Istanbul to Ephesus — Gallipoli, Troy & the Aegean in 6 Days

A focused private tour through Turkey’s western arc: WWI battlefields, Homer’s city, a hilltop healing center, and the best-preserved classical city in the Mediterranean. No filler days, no wasted time.—

6-Day Istanbul, Gallipoli, Troy, Pergamon & Ephesus Tour

Tour Overview

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Six days is enough to cover Turkey’s most historically dense western corridor — if you plan it right. This itinerary moves from Istanbul‘s Ottoman and Byzantine layers to the Gallipoli Peninsula, where the 1915 campaign reshaped the identities of multiple nations. Then across the Dardanelles to Troy and Pergamon, two ancient cities that defined different eras of civilization. You finish with a full day in Ephesus — the second-largest city of the Roman Empire, now yours to walk through with a guide who knows every column.

The route is efficient without being rushed. Each day focuses on one or two major sites, with enough time to absorb what you are seeing rather than just photographing it. Your guide is licensed, local, and adjusts to your interests — whether that means spending an extra hour at the Gallipoli memorials or lingering in Ephesus‘s Great Theater.

All logistics are handled: private transfers, domestic flight, hotels, entrance fees. You focus on the history. We handle the rest.

Itinerary

Day 1Arrival in Istanbul

From the moment you clear customs, everything is handled. A private driver transfers you from the airport straight to your centrally located hotel in the Sultanahmet or Taksim district. Six days is compact, and the guided touring begins early tomorrow, so tonight is the time to stretch your legs at your own pace — the neighborhood around your hotel rewards a slow walk. Your guide will be in touch to confirm the morning plan.

Day 2Guided Istanbul Tour (Choose Your Focus)

You choose the side of Istanbul that interests you most:

Option A — Sultanahmet & the Old City The Hagia Sophia first — 1,500 years of layered history in a single structure, where Byzantine mosaics sit beside Ottoman calligraphy. Then the Blue Mosque, its interior lined with 20,000 handmade Iznik tiles. Walk the Hippodrome, once the center of Constantinople’s public life, then lose yourself (briefly) in the Grand Bazaar’s 4,000-plus shops.

Optional add-on: Topkapi Palace — seat of the Ottoman Empire for four centuries (entrance fee not included)

Option B — Bosphorus & Beyond Start underground at the Basilica Cistern — 336 marble columns supporting a Byzantine reservoir beneath the city streets. Browse the Spice Bazaar, then board a 1.5-hour cruise along the Bosphorus, passing Ottoman waterfront mansions and the Rumeli Fortress. End the day at the Galata Tower with a 360-degree panorama across both sides of the city.

Optional add-on: Dolmabahce Palace — 14 tons of gold leaf and Europe’s largest Bohemian crystal chandelier (entrance fee not included)

Day 3Istanbul to Gallipoli, Ferry to Canakkale

Early departure toward the Gallipoli Peninsula — roughly four hours by road from Istanbul. For visitors from Australia, New Zealand, Britain, and Turkey, this landscape carries a particular weight. Your guide provides both military strategy and the human stories behind the campaign.

You’ll visit:

  • ANZAC Cove — the beach where Allied forces landed on April 25, 1915. The shoreline is largely unchanged from that morning — the same narrow strip of sand, the same steep ridges behind it. Today, memorial plaques line the path above, and the only sound is the Aegean lapping at the shore where gunfire once echoed off the cliffs.
  • Lone Pine Cemetery & Memorial — marking the site of some of the most intense close-quarters fighting of the entire war
  • Chunuk Bair — the New Zealand memorial at the highest point the Allied advance reached
  • Kabatepe War Museum — personal letters, uniforms, and artifacts recovered from the peninsula

After the tour, ferry across the Dardanelles to Canakkale. The crossing takes about 30 minutes — long enough to process what you have just seen.

Day 4Troy & Pergamon, Drive to Kusadasi

Morning at Troy, a short drive from Canakkale. What looks like a modest archaeological site is actually nine cities built one on top of the other across 4,000 years. Your guide walks you through the excavation layers — the fortification walls, the ramp, the historical context that connects Homer’s poem to the actual ground beneath your feet. The reconstructed Trojan Horse at the entrance is the photo opportunity; the stratigraphy below is the real story.

