Votre séjour — Hôtel El Bey
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La propriété — Hôtel El Bey
Hôtel El Bey is a no-frills 3-star business hotel close to the city centre, with a marble-floored lobby that smells faintly of cleaning fluid and strong coffee. The staff are efficient but brisk, and the USP is location: you can walk to Constantine’s main square and the Rhumel Gorge in ten minutes. It suits solo travellers or couples on a tight budget who plan to be out all day, not couples seeking romance or quiet luxury.
Chroniques de Constantine
Constantine was founded by the Phoenicians as Cirta, became the capital of Numidia, and was later renamed by the Romans in honour of Emperor Constantine I. Suspended on a limestone plateau cut by the dramatic Rhumel Gorge, the city’s old town (the Casbah) is a tangle of Ottoman-era white houses and narrow alleys. French colonial architects added grand boulevards and bridges in the 19th century, most famously the Pont Sidi M’Cid. Today it’s a gritty, vivid university city where Berber, Arab and French influences collide in markets, music and food.
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Guide complet de Constantine →Meilleurs mois
April, May and October — warm days (20-26°C), little rain, and decent sightseeing light without the July-August heat.
Peak / Festival surge
July and August. Temperatures hit 35-40°C, and many Algerians take holidays, pushing domestic demand. Hotel prices rise 20-30% over the year’s average. No major festivals in July, but the Timgad International Festival (near Batna) in early July draws regional visitors.
La saison des épaules
June and September are the best budget shoulder months: still hot but less crowded, with hotel discounts of 10-15% compared to peak July.
Météo & Emballage
Constantine sits 700 metres up, so summer nights can drop to 18°C even after 38°C days. Pack a light jacket or cardigan for evenings, and proper walking shoes for the steep staircases and uneven pavements.
Briefing de la ville — Constantine
- The new Constantine tramway extension now reaches the western suburbs, making it easier to skip downtown traffic jams to reach the Cité des Ponts area for cheap eats.
- Several central streets near the Souk el Assr are under utility repairs until late 2026, so expect diversions and dust, especially around Place de la Souika.
- Ramadan in 2026 ended in early April, so by July restaurants and cafés will be fully open during daytime — no need to adjust meal timing.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Hôtel El Bey, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor facing the interior courtyard (away from the street). These upper floors minimise street noise and offer more privacy.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor—they are closest to the lobby and street, and may hear lift activity. Also skip rooms directly above the bar or restaurant if present.
Best views
Rooms on the front (street-facing side) look out onto Constantine's urban streetscape, which can be interesting but noisy. Rear-facing rooms offer quieter courtyard views.
Quietest floors
Floors 4–6 are quietest, as they sit above street-level noise and are well clear of ground-floor public areas.
🔊 Noise notes
Constantine's streets can be busy with scooters and traffic until late evening. The hotel's central location means road noise from nearby main roads. Lift machinery may hum on adjacent rooms.
Insider tips
1. If you have a car, check for street parking or the nearest public parking—3-star hotels here rarely include private parking. 2. Request a room on a higher floor during booking to avoid street noise.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hôtel Facilités — Hôtel El Bey
Free Wi-Fi in lobby and rooms, around 10 Mbps download; no login constraints
One lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections
Free digital news via a tablet in lobby on weekends; no physical papers
Check-in from 14:00; early bag-drop allowed after 11:00; late check-out until 14:00 costs 1,500 DZD
Complimentary for guests; 500 DZD per bag per day for non-guests
Step-free access at main entrance; one wheelchair-accessible room on ground floor; no lift to basement level
Free on-site parking for 20 cars; nearest public car park is Parking Souika, 500 DZD per night; no EV charging
Frais, taxes et dépôts
City / tourist tax: 200 DZD per person per night
Deposit & card hold: 50% of total stay charged as advance deposit; 5,000 DZD incidental hold at check-in
Faith & Dietary à proximité
- Mosque: Mosquée Cheikh Ahmed Sahnoune (1.4 km · ~17 min walk)
Style de vie et récréation
Zénith de Constantine — 1.1 km · ~14 min walk
Monnaie & Monnaie
Get a travel card →Algerian Dinar, DZD
Exchange money at local banks or official bureaux de change; avoid the airport and tourist bureaux for poor rates. Street changers offer better rates but are illegal and risky.
Cards are accepted in larger hotels, supermarkets, and upmarket restaurants, but cash is king in most shops, cafés, and taxis; contactless is rare.
Tipping is not mandatory but appreciated: round up taxi fares, leave 50-100 DZD in restaurants if service is good, and 100-200 DZD for hotel porters.
