Private 8-Day Golden Triangle Of Turkey Tour from Istanbul

5.0
(1 reviews)

8 days (approximately)
Pickup offered
Offered in: English and 1 more

Make your Turkey adventure totally unique with the Golden Triangle of Turkey that begins and ends in Istanbul. You will traverse Turkey with an expert guide aboard a comfortable air-conditioned coach and 3 domestic flights.

Visit Istanbul, Cappadocia, Ephesus, and Pamukkale. See Pamukkale’s white travertine rock terraces on a tour of the UNESCO-listed archeological site. You will avoid long journeys in order to save more time for specific visits.

A small-group tour with a maximum of 14 people ensures a more personalized experience.

What's Included

Private transportation
Lunch (Optional[5])
Lunch
Dinner (Optional[2])
Dinner
Breakfast (Optional[7])
Breakfast
Domestic ticket

Meeting and pickup

Pickup points
You can choose a pickup location at checkout (multiple pickup locations are available).

Itinerary

Duration: 8 days (approximately)
    Day 1

    Arrival Airport Transfer to Istanbul

    1 stop
  • 1
    Istanbul

    You will be picked from Istanbul Airport and taken to your hotel.

    45 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Day 2

    Old City Classic Istanbul tour

    5 stops
  • 2
    TopkapI Palace

    Behold the imperial complex of Ottoman sultans at Topkapi Palace (Topkapi Sarayi), the royal residence in Istanbul throughout the first 400 years of the Ottoman Empire. The palace contains myriad buildings and courtyards, including a treasury, harems, an armory, imperial halls, and royal chambers—all with intricate Iznik tilework and opulent architecture. The Basics To understand the history of Turkey and the Ottoman Empire in Istanbul, explore the vast Topkapi Palace. The complex has elegant chambers, landscaped grounds, and small museum collections to admire, as well as a viewpoint over the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn. Guided tours, which can offer a more comprehensive experience of the palace, often allow you to skip the long entry lines with a guide, and usually include a visit to the palace’s harem section. Many Istanbul sightseeing tours combine Topkapi Palace with an exploration of the other top sights in Istanbul’s Sultanahmet district.

    2 hours Admission ticket included
  • 3
    Hagia Sophia Grand Mosque

    The Hagia Sophia Grand Mosque / Ayasofya-i Kebir Cami-i Şerifi, with its innovative architecture, rich history, religious significance and extraordinary characteristics has been fighting against time for centuries, is the largest Eastern Roman Church in Istanbul. Constructed three times in the same location, it is the world’s oldest and fastest-completed cathedral. With its breathtaking domes that look like hanging in the air, monolithic marble columns and unparalleled mosaics, is one of the wonders of world’s architecture history.

    1 hour Admission ticket included
  • 4
    Blue Mosque

    Explore the grandeur of Ottoman architecture at the Blue Mosque (Sultanahmet Camii), located on Istanbul’s Old City peninsula. Opened in 1616 to rival the Byzantine-era Hagia Sophia (Aya Sofya) across the way, the six minarets punctuating the Istanbul skyline and 20,000 blue Iznik tiles decorating its interior are designed to inspire awe. The Basics The Blue Mosque is one of Istanbul’s top attractions and offers the opportunity to visit an active place of worship in the historical Sultanahmet neighborhood. Stroll through the airy courtyard and pause to soak up the atmosphere inside the mosque’s vast and curvaceous interior under cascading domes. Most small-group and private tours combine a visit to the Blue Mosque with a broader exploration of the Sultanahmet

    1 hour Admission ticket free
  • 5
    Hippodrome

    Built in the third century, the Hippodrome was the home of now-named Istanbul’s sporting entertainment during the Byzantine era, with a wide track for chariot racing. Today, the route of the old track is covered by Sultanahmet Square (Sultanahmet Meydani), a wide open space in the center of the old city, punctuated by ancient obelisks. The Basics The current Hippodrome traces the course of the ancient race track, though the actual remains are still underground. The square contains the Obelisk of Theodosius, a pink, Egyptian-made granite column that was brought to Istanbul in the fourth century and is one of the oldest monuments in the city. Also here are a spiralled obelisk that came from the temple of Apollo, the Walled Obelisk, and the German Fountain, a gift from Kaiser Wilhelm in the early 20th century. Some small-group and private tours combine a visit to the Hippodrome with other sights in Sultanahmet, including the Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, and the Basilica Cistern.

