Iran
Traveling to · Iran
Weather right now
13°C
Sun
30° / 15°
Mon
29° / 17°
Tue
29° / 15°
Wed
30° / 16°
Country facts
Capital
Tehran
Language
fa · fa
Currency
IRR ﷼
Emergency
110 police 125 fire 115 medical
Tipping
10% at restaurants if not included; small tips for porters.
Plug & power
Type C/F · 230V · 50Hz (Europlug)
When to visit
November–March: pleasant 20-28°C. Avoid June–September — 45°C+ daytime makes outdoor travel dangerous.
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
high season
low season
Typical costs (USD)
Hotel · budget
$40-100
per night
Hotel · midrange
$120-280
per night
Meal
$8-25
restaurant, typical
Transit
$2-6
single trip
Gulf states pricey (Dubai-tier). North Africa significantly cheaper.
Essential phrases
Hello
سلام
Thank you
متشکرم
Please
لطفا
Excuse me
ببخشید
Sorry
متاسفم
Where is the bathroom?
حمام کجاست؟
How much?
چقدر؟
Help!
کمک کنید
I don't understand
من نمی فهمم
No thank you
نه ممنون
Tea
چای
Water
آب
Translate any phrase →
Open the full translation grid — your phrase will appear in 65 languages with audio and a cross-check verdict on each card.
Numbers
۰
0
صفر
Zero
۱
1
یکی
One
۲
2
دو
Two
۳
3
سه
Three
۴
4
چهار
Four
۵
5
پنج
Five
۶
6
شش
Six
۷
7
هفت
Seven
۸
8
هشت
Eight
۹
9
نه
Nine
۱۰
10
ده
Ten
۲۰
20
بیست
Twenty
۵۰
50
پنجاه
Fifty
۱۰۰
100
صد
Hundred
۱۰۰۰
1000
هزار
Thousand
What to pack
- Long lightweight breathable clothing (sun protection)
- Wide-brim hat + sunglasses + SPF 50+
- Modest dress code — covered shoulders + knees minimum
- Reusable water bottle (large)
- Comfortable closed shoes (sand + heat)
- Light layers for air-conditioned interiors
- Lip balm + moisturizer (very dry air)
Cultural notes
- Strict dress code — women cover hair (hijab) + arms/legs; men avoid shorts in public
- Public displays of affection illegal; same-sex relations illegal
- Sanctions: international cards don't work — bring cash USD/EUR, exchange in country
- Iranian hospitality is legendary; refusing tea + meals is rude
- VPN essential for major apps; install before arrival
Universal courtesies
Apply everywhere, every country — respect travels with you.
- Try a greeting in the local language even if it's the only word you know — it's appreciated everywhere.
- Match local dress norms when entering religious sites, government buildings, or rural areas.
- Ask before photographing people, especially children or in religious settings.
- Tipping customs vary — never assume your home country's expectation applies.
- Remove shoes when entering homes if your host does; watch their cue.
- Keep voices lower than at home in temples, mosques, museums, public transport.
- Hands and gestures mean different things across cultures — observe before reaching out.
- Cash + cards: rural areas often need cash; major cities take cards. Carry small notes.
- Don't compare countries to each other in front of locals — every culture stands on its own.
- If you don't know the etiquette, watching for 30 seconds usually teaches it.