Travelisto destinations

Turkey holidays

Istanbul's Hagia Sophia and Topkapi, Cappadocia's hot-air balloons at sunrise, the Lycian coast and Antalya beach resorts — Turkey at every register.

Best Apr–Jun, Sep–Oct (peak Jul–Aug) ~4h to Istanbul / Antalya

Overview

Welcome to Turkey

Turkey is the country that straddles two continents and somehow ends up cheaper, warmer and more layered than most travellers expect. The headline Turkey trip is Istanbul + Cappadocia + a coastal finisher (Antalya, Bodrum or a gulet cruise), 10-12 days, and it is one of the genuinely great mid-haul holidays. After that, repeat travellers go deeper — the Lycian coast, the Greek-feeling Aegean towns, eastern Anatolia, the Black Sea coast.

Istanbul is the trip-maker. It is Byzantine, Ottoman and contemporary all at once; Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapi, the Grand Bazaar, the Bosphorus boat trip across to Asian-side Kadıköy. Two nights here is not enough — three is the minimum, four is better. Sultanahmet for the headline sights, Beyoğlu and Karaköy for the food and nightlife, Asian Side for the day-trip every traveller comes home talking about.

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Cappadocia is a landscape unlike anywhere else on the planet — fairy-chimney rock formations, underground cities, cave hotels carved into 4th-century churches, and the dawn hot-air balloon flights that have become an Instagram archetype but are genuinely worth the early start. Two nights is enough; the balloon flight is the trip-defining moment.

The Turkish Mediterranean (Antalya, Belek, Kemer) and Aegean (Bodrum, Marmaris, Çeşme) coasts are the resort-holiday side of Turkey — bigger, cheaper and warmer than equivalent Spanish or Greek resorts, with the upside of a 4-hour flight versus a 2-hour. Bodrum is the cosmopolitan, beach-club end; Antalya is the value family-resort end; the Lycian Way between Fethiye and Antalya is the dramatic-cliff-and-cove walking-and-yacht end.

The seasonal rhythm: April-June and September-October are ideal — warm but not punishing, manageable crowds. July-August is reliably hot (40°C inland in places like Konya and Şanlıurfa, mid-30s on the coast), with the coast still working well because of sea breezes. November-March: Istanbul is genuinely lovely (snow on the Hagia Sophia dome is a Turkey-as-Byzantium image), Cappadocia is below-zero but spectacular under snow, the resorts shut.

Turkish food is a genuine surprise to travellers who think they know Mediterranean cooking. The kebab-and-mezze image is right but undersells it. The breakfast culture (Turkish kahvaltı — cheeses, olives, eggs, breads, jams, honey, tea) is one of the great breakfasts of the world. Istanbul's street food (simit, börek, midye dolma), Cappadocian pottery kebabs, Aegean seafood-and-meze tavernas, and the South-Eastern (Gaziantep) baklava are each a reason to design a trip around food.

Turkey pairs naturally with Greece (Bodrum-Kos ferry, Marmaris-Rhodes ferry, or a Greek-Turkish cruise) and with Cyprus (1-hour flight from Antalya). Within Turkey, the headline 10-12 day trip is Istanbul + Cappadocia + coast; for second-time travellers, the Lycian coast yacht cruise or eastern Anatolia (Mount Nemrut, Mardin, Şanlıurfa) opens a different Turkey altogether.

Best time

Apr–Jun, Sep–Oct (peak Jul–Aug)

Flight from UK

~4h to Istanbul / Antalya

Currency

Turkish Lira (TRY)

Language

Turkish

From the team

Why we love Turkey

Rossella — Travel Designer · Luxury & Destination Specialist

Turkey is the trip I send people on when they want "more for their money" without losing quality. The Mediterranean coast resorts are some of the best in the world for the price, and the cultural side — Istanbul + Cappadocia — is genuinely once-in-a-life.

My quiet recommendation: the 12-day Istanbul + Cappadocia + Mediterranean route is the sweet spot. Three nights in Istanbul, two in Cappadocia, six on the coast. Don't add Ephesus and Pamukkale to a first trip — they're wonderful, but the trip becomes a checklist and you don't actually enjoy any of it.

Rossella Rossella, Luxury & Destination Specialist Meet our Travel Designers

Main areas

Where to go in Turkey

5 distinct regions — they pair beautifully two or three at a time.

Istanbul

Istanbul

Sultanahmet Beyoğlu Karaköy Asian Side

Hagia Sophia, Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, the Grand Bazaar, the Bosphorus boat trip — Istanbul is two continents in one city.

Cappadocia

Cappadocia

Göreme Üçhisar Ürgüp Kayseri

Fairy-chimney rock landscape, cave hotels carved into 4th-century churches, and the dawn hot-air balloon flights.

Aegean Coast (Bodrum & Marmaris)

Aegean Coast (Bodrum & Marmaris)

Bodrum Marmaris Çeşme Kuşadası

The cosmopolitan-resort coast — Bodrum's beach clubs, Marmaris's family resorts, Çeşme's wind-surfing, and Kuşadası for Ephesus.