Then south to Pergamon, set on a dramatic hilltop overlooking the valley below:

  • The Acropolis — home to the steepest theater in the ancient world (10,000 seats cut into the hillside) and the ruins of a library that once rivaled Alexandria’s
  • The Asklepion — an ancient medical center where patients received treatment through water therapy, herbal remedies, and dream analysis. It was the most advanced healing facility of its time.

Continue south along the Aegean coast to Kusadasi (or Selcuk) for the night.

Day 5Ephesus Full Day, Flight to Istanbul

A full day at the most complete classical city in the eastern Mediterranean. Ephesus was a city of 250,000 at its peak — the commercial and religious hub of Roman Asia Minor, and home to one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

Your guide takes you through:

  • The Library of Celsus — the two-story facade built in 117 AD, with four statues in its niches representing Sophia (wisdom), Episteme (knowledge), Ennoia (intelligence), and Arete (virtue) — the qualities Romans associated with a well-stocked library of 12,000 scrolls
  • The Great Theater — 25,000 seats used for drama, political assemblies, and gladiatorial combat. St. Paul preached here; the crowd that gathered was not entirely receptive
  • The Temple of Hadrian — detailed reliefs depicting the founding myths of Ephesus
  • The House of the Virgin Mary — a small hilltop chapel recognized by the Vatican as a pilgrimage site
  • The Temple of Artemis — a single column marks where the Wonder once stood

Lunch is included today.

After Ephesus, transfer to Izmir airport for your domestic flight back to Istanbul.

Day 6Departure

Breakfast at your hotel. Your driver collects you 3-4 hours before your international flight for a smooth airport transfer. Six days, five cities, and every logistic handled from landing to departure.

What is included?

  • All airport transfers and ground transportation in air-conditioned vehicles
  • Domestic flight: Izmir to Istanbul
  • 5 nights accommodation in 4-star hotels with daily breakfast
  • Professional licensed English-speaking guides on all tour days
  • Entrance fees to all sites listed in the itinerary
  • Lunches on guided tour days (including Ephesus full-day)
  • Ferry crossing: Gallipoli to Canakkale
  • 24/7 local support throughout your trip

What is excluded?

  • International flights
  • Dinners and drinks
  • Optional experiences: Topkapi Palace, Dolmabahce Palace
  • Personal expenses
  • Travel insurance
  • Guide and driver gratuities (optional, appreciated)

Who Is This Tour For?

This itinerary works well for:

  • Travelers combining this with an Istanbul city break — if you have already spent a few days in the city on your own, this six-day extension takes you from Gallipoli to Ephesus and back without repeating ground
  • History-focused visitors with limited time — six days is tight, but this route does not waste a single one. You go from WWI trenches to Bronze Age walls to Roman libraries in four consecutive touring days.
  • ANZAC descendants who want Gallipoli as part of a wider journey — the battlefield visit gets a full afternoon, and the days that follow add Troy, Pergamon, and Ephesus rather than just driving back to Istanbul
  • Solo travelers who want a guide at every major site but free evenings to explore Canakkale’s waterfront or Kusadasi’s harbor promenade on their own

Frequently Asked Questions

Istanbul, the Gallipoli peninsula, and the Aegean coast from Canakkale to Kusadasi are firmly on Turkey’s main tourism circuit, with reliable infrastructure and a well-organized local hospitality sector. All ground transportation on this tour is by private vehicle transfer — your own car and driver — which means you move between cities on your schedule, not on a public timetable.

Moderate. Ephesus and Pergamon involve walking on uneven ancient surfaces — bring comfortable shoes with good grip. The Pergamon Acropolis is accessible by cable car. Gallipoli is mostly flat but covers ground across multiple memorial sites. Your guide will adjust the pace based on your preferences.

Yes, and we encourage it. Want to add a night in Kusadasi and explore the Aegean coast? Extend with Pamukkale before flying back? Swap a site for a local market or cooking experience? The itinerary is a starting point — tell us what you want and we will reshape it.

Respectful and historically detailed. Your guide provides context from both sides of the campaign — not just dates and troop movements, but the personal stories of soldiers and the strategic decisions that shaped the outcome. If you have a family connection to the campaign, let us know and we can focus on specific cemeteries or regimental sites.

For the best hotel availability along the Aegean coast, particularly from May through October, 4-6 weeks ahead is recommended. We can often accommodate shorter timelines — reach out and we will let you know what is available.

April through June and September through November offer comfortable temperatures, manageable crowds, and good light for photography across all sites. July and August are hotter and busier along the Aegean. Winter is quiet, and most sites remain open, but some outdoor exploration is less comfortable.

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