Daytrip is a private car service platform that connects you with local drivers who will transport you door-to-door. We also give you the opportunity to explore sights/attractions along the way. We drive, you discover.
Daytrip offers private door-to-door transfers with optional sightseeing stops, hourly driver hire, and curated day trips β all with local English-speaking drivers and operating across 130+ countries.
For private trips, you can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before departure.
Yes! Book a private, door-to-door airport transfer with a local English-speaking driver. Enjoy fixed and transparent pricing, no hidden fees, and the option to pay in advance without the hassle of exchanging cash at a foreign airport.
You will receive the vehicle that best fits the number of travelers in your group, ranging from a sedan to a van for groups of up to 7. Depending where you travel, you can book anything from a sedan comparable to a Toyota Corolla to a Mercedes V-Class to a Classic Cuban Car. While the exact model may vary, we always ensure that the vehicle provided meets your needs in terms of safety, reliability, and comfort. You may be upgraded to a larger vehicle class free of charge depending on availability. Since our largest vehicle seats 7, for groups larger a combination of vehicles will be used. We will send you the exact vehicle details a few days before your trip.
Everywhere except the USA, drivers will supply appropriate child seats (just let us know during booking). In the USA, certain states require you to supply your own child seats.
Douz is roughly 430 km (267 miles) from Tunis, around 370 km (230 miles) from Sousse, and approximately 200 km (124 miles) from Djerba. The drive from Djerba typically takes around 3 to 3.5 hours, while the journey from Tunis or Sousse takes considerably longer β which is why a comfortable, direct private transfer makes a meaningful difference on this route.
One full day is enough to experience the essential Douz highlights β the dunes, a camel ride, the Sahara Museum, and the market. The key is arriving with enough daylight to spend time in the desert, since the late afternoon light over the dunes is particularly spectacular. If you want to venture further into the Grand Erg Oriental or combine Douz with a stop at Chott el Jerid and Tozeur, plan for an early start or consider an overnight stay to make the most of the region.
A day in Douz is genuinely full. Start at the Sahara Museum for a grounded introduction to nomadic desert life and local Berber culture. From there, the dunes of the Grand Erg Oriental are minutes away β a camel ride at the edge of the sand sea is the defining experience. The weekly market is one of the most authentic in southern Tunisia, where locals trade everything from dates and handmade crafts to livestock β check locally for the current market day when planning your visit. If time allows, the shimmering Chott el Jerid salt flats are a short drive away and offer an otherworldly visual payoff.
The Grand Erg Oriental is one of the largest sand seas in the Sahara, stretching across the Tunisia-Algeria border with dunes that can rise to around 100 metres in height. Douz sits right at its northern edge, making it the most accessible entry point for travellers who want to experience genuine Saharan dunes rather than roadside photo stops. This is not a tourist replica of the desert β it is the real thing, and arriving by private transfer means you step out of the car directly into that experience without the hassle of navigating unfamiliar roads.
Douz sits at the very edge of the Sahara Desert, earning its reputation as Tunisia's "Gateway to the Sahara." It is the point where paved roads give way to endless golden dunes of the Grand Erg Oriental. Few places in Tunisia offer this kind of contrast β a thriving oasis town with a lively market and a rich nomadic heritage, right next to one of the world's most iconic desert landscapes. If you have ever wanted to experience the Sahara without a multi-day expedition, Douz is where that becomes possible in a single day.
The desert climate means temperatures vary sharply between day and night, so bring a light layer even in warmer months. The most comfortable visiting periods are spring and autumn, when the heat is manageable and the landscape is at its most vivid. If your visit coincides with the weekly souq, it adds a lively local dimension to the trip β check locally for the current market day. The town is relatively small and easy to navigate on foot once you arrive, so the main practical challenge is simply getting there β southern Tunisia's road network is well-paved but the distances are long, making your transfer the most important logistical decision of the day.
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