The best hotels in Petra

Petra has 8,000+ places to stay, and most of them will leave you stranded far from the Siq with a mediocre breakfast and zero views. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.

Our Top Picks in Petra

Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.

Rocky Mountain Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#1
Budget Pick
7.2

Rocky Mountain Hotel

Town Center, Wadi Musa

$45–75/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Petra Gate Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#2
Best Value
7.8

Petra Gate Hotel

Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa

$65–95/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Cleopetra Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#3
Most Popular
8.1

Cleopetra Hotel

Central Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa

$105–155/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Petra Moon Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#4
Best Location
8.3

Petra Moon Hotel

Petra Entrance Road, Wadi Musa

$120–175/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Petra Marriott Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#5
Business Pick
8.5

Petra Marriott Hotel

Al-Anbat Hill, Wadi Musa

$145–220/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Movenpick Resort Petra hotel in Wadi Musa
#6
Top Rated
8.8

Movenpick Resort Petra

Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa

$165–230/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Petra Sela Hotel hotel in Wadi Musa
#7
Hidden Gem
8.4

Petra Sela Hotel

Upper Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa

$170–240/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Beit Zaman Hotel and Resort hotel in Rajif Village
#8
Romantic Stay
8.6

Beit Zaman Hotel and Resort

Rajif, Rajif Village

$195–250/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Taybet Zaman Hotel and Resort hotel in Taybeh Village
#9
Luxury Pick
9

Taybet Zaman Hotel and Resort

Taybeh, Taybeh Village

$265–370/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later

Six Senses Shaharut hotel in Shaharut
#10
Luxury Pick
9.5

Six Senses Shaharut

Arava Desert, Shaharut

$780–1 400/night Check Availability

Free cancellation & Pay later


All Hotels Compared

Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.

# Hotel City & Area Price/Night Score Best For
1 Rocky Mountain Hotel Town Center, Wadi Musa $45–75/night 7.2/10 Budget Pick
2 Petra Gate Hotel Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa $65–95/night 7.8/10 Best Value
3 Cleopetra Hotel Central Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa $105–155/night 8.1/10 Most Popular
4 Petra Moon Hotel Petra Entrance Road, Wadi Musa $120–175/night 8.3/10 Best Location
5 Petra Marriott Hotel Al-Anbat Hill, Wadi Musa $145–220/night 8.5/10 Business Pick
6 Movenpick Resort Petra Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa $165–230/night 8.8/10 Top Rated
7 Petra Sela Hotel Upper Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa $170–240/night 8.4/10 Hidden Gem
8 Beit Zaman Hotel and Resort Rajif, Rajif Village $195–250/night 8.6/10 Romantic Stay
9 Taybet Zaman Hotel and Resort Taybeh, Taybeh Village $265–370/night 9/10 Luxury Pick
10 Six Senses Shaharut Arava Desert, Shaharut $780–1 400/night 9.5/10 Luxury Pick

Why These Hotels Made Our List

Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.

Rocky Mountain Hotel hotel interior
#1

Rocky Mountain Hotel

Town Center, Wadi Musa $45–75/night 7.2/10

This small guesthouse sits right in the heart of Wadi Musa, about a ten-minute walk from the Petra visitor center entrance. Rooms are basic but clean, with hot water and decent beds. The staff are genuinely helpful with arranging tours and transport. Breakfast is included and filling enough to set you up for a full day of hiking. Do not expect polish, but the value for the location is hard to beat.

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Petra Gate Hotel hotel interior
#2

Petra Gate Hotel

Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa $65–95/night 7.8/10

The Petra Gate Hotel is one of the closest budget options to the main Petra entrance gate, which makes an enormous practical difference after a long day on your feet. Rooms are modest with simple furnishings, but the beds are comfortable and the showers work reliably. The rooftop terrace gives you a clear view across the surrounding hills at sunset. Staff speak good English and can book Wadi Rum day trips directly. A solid no-frills base for exploring the site.

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Cleopetra Hotel hotel interior
#3

Cleopetra Hotel

Central Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa $105–155/night 8.1/10

Cleopetra Hotel has been a reliable mid-range choice in Wadi Musa for years, positioned on the main road near local restaurants and shops. The rooms are well-maintained with comfortable beds and air conditioning that actually keeps up in summer. The pool is a genuine highlight after a hot day of walking through the Siq. Staff are attentive and the buffet dinner is good quality for the price. Book a room facing the garden rather than the road for a quieter stay.

