Aegean Coast
Bodrum Castle
How to visit Bodrum Castle and its Museum of Underwater Archaeology: the entry fee in euros, opening hours, the towers and shipwreck halls worth your time, and an honest worth-it verdict.
Where
Bodrum, Turkey
Opening hours
Open daily from 08:30. In the summer season (roughly 1 May to 1 October) it stays open late, to about 21:00; in winter it closes around 17:30. The ticket office shuts 30 minutes before closing. Confirm your date on bodrum-museum.com.
Tickets
About โฌ20 for adults (roughly ยฃ17), payable in euros at the gate; an audio guide is included if you ask for it. Free with a Museum Pass Tรผrkiye or the Aegean Museum Pass.
Time needed
About 2 hours: 1.5 if you walk the towers and skim the museum, up to 2.5 if you read the shipwreck halls properly.
In short
Visiting Bodrum Castle
Bodrum Castle is the Castle of St Peter on the headland between the marina and the old town, and the same ticket gets you the Museum of Underwater Archaeology inside its walls. Pay at the gate in euros โ there is rarely a queue, so you don't need to pre-book unless you want a guided tour. Allow two hours: enough for the five knights' towers, the Carian Princess and Glass Wreck halls, and the ramparts looking back over the harbour. If you hold a Museum Pass Tรผrkiye or the Aegean pass, entry is already covered.
How to visit without overthinking it
Bodrum Castle โ properly the Castle of St Peter โ sits on the rocky headland that splits the bay, with the marina on one side and the old town on the other, so itโs a five-to-ten-minute walk from almost anywhere in the centre. Unlike the big-name sights in Istanbul, this is a state museum with on-the-gate entry: you pay about โฌ20 (roughly ยฃ17) in euros at the door, an audio guide is yours for the asking, and thereโs rarely a queue worth pre-booking around. The one reason to book ahead is a guided tour, because the labelling on the shipwreck halls is thin and a guide fills in the context that makes the artefacts land.
What your ticket actually buys is two things at once. The first is the castle itself, built by the Knights Hospitaller from the 15th century with five towers named for the French, German, English, Italian and Spanish knights who funded them โ each now holding a small themed display. The second, threaded through the courtyards, is the Museum of Underwater Archaeology, which is the real reason to go.
What to see, and is it worth it?
Head for the Serรงe Limanฤฑ Glass Wreck Hall, where a thousand-year-old shipload of medieval Islamic glass is shown in near-darkness so the colours glow, and the Carian Princess Hall, displaying the gold burial crown and jewellery of a 4th-century-BC noblewoman found by chance in 1989. The Uluburun shipwreck reconstruction is the other set-piece. Between halls, the gardens have wandering peacocks and the ramparts give you the best view back over Bodrum harbour and the marina youโll get anywhere in town โ bring a hat, as the open walls have no shade. Allow about two hours; an hour and a half if youโre skimming, two and a half if you read everything.
Make no mistake: this is the most rewarding paid thing to do in Bodrum, and rare in being a castle and a serious museum on one cheap ticket. If you only buy one entry in town, make it this. Time it for late afternoon when the summer heat eases and the evening opening lets you watch the harbour light go gold from the walls โ then walk straight down into the old town for dinner.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Bodrum city guide.
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