing. If you only did dunes on day one, you might feel like you’re sprinting. With Chott Djerid and Debebcha, you ease into the experience.
Small practical note: because these are outdoor stops, you’ll want to be ready for sun and bright reflections. Salt and desert areas can be harsh on your eyes, so sunglasses and sun protection are a smart idea.
Day 2: Camel Trek Through the Grand Erg Oriental (Sunrise and Sunset)

This is the centerpiece. The tour includes an adventurous camel trek in the heart of Tunisia’s Sahara Desert, specifically in the Grand Erg Oriental. The promise here is timing: you’ll do camel trekking at sunset and sunrise.
That detail changes the whole feeling of the trip. At sunset, dunes stretch out and shadows lengthen. The light turns softer and the colors shift without needing any filters. Sunrise brings the opposite effect—quiet, early brightness and a different mood entirely. If you’ve only experienced desert photos, you’ll be surprised how much the light changes what everything feels like.
You also have a guide with you during the trek to the camp. That matters because you’re not navigating dunes on your own. Your job is to ride, follow the pace, and enjoy the slow rhythm of moving across a vast area.
Fitness-wise, keep expectations realistic. The tour asks for moderate physical fitness. That doesn’t mean you need to be a marathoner, but camel trekking can involve long sitting periods, uneven ground, and the occasional bump. If you have mobility issues, you should think carefully before booking.
Night Under the Stars: Bedouin Camp Dinner and Desert Camping

The overnight part is where many desert trips win or fail. Here, you get overnight in the desert, which means you’re there when the temperature drops and the sky fully opens up. The tour includes memorable nights under millions of stars and time to learn about Bedouin life.
The Bedouin dinner under the stars is also included: breakfasts and dinners are part of the package. That’s a big deal for value and comfort. When food is scheduled and handled, you can focus on the experience instead of tracking down meals in a place where options are limited.
Based on what I’ve seen from guide-focused feedback, the camp portion tends to be more than just food and sleeping. Guides often set the tone through conversation, stories, and explanations of what you’re seeing. One review highlighted Ali as professional and caring throughout the trip, and another praised Sami for keeping a good mood and organizing everything from start to finish.
There’s also a practical upside to spending the night out there: you don’t have to rush. You get both evening atmosphere and the next morning’s return to daylight. That’s the difference between feeling like you visited the desert and feeling like you lived inside it for a couple days.
Guide Quality and Private Format: Ali and Sami Set the Tone

A desert trip lives and dies by the guide. The tour provider is Tunisie Rêves Day Tours, and two guide names came up clearly in feedback: Ali and Sami.
Ali was described as very professional and attentive, with a trip highlight that was camping out in the desert as a surreal experience. Another note praised how Ali handled a rough moment when a traveler was sick at the start of the journey—showing flexibility and genuine care rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.
Sami got praise for his good mood and for helping a couple discover southern Tunisia while avoiding crowds. That’s worth paying attention to. If your desert goal is quiet horizon views, avoiding tour traffic matters. It’s not just about fewer people. It’s about fewer interruptions when you’re trying to absorb the scenery.
The tour is also private for your group. That usually means you’ll have more control over the pace, plus less hassle than a shared big-bus style. If you like travel with fewer moving parts, the private format can make the whole thing smoother.
Comfort, Meals, and What to Expect on Desert Time

The tour includes bottled water and covers breakfasts and dinners. That helps you manage the practical side of multi-day travel in a remote area. You won’t be figuring out where to buy drinks or worrying about whether you’ll find food after a long camel day.
Tips are not included, so budget for that separately. The tour specifically mentions tips for camleers and drivers. If you’re unsure how much to set aside, a useful approach is to consider time and effort: you’re dealing with staff who handle your safety, trekking, transport, and camp work.
Sleep setup details beyond the fact of overnight desert camping aren’t provided here, so I won’t pretend to know what your exact sleeping arrangement will be. But desert camping generally means you should be mentally ready for simple conditions compared to a hotel.
My advice: plan for the desert to run on its own clock. The sun and the stars matter more than schedules. If that sounds like your kind of travel, you’ll enjoy this.
Who Should Book This 3-Day Desert Trip From Tozeur?

Book it if:
- You want a first-class Sahara experience with structured stops (salt lake, village, dunes) and not only sand
- You want camel trekking with both sunrise and sunset, which is a different experience than one-time riding
- You care about spending a real night out and eating a proper Bedouin dinner under the stars
- You prefer a private group format so the trip feels less like herding and more like a shared journey
Skip or reconsider if:
- You’re very sensitive to physical strain. The trip requires moderate fitness, and camel trekking is not a gentle walk.
- You expect full hotel comfort. This is desert camping, and the point is the change of setting.
- You need a strict itinerary with minimal unpredictability. The tour does require good weather, and desert areas can’t always behave on demand.
This works especially well for couples and small groups who want a memorable “we were really there” trip. It can also suit solo travelers who don’t mind group dynamics as long as the guide is strong—based on the Ali and Sami feedback, that part is taken seriously.
Should You Book This From Tozeur: 3-Day Desert Trip?
If your goal is classic Sahara magic done in a practical, organized way, I’d say yes. The value is strongest for people who want everything handled: hotel pickup, desert overnight, guided trekking, meals, water, and even the mandatory paperwork piece is included. That’s the difference between a smooth adventure and a logistics headache.
You should book if two things matter to you:
1) Time in the desert at the right light (sunrise and sunset trekking)
2) A real overnight camp with an evening Bedouin dinner under the stars
Before you commit, check that your body is up for camel trekking and that you’re comfortable with sleeping in the desert. If that’s a match, you’re set up for a trip that feels big, quiet, and genuinely different from a normal day trip.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the From Tozeur 3-Day Desert Trip?
It’s about 3 days.
What does the tour include?
It includes hotel pick up and drop-off in Tozeur, overnight in the desert, guided camel trekking to the camp, breakfasts and dinners, trek insurance and mandatory tourism registration, and bottled water.
What is not included in the price?
Tips for camleers and drivers and personal expenses are not included.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes, pickup and drop-off at your hotel in Tozeur are included.
Do I need to be in good physical shape?
The tour notes a moderate physical fitness level is needed.
Is this a private tour?
Yes. It’s private, meaning only your group will participate.
Does the trip include time at the salt lake Chott Djerid?
Yes, the itinerary includes a visit to the salt lake of Chott Djerid.
What camel trekking experiences are included?
You’ll do camel trekking in the Sahara Desert in the Grand Erg Oriental, including at sunset and sunrise.
Are meals provided during the trip?
Yes. Breakfasts and dinners are included.
What’s the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. The tour also requires good weather; if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.













