Key Takeaways
- The #1 reported scam is the Lookalike Hegra Ticket Reseller Markup
- 2 of 6 scams are rated high risk
- Use app-based ride services (Uber, Careem) or official metered taxis instead of unmarked vehicles
- Never accept unsolicited offers from strangers near tourist sites in AlUla
⚡ Quick Safety Tips
- Buy Hegra and AlUla heritage tickets only on the official experiencealula.com — third-party resellers buy Google ads and charge 2–3x the roughly 95 SAR rate, then issue a voucher you must exchange on arrival rather than an official QR ticket
- Arrange your transfer from AlUla airport (ULH) through your hotel or Experience AlUla and agree the rate in advance — refuse curbside drivers quoting 500–1,000 SAR for a trip locals pay around 80 SAR for
- Book rawi-guided Hegra tours, Land Rover experiences, and desert camps through experiencealula.com or a hotel concierge with a written confirmation — never a WhatsApp contact demanding a wire deposit
- Pay by credit card for chargeback protection and ignore any 'confirm your card details' message from a booking platform — log in to the app or website directly instead
Jump to a Scam
The 6 Scams
You sit down to book your Hegra tour, type "Hegra tickets" into Google, and land on a slick, professional-looking site like experiencehegra.com or a GetYourGuide / Viator / Klook listing.
It looks official, so you pay. What you didn't realize is that the only official seller is the Royal Commission for AlUla's own platform, experiencealula.com (booking runs through tickets.experiencealula.com), where the standard coach-based Hegra Day Tour is about 95 SAR (~$25) per person. On an AlUla TripAdvisor forum thread, one experienced visitor warns bluntly that "there are some third parties that sell the same activities (such as the Hegra Tour) on Booking, GetYourGuide or Klook but prices are 2-3X" — turning a 95 SAR ticket into 250-300 SAR for the identical bus and the same Rawi storyteller.
The trap is baited by the official site itself. Multiple TripAdvisor AlUla forum threads ('Solution for those who can't pay on ExperienceAlUla.com', 'experiencealula.com - trying to book a Hegra tour', 'Unable to purchase tickets from experiencealula.com') document foreign credit cards being declined over and over — one visitor named Jon reported his AMEX failed twice before a Mastercard finally worked, and others got nothing but error messages and an app that said it was "down." Frustrated travelers give up and buy from whatever reseller's payment page actually accepts their card, eating the markup.
The resellers aren't always outright fraud — experiencehegra.com even carries a disclaimer telling you that if you "booked your ticket through a third party (not the suggested Experience AlUla website), please coordinate with them," and notes "any bank credit card charges cannot be refunded." But that disclaimer is exactly the problem: when a tour is cancelled or a guide no-shows, the official AlUla customer center (+966 920 025 003) washes its hands of any booking it didn't sell, and you're left chasing a middleman who already pocketed double the face value. For the private Hegra Vintage Land Rover tour, which starts around 1,000 SAR per vehicle officially, a reseller markup can mean paying well over $500 for one car.
Book Hegra only on the official experiencealula.com / tickets.experiencealula.com site, and if your foreign card is declined, email the AlUla Customer Center for a direct payment link rather than paying a third-party reseller charging 2-3x.
Red Flags
- A booking site with "Hegra" or "AlUla" in the URL that isn't experiencealula.com
- Hegra Day Tour priced well above ~95 SAR per person
- Listing admits you must 'coordinate with the third party' for changes
- 'Credit card charges cannot be refunded' fine print
- Top Google result is GetYourGuide / Viator / Klook, not the official site
How to Avoid
- Buy tickets only at tickets.experiencealula.com
- Compare any price against the ~95 SAR official Hegra Day Tour
- If your card fails, email AlUla's Customer Center for a payment link
- Use an authorized agent only if they send an official-priced link
- Screenshot the official price before booking anywhere else
You ask your AlUla hotel or a local tour operator to "just arrange everything" for Hegra.
Permits, transfers, guide, a night or two of accommodation and meals — and they quote you one big round number that sounds convenient. That convenience is where the padding hides. A long-running TripAdvisor review for the site (then still called Madain Saleh) warns directly about "the scams the hotels and tourist guides are pulling when pricing the trip," noting that after the site gained UNESCO World Heritage status the quoted cost rose "by almost 3 times for the same trip."
The reviewer, who priced it out in detail, concluded a complete two-person, two-night package — accommodation, all meals, airport transfers, tour guides and the entrance permit — "should cost no more than SR3000... NOT the SR6,500 - SR7,000 that they are charging." A second reviewer broke the real component costs down even further: roughly 190 SAR per night for a room, about 100 SAR for permit assistance, and around 900 SAR for vehicle transport split across a group, and flatly advised "do not pay even close to SR3000. You will feel ripped off."
The mechanics are simple: the operator bundles the genuinely cheap official pieces — the Hegra ticket is around 95 SAR, the permit is nominal, fuel is barely 2 SAR a liter — with a fat undisclosed margin, betting you'll never look up that each item is bookable separately on experiencealula.com. Because AlUla feels remote and a little intimidating to self-organize, tourists hand over a blank check. The same dynamic shows up in transport quotes locals consider "extortionate," so treat any all-in figure with suspicion.
