Tunisia · 7-day travel guide

The 7-Day Tunisia Itinerary a Local Would Give You

Tunis medina, Sidi Bou Saïd, Carthage, Sousse, Kairouan, the Sahara and Djerba — day by day, with the tips you won't find on Tripadvisor. Free to plan, real locals included.

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Day by day

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DAY 01

Tunis Medina — Where History Lives

TunisFull day~30–50 DT

Step into the oldest Arab medina in North Africa. The narrow lanes of the Tunis medina (UNESCO) are a sensory maze of spice sellers, carpet weavers, and copper smiths.

Highlights

  • Zitouna Mosque — the city's spiritual core, walk the perimeter even if non-Muslim
  • Souk des Chèches — find the hand-embroidered fouta towels locals actually buy
  • Café Mrabet — a 300-year-old café above the medina gate with a terrace over the rooftops
  • El Mrabet rooftop bar at sundown — the only rooftop bar in the medina
Local tip — Book a local medina guide on Auva — the alleys have no signage and the best stalls are in courtyards invisible from the main street.
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DAY 02

Sidi Bou Saïd — The Blue & White Village

Sidi Bou SaïdHalf day + La Marsa beach~20 DT

The cliff-top village 20 km from Tunis is one of the most photographed places in Africa. Every door is ink-blue. Every wall is chalk white. Protected by law since 1915.

Highlights

  • The Blue Door staircase — the most iconic frame in Tunisia
  • Café des Délices — suspended above the sea, best sunset in the country
  • El Aoud palace garden — free to enter, rarely visited
  • La Marsa beach (15 min north) — calm water, local families, good brik vendors
Local tip — Come on a weekday morning before 10am — the main street fills up after 11. The souvenir prices are 3× lower two streets back.
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DAY 03

Carthage — Rome's Greatest Rival

CarthageFull day~25 DT entry + guide

The ruins of Carthage spread across a whole suburb of Tunis. Once the most powerful city in the Mediterranean, destroyed by Rome in 146 BC and rebuilt by Caesar. Seven sites, one UNESCO designation.

Highlights

  • Antonine Baths — the third-largest Roman baths ever built, on the seafront
  • Byrsa Hill — panoramic view + Punic–Roman museum
  • Tophet — the sacred precinct where Phoenician ritual archaeology is still debated
  • Amphitheatre of Carthage — still used for concerts
Local tip — A good Carthage guide makes the ruins tell a story. Without one, it's just old stones. Auva has vetted history guides who specialize in this site.
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DAY 04

Sousse — The Pearl of the Sahel

SousseFull day~40 DT

2 hours south of Tunis by train or car. Sousse has the most complete surviving medieval medina walls in Tunisia (UNESCO) and a marina full of local life.

Highlights

  • The Ribat fortress — climb the tower for the best view of the medina
  • Great Mosque of Sousse — 9th-century masterpiece, free entry outside prayer times
  • Medina souk — better prices than Tunis, less tourist pressure
  • Marina Port El Kantaoui — modern resort strip with seafood restaurants
Local tip — The Sousse catacombs (4km of Roman underground tunnels) are completely off the tourist trail. One of Auva's local guides leads private visits.
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DAY 05

Kairouan — The Holy City

KairouanDay trip from Sousse (1 hr each way)~30 DT entry + transport

Kairouan is the 4th holiest city in Islam and was the capital of North Africa for 300 years. Non-Muslims can visit the surroundings of the Great Mosque and enter the courtyard.

Highlights

  • Great Mosque of Kairouan — founded in 670 AD, the oldest mosque in North Africa
  • Medina of Kairouan (UNESCO) — one of the best-preserved in the Arab world
  • Aghlabid basins — 9th-century water engineering that fed the city
  • Makroudh pastry shops — the city's famous date-and-semolina biscuit
Local tip — Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered). The carpet sellers around the mosque will approach — Kairouan is the carpet capital of Tunisia and prices are genuinely competitive.
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DAY 06

Day 6 — Choose Your Adventure

Sahara / El JemFull day~50–150 DT depending on option

Two completely different Day 6 options — pick based on your energy and interests.

