Medina panoramic view — Arábia Saudita

Voyspark · Destinations · Arábia Saudita

Medina.
Islam's second holiest city, now open to the world.

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📊 Quick comparison

ItemValue
Best seasonnovembro, dezembro, janeiro, fevereiro, março
LanguageÁrabe (oficial) · Inglês falado em hotéis, restaurantes turísticos e serviços médicos. Urdu e Indonesian comuns por causa de peregrinos.
CurrencyRiyal saudita (SAR) · 1 USD ≈ 3,75 SAR (peg fixo) · 1 EUR ≈ 4,05 SAR
Power plugTipo G (3 pinos britânico) · 230V · 60Hz
Emergency999 (polícia) · 997 (ambulância) · 998 (bombeiros) · 911 também funciona em todo o reino desde 2022
Avg cost/day (couple)USD 5.861 /day (couple)
Direct flightsShortest route is GRU-Doha (Qatar Airways, 14h30) + DOH-MED (3h direct, daily), 22-26h door-to-door, R$ 4,500-7,500 RT economy
Vaccines / docsSaudi e-visa available online for 50+ nationalities at USD 90, valid for 1 year, multiple entries, up to 90 days per stay

Medina é a segunda cidade santa do Islã, atrás apenas de Meca. Foi para cá que o profeta Maomé migrou em 622 da Era Comum — a Hégira, ponto zero do calendário islâmico —, fundando ali a primeira comunidade muçulmana organizada e transformando uma oasis de tâmaras chamada Yathrib na al-Madinah al-Munawwarah, "a cidade iluminada". 1,5 milhão de habitantes hoje, 400 km ao norte de Meca, no coração do Hejaz. Para 1,9 bilhão de muçulmanos no mundo, esta é a segunda parada obrigatória depois da peregrinação a Meca. Para o resto do planeta, foi por décadas uma cidade quase inacessível — até 2019.

No centro está a Masjid an-Nabawi, a Mesquita do Profeta. Foi construída pelo próprio Maomé em 622 e expandida por sucessivos califas até virar o complexo de mármore branco, dez minaretes e capacidade para 1 milhão de fiéis que se vê hoje. Sob a Green Dome (a cúpula verde icônica, pintada nessa cor em 1837 pelo sultão otomano Mahmud II) está o túmulo do Profeta, junto aos primeiros califas Abu Bakr e Omar. O interior da mesquita — incluindo a Rawdah, a "jardim do paraíso" entre o púlpito e o túmulo do Profeta — é restrito a muçulmanos. A área externa, a praça de mármore com 27 cúpulas retráteis e os mercados ao redor, está aberta a todos.

O que mudou em 2019 foi a abertura turística histórica. Como parte do plano Saudi Vision 2030 do príncipe herdeiro Mohammed bin Salman, o reino lançou o e-visa para viajantes de 50+ nacionalidades por USD 90, válido por um ano, múltiplas entradas. Pela primeira vez na história moderna, não-muçulmanos podem visitar Medina legalmente. As regras se mantêm claras: interior das mesquitas haram (sagradas) só para muçulmanos, vestimenta modesta obrigatória em toda a cidade (mulheres precisam cobrir cabelos próximo a Masjid an-Nabawi, abaya recomendada), álcool proibido em todo o território nacional, comportamento público respeitoso ao calendário religioso (especialmente durante Ramadã e período de Hajj, quando milhões de peregrinos chegam).

Fora da Masjid an-Nabawi, a cidade oferece a Quba Mosque a 5 minutos — a primeira mesquita do Islã, fundada pelo próprio Profeta ao chegar de Meca em 622, também observável externamente —, o Monte Uhud a 30 minutos com o campo de batalha de 625 EC onde o Profeta foi ferido, e o museu Dar Al Madinah que explica a arqueologia urbana islâmica. A culinária local gira em torno do mandi (cordeiro ou frango com arroz aromatizado cozido lentamente em forno subterrâneo de barro), kabsa (o prato nacional saudita, arroz basmati com carne e sete especiarias), saleeg (arroz cremoso parecido com risoto, hejazi tradicional), e o mhalbi de sobremesa (pudim de leite com água de rosas e pistache). Al Baik, a rede saudita de frango frito, é instituição. O Spice Souk Datterada vende mais de cem variedades de tâmaras — a fruta-símbolo da região.