Price every component separately on experiencealula.com first — the Hegra ticket is about 95 SAR and permits are cheap — and refuse any bundled Madain Saleh package that lands near the SR6,500-7,000 markup veterans warn about.
Red Flags
- One big round 'all-inclusive' number with no itemized breakdown
- Quote in the SR6,000-7,000 range for two people, two nights
- Operator discourages you from booking pieces yourself online
- 'It's complicated to arrange alone' pressure
- Refusal to show the official Hegra/permit prices
How to Avoid
- Demand a line-by-line breakdown of every cost
- Book the Hegra ticket and permit yourself on experiencealula.com
- Benchmark against ~SR3,000 for a 2-person, 2-night trip
- Book the room directly with the hotel, not via the guide
- Walk away from any package near SR6,500-7,000
You splurge on a private Hegra experience — a vintage Land Rover tour with your own Rawi (the AlUla storyteller-guide) winding among the Nabataean tombs — and pay up front.
Then nobody shows up. A TripAdvisor review of Hegra titled "Experience AlUla is a SCAM" documents exactly this: the reviewer paid 250 euros for a private Land Rover tour, the guide simply failed to appear, the tour never happened, and a month of refund emails went unanswered — "they haven't answered me at all. I have not received a response to any of my emails."
What makes the no-show sting is the cancellation policy stacked against you. Booking terms across the Hegra experiences state that many tours are "non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason," with "no refunds or changes allowed on the day of the event" and date changes permitted only up to one day prior. So even when the operator drops the ball, the paperwork is written so the loss lands on you, and the official Customer Center is slow enough that visitors describe waiting weeks with no reply.
It gets worse if you bought through a reseller (see the lookalike-ticket scam): the official AlUla center will tell you to "coordinate with the third party," the third party points back at AlUla, and your money sits in limbo. The private Land Rover tier — roughly 1,000 SAR per vehicle and up — is exactly the high-value booking where a no-show hurts most, because you can't simply re-buy a same-day private slot when the best times are already sold out.
Pay for private Hegra tours by credit card so you can chargeback, screenshot the confirmation and policy, and if a guide no-shows, immediately phone the AlUla Customer Center on +966 920 025 003 rather than relying on email.
Red Flags
- Up-front payment for a private tour with a strict no-refund policy
- No same-day phone contact, only an email address
- Guide or driver not present at the agreed meeting point
- 'Non-refundable, no changes for any reason' fine print
- Reseller and official site each blaming the other
How to Avoid
- Pay by credit card to preserve chargeback rights
- Screenshot the booking, time slot, and cancellation policy
- Confirm the meeting point and guide name 24h ahead
- Call +966 920 025 003 the moment a guide is late
- Prefer the official site so there's no third party to dodge blame
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You land at AlUla International (ULH), 35-odd kilometers from the resorts and Old Town, and because Careem and Uber barely function here you take whatever transfer the agency or hotel concierge offers. On the AlUla TripAdvisor forum, travelers report being quoted around 1,000 SAR (~£200 / $265) just for a round-trip airport-to-hotel transfer, and roughly 650 SAR for a round trip between a hotel and Winter Park — figures multiple visitors flatly call "extortionate" and "quite expensive."
The gap between that and the real cost is enormous. On the same threads, one traveler's Airbnb host charged just 80 SAR for a single airport pickup, and a full day of private driving — splittable among four people — ran about 1,000 SAR, i.e. less than the price some agencies charge for one round-trip airport hop. AlUla Taxi (operated by Experience AlUla) is effectively the only reliable on-demand taxi in town, and Kosupa Travel's AlUla taxi guide notes Careem and Uber have so few registered cars that waits stretch "from tens of minutes to several hours," which is precisely the leverage that lets pre-arranged transfers charge whatever they like.
Veteran visitors solve it by renting a car instead — a Lumi sedan went for about 730 SAR for four days with unlimited mileage, and fuel is barely 2.18 SAR a liter — or by using the local Kaiian/AlUla Taxi app the locals actually use. The 1,000 SAR "VIP airport transfer" isn't technically a con, but it's a tourist-only price aimed at people who don't know an 80 SAR pickup exists.
Skip the 1,000 SAR agency transfer: pre-book a flat-rate pickup with your hotel or Airbnb host (around 80 SAR), use the AlUla Taxi app, or rent a car at ULH for roughly 730 SAR for four days.
Red Flags
- Airport round-trip transfer quoted near 1,000 SAR
- Hotel-to-Winter Park round trip around 650 SAR
- Driver insists Careem/Uber 'don't work here' to justify the price
- No flat published rate, just a high verbal quote
- Pressure to book the transfer on the spot at arrivals
How to Avoid
- Ask your hotel/Airbnb for a flat pickup rate before you fly
- Install and use the AlUla Taxi (Experience AlUla) app
- Compare against ~80 SAR for a single airport pickup
- Rent a car at ULH (~730 SAR / 4 days, cheap fuel)
- Split a full-day driver (~1,000 SAR) across your group
Because AlUla has a genuinely limited stock of rooms.
