International courier from Udaipur to Egypt. Free home pickup.
Pickup from your Udaipur door, packed and documented, into the DTDC International network. 6–10 working days door-to-door for express; air movement to Cairo (CAI) via Mumbai or Delhi, often through a Gulf trans-shipment. From ₹1,200 per kilogram before fuel surcharge and GST.
Five steps from your Udaipur door to an Egyptian address.
Pickup, Udaipur.
Free at 5 kg+. We bring tape, bubble wrap and the international airway bill.
Pack & document.
Commercial invoice, KYC, recipient Egyptian National ID on the AWB. Done at our office before handover.
DTDC handover.
Same evening into the DTDC International facility; air movement to Cairo (CAI) via Mumbai or Delhi, often via a Gulf trans-shipment hub.
Egyptian customs.
Clearance via the Egyptian Customs Authority. Be straight about this: clearance is slower than Gulf — typically 3–7 days. Ramadan and major holidays add more. We track it daily.
Doorstep delivery.
Last-mile across Cairo, Alexandria, Giza. POD on WhatsApp the same day.
Starting rates. Real pricing depends on weight.
Egypt rates run higher than the Gulf countries because of the additional trans-shipment leg and longer customs cycle. Final price depends on actual or volumetric weight (whichever is greater) plus the international fuel surcharge in force on your booking date. GST is extra.
Starting per-kg rates
- Express (6–10 days, door)from ₹1,200 / kg
- Economy (10–15 days, door)from ₹900 / kg
- Min billable weight0.5 kg
- Pickup from UdaipurFree at 5 kg+
Volumetric formula: (L × W × H cm) ÷ 5000.
Worked example
A 2 kg parcel — say a saree set with sealed mithai and a small jewellery box for a Cairo address:
- Express, 2 kg × ₹1,200≈ ₹2,400
- + fuel surcharge (~25%)≈ ₹600
- + GST 18%≈ ₹540
- Approx total, express≈ ₹4,000
Indicative only. Fuel surcharge and rate cards change.
What you’ll need at pickup.
Egypt is paperwork-fussy and the Egyptian Customs Authority (ECA) is slower than Gulf customs. Tight documents at pickup save days at the other end.
KYC of the sender
One photo ID for the person whose name is on the AWB — Aadhaar, passport or driving licence. We photograph it at pickup; not stored beyond DTDC’s record.
Commercial invoice
Printed invoice listing items, quantity and value. For gifts, a written declaration with values stated. Egyptian customs is fair-value based — under-declaring trips inspections.
Recipient Egyptian National ID
National ID number for the consignee on the AWB. Without it, ECA holds the parcel pending verification. Confirm with the recipient before pickup.
Prescription (medicines)
Tablets going to a family member: copy of the prescription with doctor’s registration, sealed strips, no liquids, no controlled substances. EgyDA (Egyptian Drug Authority) sets the rules; small personal-use quantities are workable with paperwork.
What Egypt doesn’t let in.
Egypt is more permissive than Gulf states — alcohol and most foods are sold openly — but courier parcels still face screening and zero-tolerance for several categories. CITES enforcement is serious.
Don’t even try
- Alcohol — courier zero-tolerance even though it is legal at retail.
- Pork and pork products — restricted in courier consignments.
- Ivory, tortoise-shell, antiquities — Egypt is strict on CITES and on protected-heritage items, both inbound and outbound.
- Recreational drugs, CBD, cannabis — banned outright.
- E-cigarettes, vape liquids — banned.
- Satellite receivers and broadcast equipment — NTRA-controlled.
- Israeli-origin products — despite the peace treaty, many products are still flagged at customs.
- Aerosols and pressurised cans — air-leg restricted.
- Lithium batteries above 100 Wh — restricted on air leg.
Allowed with care
- Textiles, sarees, lehengas, dupattas — declare a fair value, no issue.
- Books — politically-neutral preferred; avoid materials critical of the Egyptian government.
- Sealed dry sweets — factory-sealed mithai usually clears.
- Prescription tablets — sealed strip, copy of Rx, recipient National ID. No injectables.
- Non-precious jewellery, papier-mâché, small electronics — declare make, model, fair value.
- Indian decorative arts and handicrafts — Pharaonic–Indian historical exchange has currency; cultural-art parcels are received well.
- Personal documents — passports, originals, signed papers.
Khan El-Khalili B2B, family gifts, academic exchange.
Gifts to Indian-Egyptian families
Small but historic diaspora — mostly business families in Cairo and Alexandria. Sarees, sealed sweets, festival outfits, jewellery boxes (non-precious). Picked up from Udaipur, landed in 6–10 days.
Khan El-Khalili Marwari B2B
Cairo’s old bazaar has Indian merchants in the wholesale lanes around Khan El-Khalili. Block-print fabric, decorative handicrafts, non-precious metalwork — recurring slot, commercial invoice with item-level pricing and HS codes (we draft the first one).
Sufi pilgrimage / Al-Azhar exchange
Long-standing Indian Sufi-pilgrim tradition with Egyptian shrines, plus Al-Azhar academic linkages. Documents, academic books, decorative gifts move on this lane.
Wedding outfits
Lehengas, sherwanis, dupattas. Shipped well ahead of weddings to Egypt-resident Indian families — express recommended given the longer customs cycle.
B2B handicraft to Cairo souvenir wholesalers
Cairo’s tourist-souvenir wholesalers around Khan El-Khalili stock papier-mâché, decorative metalwork, hand-block print pieces from Rajasthan. Recurring B2B works once buyer details are on file.
Returning-traveller baggage
Egyptian tourists who completed the India circuit (Udaipur–Jaipur–Agra) and ran out of suitcase room. Picked from the hotel, packed, shipped before they fly out.
Personal documents
Originals, signed contracts, certified copies. Always express; tracked international document is faster than registered post.
AWB on WhatsApp. Track on dtdc.in. POD when it lands.
The moment the parcel is booked into DTDC International, we send you the AWB number on WhatsApp. Type it into the public tracker at dtdc.in any time. On Egypt lanes the customs-clearance phase can show static tracking for 3–7 days — that’s ECA, not the parcel being lost. We chase status daily and update you. POD on delivery.
Asked most often.
How long does Egyptian customs really take?
Honest answer: 3–7 days for a clean parcel, longer during Ramadan and Egyptian public holidays. The Egyptian Customs Authority is slower than any Gulf customs — that’s a structural fact, not specific to your parcel. Express transit of 6–10 working days door-to-door already factors this in. If we promise faster, we’d be misleading you.
I trade handicrafts to a Khan El-Khalili wholesaler. What works?
Block-print fabric, papier-mâché, decorative non-precious metalwork (brass, copper, white-metal), textile cushion covers, dohars — all clean to ship with item-level commercial invoice and the buyer’s National ID or commercial registration on the AWB. Once the buyer’s details are on file, recurring sends are straightforward. Avoid anything that could be misclassified as antiquity (old-look brass, replica artefacts) — even when it isn’t, it can trigger ECA review.
Does shipping during Ramadan slow things down?
Yes — noticeably. Egypt observes Ramadan with reduced government working hours, and ECA clearance times stretch by 2–4 days during the month. Eid al-Fitr immediately after adds another holiday gap. If you’re sending wedding outfits or anything time-sensitive into a Ramadan window, we recommend booking 2–3 weeks ahead and using express.
Tell us the rough weight and the destination city.
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