Medina é também porta para o Hejaz inteiro. A 3 horas de voo está AlUla, o sítio UNESCO de tumbas nabateias talhadas em rocha (mesma civilização que construiu Petra, vizinhos pelo norte). Jeddah, a 4 horas de carro pela costa do Mar Vermelho, oferece o contraste cosmopolita do reino. Meca fica a 4 horas de carro ao sul mas é restrita a muçulmanos. Visitar Medina em 2026 é assistir a um experimento civilizacional em tempo real: uma das cidades mais conservadoras e religiosamente significativas do mundo islâmico se abrindo de forma controlada ao turismo internacional, num equilíbrio delicado entre preservação do sagrado e diversificação econômica pós-petróleo. Para o viajante respeitoso e curioso, é uma janela rara para um lugar que poucas pessoas fora da fé chegaram a conhecer.

Voyspark editorial · updated monthly by our resident editor in Medina.

By the numbers.

Population

1,5 milhão de habitantes

Time zone

AST (UTC+3) · sem horário de verão

Language

Árabe (oficial) · Inglês falado em hotéis, restaurantes turísticos e serviços médicos. Urdu e Indonesian comuns por causa de peregrinos.

Currency

Riyal saudita (SAR) · 1 USD ≈ 3,75 SAR (peg fixo) · 1 EUR ≈ 4,05 SAR

Plug · voltage

Tipo G (3 pinos britânico) · 230V · 60Hz

Emergency

999 (polícia) · 997 (ambulância) · 998 (bombeiros) · 911 também funciona em todo o reino desde 2022

Known for

Masjid an-NabawiGreen DomeTúmulo do Profeta MaoméQuba Mosque (1ª do Islã)Monte UhudTâmaras ajwaHejaz Railway2ª cidade santa do Islã

Neighborhoods by personality.

Every neighborhood has its own temperature. Tell us your vibe — we'll re-rank.

01

Al-Haram

95% match with your Slow Romantic profile

The spiritual and logistical heart of the city — the ring immediately around Masjid an-Nabawi. Home to the major pilgrim hotels (Pullman Zamzam, Anwar Al Madinah Movenpick, Dar Al-Iman Intercontinental), towers with direct Green Dome views, and the marble plaza with its retractable umbrellas. Everything is 1-5 min on foot from the mosque. Dense, busy 24/7 during religious seasons. Expensive but unmatched for proximity.

Vista Green Dome1-5 min da Masjid an-NabawiHotéis 5* peregrinosPraça de mármoreAcesso a souks

02

Al-Anbariya

86% match with your Slow Romantic profile

Neighborhood west of Masjid an-Nabawi, home to the historic Anbariya railway station (Hejaz Railway, 1908, built by the Ottomans to connect Damascus to Medina), now converted into a railway museum. Mid-range 4-5* hotels at 30-40% lower prices than Al-Haram, roomier restaurants, wide streets. 10-15 min walking to the mosque. Good for families and longer stays.

Hotéis mid-range mais baratosEstação Hejaz Railway museumRuas largas10-15 min a pé da mesquitaMais espaçoso

03

Qurban

78% match with your Slow Romantic profile

Residential neighborhood to the northwest, near the Al-Qiblatain Mosque (one of the historic mosques where the direction of Muslim prayer — the qibla — was changed from Jerusalem to Mecca in 624 CE). More local, less touristy, with neighborhood markets, bakeries and cafés frequented by residents. Good for understanding everyday Medina beyond the pilgrim circuit.

