Key Takeaways
- The #1 reported scam is the Diluted or Synthetic "Pure Taif Rose Oil" and Attar
- 1 of 6 scams are rated high risk
- Use app-based ride services (Uber, Careem) or official metered taxis instead of unmarked vehicles
- Never accept unsolicited offers from strangers near tourist sites in Taif
⚡ Quick Safety Tips
- Buy 'pure Taif rose' oil and attar only from established factories that provide a lab certificate and a sealed bottle — street and souq 'pure attar' sold at bargain prices is routinely diluted or synthetic
- Agree the Al Hada cable car fare and any mountain-taxi fare before you board, and confirm whether the price is per cabin or per person
- Buy mountain honey only sealed, labelled, and priced per kilo from a licensed shop — roadside 'pure Sidr honey' vendors commonly sell adulterated jars
- Use Uber or Careem from Jeddah and around Taif rather than unmetered street taxis, and check the in-app estimate before agreeing any private fare
Jump to a Scam
- Medium Diluted or Synthetic "Pure Taif Rose Oil" and Attar
- Medium Al Hada Cable Car and Mountain-Taxi Surcharge
- Medium Adulterated "Pure Mountain Honey" from Roadside and Souq Vendors
- High Baboon-Feeding Fruit Stalls on the Al Hada and Al Shafa Roads
- Medium Airport and Street Taxi Overcharge from Jeddah and Within Taif
- Medium Rental-Car Damage Charges and the Camera-Drop Setup
The 6 Scams
You step into a perfume stall in Taif's old souq, the City of Roses, and a vendor waves a little vial under your nose: "Pure Taif rose oil, special price, only 200 riyals." It smells gorgeous and the price feels like a steal for the world's most expensive rose. That is exactly the problem. House of Saud's Taif travel guide notes that a single tola (about 11 grams) of genuine Taif rose oil typically costs between SAR 1,000 and SAR 3,000 (roughly $265 to $800) because around 40,000 hand-picked damask roses go into each tola. Anything dramatically cheaper is almost certainly cut with carrier oil, blended with cheaper Bulgarian or Iranian rose, or simply a synthetic fragrance compound dressed up in a fancy bottle.
Industry purity guides are blunt about how common this is. Essential-oil authenticity write-ups (Ethos, KushAroma Exports and others surfaced in our research) estimate that as much as 80% of essential oil on the open market is adulterated in some way, and that with pricey oils like rose, "an unusually low price point is a classic red flag." Attar perfumers point out that real Taif attar is a concentrate sold by the tola in a sealed bottle with a botanical name (Rosa damascena), not a watery liquid in a clear plastic dropper bottle handed to you with no label.
The scam thrives because most visitors are pilgrims or GCC summer tourists buying a quick souvenir, not perfumery experts, and bargaining is genuinely expected in the souq, so a "discount" feels normal rather than suspicious. Vendors on the Al Hada and Al Shafa farm roads will sometimes let you tour a distillery, then steer you to "farm-direct" oil that is actually rosewater or heavily diluted stock at attar prices. House of Saud's advice to buy direct from named producers and factory shops exists precisely because the markup-and-dilute game is so widespread once you leave the distillery floor.
Treat any "pure Taif rose oil" under roughly SAR 1,000 a tola as fake, buy only from a named farm or factory shop with a sealed, labeled bottle stating Rosa damascena, and smell-test for an artificial or alcohol note before you pay.
Red Flags
- "Pure" rose oil offered for a tiny fraction of the SAR 1,000-3,000 per tola real price
- Watery liquid in an unlabeled clear plastic dropper bottle instead of a sealed tola vial
- No botanical name (Rosa damascena), no producer name, no batch info on the label
- Heavy push to buy attar right after a free distillery or farm "tour"
- Sharp alcohol or artificial top-note instead of a deep, rounded rose scent
How to Avoid
- Buy only from named farm or factory shops, not anonymous souq dropper-bottle sellers
- Expect to pay roughly SAR 1,000-3,000 per tola for genuine pure oil
- Insist on a sealed bottle labeled Rosa damascena with producer and origin
- Smell-test for synthetic or alcohol notes before paying
- If you want a cheap keepsake, buy clearly labeled rosewater, not 'pure oil'
You want to ride the famous Al Hada cable car (the Telefric) down to Al Kar village, so you flag a taxi and ask for the mountain.
