Hot-air balloons at dawn above the valleys of Cappadocia · Turkey
Europe · Boutique

Turkey

The hinge between two continents

Turkey is not a country — it is a hinge: the only one that holds the weight of Europe on one side and the depth of Asia on the other, with two thousand years of empires layered like the skins of an onion. Whoever lands in Istanbul lands on three cities stacked one upon another. That same stratification repeats itself from underground Cappadocia to the white terraces of Pamukkale, from the Greek theatres of Ephesus to the turquoise shores of the Aegean.

A country that reads across twelve civilisations

Turkey entered the curious traveller's map through the silhouette of Istanbul and stayed because of everything else. On the Bosphorus, a sixth-century basilica shares its square with a seventeenth-century mosque. In Cappadocia, early Christians carved monasteries into volcanic rock that today fill with balloons at dawn. On the Aegean coast, Ephesus preserves the best-kept Roman city in the entire Mediterranean. This is a destination of distinction: it delivers genuine exoticism without insurmountable language barriers, European infrastructure at prices well below Italy or Greece, and a cultural density per kilometre that few destinations can match. The right seasonal window, the right order of cities, the right hotels and guides who truly command the historical layers. Done that way, Turkey delivers the most memorable journey in the extended Mediterranean.

2continents · the only great city spanning both Europe and Asia
9,600 BCGöbekli Tepe, older than Stonehenge and the pyramids
12documented civilisations layered across Anatolia
3seas and seven climate zones within a single country
Regions

Five Turkeys within one country

A world city straddling two continents, a volcanic balloon landscape, classical Aegean archaeology, the turquoise sea of the Lycian coast and the Mesopotamian borderlands of the southeast. Each region is a distinct journey; every combination bears the CocoVolare signature.

Aerial view of Hagia Sophia and the Sultanahmet gardens in Istanbul 01 · World city 3–4 nights

Istanbul

The city on two continents

Istanbul is not toured — it is breathed. Sixteen million inhabitants moving at full speed across three thousand years of layered history. The Bosphorus cuts through the city plan like an open artery, and ferries cross from Europe to Asia every fifteen minutes.

Hotels
Pera Palace · Soho House · Tomtom Suites
Must-see
Hagia Sophia · Topkapi · Bosphorus cruise
Best season
Apr–Jun and Sep–Nov · long golden light
Hot-air balloons rising above the Cappadocia valleys at dawn 02 · Volcanic 3 nights

Cappadocia

The landscape that looks like another planet

A volcanic tufa plateau sculpted by erosion over ten million years into valleys, columns and fairy chimneys. Between the fourth and tenth centuries, Christians carved monasteries into the rock. At dawn, the sky fills with balloons.

Hotels
Argos in Cappadocia · Museum Hotel · Sacred House
Must-see
Balloon at dawn · Göreme · underground cities
Best season
Apr–Jun and Sep–Oct · clear skies
Street of whitewashed houses on the Aegean coast of Turkey 03 · Aegean 2–3 nights

Aegean Coast and Ephesus

Classical Mediterranean archaeology

Ephesus preserves the best-kept Roman city in the entire Mediterranean: the Library of Celsus, the great theatre, the Street of Curetes. Nearby, the white travertine terraces of Pamukkale and Aegean wine villages such as Şirince among vines and olive groves.

Hotels
Nişanyan Houses · Hotel Akanthus
Must-see
Ephesus at dawn · Pamukkale · Şirince
Best season
May–Jun and Sep–Oct · temperate climate
Whitewashed hillside village above the Turquoise Coast of Turkey 04 · Mediterranean 2–4 nights

Turquoise Coast

Turquoise Mediterranean and Lycian ruins

Nine hundred kilometres where turquoise Mediterranean waters meet pine-covered mountain ranges, Greco-Roman ruins and fishing villages adorned with Ottoman calligraphy. The Turkish answer to the Côte d'Azur, with three thousand more years of visible history.

Hotels
Likya Residence · Maxx Royal Kemer
Must-see
Private gulet · Kekova · ruins of Side
Best season
May–Jun and Sep–Oct · ideal water temperature
Interior of a dome with geometric decoration and Islamic calligraphy 05 · Mesopotamia 2–3 nights

Southeast Anatolia

The cultural frontier with Mesopotamia

The east is a different country altogether: Gaziantep is a UNESCO-recognised gastronomic capital, Mardin rises in ochre stone above the Mesopotamian plain with fifth-century Syriac monasteries, and Göbekli Tepe is the oldest documented human settlement on record.