Mesquita Al-Qiblatain próximaVida de bairro localMercados de ruaSem turismo de peregrinaçãoPreço residencial

04

Aboud

75% match with your Slow Romantic profile

Neighborhood east of the center, with strong popular commerce, traditional Hejazi restaurants (authentic mandi and saleeg) and bakeries selling fresh Arabic bread. Budget 3-4* hotels. 20-25 min walking to Masjid an-Nabawi, or 10 min by taxi. For budget travelers or those who want to eat where locals eat.

Restaurantes hejazi autênticosHotéis 3-4* econômicosPadarias tradicionaisComércio localBom custo-benefício

05

Al-Khalidiya

80% match with your Slow Romantic profile

Modern neighborhood north of the center, with shopping malls (Aliat Mall, Al Noor Mall), international chains, and the highest density of Al Baik (the Saudi fried chicken brand) per square kilometer. Mid-range 4-5* hotels, newer residential complexes, planned streets. Far from Masjid an-Nabawi (20 min by taxi) but offers the urban comfort many Western travelers prefer.

Shoppings modernosHotéis 4-5* novosAl Baik onipresenteConforto urbanoRuas planejadas

06

Al-Aqool

72% match with your Slow Romantic profile

Semi-residential neighborhood to the south, near the date-palm agricultural area (Medina is one of the world's largest date producers — ajwa, sukkari, anbara, mabroom). Wholesale date markets operate here. Simple restaurants, quiet streets. Not ideal as a tourist base (far from the mosque), but the place to buy quality dates straight from the producer.

Mercados de tâmara atacadoPlantações ajwa próximasRestaurantes locais simplesRuas tranquilasPreço residencial

When to go.

We crossed climate, average price, crowds and your tastes. Green = good, gold = great, red = avoid.

Jan18°C · $$$
Fev21°C · $$$$
Mar25°C · $$$$
Abr30°C · $$
Mai35°C · $$
Jun40°C · $$$
Jul43°C · $$$$
Ago43°C · $$$
Set39°C · $$
Out32°C · $$
Nov25°C · $$$
Dez20°C · $$$

Voyspark AI suggests: Visite de novembro a março (15-25°C, clima ameno, viável caminhar entre Masjid an-Nabawi e Quba Mosque). Abril a outubro tem calor extremo (35-45°C, sol direto, exige hidratação contínua e proteção). EVITE Ramadã (mês islâmico de jejum, que em 2026 cai entre fevereiro-março — cidade lotadíssima, restaurantes fechados durante o dia, serviços alterados) e a temporada de Hajj (julho 2026 aproximadamente, milhões de peregrinos, hotéis esgotados e preços 5-10x). Hospede em Al-Haram (caminhada de 5 min até a Masjid an-Nabawi) se prioridade é estar perto da mesquita; em Al-Anbariya ou Al-Khalidiya pra hotéis mid-range mais espaçosos. Vestimenta modesta o tempo todo (homens calça comprida, mulheres cobrir cabelos perto da mesquita, abaya recomendada). Álcool é proibido em todo o país. e-visa Saudi USD 90 online (sem necessidade de carta-convite religiosa).

Gastronomy.

Dishes worth the trip — no tourist traps, no gimmicks.

Mandi tradicional servido em prato comunal

Mandi

The signature dish of the Hejaz and Yemen. Lamb (lahm) or chicken (dajaj) marinated in cardamom, clove, cinnamon, saffron and loomi (fermented black lime), slow-cooked in a tannour (underground clay oven) over basmati rice that absorbs all the meat's fat and flavor. Served in a communal platter, traditionally eaten with the right hand. Comes with laban (liquid yogurt), sahawiq (Yemeni hot sauce) and tomato-cucumber salad.

📍 Najd Village (várias unidades em Medina, instituição saudita)💶 SAR 40-75 (USD 11-20)

Wikimedia Commons

Kabsa — arroz basmati especiado com carne, o prato nacional saudita

Kabsa

The Saudi national dish. Basmati rice cooked in meat broth (lamb, chicken or camel) seasoned with bzar (the Saudi seven-spice mix: cumin, coriander, cardamom, black pepper, clove, nutmeg, cinnamon), tomato, caramelized onion and toasted pine nuts. Differs from mandi in method (regular vs. underground oven) and has a wetter broth. Found in every Saudi restaurant.