The driver shrugs that the meter "doesn't work up here" and names a flat fare that is two or three times what the trip should cost. Taif sits at the top of a steep, hairpin mountain road, and drivers know it: as the taxi-service listings surfaced in our research put it, "some drivers charge extra for the Al Hada route since it takes longer and uses more fuel." That is fair in principle, but it is also the perfect cover for a quoted-flat-fare overcharge once the meter is conveniently "broken."
Know the real numbers so you can push back. Sarvar Umrah and Welcome Saudi peg the Al Hada cable car ticket at about SAR 84 per person, fixed. Travel guides put a short in-city hop from Taif to the Al Shafa park area at roughly SAR 50-100, while a one-way sedan all the way from Makkah to Taif runs about SAR 200-300 (vans and "luxury" cars more). If a driver waves off the meter and quotes SAR 400-500 for a short mountain run, that is the same broken-meter flat-fare play that GoDigit's Saudi scam guide and travelsafe-abroad both flag nationwide, just localized to the Al Hada switchbacks.
A second twist is the cable-car ticket itself. Because the line runs from the Ramada Al Hada hotel and self-parks at the bottom in Al Kar, freelancers and "helpers" sometimes offer to sort your tickets, parking or a "package" at a markup over the SAR 84 counter price. Buy at the official ticket window or a recognized operator rather than from anyone working the parking lot.
Insist on the meter or agree a fare before getting in (about SAR 50-100 for a short Al Hada/Al Shafa run), and buy the roughly SAR 84 cable-car ticket only at the official window, never from a parking-lot "helper."
Red Flags
- Driver claims the meter is "broken" specifically once you ask for the mountain
- Flat fare of SAR 400-500 quoted for a short Al Hada or Al Shafa run
- Refusal to start the meter or to state a price before you board
- Parking-lot 'helpers' offering cable-car ticket or parking 'packages' above SAR 84
- Vague claims that the cable car is 'sold out' unless you buy through them
How to Avoid
- Agree the fare or insist on the meter before getting in
- Know the benchmarks: ~SAR 50-100 short mountain hop, ~SAR 200-300 Makkah-Taif sedan
- Use a ride-hailing app (Uber/Careem) where the price shows before you confirm
- Buy the ~SAR 84 cable-car ticket at the official Telefric window only
- Photograph the taxi plate and share it with someone before departing
A vendor in Taif pours a thick amber stream from a jar and tells you it is wild Sidr or pure highland mountain honey, harvested from the surrounding Sarawat peaks, for a price that seems suspiciously friendly for the "king of honeys." Taif and the southern highlands are real honey country, which is exactly why fakes circulate here. Saudi Gazette has run a "Beware of the honey trap" warning telling the public not to buy honey from street vendors or unauthorized dealers because they may end up with a counterfeit product, noting Saudi honey output has collapsed (to roughly 800 tons a year from 9,000 in 2007) while demand tops 22,000 tons, a gap that adulterated and rebottled honey rushes in to fill.
Enforcement cases show how industrial the fraud can be. Arab News reported authorities shut two unlicensed factories and seized more than 30,000 bottles of syrup (sold under names like "Al-Wadi Nectar") that was being passed off as pure honey in markets south of Riyadh, with the Ministry of Commerce ordering refunds. Gulf News reported the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture and the Food and Drug Authority shut down a string of honey shops in Abha and the Asir highlands for selling honey "mixed with cheaper syrups" from sugar cane, corn or rice. Specialist estimates cited in our research put 60-80% of honey sold abroad as "Yemeni Sidr" as fake; the same dilution-and-mislabel playbook reaches the Taif souqs.
The usual tells are sensory and commercial: real raw Sidr is rare and expensive, so a cheap price, a perfectly clear pourable texture that never crystallizes, an over-caramel color, or a too-sweet flat taste all point to syrup-cut product. Roadside jars with no producer label, no farm name and no Saudi food-authority markings are the riskiest of all, especially when sold to passing GCC summer tourists who will be back home before they realize what they bought.
Buy honey only from a named, licensed producer with a proper label and food-authority markings, be deeply suspicious of cheap "pure Sidr" from unlabeled roadside or souq jars, and remember real wild Sidr is never a bargain.