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Petra Moon Hotel hotel interior
#4

Petra Moon Hotel

Petra Entrance Road, Wadi Musa $120–175/night 8.3/10

Petra Moon sits directly on the road leading to the visitor center, meaning you can walk to the entrance gate in under five minutes. The rooms are spacious by local standards, with stone accents that suit the surroundings. The restaurant serves reliable Jordanian food including a solid mezze spread. Views from the upper floor rooms extend across the rocky hillside toward the archaeological zone. It fills up fast during peak season so book early.

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Petra Marriott Hotel hotel interior
#5

Petra Marriott Hotel

Al-Anbat Hill, Wadi Musa $145–220/night 8.5/10

The Petra Marriott occupies a commanding position on Al-Anbat Hill above Wadi Musa, with sweeping views over the valley and surrounding desert. Rooms follow the standard Marriott template, which means consistent quality, good linens, and reliable air conditioning. The outdoor pool area is well-maintained and less crowded than you might expect. Service is professional and the concierge team knows the Petra site well. It is a fifteen-minute walk to the entrance but the hotel runs a regular shuttle.

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Movenpick Resort Petra hotel interior
#6

Movenpick Resort Petra

Petra Entrance, Wadi Musa $165–230/night 8.8/10

The Movenpick is the most convenient mid-to-upper range hotel in Petra, located literally steps from the entrance gate with a footbridge connecting the property directly to the site. The building has a handsome stone facade that fits the landscape, and the interior is warm and well-designed. Rooms are generous in size with quality fixtures throughout. The rooftop bar at sunset is one of the best spots in Wadi Musa for a drink with a view. Breakfast is exceptional and worth factoring into your decision.

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Petra Sela Hotel hotel interior
#7

Petra Sela Hotel

Upper Wadi Musa, Wadi Musa $170–240/night 8.4/10

Petra Sela Hotel sits on the higher slopes of Wadi Musa with panoramic views across the town and surrounding mountains. The rooms are large, finished with local sandstone materials, and feel calm and considered. The infinity pool overlooking the valley is the property's standout feature. Food at the restaurant leans traditional Jordanian and is prepared well. It is not as close to the Petra gate as some competitors, but the setting and tranquility more than compensate.

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Beit Zaman Hotel and Resort hotel interior
#8

Beit Zaman Hotel and Resort

Rajif, Rajif Village $195–250/night 8.6/10

Beit Zaman is a converted Ottoman-era village in Rajif, about eight kilometers from the Petra entrance, and it is genuinely unlike anything else in the area. The property consists of restored stone buildings arranged across a hillside with terraced gardens and a large outdoor pool. Each room has character, with arched ceilings and traditional furnishings that do not feel forced. The restaurant serves some of the best food in the Petra region, with dishes rooted in local Bedouin tradition. It suits couples and anyone who wants calm over convenience.

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Taybet Zaman Hotel and Resort hotel interior
#9

Taybet Zaman Hotel and Resort

Taybeh, Taybeh Village $265–370/night 9/10

Taybet Zaman is a restored nineteenth-century village turned luxury resort, located in Taybeh about twelve kilometers from Petra. The property has over one hundred individual stone cottages, each with private terraces and unobstructed views of the surrounding desert and hills. The spa is extensive and genuinely good, and the main pool is one of the most scenic in Jordan. Dining is upscale with both Jordanian and international menus executed at a high level. The remoteness is the point, and the hotel arranges all Petra transfers smoothly.

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Six Senses Shaharut hotel interior
#10

Six Senses Shaharut

Arava Desert, Shaharut $780–1 400/night 9.5/10

Six Senses Shaharut sits on the rim of the Arava Desert cliff face in Shaharut, offering some of the most dramatic accommodation views in the broader Petra and Negev region. The individual lodges are designed around the natural rock landscape and each has a private plunge pool with uninterrupted desert panoramas. Food is outstanding, focused on locally sourced and organic ingredients prepared with genuine skill. The spa and wellness programming are among the best in the Middle East. This is a property where you will genuinely struggle to leave the grounds.

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Where to Stay in Petra

The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.

First-timers: Where to stay and what nobody tells you

Book within 500 meters of the Petra Visitor Center on Tourism Street. You want the 6 AM first entry advantage, and you want to stumble back to your room after 8 hours of walking without a taxi ride. Hotels like Movenpick Resort Petra and Petra Gate Hotel sit right on this strip.

