The Chouf Mountains do three things really well — grand palaces, ancient cedar forests, and perfectly preserved Ottoman villages — and this private day trip from Beirut does all three. One mountain range, one full day, three completely different experiences that have no business being this good or this close together.
Beiteddine Palace is the showstopper — one of the most magnificent 19th-century palaces in the Arab world, built by the man who unified Lebanon's warring mountain factions and today the summer residence of the Lebanese President. The Barouk Cedar Forest is the antidote — ancient trees, mountain air, and the complete silence of a UNESCO-protected biosphere that most Lebanon visitors never reach. And Deir el Qamar is the perfect finale — a honey-stone village that was Lebanon's first capital and still looks like nobody told it the rest of the world moved on.
We pick-up travelers from any Hotel, Residence or Airbnb in Beirut
9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut Your driver picks you up from your Beirut hotel and heads southeast into the Chouf Mountains — pine-forested ridges rising steeply above the coastal plain as you climb toward Beiteddine.
Beiteddine Palace — the presidential one Built between 1788 and 1840 by Emir Bashir II — the ruler who unified Lebanon's mountain communities under a single authority and today serves as the Lebanese President's official summer residence — Beiteddine is the most impressive palace in the Chouf and one of the finest in the Arab world. Three grand interconnected courtyards decorated with hand-cut geometric tilework and carved cedar-wood ceilings open before you. Beneath the palace, an underground museum preserves Lebanon's finest collection of Byzantine mosaics — floor panels of extraordinary colour that most visitors walk straight past. Your driver knows where the good stuff is and takes you straight to it.
Barouk Cedar Forest — ancient trees, zero crowds After the grandeur of Beiteddine, the Barouk Cedar Forest is the reset button. Part of Lebanon's largest nature reserve and a UNESCO-recognised biosphere, the Barouk grove protects ancient cedar trees descended from the forests that built Phoenician ships, Solomon's Temple, and Egyptian palaces. An hour walking the marked paths through the grove at your own pace — massive ancient trunks, mountain panoramas through the canopy, the kind of mountain silence that is genuinely hard to find anywhere near Beirut. No steep terrain, no technical difficulty — just old trees, good air, and the satisfying feeling of being somewhere most tourists do not bother to go.
Deir el Qamar — Lebanon's first capital, still going strong Drive down to Deir el Qamar — meaning "Monastery of the Moon" — one of the most perfectly preserved Ottoman villages in Lebanon and the country's first capital under the Ma'an dynasty. The central square is framed by honey-stone mansions dating to the 17th and 18th centuries, a Druze palace, and public buildings that have barely changed in 300 years. After the imperial scale of Beiteddine and the forest solitude of Barouk, Deir el Qamar is the human-sized finale — cobblestone streets, mountain air, and a village that has been going about its business since the 16th century without making a big deal of it.
Fakhreddine Mosque & Saydet el Tallé Church A quick visit to the 17th-century mosque built by Fakhreddine II — the Druze emir who built an empire from the Bekaa to the Sinai and is considered one of Lebanon's founding fathers — and the hilltop Maronite church with sweeping Chouf valley views. A mosque and a church sharing the same hillside for 400 years. Completely normal in Deir el Qamar.
Lunch in Deir el Qamar — optional Traditional Lebanese mountain lunch at one of Deir el Qamar's stone-vaulted restaurants — mezze spreads, grilled meats, fresh bread, and Chouf valley views. After a presidential palace, an ancient cedar forest, and Lebanon's first capital — sitting down to eat in a 300-year-old village feels like exactly the right way to finish.
Return to Beirut — approx. 5:30–6:00 PM Mountain drive back to Beirut with drop-off at your hotel — completing a full Chouf day that went from a presidential palace to ancient cedar trees to Lebanon's first capital, all within the same mountain range.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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