Red Flags
- "Pure Sidr" or "wild mountain honey" offered cheap, far below the king-of-honeys price
- Unlabeled jars with no producer name, farm or food-authority markings
- Honey stays perfectly clear and pourable and never crystallizes
- Over-dark caramel color or a flat, too-sweet sugar-syrup taste
- Roadside-only seller pressuring a quick cash sale to passing tourists
How to Avoid
- Buy only from named, licensed shops or apiaries with labeled jars
- Avoid cheap 'pure Sidr' from unlabeled roadside or souq jars
- Remember genuine raw Sidr honey is rare and expensive, never a bargain
- Check for Saudi food-authority markings and a producer address
- Ask to taste; reject flat, syrupy, or caramel-colored 'honey'
Like what you're reading? Get a full Taif itinerary with safety tips built in.
Get Free Itinerary →
Driving the scenic Al Hada road toward Al Shafa, you slow for the troop of hamadryas baboons lined up along the crash barriers, and a roadside stall is right there selling bananas and bagged snacks "for the monkeys." Feeding them looks like the thing to do; a TripAdvisor reviewer of the Shafa Mountains describes stopping at "a roadside market selling fresh fruits" to buy bananas and how "many monkeys even sit on the cars if you offer them banana." The stalls know this is the draw and price the fruit accordingly, marking up a cheap bunch of bananas into a captive-audience tourist purchase. That is the soft part of the scam. The hard part is what the feeding sets you up for.
Arab News ("Monkeys in Taif: Menace or delight?"). A separate Arab News piece documents that the food-conditioned animals have started attacking cars and throwing rocks, and that authorities now explicitly warn people, especially tourists, not to feed them. A large male baboon that expects food and does not get it can bite, scratch, snatch a bag or phone, or pile onto an open car.
So the "scam" here is really a manufactured-risk trap: a vendor profits by selling you overpriced fruit that lures powerful wild animals to your open window, and you absorb the downside (a bitten hand, a snatched phone, a clawed door, or worse if a child is involved). It is the rare Taif hazard that is both an overcharge and a genuine safety threat, which is why it earns a high danger rating.
Do not buy the roadside "monkey food" at all, keep your windows up and doors closed near the baboons, and never let a child hold food out, because the animals are food-conditioned and bite, scratch, and snatch.
Red Flags
- Stalls positioned right where the baboons gather, selling fruit 'for the monkeys'
- Cheap bananas or snacks marked up sharply as a captive tourist purchase
- Encouragement to roll your window down or get out to hand-feed
- Large males approaching cars expecting food the moment you slow
- No warning signage from the vendor despite official no-feeding advice
How to Avoid
- Do not buy or hand out 'monkey food' from roadside stalls
- Keep windows up and doors shut while passing the baboon troops
- Never let children hold or offer food to the animals
- Don't get out of the car to photograph or feed at close range
- Heed official Saudi warnings not to feed the Taif baboons
You land at Jeddah and need to get up to Taif, or you have just stepped out of your Taif hotel, and a friendly man approaches before you reach any official taxi rank offering a ride "no problem, good price." This is the most common Saudi scam there is, and Taif's visitors, many of them pilgrims combining Makkah with a Taif side-trip, are prime targets. GoDigit's Saudi scam guide and travelsafe-abroad both describe drivers who overcharge, take the long way, or claim the meter is broken to justify a "fixed" fare, and warn specifically about touts who intercept you before the official taxi counter, sometimes posing as staff and even asking to see your passport before walking you to an unlicensed car at an inflated rate.
The fix is knowing the real fares. Taxi-service guides surfaced in our research put a one-way sedan from Makkah or Jeddah to Taif at roughly SAR 200-300 (luxury cars and vans more), and short hops within Taif at modest metered rates. If someone quotes SAR 400-500+ for a standard run, or refuses the meter the moment you sit down, you are being worked. GoDigit notes that a fair private-car airport fare is in the SAR 130-180 range and that quotes of SAR 400-500 are a scam.
Ride-hailing neutralizes most of this. GoDigit and the other guides recommend Uber or Careem because the price is shown on screen before you confirm, the route is logged, and there is no "the meter's broken" conversation. Where you must take a street taxi, agree the total before boarding, ask for the meter, follow the route on Google Maps, and photograph the plate. The Transport General Authority (TGA) takes complaints by app and hotline if a licensed driver gouges you.
Skip anyone who approaches you before the official rank, use Uber or Careem so the price is locked on screen, and for street taxis agree the fare or demand the meter before you get in.