Petra is bigger than most people expect. The Treasury is just the beginning. the Monastery alone is 800 steps up from the Basin Restaurant, and the Royal Tombs trail adds another 2 km. Stay at least 2 nights. One day is genuinely not enough, and the Jordan Pass 2-day ticket only costs 5 JOD more than the 1-day version.

Budget travel in Petra: Honest numbers

You can do Petra on $45-75/night at Rocky Mountain Hotel in Wadi Musa town center, but you need to budget for taxis. Two return trips to the Petra gate per day runs about 10-14 JOD ($14-20). Add that to your room rate before comparing prices with hotels closer to the entrance.

Eat at the local spots on King Abdullah Street in central Wadi Musa, not at the tourist restaurants on Tourism Street near the gate. A full mansaf or mixed grill runs 4-7 JOD at local joints versus 12-18 JOD at the hotel restaurants. Al-Arabi Restaurant near the main roundabout is the local favorite and charges honest prices.

The best hotels near the Petra Entrance: A honest comparison

Movenpick Resort Petra wins on location. It's literally attached to the Petra Visitor Center on Tourism Street, rated 8.8, and runs $165-230/night. The rooftop bar with Treasury-area views at sunset is the best drink you'll have in Wadi Musa. Petra Moon Hotel at $120-175/night on Petra Entrance Road is the smarter value play: slightly further (8 minutes walk) but 30% cheaper with nearly the same amenities.

Petra Gate Hotel at $65-95/night is the dark horse on this strip. It's right at the entrance, rated 7.8, and the breakfast spread is genuinely better than hotels twice the price. We've sent budget-conscious travelers there who came back raving about it. Book a room on the upper floors for the Wadi Musa valley views.

Romantic stays near Petra: Beyond the obvious picks

Beit Zaman Hotel in Rajif Village, 8 km south of the Petra gate, is a converted stone mansion with private terraces and near-total silence at night. Rooms run $195-250/night and the Jordanian stargazing up on the Rajif plateau is something city hotels simply can't replicate. It's our Romantic Stay badge winner for good reason.

Taybet Zaman in Taybeh Village takes it further. It's a fully restored 19th-century Ottoman village turned boutique resort, 10 km from Petra, priced at $265-370/night. The stone archways and candlelit communal spaces make it feel like you've rented a private village. Splurge on the suite with the private courtyard if the budget allows.

Petra in peak season: How to avoid getting squeezed

March, April, October, and November are when Petra gets slammed. Tour groups from Aqaba and Amman day-trip in by the busload, and hotel prices along Tourism Street jump 40-70%. Book Movenpick Resort Petra and Petra Moon Hotel at least 6-8 weeks ahead for these months if you want the best rooms at non-panic prices.

If you're arriving during Eid al-Fitr or Eid al-Adha, expect full hotels across all of Wadi Musa. Jordanian domestic tourism fills the town during these holidays faster than international bookings. Check the Islamic calendar dates for your travel year and book 10-12 weeks out minimum during those windows.

Petra for families: Practical hotel choices

Cleopetra Hotel in central Wadi Musa at $105-155/night is the most family-friendly mid-range option we reviewed. The central Wadi Musa location keeps you connected to pharmacies, supermarkets, and restaurants on King Abdullah Street without being far from the site. The hotel has spacious family rooms and a pool, which matters a lot when you've got kids who've walked 12 km through the ruins.

Petra Marriott on Al-Anbat Hill at $145-220/night is the family luxury choice. The grounds are large, the kids' pool is separate from the main pool, and the hilltop setting means rooms get a genuine breeze in summer. It's about a 15-minute downhill walk to the Petra gate, or a 5-minute hotel shuttle. The breakfast buffet here is the most generous in Wadi Musa.


Petra's best neighborhoods

Most of the action is in Wadi Musa, and that's where you should stay. The Petra Entrance strip is the sweet spot: you're walking distance from the Siq gate, and prices don't punish you the way the hilltop resorts do.

Petra Entrance & Tourism Street 3 vetted hotels

The best location in Wadi Musa, full stop.

Tourism Street runs right along the edge of the Petra Archaeological Park. You're steps from the Visitor Center, 5 minutes from the Siq entrance, and surrounded by the best restaurants and shops in the area. This is where most serious Petra visitors choose to stay.

Movenpick Resort Petra sits at the top of this strip, essentially connected to the park entrance. Petra Gate Hotel and Petra Moon Hotel flank it on Petra Entrance Road. Between them you get options from $65 to $230/night without sacrificing the core location advantage.

