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🇶🇦 Qatar

Doha

A desert peninsula where world-class architecture rises from the sand, and the Inland Sea blurs the line between dune and ocean.

3-Day ItineraryBudget-FriendlyNov – Mar Best
Explore
💰
Currency
QAR (Riyal)
1 USD ≈ QAR 3.64
🗣
Language
Arabic / English
English widely spoken
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Timezone
AST (UTC+3)
No daylight saving
☀️
Best Months
Nov – Mar
18–28°C, dry & pleasant
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Daily Budget
~$80–120 USD
QAR 290–440 budget
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Visa
Free on arrival
Most nationalities 30–90 days
How long are you staying?

1 day in Doha

Only got 24 hours? Here's how to experience the best of Doha in a single action-packed day.

Day 1

The Best of Doha in 24 Hours

🌅 Morning

Museum of Islamic Art & Corniche

Start at the Museum of Islamic Art (free) — I.M. Pei's geometric masterpiece on a purpose-built island. The collection spans 1,400 years of Islamic art from three continents — calligraphy, ceramics, textiles, and jewellery. The building itself is the highlight — the atrium's light play is mesmerising. Walk the Doha Corniche afterward — a 7km waterfront promenade with views of the West Bay skyline's futuristic towers.

Tip: The MIA is free and uncrowded weekday mornings. The cafe on the top floor has the best view of Doha's skyline — worth a coffee.
☀️ Afternoon

Souq Waqif — Heart of Old Doha

Walk to Souq Waqif — Doha's restored traditional market and the social heart of the city. The narrow lanes are filled with spice stalls, perfume shops, fabric dealers, gold merchants, and the famous falcon souq (yes, falcons). The animal market has cats, birds, and occasionally baby camels. Lunch at Damasca One for Syrian food (QAR 50–80) or Shay Al Shoomos for Qatari cuisine (QAR 60–100).

Tip: Souq Waqif comes alive after 4pm — visit in the afternoon for shopping, then stay for the evening atmosphere when cafes and shisha spots fill up.
🌙 Evening

Katara Cultural Village & Night Views

Taxi to Katara Cultural Village — an open-air cultural district with an amphitheatre, mosques, galleries, and restaurants along a private beach. The architecture blends traditional Qatari and modern design. Walk the beachfront at sunset. Then head to The Pearl-Qatar — a man-made island with marina-front dining, boutique shopping, and Mediterranean-style waterfront promenades. Dinner at a Pearl restaurant (QAR 80–150).

Tip: Katara Beach is one of Doha's few public beaches — bring swimwear but women should use the designated women's section or wear modest swimwear.

3 days in Doha

A carefully curated route mixing iconic landmarks, hidden gems, street food, culture, and adventure — designed for younger travelers.

Day 1

Museums, Souqs & Corniche

🌅 Morning

Museum of Islamic Art

Start at the Museum of Islamic Art (free) — I.M. Pei's angular masterpiece on its own island, connected to the Corniche by a palm-lined walkway. The collection spans 1,400 years of Islamic art — hand-copied Qurans, Mughal jewellery, Ottoman ceramics, and Persian textiles. The building's geometric interiors and natural light are as impressive as the art. Allow 2 hours to explore the galleries and the sculpture garden outside.

Tip: The MIA Park behind the museum has free outdoor sculptures and the best angle to photograph the Doha skyline — arrive before 10am for the best light.
☀️ Afternoon

Souq Waqif

Walk to Souq Waqif — Doha's restored traditional market. The narrow lanes sell spices (saffron from QAR 20/gram), Arabian perfumes (oud from QAR 50), gold jewellery, textiles, and falcons (the falcon souq is extraordinary). The animal market has cats, birds, and the occasional baby camel. Lunch at Al Shami Home Restaurant for Lebanese mezze (QAR 40–60) or Parisa for Persian cuisine in an ornate tiled interior.

Tip: The falcon souq is unlike anything you've seen — handlers with hooded falcons on their arms. Photography is welcome; ask politely first.
🌙 Evening

Corniche Walk & Dhow Harbour

Walk the 7km Doha Corniche at sunset — the waterfront promenade with West Bay's futuristic towers reflecting in the Gulf. Stop at the Dhow Harbour where traditional wooden boats are moored against the modern skyline. Book a dhow dinner cruise (QAR 150–250, 2 hours) for Doha's skyline illuminated from the water. Or return to Souq Waqif for shisha and Arabic coffee at an outdoor cafe.

