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Dalyan, Turkey
Dalyan
Turquoise Coast

Dalyan

Turkey's quiet, river-led answer to the charter resorts: a low-rise delta town facing ancient rock tombs, 25 minutes from Dalaman, best over 4-7 nights staying in town rather than an all-inclusive bubble.

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

Best length

4-7 nights

Airport

Dalaman (DLM), ~25km / 30 min

Airport to town

Private transfer ~€35-€45; taxi ~335₺; HAVAŞ bus + dolmuş via Ortaca for budget travellers

Best base

Dalyan town centre or the riverside hotels off Maraş Mahallesi

In short

Dalyan at a glance

Dalyan is the quieter, river-led alternative to Turkey's big charter resorts: a low-rise town on a delta facing 4th-century-BC rock tombs, with a classic all-day river boat trip to the Sultaniye mud baths and the undeveloped Iztuzu turtle beach. It is a 25-minute transfer from Dalaman airport, works best as a 4-7 night base, and rewards staying in town rather than booking an all-inclusive bubble you never leave.

The short version

  • Base yourself in Dalyan town itself, not a remote all-inclusive — the river, restaurants and rock-tomb views are the whole point of coming here.
  • Do the classic full-day river boat trip once: rock tombs, Sultaniye mud baths and Iztuzu beach in one loop, roughly £15-£30pp through the local co-op.
  • Iztuzu is a 12km undeveloped turtle-nesting beach with no resort behind it — take the dolmuş or a water taxi, and skip it at midday in nesting season when boats are restricted.
  • It is only ~25km / 25-30 minutes from Dalaman (DLM), which is the cheapest UK-charter airport on the Turquoise Coast in summer.
  • Five nights is plenty: one boat-trip day, one beach day, Kaunos and a Köyceğiz lake day, and time to do nothing by the river.

Dalyan is the Turquoise Coast for people who don’t want a resort. Instead of a beachfront strip of all-inclusives, you get a low-rise town on a reedy river delta, looking straight across the water at 4th-century-BC Lycian rock tombs cut into the cliff — floodlit at night, and the view you’ll pay a little extra for from a riverside hotel balcony. Wooden boats run the classic all-day loop from the town jetty: past the tombs, up to the Sultaniye sulphur mud baths on Köyceğiz lake, and down to Iztuzu, a 12km turtle-nesting beach with nothing built behind it. Book that boat trip at the Dalyan Co-operative jetty rather than through your hotel and you’ll pay the fair set price, roughly £15-£30 a head.

The practical case for Dalyan is strong: it’s only about 25km and 25-30 minutes from Dalaman (DLM), the cheapest UK-charter airport on this coast in summer, so a budget transfer or even the HAVAŞ bus to Ortaca plus a dolmuş gets you in without a fuss. Five nights is the comfortable length — one day for the river boat trip, one for a longer beach day at Iztuzu, one for the quiet ruins of Kaunos across the river and the lake, and a couple of slow days doing nothing. Stay in the town or on the riverside, not a remote resort: the river, the tombs and the lokanta dinners a couple of streets back from the tourist-priced quay are the whole reason to come here rather than Marmaris.

One inheritance from the country page worth repeating: your UK GHIC does not work in Turkey, so travel insurance with medical cover is essential, not optional. The structured planning below — where to stay, the boat-trip and beach logistics, airport transfers and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here.

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

Top things to do in Dalyan

Iztuzu (Turtle) Beach

Iztuzu is a 12km spit of sand with no buildings behind it — a protected loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) nesting site rather than a resort beach. Reach it by dolmuş over the hill or by the slower, prettier river water-taxi from Dalyan. Bring your own shade, expect minimal facilities, and don't come hoping for sunbed-and-bar buzz: the emptiness is exactly the appeal. Restricted at night and partly roped off during nesting season.

Half a day
No tickets required Read the guide

Sultaniye mud baths & thermal springs

On the shore of Köyceğiz lake you slap on mineral mud, let it dry in the sun, then rinse it off and soak in a roughly 39°C sulphur pool. It is touristy, eye-wateringly sulphurous and genuinely good fun once. Most people reach it as a stop on the Dalyan river boat trip rather than as a separate outing, which is by far the easiest way to do it.

Around 45 minutes…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Dalyan town centre

££ mid-range

The compact grid of streets back from the river, with the dolmuş stop, the Saturday market, restaurants and the boat-co-op jetty all walkable. The most convenient first-trip base: you can do everything on foot and roll back from dinner in two minutes. Not beachfront — Iztuzu is a short ride away — but that is the trade for being in the actual town.