One honest warning: Tourism Street gets noisy with tour buses from 7-10 AM. Book upper-floor rooms and bring earplugs if you're a light sleeper. The trade-off for that sunrise walk to the Treasury is worth it.

Best areas Tourism Street, Petra Entrance Road
Price range $65-230/night
Best for First-timers, photographers, early risers
Avoid Ground-floor rooms facing the bus drop-off zone
Best months March-May, October-November
Central & Upper Wadi Musa 3 vetted hotels

Local life, honest prices, still walkable to the site.

Central Wadi Musa around King Abdullah Street and the Shaheed Roundabout is where locals actually live and shop. You'll find pharmacies, grocery stores, and no-nonsense local restaurants charging honest prices. Cleopetra Hotel sits here in the central district, and it's a solid base if you don't mind the 20-minute walk or short taxi to the gate.

Upper Wadi Musa on Al-Anbat Hill is a notch quieter and more comfortable. The Petra Marriott sits up here with panoramic valley views and a larger property footprint. You gain peace and space, but you're paying for the shuttle or taxi down to the gate every morning.

Petra Sela Hotel is in the upper area too, and it punches above its $170-240/night price tag on view quality. The rooftop terrace on a clear night with the Wadi Musa lights below is genuinely one of the best hotel experiences in Jordan. Book it before everyone else figures that out.

Best areas Al-Anbat Hill, Central Wadi Musa
Price range $105-240/night
Best for Families, business travelers, repeat visitors
Avoid Lower Wadi Musa near the bus station, 45+ min walk to the gate
Best months October-April
Rajif & Taybeh Villages 2 vetted hotels

Remote, romantic, and completely different from Wadi Musa.

Rajif Village sits about 8 km south of the Petra gate on the road toward Sharah. Beit Zaman Hotel here is a restored stone mansion built into the hillside. It's quiet in a way that Wadi Musa never is, and the Rajif plateau at night under the stars is extraordinary.

Taybeh Village is a further 10 km from the gate, and Taybet Zaman is the most atmospheric hotel property in the entire Petra region. It's a reconstructed 19th-century Bedouin village with stone arches, private courtyards, and a level of care that puts Wadi Musa's resort hotels to shame. At $265-370/night it's the legitimate luxury choice.

The catch: you need a car or daily taxi to visit Petra from here. Budget around 15-20 JOD per return trip from Taybeh. For couples spending 3+ nights and treating Petra as one activity among several, these villages are perfect. For people doing a single-day ruins blitz, stay closer.

Best areas Rajif Village, Taybeh Village
Price range $195-370/night
Best for Couples, luxury travelers, photographers
Avoid Staying here on a 1-night Petra trip. the commute kills it
Best months February-May, September-November
Wadi Musa Town Center 1 vetted hotel

Cheap, local, and honest about the trade-offs.

The town center around the main souq and Al-Rasheed Street is the most affordable part of Wadi Musa. Rocky Mountain Hotel sits here, offering rooms from $45-75/night with a level of genuine hospitality that more expensive hotels often lack. The staff know the area cold and will sort your taxis, tours, and Wadi Rum transfers without the usual tourist markup.

The distance to Petra is the real cost here. It's 3 km and 35-40 minutes uphill on foot. Most guests take taxis both ways, adding 10-14 JOD per day to the bill. Do the math before assuming this is cheaper than a better-located hotel at $95/night.

That said, the town center is where you eat well on a budget. Al-Arabi Restaurant and the local grill spots off King Abdullah Street charge 4-6 JOD for a full meal. The tourist restaurants up on Tourism Street charge 3-4 times as much for the same food.

Best areas Main Souq area, King Abdullah Street
Price range $45-75/night
Best for Budget travelers, backpackers, longer stays
Avoid Lower Al-Rasheed Street. noisy, far from everything
Best months November-February for lowest prices

Best Areas by Vibe

Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Petra.

Romantic Getaway

Taybeh Village is the clear winner here. Taybet Zaman's stone courtyards and candlelit dinners feel miles from the tour-bus chaos of Tourism Street, and you get the ruins to yourself on an early morning drive.

History & Culture

Stay on Tourism Street right near the Petra Visitor Center. you want to be first through the Siq at 6 AM before the crowds arrive. The Royal Tombs, High Place of Sacrifice, and the Petra Museum are all within a 2 km walk of the gate.

Family Trip

Central Wadi Musa near King Abdullah Street is your base. Cleopetra Hotel has a pool and easy access to supermarkets and pharmacies, which matters more than you think after day two of hiking with kids.

