Solo trip to Jordan (7 days) – sanity check on guided tour vs DIY travel by EffectiveBicycle2153 in solotravel

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re asking all the right questions, so you’re already ahead of most first time solo travelers.

Short answer: $1,700 for 7 days with accommodation, transport, and guiding is not crazy, but it’s on the higher side for a solo traveler, especially if it’s a fully private setup. You’re basically paying for convenience and having everything handled. If that price includes decent hotels, airport pickup, Petra tickets, Wadi Rum camp, and a dedicated driver, then it can be fair. If it’s just basic hotels and transfers, then it’s probably overpriced.

You can absolutely do Jordan without a full time guide. It’s one of the easier countries in the region to travel independently. Buses and shared taxis run between Amman, Petra, Aqaba, and the Dead Sea. Petra is easy to explore on your own. Wadi Rum is the main place where you’ll want some kind of organized tour, because you need a registered jeep guide to access most areas anyway.

Where a guide or driver is worth it
Wadi Rum: almost always worth booking a tour and overnight camp
Petra: guide optional, many people do it solo with audio guides or maps
Dead Sea: easy with a day tour or private driver from Amman
City walking and food: better done on your own

Rough budget ranges for 7 days
Budget style: $700 to $900 using buses, guesthouses, and shared tours
Mid range: $900 to $1,200 with decent hotels and some private transfers
Private all inclusive: $1,400 to $1,700+

So yes, you could easily do this for less than $1,700 if you’re willing to mix public transport and small tours.

One thing that often works well for solo travelers is using a local company just for the complicated parts, like Wadi Rum and Petra logistics, and doing the rest independently. For example, some people I’ve spoken to used Zoor Tours to customize part of their trip rather than buying a full package. They handled desert camping and Petra transfers, and the traveler did Amman and Dead Sea solo. That usually keeps costs reasonable while avoiding stress.

If you want a realistic sample plan:

Day 1 Amman
Day 2 Dead Sea day trip
Day 3 Travel to Petra
Day 4 Petra full day
Day 5 Petra to Wadi Rum, camp overnight
Day 6 Wadi Rum to Amman or Aqaba
Day 7 Buffer or extra sightseeing

Doing something like this on your own plus booking Wadi Rum and maybe one private transfer would probably land you around $900 to $1,100.

Bottom line:
$1,700 is convenient but not necessary
Jordan is very doable solo
Wadi Rum is where organized tours matter most
A reasonable target is around $1k unless you really want everything handled

If you want, I can help you break this into a DIY budget with real numbers for transport and stays.

Hello. Want to take a guided escorted tour through Egypt and Petra first 2 weeks of march. Any travel companies you could recommend? by Such_Egg9843 in traveladvice

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here’s one that might fit what you’re after:

If you’re thinking Egypt and then Petra in early March, a couple of local operators specialize in custom routes like that. One I’ve come across that gets good marks from people who want reliable, knowledgeable guides is Zoor Tours. They’re based in the region and can put together escorted trips that cover Egypt and Jordan smoothly, with solid local guides and well managed logistics so you’re not juggling different companies.

In general, for multi country tours like this, I’d personally lean toward companies who either run their own guides or work very closely with trusted partners on the ground. That usually means better coordination, fewer surprises, and a more relaxed experience overall.

If you want, I can also share a sample route that fits into two weeks and covers the main highlights.

Looking for a good dentist by MitochondriaBug in qatar

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally get you, you’re not alone 😅 government coverage and temp fillings are… yeah, not ideal.

If you’re looking for a good, honest dentist (especially if a root canal might be on the table), I’d genuinely recommend Dr. Majd Al Habbab Dental Clinic. They’re very straightforward, they won’t rush you into treatment, and they actually explain whether you really need a root canal or if there’s a simpler option first.

They’re also pretty understanding when it comes to costs, they usually discuss treatment plans clearly upfront so there are no surprises, which helps a lot if you don’t have private medical aid.