📍 Najd Village · restaurantes hejazi em Aboud💶 SAR 35-65 (USD 9-17)

Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

Saleeg — arroz cremoso hejazi cozido em leite com frango assado

Saleeg

The Hejazi version of risotto: short-grain rice cooked in milk and chicken broth until creamy, almost pudding-like. Served topped with roasted chicken and shatta (green chili sauce). Originated in Taif (a mountain city 200km away), but Medina adopts it as a hospitality dish — what you serve guests at special occasions. Creamy, comforting, not spicy.

📍 Najd Village · casas hejazi tradicionais💶 SAR 30-55 (USD 8-15)

Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0

Mhalbi em Medina

Mhalbi

Milk pudding lightly scented with rose water or orange blossom, thickened with rice starch, topped with ground pistachio and cinnamon. The classic Ramadan dessert, served chilled in small cups. Light, fragrant, never cloying. Ottoman origin adopted across the Arabian Peninsula.

📍 Confeitarias árabes em Al-Haram · supermercados Al Othaim💶 SAR 10-20 (USD 3-5)

Wikimedia Commons · CC

Al Baik em Medina

Al Baik

The Saudi fried chicken chain founded in Jeddah in 1974 that became a national institution. Chicken marinated for hours in a secret spice mix, breaded and fried until the skin is ultra-crispy. Comes with hot Arabic bread, fries and the iconic white garlic sauce (toum). 30-60 min lines are normal. Medina has several branches, the largest in Al-Khalidiya.

📍 Al Baik (várias unidades em Medina, especialmente Al-Khalidiya e Al-Anbariya)💶 SAR 25-45 (USD 7-12)

Wikimedia Commons · CC

Tâmaras ajwa do Spice Souk em Medina

Ajwa dates from the Spice Souk

The ajwa date is native to Medina and cited in Islamic hadiths as sacred. Black-purple skin, soft texture, concentrated caramel flavor with light acidity. Sold in the Spice Souk Datterada at SAR 80-200/kg (premium versions reach SAR 400/kg). Other famous varieties: sukkari (sweeter), anbara (elongated), mabroom (firm). Worth buying straight from producers in Al-Aqool for 30-40% less.

📍 Spice Souk Datterada (próximo à Masjid an-Nabawi)💶 SAR 80-200/kg (USD 22-55)

Wikimedia Commons · CC

Getting there and around.

Airport, public transport, direct flights, walkability.

Estação do Haramain High Speed Railway em Medina
Haramain High Speed Railway — trem-bala que liga Medina a Meca e Jeddah a 300 km/h. · Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0

From airport to center

Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz International Airport (MED) is 15 km from downtown. Three options: (1) Careem or Uber (local Saudi apps) to Al-Haram, SAR 40-70, 20-30 min. (2) Private hotel transfer, SAR 110-190, bookable in advance (recommended for night arrivals). (3) Official white taxi at the arrivals desk, SAR 60-100 metered — agree on the meter before getting in. Avoid informal taxis touting in the hall. Medina's light metro is still under construction in 2026.

Public transport

Medina has no operating metro yet — transport is car-dominated. Careem (the local Saudi Uber) is the standard, cheap way to get around: SAR 10-25 within the city, English app, card payment. The Haramain High Speed Railway (300 km/h bullet train) links Medina to Mecca in 2h and to Jeddah (King Abdulaziz Airport and downtown) in 1h45, with a station in the city — but the Mecca leg is boardable by Muslims only, as it terminates in the restricted holy city. Cheap SAPTCO city buses exist (SAR 3-5) but are little used by tourists. Around Masjid an-Nabawi, walking is best — the whole Al-Haram area is pedestrianized.