Cities
Gaziantep · Mardin · Şanlıurfa
Must-see
Göbekli Tepe · Zeugma mosaics · spice bazaars
Best season
Apr–May and Sep–Oct · avoids extreme heat
Intermezzo

Anatolia is a living palimpsest.

Every street in Istanbul lies over another that came before it; every mosque rests upon a Byzantine church; every bazaar upon a medieval caravanserai. Three seas, seven climate zones, the remains of twelve documented civilisations and a cultural axis that has been rewritten every century since the Neolithic. Turkey does not reveal itself at first glance — it must be crossed slowly, with respect, and with guides who truly command its layers.

"Turkey is not a country. It is a hinge."· CocoVolare master document
CappadociaBalloons at dawn
AnatoliaFirst light
The Golden HornOttoman sunset
IstanbulGalata Tower
SultanahmetThe Blue Mosque
IstanbulHagia Sophia
The BosphorusBetween two continents
BeyoğluThe red tram
Climate

When to go and why

Based on the Istanbul–Cappadocia axis. Our chart shows all twelve months with estimated cost, climate and calendar highlights. Marked in gold, the windows we recommend experiencing Turkey with us — chosen for experience, not price.

Turkey is best experienced during its two spring windows: April to June and September to early November. The chart shows all twelve months with estimated costs, temperatures and iconic festivals. Marked in gold, the windows we recommend experiencing Turkey with us.

Regional summary

Region
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Autumn (Sep–Nov)
Winter (Dec–Feb)
Spring (Mar–May)
Best window
Istanbul
Hot & humid · 27°C
Mild · 18°C
Cold & rainy · 8°C
Soft · 16°C
Apr–Jun · Sep–Nov
Cappadocia
Dry & warm · 28°C
Cool & clear · 17°C
Freezing · snow · 2°C
Mild · 16°C
Apr–Jun · Sep–Oct
Aegean Coast
Hot & dry · 31°C
Warm · 23°C
Mild & rainy · 13°C
Temperate · 19°C
May–Jun · Sep–Oct
Turquoise Coast
Hot · water 27°C
Warm · mild water
Mild · 16°C
Temperate · 21°C
May–Jun · Sep–Oct
Southeast Anatolia
Extreme heat · 40°C
Warm & dry · 25°C
Cold & dry · 6°C
Temperate · 22°C
Apr–May · Sep–Oct
Essentials

What you need to know before you go

Verified by our travel designers and updated for 2026. Browse by category.

Currency Turkish lira (TRY). Reference exchange rate approximately 45 TRY per USD (the lira depreciates quickly — verify before travel).
Pricing Premium hotels, hammams and agencies quote best in USD or EUR. Bring crisp, clean notes without marks or folds.
Lira cash Essential for taxis outside Istanbul, markets, tips and public bathrooms. Exchange at Doviz bureaux in town centres, not at the airport.
Cards Visa and Mastercard accepted almost universally at hotels, restaurants and urban shops. Less so in bazaars and smaller villages.
ATMs Use bank ATMs (Garanti, İş Bankası, Akbank). Airport machines charge high fees.
Gratuities 10% in restaurants with table service. Between 50 and 200 TRY per service for guides, drivers and boutique hotel staff.
Latin America Colombians and Argentinians do not require a tourist visa for short stays. Mexican nationals obtain an electronic e-Visa online.
Spain Spanish nationals do not require a tourist visa to enter Turkey.
e-Visa Where applicable, it is processed in minutes through the official portal evisa.gov.tr before travel.
Passport Valid for at least six months from the date of entry. Immigration rules change — verify before travel.
Documents Return ticket, first accommodation voucher and international insurance to hand. Immigration may request them.
Vaccinations No mandatory vaccines from Latin America or Spain. Hepatitis A and B are recommended, along with up-to-date tetanus and MMR.
Insurance International medical cover is essential — minimum EUR 50,000, including repatriation and evacuation.
Water Tap water is not recommended for drinking. Buy bottled water at supermarkets, which is cheaper than in hotels.
Hospitals Istanbul has internationally accredited centres: American Hospital, Acıbadem and Memorial.
Pharmacies Eczane open Monday to Friday, 9am–7pm; each neighbourhood has a duty nöbetçi pharmacy open 24 hours.
Domestic flights Turkish Airlines, Pegasus and AnadoluJet connect Istanbul with Cappadocia, Antalya and Dalaman in 60–90 minutes.
High-speed train The YHT connects Istanbul, Ankara and Konya. Comfortable for selected routes.
Private driver The CocoVolare standard for city days and Cappadocia: saves two to three hours of traffic per day.
Apps BiTaksi and iTaksi are the Turkish equivalent of Uber in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Antalya. Download before you land.
IstanbulKart A single card for metro, tram, ferry and funicular in Istanbul. Top it up on arrival.
Official language Turkish, an Altaic language with no Latin cognates. The initial learning curve is steeper than it looks.
English Functional at hotels, tourist restaurants and with guides. Beyond the circuit, a phone translator does the job.
Spanish A minority language but growing: certified Spanish-speaking guides are available in Istanbul, Cappadocia and Ephesus.
Vocabulary Merhaba (hello) · teşekkürler (thank you) · çay (tea) · misafirperverlik (love of the guest).
Our approach CocoVolare prioritises guides with genuine expertise in Byzantine and Ottoman history — it transforms how you read every site.
Mosques Shoulders and knees covered for both sexes; head covered for women. Scarves are lent at the entrance.
Footwear Remove shoes when entering a mosque or a private home.
Tea Çay is offered constantly in tulip glasses. Accepting it opens doors; declining it causes no offence.
Bargaining In the bazaars, negotiation is ritual, not aggression. The opening price is typically inflated two to four times.
Photography Ask permission before photographing people, especially women in rural areas. Never photograph military installations.
Itineraries

