
Home » 10-Day Istanbul, Cappadocia, Antalya, Pamukkale & Ephesus Tour
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You’ll cross five distinct regions of Turkey in ten days, and each one will feel like a different country. Istanbul gives you 1,500 years of overlapping empires. Cappadocia gives you a landscape sculpted by volcanoes and carved into by early Christians. Antalya puts Roman ruins against a Mediterranean backdrop. Pamukkale looks like a hillside made of snow — it’s actually mineral-rich thermal water cascading over white travertine terraces for thousands of years. And Ephesus is where you walk through streets that once served as the commercial heart of the Roman Empire.
The route is designed so you never feel like you’re just checking boxes. Two full days in Cappadocia mean you can take the balloon ride and still have time for underground cities. A private transfer from Antalya to Pamukkale keeps you off the tourist bus circuit. And every guided day offers a choice — two options in Istanbul, two in Antalya — so you shape the trip around what interests you, not the other way around.
Domestic flights, private transfers, entrance fees, guides, and daily lunches are all handled before you arrive. You focus on what’s in front of you.
Ten days, five regions, and not a single logistic you need to sort — starting with the airport pickup. Look for the nameplate at the terminal exit, and your driver takes you directly to your Sultanahmet or Taksim hotel. Tonight is the one evening on this trip with no agenda, so use it to adjust: a walk along the Marmara waterfront, a quiet dinner at a meyhane, or an early night before tomorrow’s guided day. Your guide contacts you to set the morning plan.
You decide which side of Istanbul you want to explore:
Option A — Sultanahmet & the Old City Start inside the Hagia Sophia, where Byzantine mosaics and Ottoman calligraphy share the same walls — a building that has served as a cathedral, a mosque, a museum, and a mosque again. Cross to the Blue Mosque, its interior lined with over 20,000 handmade Iznik tiles. Walk through the Hippodrome, the ancient chariot-racing arena that once held 100,000 spectators, then navigate the Grand Bazaar — 4,000 shops under one roof, operating since 1461.
Optional add-on: Topkapi Palace — seat of Ottoman power for 400 years
Option B — Bosphorus & Beyond Descend into the Basilica Cistern, a subterranean Byzantine reservoir supported by 336 marble columns. Browse the Spice Bazaar, then board a 1.5-hour Bosphorus cruise past Ottoman waterfront mansions and the Rumeli Fortress. End at the Galata Tower for a 360-degree view across both the European and Asian sides of the city.
Optional add-on: Dolmabahce Palace — 14 tons of gold leaf and the largest Bohemian crystal chandelier in the world
Early morning pickup for your domestic flight. By mid-morning, the landscape has changed entirely — you’re standing in a region where people started carving into soft volcanic rock at least 4,000 years ago, and never stopped. Hittites, early Christians, Ottoman-era villagers — each generation hollowed out homes, churches, and storerooms from the same stone. Your guide takes you through:
You’ll check into a traditional cave or stone boutique hotel. The rooms are carved into the rock — and more comfortable than you’d expect.
Optional: Sunrise hot air balloon flight — float over the valleys as the light shifts from pink to gold. We arrange everything with licensed, safety-certified operators. You just show up.
Late morning pickup (10:00–10:30 AM — time to rest if you took the balloon). Today’s route:
Breakfast at your cave hotel, then transfer to the airport for your domestic flight to Antalya. Your driver meets you on arrival and takes you to your Mediterranean-side hotel. The rest of the day is free — Antalya’s old town is walkable, the harbor is worth an evening stroll, and the pace here is distinctly slower than Istanbul.
Two routes, same quality. You pick:
Option A — Antalya City & Coast Explore Kaleici, the walled old town where Ottoman-era wooden houses line narrow cobblestone streets. Pass through Hadrian’s Gate — built in 130 AD to honor the visiting emperor and still standing. Visit the Antalya Archaeological Museum, one of Turkey’s finest collections of Roman-era sculpture and mosaic. Then drive to the Duden Waterfalls, where a river drops directly off the clifftop into the Mediterranean.
Option B — Perge, Aspendos & Side Step into Perge — a 4,000-year-old city where Alexander the Great once walked. Then visit the Aspendos Theater, a 2nd-century Roman arena so well preserved it still hosts performances today — 15,000 seats and the acoustics to match. Continue to Side for the Temple of Apollo on the waterfront, and finish at Kursunlu Waterfall, set in a forested canyon away from the coast.
Lunch included on both options.
Your private driver takes you from Antalya inland to Pamukkale — roughly three hours through the Turkish countryside, with stops as needed. This is one of the advantages of a private transfer over a tour bus: you set the pace, and you arrive fresh. Check in to your hotel near the travertines.
A full day dedicated to one of Turkey’s most unusual landscapes. The white travertine terraces of Pamukkale — literally “Cotton Castle” in Turkish — are fed by 17 different hot springs, each pushing water to the surface at around 35 degrees Celsius. As the water cools on its way downhill, it deposits the calcium carbonate that gives the terraces their white crust. You’ll walk across them in bare feet (shoes off, required to protect the surface).
Above the terraces sits Hierapolis, a Greco-Roman spa city built around the same thermal springs 2,200 years ago. Your guide walks you through:
Optional: Cleopatra’s Antique Pool — swim among submerged Roman columns in naturally carbonated, 36°C thermal water. The columns fell into the pool during an earthquake centuries ago and were never removed.
Afternoon transfer to Kusadasi on the Aegean coast — your base for tomorrow’s Ephesus visit.
This is the day for ancient history on a grand scale. Ephesus was once the second-largest city in the Roman Empire, home to 250,000 people and one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Your guide walks you through:
After the tour, transfer to Izmir Airport for your evening flight back to Istanbul.
Breakfast at your hotel. Your driver picks you up 3–4 hours before your international flight for a smooth airport transfer. Ten days, five regions, one seamless trip.
This itinerary works well for:
The five regions you’ll visit — Istanbul, Cappadocia, Antalya, Pamukkale, and the Aegean coast near Ephesus — are collectively visited by tens of millions of tourists each year and have well-established security and tourism services. All of your guides are TURSAB-licensed professionals who live and work in these areas year-round, so you’re always with someone who knows the local landscape firsthand.
Moderate. The Red Valley hike in Cappadocia is about 4 km on uneven terrain. The underground city involves some ducking through low passages. Pamukkale requires walking on wet travertine surfaces (barefoot). Ephesus involves significant walking on marble and stone. Comfortable shoes are essential, and we can adjust the pace or skip sections based on your comfort level.
That’s what private touring is for. Want an extra day in Cappadocia? Prefer to skip Kusadasi and fly from Izmir earlier? Want to add a cooking class or a hammam visit? Tell us what matters to you, and we’ll redesign the route around it.
Your Day 5 is designed around it — late morning pickup gives you time to fly at dawn and still have breakfast before the South tour begins. We handle the booking and pre-dawn hotel pickup with operators who meet Turkish aviation safety standards. Flights run approximately 60 minutes. If winds or fog cancel your slot, we reschedule for the following morning or refund completely.
It’s a private drive of roughly three hours through the Turkish interior — farmland, small towns, and mountain views. Your driver stops when you want. It’s a far more comfortable experience than the group bus alternatives, and you arrive at Pamukkale rested and ready.
April through June and September through November offer the best combination of weather, manageable crowds, and comfortable walking temperatures across all five regions. July and August are hot — especially in Pamukkale and Ephesus — and Istanbul gets busy. Winter has its own appeal (Cappadocia under snow is striking), but some outdoor activities are limited.
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