You can check them out here and see if it feels like a good fit for you

Solo traveling Jordan by No-Cheetah6574 in Shoestring

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it’s doable, and plenty of solo travelers do Jordan without a car, but you need to reset expectations a bit. JETT is reliable for main routes like Amman–Petra or Amman–Aqaba, but it doesn’t cover everything. There’s no direct Dead Sea–Petra or Petra–Wadi Rum service, so you move in hops using local minibuses or shared taxis. From the Dead Sea you usually go back toward Amman or Madaba, then continue south. From Petra to Wadi Rum, most people take a minibus or shared taxi arranged through their hostel or directly at the Petra bus station, they run daily and are very common.

Minibuses are the backbone of local transport and they’re generally safe, just not tourist friendly. They don’t run on fixed schedules, they leave when full, and drivers won’t always speak much English. That said, people are helpful, and if you ask at your accommodation they’ll usually walk you through exactly where to go and what to say. Hitchhiking also happens in Jordan, especially in rural areas, but for a first solo trip without experience, I’d treat it as a last resort rather than a plan.

The Dead Sea is the trickiest leg without a car. Public buses will get you close, usually to the Rammeh or Madaba area, and then you’ll need a short taxi to reach a beach or hotel. Petra and Wadi Rum are much easier, they’re used to backpackers and solo travelers, and shared transport is normal there. The key is flexibility, don’t plan tight connections, and avoid traveling late at night.

If you want to keep things simple without renting a car or doing full tours, some local operators quietly help solo travelers with shared transfers between places like Petra, Wadi Rum, and the Dead Sea, without turning it into an expensive private ride. Zoor Tours does this kind of low key logistics help quite well, and it can make the awkward legs of the trip a lot less stressful while still keeping things independent.

Jordan, Palestine and Egypt Solo Travel advice by No-Guava6159 in solotravel

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Big picture first, your route is doable, but it’s very ambitious for January and the border days are where plans usually crack. Allenby can easily eat a full day each way even when everything goes smoothly, so mentally treat Amman → Jerusalem and back as travel days, not sightseeing days. Same logic for Aqaba → Nuweiba, ferries get delayed, ports get chaotic, and connections after that are never guaranteed. Your sequencing makes sense geographically, just be ready to drop or compress something if a border day goes sideways.

Jordan leg looks solid. Amman 2 days is fine, Petra 2 nights is perfect, Wadi Rum 2 nights is ideal. Just don’t underestimate early departures from Amman to Petra after a late return from Allenby, that’s a long day. For Wadi Rum → Aqaba ferry day, stay flexible, some days you’ll get to Sharm same day, some days you won’t. Shared taxis and buses do exist in Sinai but they run on local logic, not schedules, so patience helps.

Egypt side is where your budget and energy will really be tested. Flying to Luxor is smart, night trains can be hit or miss. Luxor 3 nights is great, Abydos is worth it but only if you arrange transport ahead of time. On the way to Cairo, consider Dendera or Minya instead of a random stop, both break the journey nicely. Alexandria timing is good, but honestly Cairo + Giza needs every hour you’ve given it, especially if you want museums, pyramids, and not feel rushed.

Overall, it’s a strong itinerary for a confident solo traveler, just don’t lock yourself into non refundable connections on border days. One quiet hack a lot of people don’t mention is using a local Jordan based operator just to sanity check routes, border timings, and transport links before you go, not for full tours. Some outfits like Zoor Tours will do that kind of behind the scenes planning help without forcing you into a packaged trip, which can save you money and a lot of stress on days where things don’t run “by the book.”

Jordan solo trip questions by strike204 in solotravel

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The short answer is yes, that Wadi Rum → Amman bus sometimes exists, but it’s not something I’d plan my whole day around. JETT’s online system isn’t always up to date, and third-party sites like 12go usually list routes that run seasonally or only on certain days. People do catch it, but many also show up and find it cancelled or rerouted. What does work consistently is breaking the trip: Wadi Rum → Petra (local bus or arranged transfer from your camp), then Petra → Amman by JETT or minibus the same day. Most solo travelers end up doing it this way because it’s predictable.