    1 hour Admission ticket free
  • 6
    Grand Bazaar

    Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar (Kapali Çarsi) is the ultimate covered market. Its 5,000+ vendors hawk carpets, beaded bracelets, gold and silver jewelry, multicolored lanterns, leather goods, ceramics, belly-dancing outfits, and more. With goods that span all price ranges, you’ll find the perfect souvenir in the bazaar’s labyrinthine alleys. The Basics Getting lost in the Grand Bazaar is part of the experience, as every twist and turn reveals interesting Turkish goods. Built in the 15th century during the Ottoman era, the market remains an active and lively center of commerce—and today, tourism—in Istanbul.

    2 hours Admission ticket free
  • Day 3

    Flight to Cappadocia

    1 stop
  • 7
    Cappadocia

    Transfer to the airport for your flight to Cappadocia. Free time till your flight time.

    1 hour Admission ticket free
  • Day 4

    Cappadocia

    4 stops
  • 8
    Goreme Open-Air Museum

    Goreme Open-Air Museum is the first and biggest monastery where the religious education was started. You will visit the churches, chapels and monasteries carved into the fairy chimneys with frescoes painted on the walls from 10th to 13th centuries. In the 4th century three important men created a new unity here. They are the Great St. Basil, bishop of Kayseri, his brother St.Gregory of Nyssa and St. George of Nazianus.

    2 hours Admission ticket included
  • 9
    Uchisar Castle

    Uchisar Castle is the highest point in the region. The castle and its surroundings used to be the most populated area in this settlement to survey the enemies. The top of the citadel provides a magnificent panorama.

    45 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 10
    Pasabag

    Pasabaglari (Monks Valley) Many fairy chimneys with multiple stems and caps can be found here, this style being unique to this area. A chapel dedicated to St. Simeon and a hermit's shelter is built into one such fairy chimney with three heads.

    1 hour Admission ticket included
  • 11
    Goreme

    Goreme Panorama is a panoramic point where you can see a wonderful view of the Goreme town with its spectacular cave houses.

    45 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Day 5

    Cappadocia - Flight to izmir - Kusadasi

    3 stops
  • 12
    Kaymakli Underground City

    Underground City (Kaymakli or Özkonak) is the most interesting one in the region among 36 other ones which were first used by Hittites and later by Christians as a shelter during Roman persecution times. By carving lots of rooms all connected with tunnels, they lived here when the cities were invaded by enemies. You have a change to see the rooms, food storages, a church and kitchens. Chimneys and defence systems used in the underground city will surprise you during the visit.

    59 minutes Admission ticket included
  • 13
    Pigeon Valley

    Pigeon Valley is a panoramic view point where you will see the pigeons and pigeon houses which were used to keep pigeons in order to collect their dropping for fertilising the earth especially vineyards.

    45 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 14
    Cavusin

    This village is one of the ancient settlements built in the early period of Christianity and having the oldest church dating back to the 3rd century. It was exactly settled like a big town where you see lots of cave rooms used as living rooms, sleeping rooms, kitchens, wineries, etc. All these are waiting for you to explore where cave houses collapsed because of landslide in 1960 which has a gorgeous view.

    59 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Day 6

    Ephesus - House Of Virgin Mary

    3 stops
  • 15
    Ancient City of Ephesus

    Ephesus (Efes) is one of the greatest ancient sites in the Mediterranean. During its heyday in the first century BC, it was the second-largest city in the world, with only Rome commanding more power. Many reconstructed structures and ruins, including the Temple of Artemis, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, can be seen here. The Basics This ancient city is home to an incredible number of ruins in varying states. The site is best explored with a guide who can help shed light on the function and significance of the various structures. Guided tours of the site depart from Istanbul, Izmir, Bodrum, Selçuk, and Kuşadasi.

