Skip to content
Departly.
Bodrum, Turkey
Bodrum

Aegean Coast

Bodrum

The town is a base, not the holiday: pick the peninsula resort that suits you, transfer in from Milas, and treat Bodrum itself as the night out rather than the whole week.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights for the town; a week for the peninsula

Airport

Milas-Bodrum (BJV), ~35km north of town

Airport to centre

Havas shuttle ~45 min; private transfer ~35 min

Best base

Bodrum town/Gumbet for nightlife; Bitez or Yalikavak for beaches

In short

Bodrum at a glance

Bodrum is a peninsula, not a single resort: pick your base for the holiday you actually want โ€” town and Gumbet for nightlife and the castle, Bitez and Yalikavak for calmer beach days, Gumusluk for slow dinners โ€” then use a hire car or dolmus to dip into the rest. Three to four nights covers the town; a full week suits the peninsula.

The short version

  • Choose your area first: the resorts on the Bodrum Peninsula differ more than the brochures admit, and the wrong one undoes the trip.
  • Bodrum town is the base for the castle, harbour and late nights at Halikarnas, not a quiet beach holiday.
  • Yalikavak is the upmarket marina end; Bitez and Turgutreis are calmer family beaches; Gumusluk is the bohemian dinner spot.
  • A Bodrum-to-Kos ferry is a genuine half-day in Greece for about ยฃ25-ยฃ30 each way โ€” take your passport.
  • Most UK arrivals land at Milas (BJV), 35km north; pre-book a transfer or hire a car rather than haggling at the rank.

The mistake most first-timers make with Bodrum is treating it as one place. It isnโ€™t โ€” itโ€™s a peninsula of distinct resorts strung around a castle-topped town, and the gap between them is wide. Bodrum town itself is the lively end: the Crusader castle and its underwater-archaeology museum, the harbour full of wooden gulets, the marina, and a bar strip that runs late into Halikarnas, the vast open-air club that has defined the townโ€™s nightlife since 1979. Itโ€™s a brilliant base for sightseeing and going out, and a poor one if you came for quiet sand.

Pick your area for the holiday you actually want. Bitez and Turgutreis to the west are calmer, better-value family beaches a short dolmus ride away; Yalikavak is the superyacht-and-designer-shops marina end where the beach clubs charge European-resort prices; Gumusluk is the protected fishing village where you eat fish with your feet near the water and turn in early. Get that choice right and the rest falls into place.

Three to four nights does the town, the castle and a gulet day on the bays. A full week suits the peninsula โ€” and a hire car, or at least a confident grasp of the dolmus routes, lets you sample more than one resort. Below, the structured planning picks up: where to stay, how to get in from Milas airport, what a week really costs in pounds, and the months that beat the July heat. Entry, health and safety facts inherit our Turkey country guide.

Plan your Bodrum trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Bodrum

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.

About 2 hours: 1.5โ€ฆ โ‚ฌ20

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Go in knowing what you'll find: the Mausoleum that gave us the word is now foundations, a few re-erected columns and an open-air display rather than a standing monument. It sits in central Bodrum, a short walk uphill from the harbour, so pair it with the castle rather than building a half-day around it. Best seen early before the heat. Worth 30-45 minutes for the history.

30-45 min From about โ‚ฌ7-9

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Bodrum town and Gumbet

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The base for sightseeing and nightlife: the castle, the harbour, the marina and the bar strip are all here, with Gumbet next door delivering the cheap-and-loud package end. Brilliant if you want walkable evenings and Halikarnas; wrong if you came for quiet sand.

Best for: Nightlife, sightseeing, first trips, walkable evenings

Browse hotels Town centre

Bitez and Turgutreis

ยฃ value

Calmer family beaches a short dolmus ride west: Bitez is the walkable windsurf-and-palm-tree bay, Turgutreis a working town with a big marina that stays open out of season. Better value and far easier with kids than the town strip.

