
Home » 4-Day Istanbul Tour
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Istanbul is a city that rewards slow attention. This four-day itinerary gives you two full guided days to explore both sides of the city — the Byzantine and Ottoman landmarks of Sultanahmet, and the waterways, markets, and panoramic towers that define the Bosphorus side. Your guide handles the logistics. You set the rhythm.
On your Sultanahmet day, you’ll walk through the Hagia Sophia‘s 1,500-year evolution, stand inside the Blue Mosque‘s 20,000 handmade Iznik tiles, and disappear into the Grand Bazaar‘s labyrinth of 4,000 shops. The following day shifts to the water: a 1.5-hour Bosphorus cruise past Ottoman mansions, a descent into the Basilica Cistern‘s 336 marble columns, and a climb up the Galata Tower for a view that covers both continents.
Both guided days are included — this is not a choose-one situation. You get the full scope of Istanbul, with free time on arrival to ease in and a clean transfer out on your last morning.
Four days in Istanbul is tight but well-planned, and it starts with a clean arrival: private driver at the airport, direct transfer to your centrally located hotel. Both guided tour days are ahead of you, so tonight is free to set your own pace. Cross the Galata Bridge on foot, try a balik ekmek (fish sandwich) at the Eminonu waterfront, or simply watch the ferry traffic from a tea garden. Your guide reaches out to confirm the next morning’s schedule.
This is the day you walk through 1,500 years of layered history. Your guide starts at the Hagia Sophia — a building that has served as a cathedral, a mosque, a museum, and a mosque again, with Roman columns, Byzantine mosaics, and Ottoman calligraphy all sharing the same space.
Cross to the Blue Mosque, where the interior light filters through 260 stained glass windows onto those 20,000 Iznik tiles. Continue to the Hippodrome, the ancient chariot-racing arena that once seated 100,000 spectators — the Egyptian obelisk and Serpent Column still stand in place. Then the Grand Bazaar, one of the oldest covered markets in the world, where your guide knows which lanes to take and which to skip.
Optional add-on: Topkapi Palace — the administrative heart of the Ottoman Empire for nearly 400 years, housing the Imperial Treasury and Harem quarters.
Your second guided day begins underground. The Basilica Cistern holds 80,000 cubic meters of water beneath 336 marble columns — two of them rest on carved Medusa heads, turned sideways and upside down. From there, you’ll walk to the Spice Bazaar, where the air is thick with saffron, sumac, and dried apricots.
Then you board your 1.5-hour Bosphorus cruise. The strait separates Europe and Asia, and from the water you’ll see Ottoman-era wooden mansions, the Rumeli Fortress, and the modern skyline stacked behind it. Back on land, you’ll climb the Galata Tower — a 14th-century Genoese watchtower that gives you a 360-degree view of the Golden Horn, the old city, and the Asian shore.
Optional add-on: Dolmabahce Palace — 14 tons of gold leaf, the largest Bohemian crystal chandelier in the world, and the room where Ataturk spent his final days.
Breakfast at your hotel. Your driver picks you up and transfers you to the airport in time for your flight. No rushing, no confusion — seamless from check-in to check-out.
This itinerary works well for:
Yes. Istanbul welcomes tens of millions of visitors annually and is one of the most visited cities in the world. The Sultanahmet and Beyoglu districts — where you’ll spend most of your time — are well-patrolled and thoroughly touristed. Your guide carries a local phone, knows every neighborhood, and is available for anything you need.
Yes — that is the point. Want to swap the Grand Bazaar for the Asian side? Add a food tour? Extend by a day? Tell us what matters to you and we will redesign the schedule around it.
Both guided days involve 3–5 hours of walking on cobblestones and uneven surfaces. The pace is entirely up to you. If you need breaks, your guide will adjust — there is always a good tea stop nearby.
April–June and September–November offer comfortable temperatures and manageable crowds. Summer is hot and busy. Winter is cooler and quieter, with its own moody atmosphere — and no queues at the Hagia Sophia.
Two to four weeks is ideal for hotel availability and guide scheduling. Shorter notice is often possible — reach out and we will work with what is available.
From
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/per person