Budget Travel

Wadi Musa town center around the main souq keeps costs under $75/night at Rocky Mountain Hotel, and the local grill restaurants on King Abdullah Street charge half the price of anything on Tourism Street.

Outdoor & Adventure

The Petra Entrance Road area is your launch point for everything: the Siq, the Monastery trail, the Wadi Muthlim canyon hike, and day trips to Little Petra at Siq al-Barid just 9 km north. Stay as close to the gate as your budget allows.

Foodie Exploration

Central Wadi Musa around King Abdullah Street and the Shaheed Roundabout area is where the honest Jordanian cooking lives. Mansaf, zarb, and fresh mezze at local restaurants here costs a fraction of the hotel dining options up the hill.


40%

Location Quality

Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.

30%

Value for Money

We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.

30%

Guest Experience

We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.


When to Visit Petra

When to visit Petra and what to pay.

Budget Friendly

Summer (June-August)

Avg hotel: $65-145/nightCrowds: LowTemp: 30-38°C

Cheap rooms, brutal heat. Inside the Petra canyon it can hit 38°C by 11 AM, and the 800-step Monastery climb in that heat is genuinely punishing. If you must come in summer, be inside the Siq before 7 AM and back at your hotel by noon. Hotels drop to their lowest rates of the year, with budget guesthouses at $45-65/night and mid-range options around $95-140/night.

Budget Friendly

Winter (December-February)

Avg hotel: $50-130/nightCrowds: LowTemp: 5-14°C

Cold, quiet, and surprisingly beautiful. Snow occasionally dusts the rose-red cliffs around the Treasury in January, creating photographs that go viral every year. Temperatures inside the Siq drop to 5-8°C in the mornings, so pack layers. Hotels offer their best room rates of the year and you'll often have whole sections of the ruins to yourself. the Basin Restaurant near the Monastery trail is practically empty.


Booking Tips for Petra

Insider tips for booking hotels in Petra.

Buy your Jordan Pass before you fly

The Jordan Pass combines your Jordanian visa ($56 value) with free Petra entry for 1, 2, or 3 days. Buy it online at jordanpass.jo before departure. A 2-day Petra entry pass costs 75 JOD this way, versus 50 JOD for just 1 day at the gate. It pays for itself the moment you step off the plane at Queen Alia Airport in Amman.

Arrive at the Siq gate by 6:15 AM

The Petra Visitor Center on Tourism Street opens at 6 AM. The first 45 minutes inside the Siq before tour groups arrive is a completely different experience. Hotels directly on Tourism Street like Movenpick and Petra Gate make this 6 AM start realistic. From central Wadi Musa, you'd need a taxi booked the night before. arrange it with your hotel for around 4-5 JOD.

Don't book 'Petra area' hotels without checking the actual distance

Several hotels around the lower Al-Rasheed Street and Wadi Musa bus terminal advertise themselves as near Petra when they're 4+ km from the gate. Always check Google Maps from the hotel pin to the Petra Visitor Center on Tourism Street. Anything over 2 km means daily taxi costs of 10-15 JOD that erode the 'savings' fast.

The donkey and camel rides inside are optional and overpriced

Inside the Petra park, horse rides from the gate to the Siq entrance cost 5-10 JOD and are pushed hard by vendors. You can walk that 800 meters in 10 minutes. Donkey rides up to the High Place of Sacrifice run 20-40 JOD depending on your negotiation. Bring good walking shoes instead and save the money for an extra night at a better hotel.

Flash floods in the Siq are real. check the weather

The Siq canyon can flood rapidly when it rains, even if the sky above you is clear. Rain in the hills above Wadi Musa drains directly into the narrow gorge. Park rangers at the Petra Visitor Center will close the Siq on high-risk days. Check the Jordan Meteorological Department forecast before your early morning entry, especially in October-March when rainfall risk is highest.

Negotiate your Wadi Rum transfer at your hotel, not at the gate

Most Wadi Musa hotels can arrange a Wadi Rum day trip or overnight transfer at better rates than the freelance drivers outside the Petra Visitor Center on Tourism Street. Expect to pay 25-40 JOD per person for a shared transfer from Wadi Musa to Wadi Rum camp, or 60-90 JOD for a private car. Wadi Rum is only 1.5 hours south, and combining it with a Petra stay is the most popular multi-day itinerary in Jordan.


4 regions covered
8,000+ options reviewed
10 vetted picks
0 paid placements

Hotels in Petra — FAQ

Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Petra.