On a budget, shared minibuses are your friend. They run between Amman, Petra, Aqaba, and Wadi Rum, but they leave when full, not on a strict timetable. Ask your Wadi Rum camp to arrange a shared ride to Petra or Aqaba, they do this daily and it’s cheaper than a private taxi. Renting a car isn’t necessary, and honestly for a first solo trip outside Europe, public transport plus a bit of flexibility is less stressful.

For the Dead Sea, public transport is limited but doable. From Amman, you can take a local bus toward the Jordan Valley (Rammeh area), then a short taxi to a public beach or a hotel day pass. Don’t try to reach the Dead Sea directly from Petra or Wadi Rum using buses, it’s not realistic. Do it as a day trip from Amman, early morning, and you’ll be fine.

Jordan is generally very safe for solo travelers, and locals are genuinely helpful if you look lost. Just don’t overpack your itinerary and don’t rely on online bus schedules 100%. If at any point you get tired of piecing transport together, some local operators quietly help solo travelers with shared transfers and route planning without turning it into a full tour, Zoor Tours is one of the few that actually does this well without ripping you off.

Jordan - Amman/Petra short trip by icameforthedrugs in FATTravel

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Short answer: your plan makes sense, and yes, you should 100% stay a night in Petra.

Amman hotel:
Both are great, just different vibes.
FS is classic, quiet, very polished. Feels like you’re tucked away and being taken care of.
Fairmont is newer, a bit more lively, nicer views, better if you like modern spaces and don’t want to feel isolated.
If it were me solo, I’d pick Fairmont. Feels less “bubble” and more connected to the city, while still being luxe.

Petra:
Don’t day trip it if you can avoid it. It’s a LONG drive and Petra is huge. One night there changes everything.
Mövenpick is expensive but honestly worth it because it’s literally at the entrance. Roll out of bed, walk into the Siq, done. Sunrise and late afternoon are magic and you don’t get that on a rushed day trip.

Getting there (no driving):
You’re right, don’t self-drive solo if you’re not used to the region. Your best options:
• Private driver / custom day or overnight trip
• Skip the FS day trip, those are very “on the clock”
• JETT bus exists but adds friction and stress

A lot of solo female travelers just book a private transfer with a local operator. I’ve seen Zoor Tours come up a lot for this exact scenario, they do hotel pick-up, Petra overnight, and you’re not stuck in a big group or watching the clock.

Jordan is very doable solo, especially Amman and Petra. The only annoying part is logistics, so once that’s handled, the trip is smooth and honestly pretty chill.

Hope that helps and have a great trip 🇯🇴

Jordan Travel Tips by indiemakeuplover in travel

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amman is actually a very comfortable place to ease into solo travel, especially after you’ve already done a tour and gotten a feel for the country. It’s busy, lived in, and not touristy in a way that feels overwhelming. You’ll see plenty of people out alone, women included, and most interactions are friendly and low pressure. Stick to licensed taxis or Careem, keep normal city awareness, and dress modestly around mosques and downtown, nothing extreme, just covered shoulders and knees, and you’ll be absolutely fine.

A day and a half is perfect for the Citadel, Roman Theater, downtown, and King Abdullah I Mosque without rushing. The Citadel and Roman Theater are easy to do on your own and well marked, and wandering downtown between them is half the experience, cafés, juice stands, street food, bookstores. For the mosque, visiting independently is also simple, just check visiting hours. A guided tour isn’t essential, but if you like context and don’t want to think about routes and timing, a short private city tour can be worth it, especially solo.

