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Dolmabahçe Palace, Turkey
Dolmabahçe Palace

Istanbul Province

Dolmabahçe Palace

How to visit Dolmabahçe Palace in Istanbul: the one combined ticket, when to turn up to beat the cruise-ship crowds, and whether the guided shuffle through the Harem is worth it.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Istanbul, Turkey

Opening hours

09:00–17:30, every day except Monday (last tickets and last entry roughly 16:00, so don't leave it late). Also closed on 1 January and the first days of the Ramadan and Sacrifice Bayram holidays. Confirm your date on millisaraylar.gov.tr before you go.

Tickets

One combined ticket for foreign visitors, around 2,000 TL (~£33), covering the Selamlık state rooms, the Harem and the Painting Museum. The audio guide is included. There is no separate cheaper Selamlık-only ticket, and the Museum Pass Istanbul is not accepted.

Time needed

About 2 hours for the Selamlık, Harem and gardens; add 30–60 minutes if you also do the Painting Museum. The escorted Selamlık tour alone runs roughly 45 minutes.

In short

Visiting Dolmabahçe Palace

Dolmabahçe sells one combined ticket (around 2,000 TL / ~£33) covering the state rooms, the Harem and the Painting Museum — there's no cheaper 'just the highlights' option. The Selamlık (state apartments) is shown in a timed, shuffling group escorted by a guard, so go right on the 09:00 opening to get a calmer group before the Bosphorus cruise crowds and tour coaches arrive. Allow 2 hours for the lot; note the Museum Pass Istanbul does NOT work here.

How to visit without losing half a day

Dolmabahçe works differently from Istanbul’s other big sights. There is one combined ticket for foreign visitors (around 2,000 TL, roughly £33), and it covers the Selamlık state apartments, the Harem and the Painting Museum — there’s no cheaper highlights-only option, and the Museum Pass Istanbul that gets you into Hagia Sophia’s museum spaces and Topkapı is not accepted here. The Selamlık is shown as a timed, escorted group led by a guard, so the experience is more shuffle-and-stop than wander-at-will. Buying online via millisaraylar.gov.tr or a tour partner saves the ticket-office queue, but it won’t skip the security check.

The real trick is timing. Doors open at 09:00 and close at 17:30, with last entry around 16:00, shut on Mondays. Turn up for opening: by mid-morning the Bosphorus cruise boats and coach tours unload, the escorted Selamlık groups swell, and the crystal staircase becomes a scrum. Getting there is easy — ride the T1 tram to its Kabataş terminus and walk five to ten minutes along the waterfront towards Beşiktaş, or take the F1 funicular down from Taksim to Kabataş in a couple of minutes.

What to see, what to skip, and the verdict

Allow about two hours for the Selamlık, Harem and gardens; the Painting Museum adds another half-hour to an hour and is the easiest thing to cut if you’re flagging. The unmissable rooms are the Ceremonial Hall, hung with a 4.5-tonne Bohemian crystal chandelier, and the crystal-balustraded staircase — this is 19th-century Ottoman excess built to out-dazzle European courts, which is exactly why it feels closer to Versailles than to anything Byzantine.

Come for the opulence, not the history lesson. If you’ve already done Topkapı and Hagia Sophia and want Istanbul’s grand, gilded, slightly mad finale on the water, Dolmabahçe delivers. If your trip is about the old city, you can happily skip it and just photograph the waterfront gate and gardens for free. Either way, pair it with a Bosphorus ferry rather than stacking it against another indoor sight the same day.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Istanbul city guide.

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Dolmabahçe Palace FAQs

Do you need to book Dolmabahçe Palace tickets in advance?
Not essential, but useful in peak season. Booking online via millisaraylar.gov.tr or a tour partner skips the ticket-office queue rather than the security check. The bigger lever is timing: arrive at 09:00 opening, because mid-morning brings cruise passengers and coach tours and the escorted Selamlık groups get crowded.
Is Dolmabahçe Palace worth it?
Yes if you want over-the-top 19th-century Ottoman opulence — the 4.5-tonne Bohemian crystal chandelier in the Ceremonial Hall and the crystal staircase are genuinely jaw-dropping. It's less rewarding if you came to Istanbul for Byzantine and early-Ottoman history; this is European palace excess on the Bosphorus, closer to Versailles than to Topkapı.
What is there to skip at Dolmabahçe?
If you're short on time or money, the Painting Museum is the easiest cut — it's a long add-on to an already long visit. The Selamlık and Harem are the reason to come. The waterfront gardens and Bosphorus-front gate make a free, photogenic stop even if you don't go in.
How do you get to Dolmabahçe Palace?
Take the T1 tram to its Kabataş terminus and walk 5–10 minutes along the waterfront towards Beşiktaş. From Taksim, ride the F1 funicular down to Kabataş (about 2 minutes), then walk. It sits on the Bosphorus shore between Kabataş and Beşiktaş, so it pairs well with a ferry from Eminönü.

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