City Guide · Aegean

Balıkesir Travel Guide

Kazdağları, Ayvalık, and the Northern Aegean.

Show Me Türkiye May 2026 8 min read
Field notes

Balıkesir: tips for first-timers.

  1. 01 Stay in Cunda or Ayvalık, not Balıkesir city. The city is a transit point. The coast is where the food and the swimming are.
  2. 02 Ferry to Cunda, don’t drive. Parking on the island is a nightmare in summer. The short ferry hop saves you the trouble.
  3. 03 Eat at the Ayvalık market ocakbaşı. Charcoal-grilled fish in the back alleys, usually better value than the seafront and often from the same boats.
  4. 04 Kaz Dağları via Akçay. The western approach is the scenic road. The eastern entrances to the national park are restricted.

Balıkesir is one of those provinces that contains too much. The Kaz Dağları (Mount Ida) on the southern border, where Homer says the gods watched the Trojan War; Ayvalık on the coast, with one of the densest old-town walks in western Türkiye; the island of Cunda, joined by a causeway; inland geological landmarks at Devil's Table and the column formations near Sındırgı; and at the centre, an active provincial capital most travellers skip entirely.

We're going to skip the capital and concentrate on the parts of the province a traveller would actually drive for. The list below covers Kaz Dağları and the upper viewpoints, the Ayvalık-Cunda coastal pair, and a handful of inland oddities that are worth the detour.

Three days minimum. Four if you want a slow day in Cunda. Best in May–June and September–October. And if you want to see these places in motion before you go, there are a few of our own films from the region further down the page.

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01Adventure

Balıkesir Safari.

A 4x4 day through the Kaz Dağları forest.

1 min read

Several local operators run 4x4 safari days through the southern Kaz Dağları forests, leaving from Edremit or Akçay on the coast and climbing into the upper pine country.

The route varies but typically covers high viewpoints, small mountain villages, a stop at a freshwater spring, and lunch at a forest restaurant. Not a wilderness adventure, but an efficient way to see country you would not otherwise reach without your own 4x4.

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02Kaz Dağları

Mount Ida (Kaz Dağları).

Pine forest, glacial valleys, and Homeric mythology.

1 min read

The Kaz Dağları, Goose Mountains, are the southern border of Balıkesir. Homer's Iliad names the range Ida and places the gods watching the Trojan War from its summits. The mythology is real enough that it shaped the local tourism vocabulary; the geology is more interesting.

The forest is mostly pine, dense and well-preserved, with a high oxygen reading that some local marketing makes a lot of. There are several short walking trails from the upper road. Sutüven Şelalesi and Hasanboğuldu are the two waterfalls everyone goes to. The summit, Karataş Tepesi at 1,774m, requires a permit but the lower viewpoints do not.

The Kaz Dağları was sacred to the ancients and is still treated as such by locals. Don't smoke in the forest.

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03Viewpoint

Mount Ida Glass Terrace.

A cantilevered glass platform with a long view.

1 min read

A relatively new attraction on the upper Kaz Dağları is a cantilevered glass terrace that hangs out over the slope, giving a view across the southern forest and down toward the Aegean coast.

It is not the only such viewing platform built in Türkiye in the last decade, but the location works. Pair with the Kaz Mountains Museum just below.

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04Botany · Culture

Kaz Mountains Museum.

The flora, folklore, and ecology of Mount Ida.

1 min read

Small, well-curated, and easy to combine with the Glass Terrace and the upper viewpoints. The Kaz Mountains Museum covers the local botany (hundreds of plant species, many endemic), the mythology, and the contemporary ecology of the range.

Thirty to forty-five minutes inside. Worth it as a primer if you intend to walk in the forest.

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05Old town · Coast

Ayvalık.

Stone streets, an old Greek church, the Aegean kitchen.

1 min read

Ayvalık is the kind of Aegean coastal town that has somehow held its character through forty years of weekend traffic from Istanbul. The old town is a maze of stone streets, faded shopfronts, restored Greek houses, and a few unhurried cafés.

Taksiyarhis, originally a Greek Orthodox church and now a cultural centre and museum, is the architectural anchor of the old town. Walk slowly. Eat fresh fish at a harbour restaurant. Buy olive oil from one of the small producers, Ayvalık is one of the best olive oil regions in the country.

The seasonal Saturday market in Küçükköy (a short drive from Ayvalık) is one of the best produce markets in the Aegean, local fish, vegetables, olives, and cheese.

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06Village

Küçükköy.

A small art-driven village near Ayvalık.

1 min read

Küçükköy is a short drive from Ayvalık centre and has become one of the small artist villages of the western Aegean. A few galleries, a couple of restaurants, a Saturday produce market.

Not a must-stop for everyone, but if you want a quiet half-day with espresso, a gallery visit, and a wander through a village that does not depend on tourism for its identity, this is a good one.

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07Two short stops

The Salt Lake and the Devil's Table.

A shallow salt flat and a panoramic rock.

1 min read

A small salt lake sits near Ayvalık, with a thin saline layer that reflects the sky on still days. Photographers like it. Locals walk dogs on it. Twenty minutes maximum.

Devil's Table (Şeytan Sofrası) is a flat-topped rock plateau on the coast with one of the broadest sea views in the region, south across the bays toward Lesbos, east across the inland hills. Sunset is the obvious time. It gets a small crowd; come thirty minutes before sunset to claim a spot.

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08Island · Causeway

Cunda Island.

A causeway-connected island with a perfect harbour.

1 min read

Cunda (Alibey Adası) is connected to Ayvalık by a short causeway, and feels like a different town entirely. The harbour is lined with restored Greek stone houses, the seafront has a row of fish restaurants that have been there for decades, and the streets behind the waterfront still hold quiet old-town corners.

Rahmi Koç Museum on Cunda is a satellite of the Istanbul museum, well-curated, eclectic, particularly good for kids. Arka Deniz Beach on the back side of the island is one of the better swimming spots in the immediate area. The Hill of the Lovers (Aşıklar Tepesi) is the sunset point, a short walk up from the harbour.

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09Inland · Geology

Sındırgı and the Geological Columns.

Hexagonal basalt columns and a small museum (Müzehan).

1 min read

Inland from the coast, the Sındırgı district contains one of the few visible geological column formations in Türkiye, hexagonal basalt columns formed when ancient lava flows cooled slowly. The walk to the columns is short and signposted.

Müzehan in the same area is a small museum housed in a restored old building, with local archaeology and ethnography. Quick stop, worth the small detour.

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10Waterfall

Çaylak Waterfall.

A roadside fall on the way back to the coast.

1 min read

A short stop on the route back toward the Aegean, Çaylak Şelalesi is a small-to-medium waterfall in the inland Balıkesir hills, accessible by short walk from a parking area. Not a destination on its own; a pleasant pairing with the geological columns and Müzehan.

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11Closing

Why Balıkesir is on the second-trip list.

And how to combine it with Çanakkale and Edremit.

1 min read

Balıkesir is a province most international travellers skip. It is also a province most second-time visitors to Türkiye discover and then start recommending to friends.

The natural pairing is with Çanakkale to the north, Troy, Assos, then south into Edremit and Ayvalık. A four-to-seven day loop from Istanbul covers both provinces and one of the islands. Combine with a few days in Bursa or İzmir on either end for a full ten-day western Türkiye trip.

Watch the film

See Balıkesir in motion.

A short cinematic film from our journey.

Show Me Türkiye
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Show Me Türkiye Editorial
Field notes, routes, and city guides from across Türkiye.
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