Six Turkeys — choose yours

Six signature itineraries to match your dates, pace and budget. Zero templates — each is rewritten 100% to your measure. Prices per person in double occupancy, boutique category, excluding international flights.

None of these quite fits? We design one from scratch.

We tailor itineraries for honeymoons, families with children or teenagers, foodies, slow travellers, adventure or deep cultural immersion in Southeast Anatolia. Zero templates. A quote within 24 hours from a dedicated travel designer.

Start your quote
Experiences

Ten moments worth going out of your way for

These are not tours. They are private access, guides who command the historical layers, and a pace set entirely to yours. Ten experiences worth planning a journey around.

Hot-air balloons at dawn above the valleys of Cappadocia
I

Hot-air balloon over Cappadocia

Take-off at 4:30am depending on season, a 60–90 minute flight and a landing toast with sparkling wine. Operators with baskets of twelve to sixteen people, not twenty.

Cappadocia · dawn
Suspension bridge over the Bosphorus in Istanbul
II

Crossing the Bosphorus by private speedboat

The classic route skirts palaces, imperial mosques and Ottoman fortresses. By private speedboat at dusk, between Bebek and Anadolu Hisarı, with mezes on board.

Istanbul · sunset
Traveller before the facade of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul
III

Hagia Sophia with a Byzantine specialist

Built in 537 under Justinian, it was the largest basilica in the Christian world for a thousand years. With a specialist historian, the reading of this space changes completely.

Sultanahmet · morning
The Blue Mosque of Istanbul with its six minarets
IV

The Blue Mosque

Completed in 1616, directly opposite Hagia Sophia. Six minarets and an interior clad in more than twenty thousand İznik tiles in shades of blue and turquoise.

Sultanahmet · day
Cappadocia valleys with balloons at dawn
V

Göreme and the rock-cut valleys

The open-air museum brings together eleven churches and refectories hewn from stone, with intact Byzantine frescoes. Surrounding them, valleys for walking among fairy chimneys.

Cappadocia · morning
Interior of a dome with geometric decoration and Ottoman calligraphy
VI

Traditional hammam

The Turkish bath — inherited from the Roman thermae and refined by the Ottomans. Çemberlitaş, opened in 1584 and designed by Sinan, offers the full ritual with kese scrub and massage.

Istanbul · ritual
Commercial street in Istanbul covered with Turkish flags
VII

Grand Bazaar and the Spice Bazaar

Over four thousand covered shops, open since 1461. With a local curator who understands a commercial system that has functioned since the Middle Ages.

Istanbul · day
Aerial view of the Turkish coast and turquoise waters
VIII

Private gulet sailing

The traditional Turkish wooden sailing boat, chartered exclusively for a closed group. Bays inaccessible by land, swimming in turquoise coves and the submerged Lycian ruins of Kekova.

Turquoise Coast · circuit
Istanbul's minaret skyline at sunset
IX

The Golden Horn at sunset

When the lights come on and the tourist flow recedes, Istanbul's minaret silhouette transforms completely. Best from the public ferry with a hot glass of çay in hand.