Mediterranean Coast (Antalya)

Mediterranean Coast (Antalya)

Antalya Belek Kemer Side Alanya

The Turkish Riviera — Antalya's old town, Belek's luxury golf resorts, Kemer's pine-clad coves.

Lycian Coast (Fethiye, Kaş)

Lycian Coast (Fethiye, Kaş)

Fethiye Ölüdeniz Kaş Kalkan

The dramatic-cliffs-and-cove coast between Antalya and Fethiye — Ölüdeniz's lagoon, Kaş's laid-back town, Kalkan's clifftop villas, gulet yacht cruises.

Find your trip

Holiday types in Turkey

Pick a holiday style — or combine two. Each section links straight to the next step.

City breaks

Turkey's cities reward 2-4 nights each — pair two for a tailor-made multi-centre trip.

Istanbul

Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapi, the Grand Bazaar — and a contemporary food and nightlife scene in Beyoğlu and Karaköy.

Antalya old town

Antalya old town

Kaleiçi (Antalya's old quarter) — Roman walls, Ottoman houses, harbour cafés, and a 10-minute walk to the beach.

Cruises

Turkey is one of the great cruise gateways. Istanbul is a major embarkation for Mediterranean and Black Sea cruises; Kusadasi (the port for Ephesus) and Bodrum host frequent Aegean and Greek-isles itineraries. We design many of our Turkey trips with a pre- or post-cruise stay in Istanbul or Cappadocia.

See all Turkey-departure cruises ->

Escorted tours

56 escorted tours through Turkey — guided, customisable, fully ATOL-protected.

Every Travelisto tour runs with a small group (max 16), an English-speaking local leader, and is fully ATOL-protected. Most tours are also bookable as private departures — same itinerary, your party only, your dates.

See all Turkey tours

Practical info

Knowing before you go

When to go
Jan
10°
Feb
12°
Mar
15°
Apr
20°
May
25°
Jun
30°
Jul
33°
Aug
33°
Sep
29°
Oct
23°
Nov
17°
Dec
12°

April-June and September-October are the best months — warm but not punishing, manageable crowds. July-August is hot (40°C inland; mid-30s on the coast with sea breezes) and very busy on the Mediterranean. Cappadocia balloon flights run April-October with the best success rate (80% of mornings) in May-June and September. November-March: Istanbul lovely (occasional snow on the domes), Cappadocia spectacular under snow, the coastal resorts shut.

Flights & how to get there

Direct flights from major UK airports to Istanbul (~4h) and Antalya (~4h 15m). Seasonal direct flights to Bodrum and Dalaman (for Fethiye/Kalkan/Kaş). Internal Turkish Airlines and Pegasus flights link Istanbul to Cappadocia (Kayseri / Nevşehir, ~1h), Antalya, Bodrum, Izmir cheaply and frequently. Long-distance buses are excellent and a fraction of the cost.

Visa & passport

UK passport holders get 90 days visa-free entry. Passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond entry date. Check current rules at GOV.UK Foreign travel advice: Turkey.

Currency & money

The Turkish Lira (TRY), currently very weak against the pound, making Turkey exceptional value. Cards accepted in cities and resorts; carry cash for markets, taxis and small restaurants. Tipping is appreciated — 10% on restaurant bills.

Language & tipping

Turkish. English is widely understood at hotels, resorts and tour operators in Istanbul, Cappadocia and the coast; less so in rural areas and the east. Hand gestures and Google Translate go a long way. Our designers brief travellers on a few useful Turkish phrases.

Health & safety

No mandatory vaccinations. Tap water in cities is technically safe but bottled is universal practice. Sun protection is critical July-August. Buy comprehensive travel insurance before you travel.

FAQs

Turkey — your questions

When is the best time to visit Turkey?

April–June and September–October are ideal — warm, not punishing. July–August can hit 40°C in interior areas; the coast stays manageable. Cappadocia is year-round.

Are the Cappadocia balloon flights worth it?

One of the world's great experiences. They fly only in calm weather (typically 80% of mornings April–October). We book 6+ weeks ahead and rebook if the morning cancels.

Do I need a visa for Turkey?

UK passport holders get 90 days visa-free.

Is Turkey safe for tourists?

Major tourist regions (Istanbul, Cappadocia, the Aegean coast, Antalya) are well-managed and well-policed. The south-eastern border zones are not currently recommended; we brief travellers as needed.

Can I combine Turkey with Greece or Cyprus?

Yes — Istanbul–Athens is a 1.5h flight; ferries connect Bodrum/Marmaris to Greek islands (Kos, Rhodes) in summer. Larnaca to Istanbul is 2h.

Make this trip yours

Plan your Turkey holiday with a Travel Designer

Pick from any of the options on this page or tell us what you have in mind — we'll build it around how you actually like to travel. ATOL protected, flights included, real humans available 9am–7pm.

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