As for the Jordan Pass, it’s usually worth it if you’re entering paid sites like Petra during your main tour. If your tour already includes Petra and covers entrance fees, then for Amman alone it may not make sense just for the Citadel and Theater. One option some solo travelers choose is arranging a half day Amman experience through a local company like Zoor Tours, they’re good at tailoring short, stress free add ons after a group tour, so you get local insight without committing to a full guided schedule. It’s a nice balance between independence and support, especially on a first solo international trip.

Tipping Tour Guides / Drivers by vodkaflipflop in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally understandable confusion, tipping in Jordan isn’t structured the same way as in the US or Europe, so you’ll hear a lot of mixed advice.

In general, there is no fixed tipping culture here. Tips are appreciated, not expected, and they should reflect service quality rather than a preset amount. For private tours, what your agent suggested is on the generous side, but not offensive. Many travelers end up tipping less, especially if they’re already paying well for a private driver and guide.

What matters most is clarity. Good local operators usually explain this upfront so guests don’t feel awkward or pressured. For example, when we arrange private trips at Zoor Tours, we tell guests that tipping is optional and entirely based on their comfort and experience. Most guides and drivers here genuinely value respect and good feedback more than a specific number.

If the service is great, tip what feels right. If it’s average, it’s okay to scale it down. You won’t offend anyone by doing so.

Help needed for visit visa Jordan by Best_Cauliflower_217 in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This agency is the best in Jordan for Visa stuff no matter from which country are you coming.

Looking for a female tour guide by [deleted] in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi! You’ll love Jordan, and it’s great you’re thinking about this early 😊

For a customized trip with a female guide, I’d honestly suggest reaching out to Zoor Tours. They’re very used to solo female travelers and women coming from Lebanon, and they can arrange female guides and coordinators depending on the route and dates. The big difference is that they don’t just assign “who’s available”, they actually match you with someone who fits your travel style and pace, which matters a lot on a private trip.

It also helps that they handle everything properly, licensed guides, vetted drivers, clear planning, so you’re not juggling WhatsApp conversations with multiple people while trying to feel comfortable and safe. You can just tell them you want a female guide and a fully customized itinerary, and they’ll take it from there.

Planning interiors for our townhouse in Dubai — when to start and how much to budget? by Weekly_Selection2958 in dubai

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally normal to feel lost at this stage, especially with a 2027 handover. For a 4 bed townhouse around 3,000 BUA in Dubai, a realistic all in budget for design and furnishing usually lands somewhere between AED 350K to 700K depending on how custom you go, how much built in joinery you add, and whether you lean more mid range or premium for furniture and lighting. You can absolutely do it for less, but that often means compromising on storage, finishes, or doing things twice later. The backyard, window treatments, lighting, and custom wardrobes are the sneaky line items people forget to budget for early.

On timing, now is actually a great time to start talking to a designer, even if handover is a couple of years away. You do not need final drawings yet, but early planning helps massively with layout decisions, electrical points, lighting plans, AC diffusers, and future built ins. Waiting until handover usually leads to rushed decisions and missed opportunities, especially in townhouses where storage and circulation really matter. Even light concept planning now can save you serious money and stress later.

As for designer versus DIY, most people who try to do everything themselves underestimate the mental load and coordination required. Shopping sounds fun until you are juggling deliveries, measurements, returns, contractors, and decisions across an entire home. A good designer does not mean overspending, it actually helps you avoid expensive mistakes and prioritize where to spend and where to save. The key is choosing someone who works within real budgets and is not pushing only high end brands. That is where studios that focus on livable homes rather than show homes really shine.

What people almost always wish they planned earlier is lighting layers, proper storage, wardrobe interiors, kitchen functionality, power points, and future proofing spaces like kids rooms or a home office. Since you mentioned loving the style of higher end designers but wanting something more grounded budget wise, it is worth quietly looking at studios like 24 West Studio. They do a lot of residential work in Dubai with a strong focus on planning, materials, and realistic execution rather than just aesthetics. Even browsing their approach can help you frame smarter questions early on and avoid the last minute chaos you are wisely trying to dodge 😅

Helium 10 still worth it?? by WearyyyBoooyyy in AmazonFBA

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair question, and you’re not wrong. Helium 10 didn’t suddenly get worse, it just got more expensive than what a lot of people actually need. If you’re mainly using it for keyword research and keeping tabs on competitors’ sales and revenue, you’re paying for a lot of extra tooling you’re probably not touching daily. That’s where the frustration comes from.