Highlights

  • OPTION A: El Jem amphitheatre (45 min south) — one of the largest Roman arenas ever built, better preserved than the Colosseum in some sections. Mostly skipped by tourists.
  • OPTION B: Douz + the Sahara (3 hrs south) — the gateway to the Algerian Sahara. Camel ride at dusk on the real dunes. Overnight available.
  • OPTION C: Dougga ruins (north, 2.5 hrs from Sousse) — the most complete Roman town in Africa, barely known outside Tunisia
Local tip — El Jem + Sfax in one day is a great combination for archaeology lovers. For the Sahara, a private driver from Sousse costs ~150 DT for the full day.
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DAY 07

Djerba — The Island of Myth

DjerbaFull day or fly home~60 DT + ferry

Homer's Island of the Lotus Eaters. Connected to the mainland by a Roman causeway. The south of the island has the most authentic villages; the north has the best beaches.

Highlights

  • El Ghriba Synagogue — one of the oldest synagogues in the world (2,500+ years)
  • Erriadh village — turned into an open-air street art museum
  • Houmt Souk — the main market town, good jewelry and pottery
  • Flamingo lagoons in the south — wild flamingos year-round
Local tip — Fly Tunis–Djerba (45 min, cheap) rather than driving 7 hours. Or end your trip in Djerba and fly home directly.
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Know before you go

Tunisia Essentials

The things a local would tell you in the first five minutes.

👋

Say "Salamou Alikom"

Greet everyone — shopkeepers, guides, neighbours. It opens every door in Tunisia.

Even a small attempt at Arabic dissolves suspicion instantly. Try it at a medina gate — the vendor's face changes immediately.

Cultural
🚕

Taxi — always the meter

Ask for compteur when you get in. Or use InDrive for a fixed price — no negotiation.

If refused, get out. Another cab is 30 seconds away in any city. Never negotiate blind — you'll always lose.

Transport
💵

Carry small bills

5, 10, 20 DT notes. Most cafés and souks don't take card.

Withdraw at airport or bank ATMs — you get the official rate. Don't exchange at the hotel desk or with street changers.

Money
🕌

Friday rhythm

Family spots close 11am–2pm for prayer. Plan lunch early or after.

Friday morning is actually the best time to visit mosque courtyards — fewer tourists, more atmosphere, and the call to prayer echoes.

Local life
🤝

Tipping is small but expected

Round up; 1 DT at a café, a few DT for a guide. Not 15% — this isn't America.

For a full-day guide who was genuinely excellent, 20 DT is generous and remembered. It also gets you remembered for next time.

Cultural
🧣

Dress for the room

Beachwear at the beach, covered shoulders/knees at mosques and inland medinas.

Keep a light scarf in your bag. It doubles as mosque cover, shade from the afternoon Sahara sun, and a beach sarong.

Cultural
🍷

Alcohol exists, quietly

Sold in licensed restaurants, hotels and Magasin Général — not corner shops.

A cold Celtia beer costs ~2 DT. Most restaurants outside tourist zones are dry — ask before you sit down if it matters to you.

Local life
🚺

Solo women travellers

Generally safe; ignore street comments, dress modestly inland, trust vetted guides.

The best move: sunglasses, confident stride, and a firm 'La, shukran' (No, thank you) said once. Engaging invites more engagement.

Safety
Eat like a local

What to Eat in Tunisia

Order these — and where locals actually find them.

🥚

Brik à l'œuf

Crispy pastry, runny egg. Eat it over a plate — it will drip.

The best ones are at market stalls, not restaurants. Look for the frying pan and the queue — that's the signal.

Street food
🍲

Lablabi

Chickpea & cumin breakfast soup. A workman's dish — go where the queue is.

Ask for it with harissa, olive oil, tuna, and a poached egg on top. That's the full version locals eat before a long day.

Breakfast
🍳

Ojja merguez

Spiced tomato & egg with sausage. The test of any real local kitchen.

If it's on the menu before 11am, the kitchen knows what it's doing. Afternoon ojja in a tourist spot is usually reheated.

Classic
🌿

Mloukhia

Slow-cooked jute-leaf stew, almost black. Grandmother food — rare on tourist menus.

You'll smell it before you see it. It has a distinct fermented scent that splits tourists — locals consider it the test of a real palate.

Home cooking
🐟

Poisson complet (coast)

Whole grilled fish, salad, tastira. Pick the fish yourself at the counter.

Point at the fish before they take it to the kitchen. Freshness varies — if they won't show you, don't stay.

Seafood
🍩

Bambalouni

Sidi Bou Saïd's hot sugar doughnut. One dinar, eaten on the steps.

Only eat them fresh and hot — if they're sitting in a tray, walk past. The good ones have a 5-minute wait.

Sweet
The practical backbone

Money · Weather · Getting Around

What every trip planner Googles — answered straight.

💳

Real costs in dinar

Coffee 2 DT · big meal 25 DT · museum 12 DT · a day with a guide 80–150 DT.

