From Antigua and Barbuda to Egypt
When travelling from Antigua and Barbuda to Egypt: None of your Antigua and Barbuda plug types fit in Egypt. You will need a travel adapter. Voltage is different (110V / 220V → 230V). Check your charger label; if it doesn’t list 230V you’ll also need a voltage converter. Frequency differs (60Hz → 50Hz). Modern phone and laptop chargers are usually fine, but some clocks, motors, and appliances may behave incorrectly.
Your plugs
Type A
No fit
Type B
No fit
Accepted in Egypt
Type C
Type F
0 of 2 plug type(s) match
You: A, B • Egypt: C, F
No fit for: A, B
Voltage: 110V / 220V → 230V
Different voltage
You may need a voltage converter.
Frequency: 60Hz → 50Hz
Different frequency
Check device supports both 50/60 Hz.
Adapters you may need
Your plug shape does not fully match. Voltage differs; check for 100–240V support.
About electricity in Egypt
Egypt runs on 230V/50Hz with Type C and F sockets, the same standard used across continental Europe.
Grid & history
Natural gas dominates generation, with growing solar (Benban Solar Park is among the world’s largest) and wind. Nuclear is in development at El-Dabaa on the Mediterranean coast.
Availability
Supply is reliable in Cairo, Alexandria, and major tourist areas. Rural Upper Egypt sees occasional outages.
Sockets & hotels
Type F (Schuko) is the standard, and Type C Europlugs slot directly into Type F sockets.
Energy mix
Natural gas dominates; solar growing rapidly.
Practical tips
- A European C/F adapter is all you need.
- Voltage is 230V, so modern chargers handle it.
- Bring a power bank for long desert or Nile cruise days when sockets may be scarce.