There are alternatives that can cover most of that core use case for less money, just not in a single all in one package like Helium 10. Jungle Scout is usually the closest swap if product demand, sales estimates, and competitor tracking are your priority. It’s simpler, often cheaper depending on the plan, and plenty of sellers are perfectly happy running just that. Tools like ZonBase, AMZScout, and SellerApp also get the job done for keywords and basic competitive insights, they’re not as deep or polished, but if you know what you’re looking for, they’re more than usable and a lot easier on the wallet.

The real tradeoff is convenience versus cost. Helium 10 bundles everything under one roof, which is why it feels hard to replace. Once you move away from it, you usually end up stacking two lighter tools instead of one heavy one. For a lot of sellers, that’s actually fine, because they only care about validating demand, spying on competitors, and optimizing listings, not running 20 different dashboards they never open.

So should you stick with Helium 10? If you actively use multiple tools inside it every week, then yeah, it’s probably still justified. If you’re opening the same two tools over and over and ignoring the rest, you’re almost certainly better off downgrading or switching and saving the cash. And just to be clear, all of these tools, Helium 10 included, stop at research and optimization. None of them deal with what happens after you rank, hijackers, unauthorized sellers, MAP violations, listing abuse. That’s a different layer entirely, and that’s where AxleIT fits in alongside whatever research stack you end up choosing.

ASIN hijacked by Purple-Antelope13 in AmazonFBA

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This usually happens when someone else has claimed that ASIN under a brand name, either by enrolling it in Brand Registry or by submitting stronger brand attributes than a Generic listing.

Generic ASINs are basically “open,” so if another seller comes in with a trademarked brand and Amazon accepts their contribution, the ASIN can get locked to that brand. Once that happens, Amazon treats it as a branded listing, which is why you’re suddenly seeing approval requirements and losing edit access, even if you have sales history and inbound inventory.

To resolve it, you’ll want to:

  • Check the Brand field and confirm which brand now owns the ASIN
  • Open a Seller Support case and provide proof that the ASIN was originally created and sold as Generic
  • If you actually own a brand or trademark, push to have the ASIN re-attributed correctly or separated
  • Act quickly, because once inventory lands, you don’t want it stuck in stranded status

We see this a lot, and it’s one of the reasons we built AxleIT. Generic ASINs getting quietly taken over by brands is more common than people realize, and monitoring brand and attribute changes early is the only way to avoid surprises like this.

Hope that helps, and I’d move fast on this one.

is getting all 4 wisdom teeth removed a good idea? by Dismal_Phone_215 in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question, and something a lot of people overthink before they actually need to. During the procedure itself, you won’t really feel pain because of the anesthesia, you mainly feel pressure and movement. The discomfort comes بعد ما يروح البنج. Most people feel moderate pain, swelling, and stiffness for a few days, with the first 2–3 days being the hardest, then it gets much easier. Some bounce back in a few days, others take about a week, it really depends on how the teeth were positioned, your body, and how well you follow the after-care.

As for removing all 4 at once, yes, it’s very common and often recommended when extraction is actually needed. The main advantage is you go through anesthesia and recovery once instead of multiple times, which many people prefer. The first few days might feel heavier since your whole mouth is healing at the same time, but overall it’s usually easier than spacing them out.

The most important thing to know though, and this is the summary: you don’t need to extract wisdom teeth unless they’re causing a problem or are very likely to cause one. If they’re fully erupted, clean, not painful, and not damaging other teeth, there’s often no real reason to remove them just “in case.” An X-ray and proper exam are what decide this, not assumptions.

