Travel & Stay

First-timer's guide to The Red Sea Project in Saudi Arabia

Discover why some of the world's most luxurious hotels and resorts are flocking to the Kingdom's Red Sea coast.

BY /
19 June 26
First-timer's guide to The Red Sea Project in Saudi Arabia
We've got all the insider info you need on the incredible Red Sea Project.

When Cristiano Ronaldo, the former Manchester United star-turned-Al-Nassr FC player, checked into The St Regis Red Sea Resort, he gave his Instagram followers a glimpse of one of the most exclusive – and expensive – hotels in the Middle East. 

And that's just one of the resorts that have opened as part of Saudi Arabia’s incredible Red Sea Project, an enormous tourism development north of Jeddah's coastline. Many incredible resorts are open and welcoming visitors, and the Red Sea International Airport is also open for business, providing a seamless luxury experience for travellers arriving in this part of the Kingdom. Escape the summer heat and enjoy the clear, refreshing waters of The Red Sea.

What is the Red Sea Project?

Ronaldo and his family at the St Regis Red Sea Resort

The Red Sea Project is a Saudi government-funded effort to develop 50 new hotels and more than 1,000 new residential units on the country’s western coastline, boosting the Kingdom’s tourism infrastructure as part of Saudi Vision 2030. Many of the hotels have been designed by star architects like Foster + Partners, and developers have committed to sustainability standards, including whole resorts powered by solar power, electric vehicles, etc. 

North of Jeddah and between the cities of Al Wajh and Umluj, the site currently consists of 90 mostly untouched offshore islands, beaches, deserts, and the Al Wajh lagoon, home of mangroves and coral reefs. The ultimate goal is, of course, ambitious, but given that it is funded by the Saudi Public Investment Fund, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds, there’s a good chance that it will be an enormous success. Indeed, many of the resorts are already open and welcoming guests.

What resorts are at The Red Sea, Saudi Arabia?

A villa at the Six Senses Southern Dunes Resort
A villa at the Six Senses Southern Dunes Resort
A villa at the Six Senses Southern Dunes Resort
Six Senses Southern Dunes, The Red Sea 2

In November 2023, the Six Senses Southern Dunes became the first hotel in the project to open its doors to guests, with 36 guest rooms and 40 villas boasting views over the dunes and the wadi, deep in the desert inland from the Red Sea Coast. Foster + Partners designed the project, which is influenced by the colours and patterns of traditional Bedouin dress. It aims to be the first LEED Platinum resort in Saudi Arabia, generating all of its own power via a dedicated solar farm. A second desert hotel, Desert Rock, opened in 2024 and features hotel rooms cut into the side of massive granite rocks – an utterly peaceful and yet luxurious escape from modern life.

Two coastal projects were also unveiled: The St Regis Red Sea Resort and Nujuma, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve. Both are currently reachable only by seaplane or chartered boat. Nujuma, the first Ritz-Carlton Reserve, also has a reputation as one of the most expensive hotels in the Middle East, at just over SAR 13,000 per night. 

Another large island, Shura Island, will ultimately be home to 11 hotels, including Hyatt, Jumeirah, InterContinental, and the Fairmont, with a masterplan designed by Foster + Partners, and started welcoming guests to the first three resorts at the end of 2025. It is also the home of Saudi Arabia’s first 18-hole championship golf course on an island. 

Sheybarah Island is home to Shebara, a 73-room luxury hotel developed and managed by Red Sea Hospitality Group, made up of reflective stainless steel villas designed in the shape of orbs and masterminded by Killa Design, a Dubai-based firm. 

Is it easy to get to The Red Sea?

Red Sea International Airport
Red Sea International Airport
Aerial view of Red Sea International Airport
Red Sea International Airport

The resorts are reachable via the Red Sea International Airport, which is currently open to both domestic and international flights. Red Sea Global has also launched a dedicated seaplane company, Fly Red Sea, that will ferry visitors to and from the islands. 

Shura, also known as Shurayrah Island, is connected to the mainland via a 1.2 km-long road bridge, the longest in Saudi Arabia. All the other islands are only reachable by boat or seaplane. The firm behind the development, Red Sea Global, has committed to providing a fleet of electric vehicles to ferry people to the onshore resorts, as well as fully electric buses for staff. 

In the rare event that guests are driving themselves, Six Senses is a 4.5-hour drive from AlUla airport and a five-hour drive from Jeddah. 

Top things to do on the Red Sea Coast

A villa with a pool and views of the desert at Desert Rock
A villa with a pool and views of the desert at Desert Rock
A villa with a pool and views of the desert at Desert Rock
Desert Rock Resort provided 14

The resorts currently accepting guests are the height of luxury, with private pools, wellness centres, and pristine beaches – unsurprisingly, the top thing to do here is *chill*. However, the Red Sea is also a world-class diving location, and visitors will be able to explore largely untouched and quiet reefs.

Inland, at the Six Senses resort, guests are offered yoga in a desert oasis and a range of cultural activities, such as traditional Saudi weaving, cooking and dance. Desert Rock Resort is already renowned as a base for hiking in the desert and mountains, and stargazing in the blissfully dark desert sky.

Is the Red Sea Project really a sustainable development? 

Sheybarah Island Resort
Sheybarah Island Resort
Aerial view of Sheybarah Island the resort built around into extending into the sea
Red Sea -Sheybarah-Island-Resort-001

Yes, as much as building anything can be. Architects involved in the project have committed to achieving LEED rankings for many of the sites, while the developers have cited the low-impact nature of much of the project and commitments to protecting wildlife. 

The Red Sea Development Company has committed to several sustainable initiatives, including zero waste sent to landfill, zero discharge to the sea, and zero single-use plastics, and has committed to achieving 100% carbon neutrality. The developer has also committed to restoring mangroves on the islands, and they’ve cultivated more than one million so far. 

The destination will rely solely on renewable energy and have no connection to the national grid. There have also been specific campaigns, including on the Waqqadi and Breem Islands, to develop key sites for hawksbills and green turtles, respectively, and there is a new EPR turtle recovery centre at Turtle Bay. The centre is expected to welcome 300,000 people a year. 

Elsewhere, there is a beach cleaning robot that can clean 3,000 square metres of coastline a day, and the developers have worked with Warner Brothers to release a documentary about the fate of the Red Sea coral reefs that features Salma Shaker, a Saudi Arabian free diver.