Tip: The Corniche between MIA and the Dhow Harbour at sunset is the money shot — the towers catch the golden light perfectly.
Day 2

Culture, Desert & Modern Doha

🌅 Morning

National Museum of Qatar

Visit the National Museum of Qatar (QAR 50 foreigners) — Jean Nouvel's "Desert Rose" building is an architectural icon. The interlocking disc-shaped structure tells Qatar's story from geology to Bedouin life to the modern oil era through immersive galleries with projections, soundscapes, and artefacts. The 1.5km gallery path takes 2–3 hours. The pearl diving exhibition is particularly moving.

Tip: The National Museum's exterior is most photogenic at golden hour — but the interior exhibitions are best enjoyed in the cooler morning hours.
☀️ Afternoon

Katara Cultural Village

Taxi to Katara Cultural Village (free entry) — Doha's open-air cultural hub with an amphitheatre, two mosques (one gold, one pigeon-hole design), art galleries, and restaurants along a private beach. The architecture blends traditional Qatari elements with contemporary design. Walk the heritage district, browse the galleries, and have lunch at Sukar Pasha for Turkish food (QAR 60–90) with sea views.

Tip: Katara hosts free cultural events, film screenings, and concerts — check the Katara website for the monthly programme.
🌙 Evening

Desert Safari

Book a desert safari (QAR 200–350 per person, hotel pickup around 2:30pm). The experience includes dune bashing in a 4x4 across the Inland Sea (Khor Al Adaid) — one of only two places in the world where the desert meets the sea. Sandboarding, camel rides, and a Bedouin camp dinner under the stars. The sunset over the dunes where Qatar's desert reaches the Gulf is otherworldly.

Tip: The Inland Sea safari is Qatar's unique experience — no other country has sand dunes meeting the sea like this. Book the Khor Al Adaid route specifically.
Day 3

The Pearl, Art & Farewell

🌅 Morning

The Pearl-Qatar & Lusail

Explore The Pearl-Qatar — a man-made island with Mediterranean-style waterfront architecture, yacht marinas, boutique shopping, and restaurants. Walk the Qanat Quartier — Venice-inspired canals with colourful buildings. Then taxi to Lusail — Qatar's purpose-built new city, home to the 2022 World Cup final stadium (Lusail Iconic Stadium). The futuristic Lusail Boulevard has shops and restaurants opening steadily.

Tip: Qanat Quartier on The Pearl looks like Burano in Venice — the colourful canal buildings make for excellent photographs any time of day.
☀️ Afternoon

Msheireb & Fire Station Art

Metro to Msheireb — Doha's revitalised heritage district with four restored heritage houses turned museums (QAR 50 combo). The Msheireb Museums tell stories of slavery abolition, oil discovery, and traditional Qatari family life. Walk to the nearby Fire Station (free) — a former fire brigade headquarters converted into Doha's leading contemporary art space with residencies and rotating exhibitions.

Tip: The Fire Station gallery is free, excellent, and virtually empty — one of Doha's best-kept secrets for contemporary art lovers.
🌙 Evening

Farewell Dinner & Souq Night

Return to Souq Waqif for a farewell evening — the market transforms at night with live music, shisha smoke, and the glow of lanterns. Dinner at Damasca One (Syrian, QAR 50–80) or IDAM by Alain Ducasse at the MIA for a splurge (QAR 300–500, French-Arabian fusion with harbour views). End with Arabic coffee and dates at a souq cafe — the traditional Qatari welcome that perfectly bookends your visit.

Tip: Souq Waqif's Gold Souq section stays open late — the evening light on the gold displays is worth a final browse.

7 days in Doha

A full week to go deep — from famous landmarks to local neighbourhoods, day trips, hidden gems, and proper local immersion.

Day 1

Museums, Souqs & Corniche

🌅 Morning

Museum of Islamic Art

Start at the Museum of Islamic Art (free) — I.M. Pei's geometric masterpiece on its own island. The collection spans 1,400 years — hand-copied Qurans, Mughal jewellery, Ottoman ceramics, Persian textiles. The building's light play and geometric interiors are as impressive as the art. Walk through MIA Park afterward for outdoor sculptures and Doha skyline views across the water.