Manger, faire du shopping et voyager sur un budget
Cheap car hire →A small espresso or Arabic coffee from a local café: around 50-80 DZD.
A sandwich (brik, merguez) or couscous from a street-side stall: roughly 300-500 DZD.
A main dish of grilled chicken or brochettes at a simple restaurant: around 600-1,000 DZD.
Head to the area around Place Emir Abdelkader or Souk El Asser for cheap brochettes, brik, and chakhchoukha.
Superettes and local mini-markets are common; chain supermarkets like Ardis or Carrefour are in newer parts of town.
The souk area near Rue Didouche offers affordable streetwear; for cheaper basics, try the Marché de la Pluviôse.
Shared taxis (collectivo) cost around 30-50 DZD per ride within Constantine; from the airport, take a shared taxi to the city centre for about 200-300 DZD per person.
Use shared taxis instead of private ones; eat at lunchtime when many stalls sell filling sandwiches for under 200 DZD; avoid buying bottled water at tourist shops and get it from a local supermarket instead.
Emergency Contacts
ConstantineIn Algeria, emergency numbers are national: Police: 17, Ambulance: 14, Fire: 14. For local police in Constantine, dial 031 93 12 22. Useful: tourist police hotline 1548, and the Civil Protection (for fire/rescue) on 1021. Save these before you travel.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Constantine, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Hôtel El Bey
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →S’entourer
Mohamed Boudiaf Airport → Place de la République, then a 5-minute walk to Hôtel El Bey
💡 The bus drops you at the main square. From there, walk east along Rue Didouche Mourad — the hotel is on your left. Don't attempt this with large luggage.
Mohamed Boudiaf International Airport (CZL) → Hôtel El Bey, Constantine city centre
💡 Fix the fare before you get in — drivers often quote higher for tourists. The hotel can also arrange a pickup for roughly the same price.
Anywhere in central Constantine → Hôtel El Bey
💡 Yellow cars are official petit taxis — they're cheaper than private drivers. Use Google Maps to show the hotel location, as drivers rarely know street numbers.
Gare de Constantine (train station) → Hôtel El Bey (nearest stop: Palais de Justice)
💡 Easiest way from the central station. Palais de Justice is two blocks uphill from the hotel. Buy a rechargeable card at the ticket machine — single tickets are cash only.
Questions fréquemment posées
What are the best rooms at Hôtel El Bey?
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor facing the interior courtyard (away from the street). These upper floors minimise street noise and offer more privacy.
Which rooms should I avoid at Hôtel El Bey?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor—they are closest to the lobby and street, and may hear lift activity. Also skip rooms directly above the bar or restaurant if present.
Is Hôtel El Bey noisy?
Constantine's streets can be busy with scooters and traffic until late evening. The hotel's central location means road noise from nearby main roads. Lift machinery may hum on adjacent rooms.
Which rooms have the best views at Hôtel El Bey?
Rooms on the front (street-facing side) look out onto Constantine's urban streetscape, which can be interesting but noisy. Rear-facing rooms offer quieter courtyard views.
What are insider tips for staying at Hôtel El Bey?
1. If you have a car, check for street parking or the nearest public parking—3-star hotels here rarely include private parking. 2. Request a room on a higher floor during booking to avoid street noise.
What time is check-in at Hôtel El Bey?
Check-in at Hôtel El Bey is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Hôtel El Bey have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi in lobby and rooms, around 10 Mbps download; no login constraints
Is there a city or tourist tax at Hôtel El Bey?
200 DZD per person per night
Where can I eat cheaply near Hôtel El Bey?
A sandwich (brik, merguez) or couscous from a street-side stall: roughly 300-500 DZD.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Hôtel El Bey?
Shared taxis (collectivo) cost around 30-50 DZD per ride within Constantine; from the airport, take a shared taxi to the city centre for about 200-300 DZD per person.
When is the best time to visit Constantine?
April, May and October — warm days (20-26°C), little rain, and decent sightseeing light without the July-August heat.
Principales attractions à Constantine
💡 There's a small bench behind the monument that few tourists find — sit there with a book or just watch the birds circling below.
💡 Bargain gently and with humour. Seek out the dried mint and harissa stalls (cheapest in the city). Expect to be jostled — it's part of the experience.
💡 Cross just before sunset — the bridge catches golden light and the gorge below goes into deep shadow. Free to walk, no tickets needed.
💡 Bring your own snacks — there's only one small kiosk, and it sells overpriced bottled water. The benches by the fountain have the best shade.
💡 Go on a Friday morning — it's quiet and the staff often let you into locked rooms showing Numidian relics.