Best for: First-timers, walkers, short stays

Riverside (Maraş Mahallesi / quay road)

££ mid-range

The strip of hotels and boutique stays facing the water and the floodlit rock tombs — the postcard view, and worth paying a little more for if you want it from your balcony. A few minutes' walk from the centre along the promenade. Quieter and prettier in the evening; book ahead in summer because the river-view rooms go first.

Best for: Couples, the rock-tomb view, evenings

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk to centre

Gülpınar

£ value

A leafier, more residential pocket on the edge of town with apart-hotels and family villas among gardens. Calmer and often better value than the riverfront, with an easy walk or short ride into the centre. Best if you want a pool, space and a quieter base over being right on the strip.

Best for: Families, longer stays, value

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk / short ride

Out-of-town all-inclusive resorts

£££ premium

Several large hotels sit a drive from Dalyan towards Iztuzu or the surrounding countryside. Fine if you want pool days and full board, but the honest steer is that they cut you off from the river town that is the whole reason to choose Dalyan over Marmaris or Ölüdeniz. Pick one only if a resort holiday is the point.

Best for: Pool-and-buffet holidays

Browse hotels Drive from centre

Airport to city centre

Dalyan airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Private transfer (door to door) ~25-30 min about €35-€45 per car Simplest with luggage or a family; pre-book
Airport taxi ~25-30 min about 335₺ (~£5-£6 on the meter; agree before you go) From the rank outside arrivals
HAVAŞ/Muttaş bus to Ortaca, then dolmuş ~45-60 min total a few pounds total Cheapest; bus to Ortaca otogar, then frequent dolmuş to Dalyan
Resort/charter coach ~30-45 min included in many packages If booked as part of a package holiday
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: 25-30°C, warm sea, reliable boat-trip days and prices well below the July-August peak. May and September also coincide with the start and end of turtle-nesting season, when Iztuzu is at its quietest and most atmospheric.

July and August are hot (often 35°C+) and the busiest and priciest weeks, with Iztuzu packed and nesting restrictions tightest. Spring and autumn are the best all-round windows for the river, the ruins and the beach. Winter is very quiet — many hotels, restaurants and the UK charter flights to Dalaman shut down from November to March, so it is not a winter-sun option.

What it costs

UK summer charter and scheduled flights to Dalaman (DLM) — Jet2, easyJet, TUI and Ryanair — typically run £90-£200 return in May and late September and £250-£400+ in the July-August school holidays. Dalaman is summer-only for UK direct flights (roughly April to October); there are no winter direct routes, so off-season you'd connect through Istanbul.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 5-night mid-range Dalyan week for one person lands around £450-£650 before flights vary: ~£150-£250 on a river-view or central hotel share, ~£120-£170 on food and drink (riverside fish dinner with wine ~£15-£25), ~£25-£40 on the boat trip and Iztuzu dolmuş, ~£15-£25 on Kaunos and the mud baths, and ~£20 on an eSIM plus insurance. Add £90-£300 for the Dalaman return flight depending on the month.

Dalyan's catch is the riverfront restaurants — beautiful view, tourist pricing. Eat one or two dinners by the water for the rock-tomb backdrop, then move a couple of streets inland to the lokantas and ocakbaşı grills locals use for half the bill. Pay in lira not pounds at card machines, and book the boat trip at the co-op jetty rather than through your hotel.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Turkey

See the full Turkey guide

Dalyan FAQs

How many days do you need in Dalyan?
Four to seven nights. Five is the comfortable sweet spot: one day for the river boat trip (rock tombs, mud baths and Iztuzu), one for a longer beach day, one for Kaunos and a Köyceğiz lake trip, and a couple of slow days by the river. It is a relax-and-explore base, not a city you blitz in 48 hours.
How do you get from Dalaman airport to Dalyan?
It is only ~25km and 25-30 minutes. A pre-booked private transfer (about €35-€45 a car) is the easiest with luggage; an airport taxi is around 335₺ on the meter. On a budget, take the HAVAŞ/Muttaş airport bus to Ortaca otogar and a frequent dolmuş (shared minibus) on to Dalyan. Many package holidays include a resort coach.
Is Dalyan good for families or couples?
Both. It is calmer and more low-rise than Marmaris or Ölüdeniz — couples come for the rock-tomb river views and quiet dinners, families for the gentle river, the turtle beach and the mud baths. There is little nightlife beyond riverside bars, which is exactly why people who want a quieter Turkey choose it.
Does my GHIC work in Dalyan?
No. As across Turkey, your UK GHIC or EHIC is not valid here — Turkey is outside the EU with no reciprocal healthcare deal, so you pay for treatment. Comprehensive travel insurance with medical cover and repatriation is essential. See the Turkey country guide for the full GOV.UK entry, health and safety detail.

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