Tip: The MIA cafe on the top floor has the best skyline view in Doha — worth a coffee even if you don't visit the galleries.
☀️ Afternoon

Souq Waqif

Walk to Souq Waqif — the restored traditional market. Spice stalls, perfume shops, gold merchants, and the falcon souq fill the narrow lanes. The animal market is fascinating. Lunch at Al Shami Home Restaurant for Lebanese mezze (QAR 40–60) or find a Qatari machboos (spiced rice with meat) stall in the souq for QAR 30. This is Doha's social heart — locals and visitors mingle.

Tip: The falcon souq is extraordinary — hooded falcons on handlers' arms. Photography is welcome; ask politely before shooting close-ups.
🌙 Evening

Corniche & Dhow Harbour

Walk the 7km Corniche at sunset — West Bay's towers reflecting gold in the Gulf waters. Stop at the Dhow Harbour for traditional boats moored against the skyline. Book a dhow dinner cruise (QAR 150–250, 2 hours) or return to Souq Waqif for shisha and Arabic coffee at an outdoor cafe. The souq at night, lit by lanterns with live music, is atmospheric and unhurried.

Tip: The Corniche between MIA and Dhow Harbour at sunset is the classic Doha photograph — arrive 30 minutes before sunset.
Day 2

National Museum & Culture

🌅 Morning

National Museum of Qatar

Visit the National Museum (QAR 50) — Jean Nouvel's "Desert Rose" building. The interlocking disc structure tells Qatar's story through immersive galleries with projections, soundscapes, and artefacts. The 1.5km gallery path takes 2–3 hours. The pearl diving and Bedouin life sections are particularly moving. The museum shop has the best design souvenirs in Doha.

Tip: The NMoQ is best experienced chronologically from the start — don't skip the geological formation gallery, which sets the desert context.
☀️ Afternoon

Katara Cultural Village

Taxi to Katara (free entry) — an open-air cultural hub with two mosques (one gold-domed, one with a striking pigeon-hole facade), amphitheatre, galleries, and a beach. Walk the heritage architecture, browse the art galleries, and lunch at Sukar Pasha for Turkish food (QAR 60–90). The beach is one of Doha's few public beach options — bring swimwear but be mindful of modest swimwear customs.

Tip: Katara hosts free cultural events, concerts, and film screenings — check their website for the monthly programme before visiting.
🌙 Evening

The Pearl-Qatar

Explore The Pearl — a man-made island with marina-front dining and Mediterranean-style architecture. Walk the Qanat Quartier's Venice-inspired canals with colourful buildings, then stroll the marina watching superyachts. Dinner at a Pearl waterfront restaurant — cuisine ranges from Japanese to Italian to Arabic, QAR 80–200. The evening lighting and reflections make the marina very photogenic.

Tip: Qanat Quartier at The Pearl looks like colourful Venice — the canal reflections at night are stunning for photography.
Day 3

Desert & Inland Sea

🌅 Morning

Morning at Leisure

Rest and prepare for the desert afternoon — the safari pickups usually begin at 2–2:30pm. Use the morning to explore your neighbourhood or revisit the MIA Park. Grab brunch at a Souq Waqif cafe — ful medames (fava beans, QAR 15), labneh, hummus, and flatbread make a traditional Qatari-style breakfast. The pace of morning life in the souq is gentle and atmospheric.

Tip: Use the morning to charge devices and apply sunscreen — the desert safari will have you outdoors for 5–6 hours with no shade.
☀️ Afternoon

Desert Safari to Khor Al Adaid

Book a desert safari to Khor Al Adaid — the Inland Sea (QAR 250–400). The drive south through increasingly dramatic dunes takes 1.5 hours with dune bashing in a 4x4. Khor Al Adaid is a UNESCO-recognized natural reserve where the desert meets the sea — one of only two such places on earth. The turquoise water lapping against golden sand dunes is surreal and unique to Qatar.

Tip: Book the Khor Al Adaid (Inland Sea) route specifically — it's Qatar's most unique natural attraction. Regular desert safaris don't go there.
🌙 Evening

Bedouin Camp & Stars

The safari continues to a Bedouin camp at sunset — sandboarding, camel rides, henna painting, and a barbecue dinner under the desert stars. The silence of the Qatar desert at night, far from the city lights, is profound. Some operators offer overnight camping options (QAR 500+) — sleeping under the stars in the Empty Quarter is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Return to Doha by 10pm.

