Skip to content
Departly.
Kemeraltı Bazaar & Kızlarağası Han, Turkey
Kemeraltı Bazaar & Kızlarağası Han

Aegean Coast

Kemeraltı Bazaar & Kızlarağası Han

The reason to give central İzmir a day: a 17th-century maze of fabric, spice and tea lanes — head for the restored Kızlarağası caravanserai courtyard for coffee rather than just shopping the outer streets.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Izmir, Turkey

Opening hours

Open access (always open) to walk the streets; individual shops, the han courtyard cafes and stalls keep their own hours, broadly daytime into early evening and quieter on Sundays.

Tickets

Free — no ticket needed to wander the bazaar or the Kızlarağası Han courtyard. You only spend on what you buy, eat or drink among the stalls and cafes.

Time needed

Two to three hours to wander the lanes, browse, and stop for coffee in the caravanserai courtyard.

In short

Visiting Kemeraltı Bazaar & Kızlarağası Han

Kemeraltı is the sprawling 17th-century bazaar at the heart of İzmir — a covered maze of fabric, spice, tea and jewellery lanes that is the city's main reason to linger. Free to wander, it rewards getting lost; aim for the restored Kızlarağası Han, an Ottoman caravanserai whose galleried courtyard is the place to stop for a Turkish coffee rather than only shopping the outer streets. Mornings are calmer.

Getting lost on purpose

Kemeraltı is central İzmir’s reason to stay a day. It is a vast, covered 17th-century bazaar that spills out from the old harbour line into a tangle of lanes selling fabric, spices, tea, dried fruit, jewellery, hardware and everything in between. This is a working everyday market, not a tourist set-piece, which is exactly what makes it worth your time — locals do their real shopping here, and the noise, smells and crush feel genuine. It is free to walk; you spend only on what you buy or where you stop.

The mistake is to shop only the obvious outer streets. The lanes branch and double back, so the trick is to wander inwards without a fixed plan, follow the smell of roasting coffee or grilling köfte, and let the side alleys pull you along. Carry some lira and small change, as many of the smaller stalls prefer cash to card.

The Kızlarağası Han, and when to come

Aim, above all, for the Kızlarağası Han — a restored Ottoman caravanserai buried in the bazaar. Its galleried stone courtyard, ringed with small shops and tea tables, is the single nicest place to pause: order a Turkish coffee or a glass of çay, sit under the arches, and watch the comings and goings. It is a far better use of an hour than only trawling the outer fabric streets.

Go in the morning on a weekday if you can. The lanes are cooler and calmer before midday, the light in the han’s courtyard is gentle, and you avoid the worst of the afternoon press. Many shops wind down on Sundays, so don’t pin a Sunday-only visit on serious browsing. Pair the bazaar with a stroll to the nearby Kemeraltı mosques and the Agora, then head down to the Kordon for the evening.

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

More to see in Izmir

Book the essentials

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide
See the full Turkey guide

Kemeraltı Bazaar & Kızlarağası Han FAQs

Do I need to pay to enter Kemeraltı or the Kızlarağası Han?
No. Both the bazaar streets and the caravanserai courtyard are free to walk through. You only pay for purchases, a coffee or a meal. Carry some lira and small change, as many smaller stalls prefer cash.
Is Kemeraltı worth visiting?
Yes — it is the most characterful thing in central İzmir, a working everyday bazaar rather than a tourist-only one. The Kızlarağası Han is the highlight; its restored galleried courtyard is a lovely spot for coffee. Go in the morning when the lanes are cooler and less crowded.
When is the best time to go?
Mornings on a weekday are calmest and coolest; the lanes get busy and hot by midday. Many shops keep daytime hours and wind down on Sundays, so a late-morning visit followed by lunch nearby works well.