每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
From Tunis, Hammamet is roughly 65 km (40 miles), typically a journey of around an hour by road. From Sousse, the drive is approximately 90 km (56 miles), usually around an hour. Daytrip collects you directly from your hotel, airport, or any other address and drops you at the door of wherever you are staying in Hammamet — no transfers, no taxi queues, no navigating unfamiliar bus routes.
A full day — roughly six to eight hours on the ground — lets you cover the essentials without rushing. Plan two hours for the fortified medina and kasbah, time on the coastal path between the fort walls and the sea, a stop at the George Sebastian Villa (a 1920s mansion that hosted Winston Churchill and now serves as a cultural center), and still have time to sit at a seafront restaurant and watch the Mediterranean. If your interests are primarily the beach and the old town, a half-day can work, but most visitors find the extra hours worthwhile.
Yes. Because your Daytrip driver stays with your schedule from pickup to drop-off, you are not tied to bus timetables or shared tour group timings. If you want to leave Hammamet at a specific hour to connect with an evening flight or reach your next destination, you simply set the return time and your driver will have you back on the road accordingly. There are no group departure waits and no scramble for a taxi at the end of the day.
Quite a bit for a town its size. The George Sebastian Villa offers a glimpse into the bohemian 1920s world that put Hammamet on the map for European travelers. Hammamet is also a well-known name in the hammam tradition — the town's name itself derives from the Arabic word for bathhouse — and a traditional hammam visit is a straightforward, low-cost addition to any day here. For travelers based elsewhere in Tunisia, Hammamet also sits conveniently close to the ancient Pupput Roman ruins in Hammamet Sud, which can be folded into the same day without significant extra effort.
Hammamet earns its place on any Tunisian itinerary through an unusual combination: a genuinely historic medina and 15th-century fort right on the Mediterranean coast, beaches that have drawn European travelers since the 1920s jet set era, and a town kept deliberately low-rise so the atmosphere never tips into overdeveloped resort territory. You get old-world character and a sunlit coastline in a single, walkable destination. A full day gives you time to feel the place rather than just pass through it.
The medina rewards wandering more than ticking off a checklist. The kasbah at its heart is worth climbing for the rooftop views over the coast and the Great Mosque. The streets themselves are the main attraction — small shops, spice vendors, mint tea, and narrow alleys that open unexpectedly onto open squares. Set aside time for the coastal path that runs along the outside of the medina walls, where the stonework meets the sea directly. It is one of the more photogenic stretches of the Tunisian coast.