From the $2,000-a-night tented villas at Banyan Tree AlUla in Ashar Valley down to a handful of Old Town guesthouses — you book early and feel relieved when it's locked in. Then, days before arrival, a message lands in your Booking.com app (or by email or WhatsApp) that already knows your name, your AlUla property and your exact stay dates, warning that your payment "failed to verify" and you must click a link to re-enter your card "or your booking will be cancelled." The link opens a page that looks just like Booking.com, pre-filled with your real details to seem legit.
It's phishing run off hacked hotel accounts, and it's industry-wide rather than AlUla-invented — but AlUla's scarcity makes the "act now or lose your scarce room" threat land hard. Cybernews and Euronews have documented the WhatsApp/payment-link version in detail, and the UK's Action Fraud logged 532 Booking.com-related scam reports between June 2023 and September 2024 with victims losing about £370,000; surveys cited in that reporting found nearly one in ten Booking.com users has received a scam message through the platform's own messaging system.
The tell is the demand itself: a real hotel or Booking.com will never ask you to "re-verify" a card via an off-platform link under a cancellation threat. The pre-filled personal data is meant to disarm you, not prove authenticity — it comes straight from the compromised reservation. With AlUla rooms hard to rebook last-minute, panicked travelers comply and hand their card straight to the fraudster.
Never re-enter card details through any link in a booking message: if a 'payment failed, confirm now or lose your room' note arrives, ignore the link and call your AlUla hotel directly on its official number to verify.
Red Flags
- A message demanding you 're-verify' your card via a link
- Threat that your scarce AlUla room will be cancelled now
- Page pre-filled with your real name, dates and property
- Contact pushed to WhatsApp or an off-platform URL
- Urgency and a countdown rather than normal support
How to Avoid
- Never enter card details from a link in a booking message
- Call the hotel's official number to verify any 'payment problem'
- Check the URL is exactly booking.com before typing anything
- Pay through the platform, never a WhatsApp link
- Enable card transaction alerts before your trip
Renting a car is the smart way to beat AlUla's pricey transfers, so you pick up a sedan from a desk at AlUla International (ULH).
Lumi, Budget/BudgetSaudi and Yelo all operate there — grab the keys and drive off toward Hegra. The risk surfaces at drop-off, when the agent points to a scuff or dent you're sure was already there and bills you for it. On the Saudi Arabia TripAdvisor forum, a Lumi customer describes being accused of returning the car with too little fuel (despite photo proof of returning it with more), then told an hour later that the car had "been in an accident" and that they had to pay.
This pre-existing-damage and phantom-accident play is documented Saudi-wide rather than unique to AlUla, but AlUla is where many first-time Saudi visitors rent, because the alternative is a 1,000 SAR transfer. House of Saud's Saudi car-rental guide and seasoned renters give the same defense every time: take a full video walkaround at pickup — every panel, the wheels, mirrors, windscreen and interior — because agencies that don't formally log existing scratches can later "claim new damage and charge high repair fees."
There's a sharp Saudi-specific sting in the tail. The UK FCDO's Saudi Arabia travel advice warns that not paying a disputed bill — explicitly including car hire — can trigger far more than a bad review: you can face a fine, a travel ban, deportation, or even have your bank account frozen, and bounced or unpaid 'security cheques' are treated as a financial crime. That legal leverage is exactly what makes a bogus damage charge so coercive at the counter.
Film a dated video walkaround of the rental car's entire body, wheels and interior at the ULH desk before driving off, and insist any existing scratch or dent is written onto the contract so a phantom-damage bill can't trap you.
Red Flags
- Agent rushing you through pickup without noting damage
- Existing scratches/dents not written on the contract
- A 'damage' or 'accident' claim appearing only at return
- Charge raised an hour after you've handed back the keys
- Pressure to pay on the spot to avoid 'reporting' it
How to Avoid
- Film a dated full walkaround video before driving off
- Get every existing mark written onto the rental contract
- Photograph the fuel gauge at pickup and return
- Refuse to sign a damage waiver you didn't cause
- Dispute via card chargeback rather than abandoning a 'bill'
🆘 What to Do If You Get Scammed
📋 File a Police Report
Go to the nearest Saudi Arabian Police station. Call 999 (Police) or 911 (Emergency). Get an official crime report — you'll need this for insurance claims. You can also report online at moi.gov.sa.
💳 Cancel Your Cards
Call your bank immediately. Most have 24/7 numbers on the back of the card (keep a photo saved separately). Block any suspicious transactions before the thieves use your details.
🛂 Lost Passport?
Contact the US Embassy in Riyadh at PO Box 94309. For emergencies: +966 11-488-3800.
📱 Track Your Device
If your phone was stolen, use Find My (iPhone) or Find My Device (Android) from another device. Don't confront thieves yourself — share the location with police instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
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