Red Flags
- A 'driver' approaches before you reach the official taxi counter
- Someone in 'staff' clothing asks for your passport then walks you to a car
- Meter is 'broken' and only a high flat fare is offered
- Quote of SAR 400-500+ for a standard Jeddah/Makkah-to-Taif sedan run
- Driver picks up extra passengers or detours on a private ride
How to Avoid
- Ignore touts before the official rank; reach the counter or use an app
- Prefer Uber or Careem so the fare shows before you confirm
- Know benchmarks: ~SAR 200-300 sedan Makkah/Jeddah-Taif; modest in-city fares
- Agree the price or insist on the meter before boarding a street taxi
- Photograph the plate, track the route on Google Maps, report to TGA
Because Taif is spread out and the best of it (Al Hada, Al Shafa, the rose farms, Shubra Palace) is reached by mountain road, many visitors rent a car, and that opens two Saudi-wide scams that land squarely on Taif tourists. The first is the phantom-damage charge: travelsafe-abroad and GoDigit both warn that people posing as rental staff, or a real agency at drop-off, may bill tourists for scratches, dents or "damage that did not occur during their rental period." On a car that climbed the Al Hada hairpins, a vague "undercarriage" or "new scratch" claim is easy to assert and hard to disprove once you are at the airport about to fly out.
The defense is documentation. Photograph and video the entire car (all panels, wheels, glass, roof and interior) at pickup with a visible timestamp, get every existing mark noted on the contract before you drive off, and repeat the walk-around at return with the agent present. Decline pressure to skip the inspection "to save time," and keep your photos until the deposit is fully released.
The second is the classic camera-drop, which GoDigit lists as Saudi Arabia's signature street scam: a stranger asks you to take their photo at a scenic spot, then deliberately fumbles and "breaks" the camera (or phone) and demands you pay for it. At Taif's photogenic spots, the Shubra Palace facade, an Al Hada overlook, the souq, a polite request to "please take our picture" can flip into an aggressive payment demand. A close cousin GoDigit also flags is the bird-poop / fake-stain distraction, where someone smears a substance on you, then "helps" clean it while an accomplice lifts your wallet or phone.
Photograph and video the rental car inside and out at both pickup and return with an agent present, and decline strangers' requests to handle their camera or to "clean" a sudden stain off your clothes.
Red Flags
- Rental agent rushes you past the pickup inspection 'to save time'
- Drop-off 'damage' claim for marks you never noticed or caused
- A stranger insists you hold their camera/phone for a photo
- Camera is 'dropped' and broken right after you take the picture
- Sudden 'bird poop' or stain and an eager stranger offering to clean it
How to Avoid
- Video and photograph the whole car at pickup with a timestamp
- Get all existing damage noted on the contract before driving off
- Do a joint walk-around at return and keep photos until deposit clears
- Decline to handle strangers' cameras at scenic spots
- Ignore 'let me clean that' offers; step away and check your pockets
🆘 What to Do If You Get Scammed
📋 File a Police Report
Go to the nearest Saudi Arabian Police station. Call 999 (Police) or 911 (Emergency). Get an official crime report — you'll need this for insurance claims. You can also report online at moi.gov.sa.
💳 Cancel Your Cards
Call your bank immediately. Most have 24/7 numbers on the back of the card (keep a photo saved separately). Block any suspicious transactions before the thieves use your details.
🛂 Lost Passport?
Contact the US Embassy in Riyadh at PO Box 94309. For emergencies: +966 11-488-3800.
📱 Track Your Device
If your phone was stolen, use Find My (iPhone) or Find My Device (Android) from another device. Don't confront thieves yourself — share the location with police instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
You just read 6 scams in Taif. The full Travel Safety Series has 780+ more across 20+ countries.
Tokyo's Kabukichō ¥130,000 bar trap. Rome's gladiator photo extortion. Paris's gold-ring trick. Bali's ATM skimmer scams. Bangkok's grand-palace closure ruse. Every documented scam across 20+ destinations — with the exact scripts, red flags, and local-language phrases that shut each one down. Drawn from Reddit traveler reports, embassy advisories, and consumer-protection cases.
- 780+ documented scams across Tokyo, Rome, Paris, Bali, Bangkok, Rio & 100+ more cities
- 20+ countries covered, with country-by-country phrase cards for every destination
- Updated annually — buy once, re-download future editions free
- All titles $4.99 each on Amazon Kindle
Ready to Plan Your Taif Trip?
Now you know what to watch for. Get a custom Taif itinerary with local tips, hidden spots, and restaurant picks — free.
Plan Your Taif Trip →