Tip: The overnight desert camp option is worth the extra cost — the sunrise over the Inland Sea with no one around is transcendent.
Day 4

Art, Heritage & Modern Qatar

🌅 Morning

Msheireb Museums & Heritage

Visit Msheireb Museums (QAR 50 combo for all four) — restored heritage houses telling stories of slavery abolition, the oil boom, and traditional Qatari family life. The Company House chronicles how oil transformed Qatar from a pearl-diving outpost to a modern state in a single generation. The architecture beautifully preserves traditional Qatari courtyard house design.

Tip: The Company House museum's oil discovery story is fascinating — Qatar went from one of the poorest to richest countries per capita within 50 years.
☀️ Afternoon

Fire Station Gallery & 3-2-1 Museum

Walk to the Fire Station (free) — a converted fire brigade HQ now housing contemporary art residencies and galleries. Rotating exhibitions showcase Gulf and international artists. Then metro to the 3-2-1 Qatar Olympic and Sports Museum (QAR 50) — an interactive museum celebrating Olympic history and Qatar's sporting ambitions. The FIFA World Cup 2022 exhibition is a highlight.

Tip: The Fire Station is free, excellent, and virtually empty — one of Doha's best secrets for contemporary art.
🌙 Evening

Lusail & World Cup Legacy

Metro to Lusail — Qatar's gleaming new city built for the 2022 World Cup. Walk Lusail Boulevard past the Iconic Stadium (World Cup final venue), the Place Vendôme mall, and the futuristic towers. The city is still filling up but the scale and ambition are impressive. Dinner at a Lusail restaurant overlooking the marina — the evening lighting makes the new architecture glow.

Tip: Lusail is still developing — many restaurants and attractions are new. The metro connects Lusail to central Doha in 20 minutes.
Day 5

Al Zubarah Day Trip

🌅 Morning

Drive to Al Zubarah Fort

Rent a car or arrange transport to Al Zubarah (1.5 hours northwest, QAR 200–300 return taxi) — Qatar's only UNESCO World Heritage Site. The 18th-century fort and surrounding archaeological site represent a once-thriving pearl trading town that rivalled Bahrain. The fort is beautifully restored with exhibitions on pearl diving, trading routes, and archaeological discoveries. Free entry.

Tip: Combine Al Zubarah with a stop at the flamingo lagoons along the northern coast — seasonal flocks of flamingos gather in the shallow waters.
☀️ Afternoon

Northern Coast & Mangroves

Drive along Qatar's northern coast — quieter and more natural than the urban south. Stop at Al Thakira Mangroves for a kayak trip through Qatar's largest mangrove forest (QAR 150–200, 2 hours). The paddling through green tunnels of mangroves with herons and egrets is a world away from Doha's skyscrapers. The ecological contrast within this tiny country is surprising.

Tip: Book kayaking with a local operator in advance — the mangroves are best at high tide when the water channels are deeper.
🌙 Evening

Return & Seafood Dinner

Drive back to Doha for a seafood dinner. Head to Al Mourjan restaurant at the Souq Waqif for Gulf-style grilled hammour (grouper), prawns, and Arabic salads (QAR 80–150). Or try a more casual spot — Souq Waqif's street-side grills do fresh fish with rice for QAR 40–60. The evening breeze in the souq with the smell of grilling fish and shisha is the essence of Arabian Gulf dining.

Tip: Al Mourjan's terrace tables overlooking the souq are the best seats — book ahead or arrive before 7pm to secure one.
Day 6

Beach, Shopping & Nightlife

🌅 Morning

Banana Island or Beach Day

Take a short boat ride to Banana Island (accessible via resort day passes from QAR 300) — a crescent-shaped island with private beach, crystal-clear water, and water sports. Or head to Katara Beach (QAR 35 entry) for a more budget-friendly option with public facilities and clean sand. The Gulf water is warm year-round and calm. Swim, kayak, or just relax in the morning sun.