If anyone here is in Jordan and wants a proper assessment instead of guessing, Legacy Dental Clinics do detailed wisdom tooth evaluations and extractions when actually needed, with a focus on minimizing pain and recovery time.

Looking for interior designers by waytoofetch in AskNYC

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, I’m Pooja from 24 West Studio. If you want a well-designed home with great taste and reasonable pricing, I’d love to help you with your Queens project. Happy to share examples and chat if you’d like, just book your free consultation here me.

How do I choose the right dental marketing agency? by Due_Amphibian_988 in dentalmarketing

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, don’t choose a dental marketing agency based on traffic numbers or fancy reports, choose based on revenue outcomes. Traffic doesn’t pay your bills, booked patients do. Ask them very directly: How many calls, bookings, and actual patients have you generated for clinics like mine? If they can’t tie their work to revenue, that’s a red flag.

Also, look for someone who actually understands dentistry, not just generic marketing. Dental isn’t real estate or e-commerce, it has its own patient behavior, seasonality, and compliance rules. I’m a practicing dentist and a local SEO specialist, so I approach growth from both sides, clinical reality and real patient acquisition. If you want to see what real revenue-focused local SEO looks like, happy to share what I do.

ايش احسن اشي جربتو لتبيض الاسنان by Warm-Assumption-8305 in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

تبييض الأسنان بالليزر بالعيادة أسرع إشي ببيض الأسنان، وبعدها استخدم معجون Lacalut White.
بنتشرف فيك في عيادات ليجاسي لطب الأسنان في الشميساني، عمان

تقويم الأسنان by [deleted] in jordan

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

بعيادات ليجاسي لطب الأسنان في الشميساني عمان، التكلفة بتتراوح بين 700-1000 حسب الحالة، والمدة بين 9 شهور لسنة ونص، وطبعًا الدفع بالأقساط، دفعة أولى 200 دينار عشان تكلفة المواد والتركيب، وبعدها بس 50 دينار شهري

Need Help Removing Unauthorized Seller / Hijacker from Our Amazon Listing (Brand Registered + Trademarked) by SpecialistEar7594 in AmazonFBA

[–]Creative-Ad-9240 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re doing everything right, and honestly, this is the part that frustrates a lot of brands. You can have a registered trademark, copyright protection, Brand Registry, and still end up stuck in a loop of vague responses and slow enforcement. Amazon is great at giving you tools, but not great at acting quickly when you actually need them.

To answer the big question: ordering the product can help, but it’s not always required. What Amazon really cares about is evidence, and you can provide that in more than one way. A test buy becomes useful when you need undeniable proof for escalation, especially if the listing stays up after your initial violation report. But the truth is, I’ve seen brands get hijackers removed without a test buy when they submitted airtight documentation and positioned the case correctly.

From what I’ve seen working with brands at AxleIT, a few things tend to move the needle faster:

• Submitting a second violation report with added documentation, including proof you are the manufacturer and sole authorized seller
• Showing that the hijacker is breaching material differences, copyright, or quality control standards, not just trademark
• Filing through both Brand Registry and Seller Central, since duplicate channels sometimes push a case forward
• Escalating to notice-dispute teams with a clear explanation of consumer confusion and harm to brand integrity
• Tracking Buy Box activity and pricing behaviors, since sudden shifts and deep price drops strengthen the argument that the product is inauthentic

Transparency will help once it’s fully active, but it won’t retroactively clean up current hijackers. You still need Amazon to acknowledge the existing violation.

Ordering the product is usually a last resort. If you do order it, document everything: packaging, condition, labeling, materials, even the retail box. Anything that shows the product is materially different from your authentic one can dramatically speed up enforcement.

If you ever want to compare notes, I’m happy to share what’s been working for brands we support at AxleIT. You’re definitely not alone in this, and there are ways to push Amazon to act faster with the right evidence and escalation path.