Istanbul · sunset
Street of a whitewashed village on the Aegean coast
X

Aegean wine villages

Şirince, above Ephesus, retains restored Greek houses amid vineyards and olive trees. A meze lunch in a family home and a tasting of Aegean white wines.

Aegean Coast · day
Hotels

Eighteen signature boutique hotels

Every property is part of our private network with confidential rates. These are not simply "the most famous" in the country — they are the ones that open doors and understand the CocoVolare rhythm.

Pera Palace Hotel
Beyoğlu · Istanbul
The historic Orient Express hotel, with suites overlooking the Golden Horn and memories of Agatha Christie.
Çırağan Palace Kempinski
Beşiktaş · Istanbul
A former Ottoman palace on the Bosphorus, with waterfront suites, a spa and the Tuğra restaurant.
Soho House Istanbul
Beyoğlu · Istanbul
A restored nineteenth-century mansion — members' club and boutique hotel with rooftop pool and Galata views.
Tomtom Suites
Galata · Istanbul
A former Franciscan convent converted into an intimate boutique hotel, with a terrace and Bosphorus views.
Sumahan on the Water
Çengelköy · Istanbul
A former rakı distillery reimagined as a boutique hotel on the Bosphorus, on the Asian side.
The House Hotel Bosphorus
Ortaköy · Istanbul
An Ottoman mansion beneath the Bosphorus Bridge — contemporary design with direct waterfront views.
Argos in Cappadocia
Uçhisar · Cappadocia
A thousand-year-old monastery restored to a hotel, with rock-carved cells and the Eagle Suite with a private pool.
Museum Hotel
Uçhisar · Cappadocia
Cave hotel with a thermal pool, the Antik Suite with private pool and panoramic valley views.
Sacred House
Ürgüp · Cappadocia
A nineteenth-century Greek-Ottoman mansion with a cabinet-of-curiosities atmosphere and unique suites.
Kelebek Cave Hotel
Göreme · Cappadocia
Central cave hotel with its own hammam and the Sunset Terrace overlooking the dawn balloons.
Cappadocia Cave Resort
Uçhisar · Cappadocia
Interconnecting rooms, indoor and outdoor pool — comfortable for families with young children.
Old Greek House
Mustafapaşa · Cappadocia
A Greek-Ottoman house in the former Sinasos, with original frescoes and authentic Anatolian cuisine.
Nişanyan Houses
Şirince · Aegean Coast
Restored stone houses in the wine village above Ephesus, among vines and olive trees.
Hotel Akanthus
Selçuk · Aegean Coast
Boutique hotel steps from Ephesus — the ideal base for visiting the ruins at dawn.
Doga Thermal Health & Spa
Pamukkale · Aegean Coast
Thermal hotel beside the Pamukkale travertines, with mineral-water pools.
Likya Residence & Spa
Kalkan · Turquoise Coast
Suites with private pool and sea views — ideal for a honeymoon above Kalkan Bay.
Maxx Royal Kemer
Kemer · Turquoise Coast
Exclusive resort between pine-covered mountains and the Mediterranean, with villas, a spa and premium service.
Private gulet · Lycian coast
Göcek to Kaş · Turquoise Coast
Traditional wooden sailing boat with two to four cabins, with a dedicated captain, cook and crew.

We also work with Bosphorus yalı waterfront houses, Ottoman houses on Cunda Island and private residences. The final selection depends on your travel profile.

Flavour

Turkish flavour

From the extended Bosphorus breakfast to the tasting menu of the new Anatolian cuisine. Turkish cooking is one of the three great historical cuisines of the world, refined in the kitchens of Topkapi Palace and carried across three continents over six centuries.

Mikla

Beyoğlu · Istanbul

The restaurant and bar of chef Mehmet Gürs, perched atop the Marmara Pera. New Anatolian Kitchen with modern technique and a terrace overlooking the Golden Horn.

Neolokal

Karaköy · Istanbul

Contemporary Anatolian cuisine that rewrites Turkish regional heritage inside the Salt Galata arts centre. One of the city's leading author tables.

Turk Fatih Tutak

Bomonti · Istanbul

Two Michelin stars. Chef Fatih Tutak reinterprets the regional Turkish recipe book in a tasting menu of exceptional precision.

Asitane

Edirnekapı · Istanbul

Specialised in palace Ottoman recipes recovered from fifteenth-century archives. The cuisine of the empire, served today.

Çiya Sofrası

Kadıköy · Istanbul

By chef Musa Dağdeviren — a living encyclopaedia of Anatolian regional cooking, from Adana kebab to nearly forgotten dishes.