Direct flights

No direct Brazil-Medina flight. Shortest route is GRU-Doha (Qatar Airways, 14h30) + DOH-MED (3h direct, daily), 22-26h door-to-door, R$ 4,500-7,500 RT economy. Alternatives: GRU-Dubai (Emirates, 14h) + DXB-MED (3h via flydubai); GRU-Istanbul (Turkish, 13h) + IST-MED (4h). Saudi domestic connections run MED to Jeddah (JED, 1h, multiple daily), Riyadh (1h45) and AlUla (ULA, 2h, 3-4x/week). From Lisbon/Europe, LIS-DOH (Qatar, 7h30) + DOH-MED shortens it considerably.

Walkability

The central Al-Haram area around Masjid an-Nabawi is fully pedestrianized and flat — walking is the best way around, with Quba Mosque a 20-25 min walk (or SAR 15-25 by Careem). Outside the central ring, Medina is a car city: long distances, and intense April-October heat makes midday walks dangerous. For Mount Uhud (30 min drive) and AlUla (domestic flight), motorized transport is required. Wear comfortable footwear: the mosque's marble plaza heats up badly in the sun — bring socks, since the outer prayer area requires removing shoes.

Safety.

88.0/10

Solo female travel

Since the 2019 reforms, women can travel solo to Saudi Arabia without a mahram (male guardian) from age 21. Abaya (long black robe) recommended in public — not legally required since 2019 but socially expected, especially near Masjid an-Nabawi. Hair covered with a hijab near the mosque. Apps like Careem (the local Uber) are safe and widely used.

LGBTQ+

Saudi Arabia criminalizes same-sex relations under sharia, with penalties that may include prison, flogging and theoretically the death penalty (rarely applied to foreigners, but the legal risk exists). For LGBTQ+ travelers: maximum public discretion, no displays of affection, avoid LGBTQ+ topics on social media during the trip (authorities monitor). Same-sex tourist couples usually book separate hotel rooms to avoid suspicion.

Don't miss.

  • Watch the Green Dome of Masjid an-Nabawi externally at sunset, when it lights up emerald green.
  • Visit the Quba Mosque, Islam's first mosque, founded by the Prophet himself in 622 CE.
  • Eat traditional communal mandi at an authentic Hejazi restaurant in Aboud or Najd Village.
  • Buy ajwa dates straight from the Spice Souk Datterada — Medina's signature fruit, sacred in the hadiths.
  • Hike Mount Uhud to understand early-Islamic military history and get a panoramic view of the city.
  • Visit the Hejaz Railway Station museum, a relic of the Ottoman link between Damascus and Medina (1908).

Avoid.

  • Do not try to enter the interior of Masjid an-Nabawi or Quba Mosque as a non-Muslim — it is forbidden by Saudi religious and civil law.
  • Do not carry alcohol in your luggage or consume alcohol in the country — it is a federal crime with immediate jail and deportation.
  • Do not photograph people (especially women) without explicit permission — may lead to phone seizure and legal action.
  • Do not display public affection between couples (even heterosexual married ones) — kissing and extended hugging in public are discouraged by the Mutawa religious police (whose authority was reduced but not eliminated since 2016).
  • Do not attempt to visit Mecca as a non-Muslim — highway checkpoints south of Medina verify religious credentials before allowing entry to the #1 holy city.
  • Do not travel during Hajj (July 2026) without bookings confirmed 6+ months in advance — millions of pilgrims, hotels sold out, prices 5-10x.

Day trips.

To stretch the trip beyond the city — in 1 to 3 hours you're in a different world.

Quba Mosque em Medina

Quba Mosque

5 min de táxi

Islam's first mosque, founded by the Prophet Muhammad himself when he arrived from Mecca in 622 CE. The hadith says praying two rakahs at Quba equals one umrah (the lesser pilgrimage to Mecca). Rebuilt and expanded over the centuries, the current structure is white marble with four minarets. Non-Muslims may observe externally but cannot enter the haram interior.