Best for: Families, beach days, value, windsurfing

Browse hotels 10-20 min by dolmus

Yalikavak

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The upmarket marina end: superyachts, designer shops and the polished beach clubs the peninsula is famous for. Choose it for a glossy adult holiday with money to spend, not for a cheap-and-cheerful week.

Best for: Couples, beach clubs, marina dining, splurge trips

Browse hotels 30-40 min by car

Gumusluk

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A protected, low-rise fishing village on the west coast known for fish restaurants with tables in the shallows and a sunset-and-fairy-lights rhythm. Go for slow dinners and an early night, not for nightlife or a big beach.

Best for: Couples, food-led stays, quiet evenings

Browse hotels 30-40 min by car

Airport to city centre

Bodrum airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Havas shuttle bus to Bodrum centre ~45 min about ยฃ2.50 (TRY ~150) Cheapest, but only to the town otogar
Pre-booked private transfer ~35 min from about ยฃ35-ยฃ45 per car Best with luggage or to outlying resorts
Airport taxi ~35 min usually ยฃ25-ยฃ40 to town Confirm the fare before you set off
Hire car from the airport ~35 min drive from about ยฃ20-ยฃ30/day in season Worth it for a peninsula-hopping week
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late May to early June and all of September are the sweet spot: warm sea, long days, and away from the worst July-August heat and crowds. September is the standout โ€” the Aegean is bath-warm after a summer of sun, and prices ease as the school-holiday peak clears.

July and August are hot, packed and dear, with peak charter fares and busy beaches. May can still be windy for swimming and October sees resorts winding down, though Turgutreis and Bodrum town stay open year-round. Avoid winter for a beach trip โ€” much of the peninsula shuts.

What it costs

Direct UK flights to Milas-Bodrum (BJV) run roughly 4-4.5 hours from Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester and other bases on easyJet, Jet2, Ryanair, SunExpress and TUI. Shoulder-season returns dip into the ยฃ50-ยฃ120 range when booked ahead; July and August school-holiday charters routinely top ยฃ250.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 7-night mid-range Bodrum holiday for one person is roughly ยฃ700-ยฃ1,050 before flights: ยฃ350-ยฃ600 for a decent 3-star or boutique room share, ยฃ200-ยฃ300 on food and drink, ยฃ80-ยฃ120 on a gulet day and the castle, and the rest on dolmus fares, beach-club sunbeds and a Kos crossing.

Bodrum stays good value if you eat where locals do โ€” a fish lokanta in Gumusluk or a town backstreet meze spot โ€” but the marina beach clubs at Yalikavak charge European-resort prices for a sunbed and a cocktail. Budget separately for those, or they quietly double your daily spend.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

Compare car hirevia DiscoverCars

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Also in Turkey

See the full Turkey guide

Bodrum FAQs

How many days do you need in Bodrum?
Three to four nights covers Bodrum town, the castle and a boat day. If you want to explore the wider peninsula's resorts and villages โ€” Yalikavak, Gumusluk, the quieter beaches โ€” give it a full week and ideally a hire car.
Where should you stay in Bodrum?
Match the area to the holiday. Bodrum town and Gumbet for nightlife, the castle and walkable evenings; Bitez or Turgutreis for calmer family beaches and value; Yalikavak for upmarket marina life; Gumusluk for slow seafront dinners and quiet.
Do you need a car in Bodrum?
Not if you are staying in Bodrum town and happy to use the dolmus minibuses and the odd taxi. A hire car only pays off if you are based in an outlying resort or want to visit several peninsula villages in a week โ€” parking is easy away from the centre.
Can you do a day trip to Greece from Bodrum?
Yes. A catamaran reaches the Greek island of Kos in 20-45 minutes for roughly ยฃ25-ยฃ30 each way, with several daily sailings in season. It is a genuine half-day in Greece, but take your passport โ€” it is an international crossing.

Ready to book?

Find hotels in Bodrum

Go