Topdeck Cave

Göreme · Cappadocia

Central Anatolian cuisine in a cave, with testi kebabı and a local wine pairing of Öküzgözü and Kalecik Karası grapes.

Not to be missed

Kahvaltı
The extended Turkish breakfast · börek, white cheese, olives, honey and freshly baked simit beside the Bosphorus
Regional kebab
From spicy Adana to mild Urfa · every city has its own kebab, and none of them is generic
Meze and rakı
The meyhane ritual · a long table of endless mezes, Bosphorus fish and rakı with water and ice
Testi kebabı
The dish of Cappadocia · lamb slow-cooked in a sealed clay pot that is cracked open at the table
Pistachio baklava
Gaziantep's great sweet · layers of filo, Antep pistachio and syrup, best at Karaköy Güllüoğlu
Balık ekmek
The fish sandwich of Eminönü · grilled mackerel served from the boats moored along the Golden Horn
Calendar

Eight dates worth travelling for

A well-chosen moment turns a trip into a memory. We design your itinerary around the experience that matters most to you.

Apr · May

Tulip Festival

Istanbul covers its parks with millions of tulips. The tulip — symbol of the Netherlands — reached Europe from Istanbul in the sixteenth century.

23 April

National Sovereignty Day

A public holiday dedicated to children, instituted by Atatürk. Streets and schools fill with children carrying flags.

19 May

Youth and Sports Day

Commemorates Atatürk's landing at Samsun in 1919 — the opening act of the Turkish War of Independence.

Variable

Ramadan and Iftar

The month of Muslim fasting. At sunset, squares such as Sultanahmet fill for iftar — the communal evening meal that breaks the fast.

Jun · Sep

Aspendos Festival

Opera and ballet season held in the best-preserved Roman theatre in the ancient world, near Antalya.

Jun–Jul

Edirne Oil Wrestling

The Kırkpınar — a traditional Turkish sport contested since 1361. Wrestlers coated in olive oil compete in a historic tournament.

Sep · Oct

Harvest in Cappadocia

The bağ bozumu season and fresh must. Central Anatolian wineries open their cellars for tastings.

17 December

Şeb-i Arus in Konya

The Mevlevi Whirling Dervishes' sema ceremonies on the anniversary of Rumi's death. A UNESCO-listed meditative Sufi dance.

CocoVolare Travellers

Testimonials from those who have already flown with us

Real reviews from clients, rotating automatically.

★ 5 verified testimonials

What those who have flown with us say

Real stories from CocoVolare travellers in Turkey. Rotating every 6 seconds. Pauses on hover.

4.9out of 5 · rating
98%recommend
★★★★★

We boarded the balloon at five in the morning. When the light arrived, hundreds of balloons were floating above the Cappadocia valleys and we were right in the middle of it. CocoVolare had booked it for our second morning, leaving room in case the wind forced a reschedule. It didn't.

M

Mariana Restrepo · Bogotá

Honeymoon · 10 nights

Trip: Istanbul, Cappadocia and Lycian coast

★★★★★

The Istanbul guide had genuine training in Byzantine history. Hagia Sophia stopped being a postcard — we understood the layers, the basilica beneath the mosque, the mosaics. That is not something you find on a catalogue tour.

J

Javier Mendoza · Mexico City

Cultural journey · 10 nights

Trip: Istanbul, Cappadocia and Ephesus

★★★★★

The private gulet along the Lycian coast was the part we hadn't expected. We anchored in bays with no one else around, the cook bought the fish of the day, and we dined on deck under the stars. Three nights that were worth the entire journey.

A

Andrés Lozano · Medellín

Couple's journey · 12 nights

Trip: Istanbul, Cappadocia and Lycian coast

★★★★★

I travelled alone and never once felt alone. The Istanbul driver, the Cappadocia guide, the cave hotel team — by day three they already knew my name. CocoVolare builds a network you can't see but that holds the whole journey together.

C

Carolina Vidal · Madrid

Solo journey · 9 nights

Trip: Istanbul and Cappadocia

★★★★★

We ate at Mikla, at a Kadıköy market with a chef and pistachio baklava in Gaziantep. I thought I knew Mediterranean food. Turkey showed me that Ottoman cuisine is an entirely different league.

L

Lucía Fernández-Salas · Madrid

Flavours route · 7 nights

Trip: Istanbul, Cappadocia and Gaziantep

Questions

Questions we are genuinely happy to answer

No unnecessary disclaimers, no inflated marketing copy. These are the questions Turkey travellers ask us most.

