Hiking Trails of Oman

The Ministry of Tourism runs a network of marked trails on the major mountain massifs — W-series in Wadi Ghul / Jebel Shams, E-series on Jebel Akhdar. The trails are real, the markings are unreliable. GPX is included for each.

Overview

The numbered trail system

Trails are marked with painted yellow-white-red flags every 50–200 m on rocks. Markings are repainted irregularly and you should expect to lose them at least once on any half-day walk. Treat the trail number as a starting point, not a guarantee. Always carry a GPS file.

Headline routes

W6 (the Balcony Walk) is the most popular — 4 hours return, level path, no exposure, finishes at the abandoned village of As Sab on the rim of Wadi Ghul. E35 on Jebel Akhdar links three abandoned terrace villages in a 3-hour easy loop. Jebel Shams summit (W4) is a 7-hour committing day with route-finding.

Water and weather

Carry 3 litres per person on Jebel Shams trails year-round. Hike before 10:00 between May and September; the rim trails offer no shade. Snow on Jebel Shams is rare but does happen January–February.

Practical tips

GPX downloads

Locations

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Frequently asked questions

What is the best easy hike in Oman?

The Balcony Walk (W6) on Jebel Shams. It is level, well-marked by Omani standards, takes 4 hours return, and ends at the most photogenic abandoned village on the canyon rim.

Are guides required?

No, except for technical canyoning (Snake Canyon) and the W4 Jebel Shams summit traverse if you are inexperienced with route-finding. Most people walk the Balcony, E35 and the Bilad Sayt loops without guides.

Is there a long-distance trail in Oman?

Not officially. The closest equivalent is linking E35–E37 on Jebel Akhdar over two days, which is a self-supported wild camp.

Where do I get GPX files?

On each trail's individual page on this site. Files are open and have been ground-truthed in the past 18 months.