💶 Gratuito (táxi SAR 15-25)

Monte Uhud, campo de batalha histórico do início do Islã

Monte Uhud

30 min de carro

The mountain where the Battle of Uhud was fought in March 625 CE, the second major military clash between Muslims led by the Prophet and the Quraysh of Mecca. The Prophet was wounded in battle and his uncle Hamza ibn Abd al-Muttalib was killed. The site now has a small museum, the Martyrs' Cemetery (Shuhada Uhud) and a moderate hiking trail with a panoramic view of Medina. Open to all visitors with no religious restriction.

💶 Gratuito (táxi ida-volta SAR 80-120)

Tumbas nabateias de Hegra em AlUla

AlUla (Hegra UNESCO)

3h de voo doméstico

Saudi Arabia's first UNESCO site (2008): Nabataean tombs carved into red sandstone rock, by the same civilization that built Petra in Jordan (neighbors to the north). Hegra (Madain Saleh in Arabic) is the "Saudi sister of Petra", with 111 well-preserved monumental tombs scattered across an eroded sandstone valley. Saudi luxury tourism's flagship: Banyan Tree AlUla, Habitas AlUla, Maraya (Olafur Eliasson mirrored hall). Direct flight MED-ULA via Saudia or flynas (SAR 400-700 round-trip).

💶 USD 400-600 (voo + entrada + tour)

Meca (apenas para muçulmanos) em Medina

Meca (apenas para muçulmanos)

4h de carro

Islam's first holy city, 400 km south of Medina. Closed to non-Muslims by Saudi law — highway checkpoints verify religious credentials (Mahram document) before allowing entry. For Muslims, the umrah pilgrimage (any time of year) or hajj (5th pillar of Islam, in the month of Dhu al-Hijjah) is a transformative experience. For non-Muslims, the closest permitted point is the "Christians by-pass" sign on the highway that diverts the route.

💶 N/A (não-muçulmanos não podem entrar)

Jeddah (Mar Vermelho) em Medina

Jeddah (Mar Vermelho)

4h de carro

Saudi Arabia's most cosmopolitan city, historic entry port for pilgrims via the Red Sea. Al-Balad (the UNESCO historic center) with coral houses in traditional Hejazi style, a modern 30 km corniche with contemporary sculptures, Red Sea seafood restaurants and the King Fahd Fountain (the world's tallest, 312m). Open to all. MED-JED flight in 1h or a 4h car ride via the direct highway.

💶 SAR 300-500 (voo) ou SAR 250 (carro privado)

Visual gallery of Medina.

Curated images from Wikimedia Commons — click to enlarge.

Real cost.

Three profiles. Daily items and averages verified in 2026.

Budget

SAR 200/day (USD 53) — budget hotel in Al-Anbariya or Aboud SAR 110-180, mandi or kabsa at a Hejazi house SAR 35-65, Al Baik SAR 30, Arabic coffee with dates SAR 15, Careem within the city SAR 10-25, water and sunscreen SAR 20.

Mid-range

SAR 600/day (USD 160) — 4* hotel in Al-Haram with partial Green Dome view SAR 350-680, Hejazi restaurant meals SAR 120-200, free Careem SAR 60, Mount Uhud + museums tour SAR 150, ajwa dates as gifts SAR 100.

Luxury

SAR 1,500/day (USD 400) — 5* hotel in Al-Haram with full Green Dome view (The Oberoi, Anwar Al Madinah Mövenpick, Dar Al Taqwa) SAR 1,000-1,800, private Hejazi dinner SAR 350, private driver transfer SAR 400, AlUla day trip with flight and guide SAR 2,500.

Avg flight

BR R$ 4.500-7.500 (via DOH/DXB/IST) · UK £450-750 (via JED) · ES € 600-1.000 (via DOH) · DE € 650-1.100 (via DOH/IST) · NY US$1.200-2.200 (via DOH) · JP ¥160k-280k (via DOH/DXB)

Mid hotel

SAR 350-680/noite (4* em Al-Haram com vista parcial da Green Dome)

Coffee

SAR 12-25 qahwa árabe (café com cardamomo) + tâmaras

Mid dinner

SAR 60-130/pessoa (mandi ou kabsa em restaurante hejazi)

Metro day

Sem metrô — Careem SAR 10-25/corrida dentro da cidade

Documents.