Tip: Katara Beach at QAR 35 is the best-value beach experience in Doha — it has clean facilities, food vendors, and calm Gulf water.
☀️ Afternoon

Villaggio Mall & Shopping

Head to Villaggio Mall — an Italian-themed mega-mall with a Venetian canal running through the centre (gondola rides QAR 50). Or visit the Souq Al Wakra — a restored coastal market in the traditional fishing village of Al Wakra (30 min south). The souq has pearl shops, spice stalls, and waterfront restaurants with a more authentic atmosphere than tourist-focused Souq Waqif.

Tip: Al Wakra is a genuine fishing village — the souq here is less restored and more authentic than Souq Waqif. Worth the short taxi ride.
🌙 Evening

West Bay Nightlife

Explore West Bay — Doha's skyline district with hotel bars and lounges. The Skyview Lounge at La Cigale Hotel offers panoramic city views. The Nobu and Hakkasan restaurants combine fine dining with late-night ambiance. Qatar's nightlife is more refined than raucous — expect hotel bars, rooftop lounges, and upscale restaurants rather than clubs. Non-alcoholic cocktails (mocktails) are popular and delicious.

Tip: Alcohol is only served in licensed hotel venues — there are no standalone bars. Dress code is smart casual at all hotel bars.
Day 7

Relaxation & Farewell

🌅 Morning

Final Souq Visit & Shopping

One last visit to Souq Waqif for souvenir shopping — Arabian oud perfume (QAR 50–200), saffron (QAR 20–40/gram), Arabic coffee pots (dallah, QAR 30–80), camel-themed souvenirs, and spice mixes. The perfume shops will blend custom fragrances to your taste — a unique and lightweight souvenir. Also pick up dates — Qatar produces excellent varieties and gift boxes start from QAR 30.

Tip: Custom-blended oud perfume from Souq Waqif makes an exceptional souvenir — lightweight, unique, and the scent will forever remind you of Doha.
☀️ Afternoon

MIA Revisit & Packing

Return to MIA Park for a final walk — the outdoor sculpture park with Richard Serra's massive steel work and the views of Doha's skyline. Grab lunch at one of the Msheireb restaurants — the revitalised district has excellent options from QAR 50–100. Pack your bags. Doha is small but surprisingly deep — the museums alone justify the visit, and the desert is unlike anywhere on earth.

Tip: The MIA gift shop has the best design souvenirs in Qatar — Islamic art-inspired items that are far more tasteful than generic tourist shops.
🌙 Evening

Farewell Dinner

Farewell dinner at Damasca One in Souq Waqif — Syrian cuisine with live music and shisha on the terrace (QAR 60–100). Or splurge at IDAM by Alain Ducasse in the MIA — French-Arabian fusion with harbour views (QAR 300–500). One final Arabic coffee and dates — the traditional Qatari welcome that bookends your visit perfectly. Hamad International Airport is 15 minutes from central Doha by taxi.

Tip: Hamad International Airport is consistently ranked world's best — arrive early and enjoy the Oryx lounge, art installations, and duty-free shopping.

Budget tips

Free world-class museums

The Museum of Islamic Art is free. The Fire Station gallery is free. Katara Cultural Village is free to enter. Qatar has invested billions in culture — much of it accessible at no cost.

Souq Waqif meals

Budget restaurants in Souq Waqif serve full meals for QAR 25–50 — machboos, shawarma, falafel, and Arabic breakfasts. Far cheaper than hotel restaurants for the same quality.

Metro system

Doha Metro opened in 2019 — clean, fast, and cheap. QAR 2 per ride (standard class). Day pass QAR 6. Covers MIA, Souq Waqif, Katara, The Pearl, Lusail, and West Bay.

Water is free

Tap water in Qatar is safe (desalinated). Carry a refillable bottle. Hotels and restaurants provide free water. Hydration is critical in the Gulf heat — drink 3+ litres daily.

Desert safari deals

Book desert safaris online through platforms like GetYourGuide or Viator — QAR 200–300 vs QAR 400+ through hotel concierge. The experience is identical.

Friday brunch culture

Hotel Friday brunches are all-you-can-eat-and-drink feasts (QAR 200–400). While not "budget," they replace lunch and dinner and include drinks. It's a Gulf social institution worth experiencing.

Budget breakdown

Daily costs per person in Qatari Riyals (QAR). Doha is pricier than most Middle Eastern cities, but free museums, souq dining, and smart planning keep it manageable.

