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Medina and Kasbah of Hammamet, Tunisia
Medina and Kasbah of Hammamet

Cap Bon (Nabeul Governorate)

Medina and Kasbah of Hammamet

The walled old town by the sea: whitewashed lanes, a 15th-century Kasbah fortress you can climb for a bay view, and a calmer souk than Sousse.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Hammamet, Tunisia

Opening hours

The medina lanes are open access; the Kasbah fortress keeps its own daily hours, typically from morning into late afternoon and longer in summer. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Wandering the medina is free; entry to climb the Kasbah is a small charge, around 5 Tunisian dinars (roughly ยฃ1.30). Confirm current prices on the official site.

Time needed

A slow morning of one to two hours: the lanes and souk, the climb up onto the Kasbah walls for the view, and a coffee by the harbour.

In short

Visiting Medina and Kasbah of Hammamet

Hammamet's walled old town sits right on the sea: whitewashed lanes, a small but atmospheric souk, and a 15th-century Kasbah fortress you can climb for a sweeping view over the bay. It is noticeably calmer and less frantic than the Sousse medina, and works best as a slow morning. Agree any taxi fare before you set off.

A walled old town that sits on the sea

Hammametโ€™s medina is small, white and unusually pretty because it backs straight onto the Mediterranean โ€” you can walk the ramparts with waves breaking below. Within the walls you get the familiar maze of whitewashed lanes, blue doors and a souk, but the key thing for a first-time visitor is the tone: it is much calmer and less pressured than the big medina at Sousse. Traders will still call you over, but you can browse and decline without the relentless hassle, which makes it a kinder place to find your feet.

The set-piece is the Kasbah, a 15th-century fortress at the corner of the walls. Wandering the medina costs nothing; climbing the Kasbah is a small charge of around 5 dinars (roughly ยฃ1.30), paid at the gate, and it buys you a walk along the battlements with a sweeping view over the bay, the marina in the distance and the tangle of white roofs below. It is the photo everyone takes, and it earns the few coins easily.

Doing it well, and the taxi catch

Treat this as a slow morning rather than a tick-box stop. An hour or two covers the lanes, the souk, the climb and a mint tea or coffee near the little fishing harbour just outside the walls. Carry small cash, as the Kasbah fee and most souk stalls wonโ€™t take cards, and go earlier in the day before the heat and the tour groups build.

The one practical trap is transport. Most people arrive by taxi from the resort strips or Yasmine Hammamet, and the honest advice is to agree the fare before you set off or insist on the meter โ€” quoting a price on arrival is where overcharging happens. Get all that sorted and the medina is one of the easiest, most pleasant half-days on this stretch of coast: genuinely atmospheric, genuinely relaxed, and very cheap once you are through the gate.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Hammamet city guide.

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Medina and Kasbah of Hammamet FAQs

Is the Hammamet medina worth visiting?
Yes, especially if you want a gentler introduction to a Tunisian old town. It is small, walkable and right on the sea, the Kasbah view is genuinely lovely, and the souk is far less pressured than the bigger one at Sousse. A relaxed morning here is one of the easiest day trips from the resorts.
How much does it cost to enter the Kasbah?
Walking the medina lanes is free. Climbing the Kasbah fortress costs a small fee, around 5 dinars, paid at the entrance. From the walls you get a sweeping view over the bay and the white town below. Carry small cash, as card payment is not reliable here.
How do I get there and deal with taxis?
Most visitors come by taxi from the resort strips or Yasmine Hammamet. Always agree the fare before you set off, or insist on the meter, as quoting on arrival leads to overcharging. The medina itself is compact and easily explored on foot once you are dropped at the gate.

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