What you need to enter and stay legally.

Visa

Saudi e-visa available online for 50+ nationalities at USD 90, valid for 1 year, multiple entries, up to 90 days per stay. Official platform: visa.visitsaudi.com. No religious invitation letter required (historic 2019 change). Passport valid 6 months. No proof of Islamic faith needed to visit Medina (only the interior of haram mosques remains restricted to Muslims).

Travel insurance

International insurance mandatory (automatically included in the e-visa since 2023 with basic coverage). Recommended to top up with a private policy (World Nomads, IMG, Allianz) covering at least USD 100k medical + repatriation, especially in extreme-heat seasons when heatstroke and dehydration are real risks.

Ready to make it happen?

Complete curated plan based on your Taste Genome. Every item links to the official partner to book — no markup, best available price.

Estimated total

USD 2.930 por pessoa (5 dias)

7 nights · 2 people

Build full trip →

Voo internacional → MED

Saudia, Emirates, Turkish · conexão usual em DXB/IST

USD 950

Hotel 4-5* em Al-Haram

5 noites · vista Masjid an-Nabawi

USD 1.200

Tour histórico Medina

Quba Mosque, Monte Uhud, Hejaz Railway

USD 95

Day trip AlUla

Voo doméstico ida-volta + tour Hegra UNESCO

USD 480

Transfer MED ↔ hotel

Carro privativo ida-volta

USD 60

Seguro internacional

World Nomads · 10 dias

USD 55

e-visa Saudi

Online, validade 1 ano múltiplas entradas

USD 90

Community

Ask the locals

Ask real questions to travelers and locals about Medina.

Reads before you go.

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Go deeper.

Voyspark Journal articles to dive in.

Frequently asked questions.

What people ask before booking the flight.

Can non-Muslims visit Medina?+

Yes, since 2019. Unlike Mecca (closed by law to non-Muslims), Medina was opened to international tourism with the launch of the Saudi e-visa (USD 90, online). Non-Muslims can move around the city, observe haram mosques (Masjid an-Nabawi and Quba) externally, visit Mount Uhud, museums, markets and restaurants. What remains restricted is only the interior of the haram mosques (the inner sacred area).

When is the best time to visit Medina?+

November to March, with temperatures between 15-25°C and a mild climate. Avoid April-October (extreme heat 35-45°C), Ramadan (Feb-Mar 2026, packed city and restaurants closed during the day) and the Hajj period (July 2026, millions of pilgrims and hotels at 5-10x prices).

Do I need a visa to visit Saudi Arabia?+

Yes, but it's easy. The Saudi e-visa can be obtained online in 24-72h for USD 90, valid for 1 year with multiple entries and stays of up to 90 days per visit. Available for 50+ nationalities (Brazil, US, EU, UK, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Australia, Canada and others). Official platform: visa.visitsaudi.com. No more religious invitation letter required (rule abolished in 2019).

How should I dress in Medina?+

Modest dress at all times. Men: long trousers and a shirt with sleeves (short or long). Women: loose clothing covering shoulders, arms, legs and chest. Near Masjid an-Nabawi, women should cover their hair with a hijab, and wearing an abaya (long black robe) is socially expected, although it has not been legally required since 2019. Sandals are fine, but avoid shorts, mini-skirts, plunging necklines and tight clothing in any public place.

Is it safe to travel to Medina as a solo woman?+

Yes, with cultural adaptation. Since 2019, women aged 21+ can travel solo to Saudi Arabia without a mahram (male guardian). Medina is especially safe due to heavy police presence. Wear an abaya in public (not legally required but socially expected), cover hair near the mosque, use official taxis or Careem (local Uber) rather than street taxis, avoid empty streets at night. 4-5* hotels have women-only floors.

Sources and external references.

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