🎒 Budget ✨ Mid-Range 💎 Splurge
Accommodation Hostels → 3-star hotels → 5-star resorts QAR 120–250 QAR 350–700 QAR 1,200+
Food Souq food & cafeterias → restaurants → fine dining QAR 50–100 QAR 150–300 QAR 500+
Transport Metro → taxi/Uber → private car QAR 10–30 QAR 40–80 QAR 150+
Activities Free museums & souqs → desert safari → island & water sports QAR 0–50 QAR 100–300 QAR 500+
Drinks Arabic coffee & juice → hotel cafes → hotel bars QAR 10–30 QAR 50–100 QAR 200+
Daily Total $52–126 → $190–407 → $700+ QAR 190–460 QAR 690–1,480 QAR 2,550+

Practical info

🛂

Visa & Entry

  • Visa-free on arrival for 90+ nationalities (30–90 days depending on passport). No advance application needed
  • Hamad International Airport (DOH) — consistently ranked world's best. Metro connects to city centre in 15 minutes
  • Passport must be valid for 6+ months. Keep your boarding pass for potential hotel check-in requirements
💉

Health & Safety

  • No vaccinations required. Tap water is safe (desalinated) but most people drink bottled. Medical facilities are excellent
  • Qatar is extremely safe — one of the lowest crime rates in the world. Very low risk for tourists
  • Summer heat (Jun–Sep) is extreme: 40–50°C. Limit outdoor time, carry water, wear sunscreen. Winter is ideal
🚇

Getting Around

  • Doha Metro: 3 lines covering major areas. QAR 2 per ride (standard), QAR 10 (gold class). Day pass QAR 6. Clean and fast
  • Uber and Karwa (local) taxis work well. Base fare QAR 10. Doha is compact — most rides within the city are QAR 15–30
  • Walking is limited by heat — distances between areas require transport. Most attractions are metro-accessible
📱

Connectivity

  • Tourist SIM at the airport: Ooredoo or Vodafone Qatar, QAR 55–100 for data packages with local calls
  • Free WiFi in malls, hotels, the metro, and most restaurants. Coverage and speeds are excellent throughout Doha
  • All international apps work without restrictions — no VPN needed. WhatsApp is the primary communication app
💰

Money

  • QAR is pegged to USD (1 USD = 3.64 QAR). Exchange rates are stable. Money changers in Souq Waqif offer good rates
  • Cards accepted almost everywhere. Carry some cash for small souq purchases and taxis. ATMs are plentiful
  • Tipping is not mandatory but 10% at restaurants is appreciated. Round up taxi fares
🎒

Packing Tips

  • Light, modest clothing — cover shoulders and knees in public. Swimwear for beaches and pools only
  • Sunscreen (SPF 50+), sunglasses, hat, and a refillable water bottle. The sun is intense even in winter
  • Smart casual for hotel restaurants and bars — no shorts or flip-flops. A light jacket for over-air-conditioned malls

Cultural tips

Qatar is a deeply Islamic society with modern ambitions. Dress modestly, respect Ramadan, and accept Arabic coffee when offered — small gestures that show cultural awareness.

👗

Dress Code

Cover shoulders and knees in public — shorts above the knee and sleeveless tops are discouraged in malls and cultural sites. Swimwear only at beaches and pools. Qataris appreciate modest dress from visitors.

🕌

Mosque Etiquette

Remove shoes before entering mosques. Women must cover hair, arms, and legs (abayas provided at major mosques). Don't walk in front of someone praying. Photography of worshippers requires permission.

🍺

Alcohol Rules

Alcohol is only available at licensed hotel venues. Being drunk in public is illegal. Legal drinking age is 21. Non-alcoholic beer and cocktails (mocktails) are widely available and genuinely good.

🌙

Ramadan

No eating, drinking, or smoking in public during daylight hours of Ramadan. Restaurants close during the day. Iftar (sunset meal) is a beautiful communal experience — many hotels offer special iftar buffets.

📸

Photography

Never photograph Qatari women without explicit permission. Avoid photographing government buildings, military installations, or oil facilities. The souq and public areas are generally fine for photography.

Arabic Coffee & Dates

Being offered Arabic coffee (gahwa) and dates is the traditional Qatari welcome — always accept at least one cup. Hold the cup in your right hand. Shake the cup side-to-side when you've had enough.

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