Do I need a visa to enter Turkey?
Travellers from Colombia, Argentina and Spain do not need a tourist visa for short stays; Mexican nationals obtain a straightforward electronic e-Visa at the official portal evisa.gov.tr. Your passport must have at least six months of validity remaining from the date of entry. Immigration rules change frequently — verify before you travel.
What is the best time to visit Turkey?
April to June and September to early November: mild days, long golden light and fewer crowds. July and August are hot and very busy, with coastal prices doubling. December to February is cold but the major monuments empty out and Cappadocia offers balloons above snow.
How many days do I need to see Turkey?
Five days cover Istanbul and Cappadocia in essential form. Seven to ten days adds the Turquoise Coast or the Aegean. Fourteen days allows Pamukkale, Ephesus and the Lycian coast by gulet. CocoVolare designs itineraries from five to twenty-one days, tailored to your pace, profile and travel window.
Is a hot-air balloon ride over Cappadocia worth it?
Yes — it is one of the most memorable images in the country. The flight lasts between 60 and 90 minutes at dawn and costs between USD 200 and 350 per person. CocoVolare works with operators with strong safety records and books the balloon for your second or third morning, leaving margin to reschedule if weather intervenes.
What currency is used in Turkey?
The Turkish lira (TRY), with a reference exchange rate of approximately 45 TRY per USD. The lira depreciates steadily, so it is best to exchange small amounts at a time at Doviz bureaux in town centres, and to pay hotels and agencies in USD or EUR. Carry lira cash for taxis, markets and tips.
Is it safe to travel to Turkey?
Yes, on the standard tourist circuits: Istanbul, Cappadocia, the Turquoise Coast, Ephesus and Pamukkale all operate normally with active tourist police. The main risks are pickpockets on Istanbul public transport and mild commercial scams in the bazaars. CocoVolare operates exclusively within areas with standard tourist coverage.
How much does a trip to Turkey cost?
A boutique ten-day trip, excluding international flights, falls in the comfort band between USD 3,500 and 6,000 per person in double occupancy. CocoVolare signature itineraries start from USD 2,200 per person for five days. Every quote is adjusted to your actual travel window.
How many nights should I spend in Cappadocia?
Three nights is the realistic minimum. A single day is not enough: the magic lies in the balloon at dawn, the valleys for walking, the underground cities and a night in a cave hotel. Booking Cappadocia for only two nights dilutes the experience and leaves no margin if the balloon is cancelled by weather.
How do I get around within Turkey?
Domestic flights solve the long distances: Istanbul to Cappadocia, Antalya or Gaziantep in 60–90 minutes with Turkish Airlines, Pegasus or AnadoluJet. For city days, CocoVolare recommends a private driver, saving two to three hours of traffic per day. In Istanbul, the BiTaksi app handles taxis.
Is Turkey a good destination for food lovers?
Yes — and one of the finest in the Mediterranean. Turkish cuisine is one of the three great historical cuisines of the world, refined in the kitchens of Topkapi Palace. Regional identity is very strong: Gaziantep is a UNESCO gastronomic capital, and Istanbul's new Anatolian author cuisine rewrites Ottoman heritage with modern technique.
Can I travel to Turkey with children?
Yes, with a tailored design: fewer temples per day and more storytelling, a guide who narrates Byzantium as a tale, pottery workshops in Avanos, a family balloon in Cappadocia (permitted from age six) and hotels with a pool and interconnecting rooms. Works very well with children aged ten and over.
What should I know before visiting mosques?
Active mosques such as Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque close to tourists during the five daily prayers — windows of 30 to 45 minutes. Enter barefoot with shoulders and knees covered for both sexes, and with the head covered for women. Scarves are lent at the entrance. CocoVolare plans visits around the prayer timetable.
What does a CocoVolare trip to Turkey include?
Itinerary design from scratch, domestic flights where applicable, boutique hotels and cave hotels with breakfast, private transfers with a driver, expert local guides with training in Byzantine and Ottoman history, signature experiences, the hot-air balloon, site admissions and 24/7 concierge. Every trip is designed from scratch to your profile.

Your Turkey, your way

Tell us what excites you and we will have a tailor-made proposal in your hands in under 24 hours, with a dedicated travel designer.

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★★★★★ 4.9 · 287 reviews
"I travelled alone and never once felt alone. CocoVolare builds a network you can't see but that holds the whole journey together."· Carolina Vidal · Madrid