Private Guided Tour to Tripoli from Beirut | Full Day

5.0
(2 reviews)
Beirut, Lebanon

8 to 9 hours (approximately)
Pickup offered
Offered in: English

Most visitors to Lebanon never make it to Tripoli. That is their loss — and your opportunity. Lebanon's second city is one of the most authentically preserved medieval cities in the Arab world, and on this private full-day tour from Beirut, you will experience a side of Lebanon that package tours simply do not reach.

A 12th-century Crusader citadel. Two of the finest Mamluk mosques in the Levant — one built on the foundations of a Crusader cathedral, its original Gothic portal still visible in the stonework. A living medieval souk unchanged for centuries. An unfinished Oscar Niemeyer masterpiece — one of the most architecturally significant modernist buildings in the Middle East. And Hallab 1881 — the legendary Tripoli pastry institution that has been making Lebanese sweets since the Ottoman era, where a tasting stop is not optional but essential. The day ends at El Mina, Tripoli's ancient fishing port, where the pace of life slows to something entirely unhurried.

What's Included

Hotel pickup and drop-off in Beirut
Air-conditioned vehicle
Private air-conditioned vehicle
Expert private guide
Sweet tasting & lunch at Hallab 1881 (at own expense)
Gratuities (optional)

Meeting and pickup

Pickup points
You can choose a pickup location at checkout (multiple pickup locations are available).
Pickup details:

we pick up travelers from any Hotel, Airbnb or Residence in Beirut

Itinerary

Duration: 8 to 9 hours (approximately)
  • Beirut (Pass by)

    9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut Your private guide and driver collect you from your Beirut hotel and head north along the Mediterranean coastal highway toward Tripoli — Lebanon's second city and one of the most underrated destinations in the entire Middle East.

    Admission ticket free
  • 1
    Citadel Saint Gilles (Qal'at Sinjil)

    Begin at the commanding Crusader citadel that has dominated Tripoli since the 12th century — originally built by Raymond de Saint-Gilles, Count of Toulouse, during the First Crusade and later expanded by the Mamluks who conquered it. From its ramparts, the entire city spreads below you — the old city's minarets and rooftops, the port of El Mina beyond, and the Lebanese mountains rising steeply behind. Your guide traces the full story of Crusaders, Mamluks, and Ottomans who all left their mark on these walls — and explains why Tripoli was one of the most fought-over cities in medieval history.

    30 minutes Admission ticket not included
  • 2

    Descend into the old city to visit one of the most significant Mamluk monuments in Lebanon — built in the 14th century on the site of a former Crusader Cathedral of Santa Maria. Look closely at the entrance portal and you will see the original Gothic stonework from the Crusader church still incorporated into the Mamluk facade — a remarkable architectural palimpsest where two civilisations are literally layered in a single doorway. Your guide brings the full story of this extraordinary building to life.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 3
    Taynal Mosque

    A short walk brings you to one of Tripoli's hidden architectural gems — the Taynal Mosque, another extraordinary Mamluk structure built on Crusader foundations, this time incorporating two connected prayer halls: one originally a Crusader church, the other a Mamluk addition. Gothic arches and Mamluk stonework exist side by side in the same building — a hybrid structure found nowhere else in the world and one that most visitors to Tripoli walk past without knowing its significance.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 4

    Wander through one of the most authentically preserved medieval markets in the Arab world — a labyrinth of vaulted stone alleyways where gold merchants, spice vendors, soap makers, and fabric traders have occupied the same stalls for centuries. Unlike the restored souks of Beirut, Tripoli's old market is the real thing — alive, trading, and completely unchanged in its essential character from the Mamluk era. Your guide knows exactly which lanes to take and what to look for.

    1 hour Admission ticket free
  • 5
    Rachid Karami International Fair

    One of the most surprising and most photographed stops in all of Lebanon — the Rachid Karami International Fair is an unfinished modernist fairground designed by Oscar Niemeyer, the legendary Brazilian architect behind Brasília, commissioned in the 1960s and never completed due to the Lebanese Civil War. The result is an eerie, extraordinary landscape of brutalist concrete domes, elevated walkways, and sweeping pavilions slowly being reclaimed by nature — a ghost city of the future that never arrived. When open, the site can be explored from inside — walking through Niemeyer's visionary spaces and imagining the Lebanon that might have been. When closed, the dramatic exterior structures are visible and photographable from the perimeter. Either way, it is unlike anything else in the country.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 6

    Hallab 1881 — Tripoli's legendary pastry institution No visit to Tripoli is complete without Hallab. Founded in 1881 during the Ottoman era, Hallab is the most celebrated pastry house in Lebanon and one of the most famous in the entire Arab world — a multi-storey institution where the knefeh, baklava, mamoul, and maamoul bil ashta are made to recipes that have not changed in generations. Stop for a tasting of their finest sweets — and if appetite allows, their full menu of Lebanese dishes makes Hallab an excellent lunch option as well. This is not a tourist stop. This is where Tripolitans have celebrated weddings, graduations, and ordinary Tuesdays for over 140 years.

    30 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 7
    El Mina Port

    End your time in Tripoli at El Mina — the historic port district where the pace of life slows to something completely different from the medieval intensity of the old city. Colourful fishing boats in the harbour, Ottoman-era mansions lining the corniche, and a palm-lined waterfront where locals gather at every hour of the day. A perfect final image of a city that rewards those who take the time to find it.

    15 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Beirut (Pass by)

    Return to Beirut — approx. 5:00–6:00 PM Your guide and driver bring you back along the coastal highway to Beirut with drop-off at your hotel — completing a full day in one of Lebanon's most rewarding and most underrated cities.

    Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Specialized infant seats are available
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Supplied by Lebanon Tours & travels

Tags

Full-day Tours
Bus Tours
Private and Luxury
Private Sightseeing Tours
Cultural Tours
Historical Tours
City Tours
Car Tours
Zombie
Zombie Slice
Short term availability

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

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Rating

5.0 Based on 2 2 reviews
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