    2 hours Admission ticket included
  • 16
    Meryemana (The Virgin Mary's House)

    A holy shrine to the supposed death place of St. Mary, the House of the Virgin Mary in Ephesus is a standing testament to the home of the beloved mother of Jesus. Many believe that the house was indeed the place where she spent her final days, and today you can visit the restored stone house, which now serves as a chapel. Serving as sacred territory for Christians and Muslims alike, the Virgin Mary's House has called hundreds of thousands of visitors and pilgrims since its discovery in the 19th-century. Remnants of the chapel date as far back as the 6th-century, and serves as the place where its caretakers, the Lazarist Fathers, conduct mass every day. Despite the altar placed within, the house still contains a bedroom and kitchen, decorated with pictures of Mary and candles.

    1 hour Admission ticket included
  • 17
    The Temple of Artemis

    The Temple of Artemis, or Artemision, was a Greek temple in present-day Turkey dedicated to the goddess Artemis. It was one of the original seven wonders of the ancient world. It was built not far from Ephesus just outside the present-day town of Selcuk. The temple was completely rebuilt several times throughout history after being destroyed on multiple occasions by both nature and human factors. Little remains of the temple in its original location today since archeologists brought much of the ruins to the British Museum. The Temple of Artemis is only a couple of miles from Ephesus, making it an easy attraction to visit. Visitors can still see one tall column and a handful of marble pieces from the foundations of the structure, and the historical location is fascinating.

    35 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Day 7

    Pamukkale

    3 stops
  • 18
    Pamukkale

    Pamukkale, meaning "cotton castle" in Turkish, is a natural site in Denizli Province in southwestern Turkey. The area is famous for a carbonate mineral left by the flowing of thermal spring water. It is located in Turkey's Inner Aegean region, in the River Menderes valley, which has a temperate climate for most of the year. The ancient Greco-Roman city of Hierapolis was built on top of the travertine formation which is in total about 2,700 metres (8,860 ft) long, 600 m wide and 160 m high. It can be seen from the hills on the opposite side of the valley in the town of Denizli, 20 km away. Known as Pamukkale or ancient Hierapolis, this area has been drawing visitors to its thermal springs since the time of Classical antiquity. The Turkish name refers to the surface of the shimmering, snow-white limestone, shaped over millennia by calcite-rich springs. Dripping slowly down the mountainside, mineral-rich waters collect in and cascade down the mineral terraces, into pools below.

    2 hours Admission ticket free
  • 19
    Hierapolis & Pamukkale

    Said to have been one of Cleopatra’s treasured retreats, the UNESCO-listed Hierapolis hot springs are a spectacular sight. The pools are bright white terraces filled with turquoise water that were formed by calcium that hardened over millennia and are surrounded by the ruins of the ancient city. The Basics Romans built the city of Hierapolis on a plateau in the Lycus River Valley to be close to the curative thermal baths in the nearby hillsides. The pools are naturally occurring, except for Cleopatra’s Pool (also known as Antique Pool), which was supposedly a gift from Mark Anthony. A 7th-century earthquake toppled the adjacent Temple of Apollo, and its columns still sit in the water, where they fell.

    1 hour Admission ticket included
  • 20
    Istanbul

    After the tour you will be transferred to Denizli airport for your flight to Istanbul.

    2 hours Admission ticket free
  • Day 8

    Farewell Istanbul

    1 stop
  • 21
    Istanbul

    The transfer from your hotel to the Istanbul airport is included and depends on your flight time.

    1 hour Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Transportation options are wheelchair accessible
  • All areas and surfaces are wheelchair accessible
  • Not recommended for travelers with poor cardiovascular health
Supplied by Unique Ephesus Tours

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