Where should I stay in Petra for easy access to the ruins?

Stay on Petra Entrance Road or right at the Petra Entrance itself. The Movenpick Resort sits literally 200 meters from the Siq gate on Tourism Street, and Petra Moon Hotel is a 5-minute walk away. Staying in lower Wadi Musa town center adds a 30-40 minute uphill walk every morning. Don't do that to yourself.

What is the average hotel price in Petra?

Budget guesthouses in Wadi Musa town center start around $45-75/night. Mid-range hotels near the Petra Entrance run $100-175/night. Luxury resorts on Al-Anbat Hill and above push $165-370/night. Prices spike hard during March-May and October-November, sometimes doubling in peak weeks.

Is it worth staying at a hotel right next to the Petra entrance?

Yes, 100%. The Petra gate opens at 6 AM, and being 5 minutes away means you can beat the tour groups to the Treasury. Hotels like Petra Gate Hotel and Movenpick Resort Petra charge more for that location, but you gain hours of crowd-free exploration inside the ruins. It's easily worth the extra $30-50/night.

Are there luxury hotels near Petra?

The Movenpick Resort Petra on Tourism Street is the top-rated option right at the Petra Entrance, running $165-230/night. Taybet Zaman in Taybeh Village is the true splurge at $265-370/night, a restored Ottoman village 8 km from the gate with stunning desert views. Six Senses Shaharut in Israel's Arava Desert is a different category entirely at $780-1,400/night, for those who want world-class wellness near the region.

Is Wadi Musa safe for tourists?

Wadi Musa is very safe. Jordan consistently ranks among the safest countries in the Middle East for visitors. The main tourist street, Tourism Street (also called Shaheed Roundabout Road), is well-lit and busy until late. Standard travel awareness applies, but crime targeting tourists is genuinely rare here.

How far is it from Wadi Musa town center to the Petra gate?

From the main Shaheed Roundabout in Wadi Musa town center, it's roughly 3 km uphill to the Petra Visitor Center. Walking takes 35-45 minutes. Taxis cover it in 5-7 minutes and cost around 3-5 JOD ($4-7). Most budget hotels in the town center can arrange a morning taxi for you.

When is the best time to visit Petra?

March-May is ideal: temperatures sit at 18-25°C, the wildflowers around Jabal Harun are in bloom, and the light for photography inside the Siq is perfect. October-November runs close behind at 20-27°C with thinner crowds. Avoid July-August when temperatures hit 35-38°C and the canyon turns brutal after 10 AM.

Are there cheap hotels in Petra that are actually decent?

Rocky Mountain Hotel in Wadi Musa town center at $45-75/night is the most honest budget option we reviewed. It's basic but clean, with a friendly local staff and decent breakfast. You're about 3 km from the Petra gate, so factor in taxi costs of around 3-5 JOD each way. Petra Gate Hotel near the Entrance Road offers better value at $65-95/night if you can stretch slightly.

Do Petra hotels include the Petra entry ticket?

No. Almost no hotel in Wadi Musa includes the Petra entry ticket in the room rate. A 1-day ticket costs 50 JOD ($70), a 2-day is 55 JOD ($77), and a 3-day is 60 JOD ($85). Buy directly at the Petra Visitor Center on Touristic Street. don't pay any hotel or driver who offers to 'arrange' it for you at a markup.

What areas of Wadi Musa should I avoid staying in?

Avoid the lower end of Wadi Musa near the Al-Rasheed Street area and the bus station. Hotels there are cheap but the uphill distance to the Petra gate is punishing, especially after a full day inside the ruins. A few guesthouses around the main souq market advertise 'Petra area' but are a solid 45-minute walk from the gate. The savings don't justify it.

Is there a hotel inside Petra itself?

No hotels operate inside the Petra Archaeological Park boundaries. The closest you get is the Movenpick Resort Petra and Petra Gate Hotel, both right on Tourism Street within 300 meters of the Visitor Center. The Petra Basin inside the park has small food stalls and the Basin Restaurant, but no accommodation.

Can I walk between my hotel and the Petra ruins, or do I need transport?

If you're staying near the Petra Entrance on Tourism Street, it's a 3-8 minute walk to the Siq gate. Petra Moon and Movenpick are both walkable in under 10 minutes. From upper Wadi Musa on Al-Anbat Hill where the Marriott sits, it's about 15 minutes downhill. From Wadi Musa town center, take a taxi.