A 'tourist price' exists for some things. Learn to say 'belhasba?' (how much?) and listen for the hesitation before they answer.

Money
💶

What a week costs

Budget €600–800 with flights · mid-range €1,000–1,200. Cash goes far here.

Stay in guesthouses (maisons d'hôtes) instead of hotels and you'll spend half as much — and get far more authentic food.

Money
☀️

Best time to visit

Mar–May & Sep–Nov are perfect. Jun–Aug very hot inland. Coast mild in winter.

April is the sweet spot — wildflowers in the north, warm Sahara, crowds that haven't arrived yet. October runs a close second.

Weather
🚐

Between cities

Louage (shared van) is fastest & cheapest; train links Tunis–Sousse–Sfax.

Louages leave when full — usually 4–8 passengers. No schedule, just show up to the louage station. Tunis→Sousse is ~8 DT.

Transport
🚗

For day trips

Hire a local driver-guide — Auva's network includes them. Cheaper than agency tours.

Negotiate the full-day price upfront and include waiting time at sites. A good driver earns more than a taxi fare — you'll feel the difference.

Transport
📶

SIM & data

Ooredoo / Tunisie Telecom at the airport. ~10 DT for 20 GB.

Ooredoo has better 4G inland and in the Sahara. Tunisie Telecom is stronger in the north. Get both if you're doing the full circuit.

Practical
Stay sharp

Don't Get Ripped Off

Common moves — and the local counter for each.

🧶

The carpet "gift"

Nothing is free. If it's pressed into your hands, smile, say no, keep walking.

The script is always the same: 'welcome gift', then tea, then 'just look', then 2 hours later you're buying a carpet. Walk away at step one.

Scam
🪪

The "official" guide

Real guides are vetted on Auva. Anyone grabbing you at the gate isn't.

Real licensed guides carry a government badge and won't approach you first. Anyone rushing toward you at the entrance is never official.

Scam
🌿

The henna ladies

They'll grab your hand then demand 20 DT. Hands in pockets near the souk gate.

If a woman grabs your wrist and starts drawing, shout 'La!' immediately and pull away. Once it's on, they'll demand 50–100 DT.

Scam
🚕

"Meter's broken"

Then the ride's over — get out and take the next one. A working meter is non-negotiable.

Agree on a price before getting in if there's truly no meter. 5 DT is a fair Tunis city trip. 10 DT from airport to city centre.

Scam
💱

Street money changers

Only change at banks or licensed bureaux. Street rates are a setup.

The rate looks good because they shortchange the count. Real bureau de change offices (green signs) are on most main streets.

Scam
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Frequently asked

Tunisia Travel FAQ

What currency do I need for Tunisia?

Tunisian Dinar (TND). Approximately 1 EUR = 3.3 TND. Withdraw cash at the airport or a bank — card acceptance is limited outside tourist zones.

What languages are spoken in Tunisia?

Arabic and French are official. In tourist areas English is widely understood. Auva supports 8 languages: Arabic, French, English, Spanish, Italian, German, Russian, and Chinese.

When is the best time to visit Tunisia?

March–May and September–November offer the best weather. Summer (June–August) is very hot inland. Winter is mild on the coast.

How do I get around Tunisia?

Trains connect Tunis, Sousse, and Sfax cheaply. Taxis are affordable. For day trips, hiring a local driver is recommended — Auva's guide network includes drivers.

Do I need a SIM card in Tunisia?

Buy a Tunisie Telecom or Ooredoo SIM at airport arrivals. Approximately 10 TND for 20 GB of data.

Is Tunisia safe for tourists?

Tunisia is generally safe for tourists. Tourist police (beige uniforms) are stationed at all major sites. Standard city-awareness applies in Tunis at night.

How much does a 7-day Tunisia trip cost?

Budget travelers can manage €600–800 including flights. Mid-range is €1,000–1,200. Accommodation ranges from 30 TND/night for a guesthouse to 150+ TND for a boutique hotel.

What should I eat in Tunisia?

Must-try dishes: brik à l'œuf (crispy pastry with egg), lablabi (chickpea soup), ojja merguez (spiced tomato and egg), mloukhia (jute-leaf stew), fresh grilled fish on the coast, and bambalouni doughnuts in Sidi Bou Saïd.

Is Tunisia a tourist trap?

Tunisia has some common tourist scams — carpet 'gifts', unofficial guides at site gates, henna ladies, and taxi drivers claiming a broken meter. Book vetted guides through platforms like Auva, always ask for the meter (compteur), and change money only at banks or licensed bureaux.

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