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Aegean Coast Escape

Eight days along the Aegean, paced for slow mornings, long lunches, and water in between. Izmir to Fethiye, by road and boat.

Duration 8 days 7 nights, 5 stops
Pace Slow
Best season May-Oct Long shoulder
Distance 650 km Coastal road
Difficulty Easy Beach access mostly
Reading time 13 min A quick scan
Show Me Türkiye
Show Me Türkiye
Slow Aegean

Five stops, eight days, and the Aegean teaches you to stop checking the clock.

The Aegean does not reward rushing. You start in Izmir, the largest city on the coast and an easy place to land, then move slowly south through Ephesus, Bodrum, Datca and finish in Fethiye. The driving is short, the swimming is the point, and the food gets simpler the further south you go.

You will travel by road and water, with one day fully on a wooden gulet and another along the quiet Datca peninsula. The pace is two nights minimum at every stop, which is what separates a road trip from a transit log.

When to go
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Route Map · 650 km coast Türkiye
Izmir Ephesus Bodrum Datca Fethiye N
Road Stop
Aegean Coast Escape
Day 01 / 08

The Aegean is best taken slowly. Two nights minimum at every stop, water in between. Izmir to Fethiye, by rental car with one short car ferry across the gulf, and a full day on a wooden gulet in the middle.

i.
Segment 1 · 2 daysIzmir & Ephesus
Day01
Izmir · Alsancak

Settle in, walk the Kordon at dusk

StayAlsancak
MoveRental car, walking
Don't missKordon sunset
EatBoyoz, kumru

Land in Izmir and base on the Kordon and Alsancak side. Izmir is the largest city on the Aegean and makes a natural starting point, a good airport, easy onward connections, and a relaxed seaside base before the coast proper. The hotels along the front face west, the sun sets over the bay, the air cools by evening and the city comes alive.

Late afternoon, walk the Kemeralti bazaar. The market in central Izmir runs into itself like a working Levantine souk, less polished than the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul but more lived in. Eat boyoz, the Sephardic pastry that came to Izmir with Jewish families who settled here centuries ago and is still made the same way.

Dinner along the Kordon, slow start, the trip is paced for it. Order a meze spread, a fish, and a glass of raki with water on the side, the classic Aegean table.

Rent a car
Rent a car in Izmir Pick up · DiscoverCars
Pick the car up in Izmir. At the end you can either drive it back to Izmir, around five hours from Fethiye, or arrange a one way rental and drop it at Dalaman airport, just fifty minutes from Fethiye. One way drop-offs can cost significantly more, sometimes a lot, so check the fee carefully when you book and weigh it against the drive back. Either works, depending on where you fly out from.
Stay
Where to stay in IzmirBooking Alsancak, on the Kordon · Days 1 to 2 Where to stay in IzmirAgoda Alsancak, on the Kordon · Days 1 to 2
Two options per stay. Booking works well from outside Turkey; if you are booking from within Turkey, it won't load. You can use the Agoda link instead. Same hotels, just a different platform.
Day02
Izmir · Ephesus & Sirince

A Roman city at dawn, a Greek village for lunch

StayAlsancak (same)
MoveDay trip by car
Don't missLibrary of Celsus
EatŞirince köy yemekleri

Day trip south to Ephesus, the largest Roman city ruin in the eastern Mediterranean. An hour and a half from Izmir. Get there early before the cruise ship buses, which start arriving around ten. Three hours minimum inside.

The Library of Celsus is the famous photograph but the residential Terrace Houses are where the real value is, ticketed separately, with intact mosaics from the Roman elite homes built into the hillside.

If you have a rental car, have lunch in Sirince, the wine village in the hills above Ephesus. A Greek village abandoned in 1923 and partially repopulated, now full of family run wineries and restaurants. The fruit wines here range from genuinely good to very strange, taste before you buy. If you are not driving, look for a tour that includes Sirince along with Ephesus, or take a minibus up from Selcuk, the town next to Ephesus. If the village does not appeal, you can instead head from Selcuk to Kusadasi on the coast for the afternoon.

Afternoon, head back to Izmir along the coast, second night on the Kordon.

ii.
Segment 2 · 2 daysBodrum
Day03
Izmir → Bodrum

South along the coast to Bodrum

StayBodrum centre
MoveDrive, 3h30
Don't missBodrum Castle from the water
EatBodrum mantı

Drive south to Bodrum, around three and a half hours via the coast. Stay in Yalikavak if you want the high end marina mood, or in Turkbuku for boutique hotels in a quieter cove. The town centre of Bodrum itself is busy but worth one walk for the castle.

Settle in, swim before sunset. The water in this part of the Aegean is the clearest of the Turkish coast, mineral blue rather than turquoise.

Dinner in a small cove restaurant. Try levrek (sea bass) or cipura (sea bream), both line caught locally and best grilled simply with olive oil and lemon.

Getting there
Stay
Where to stay in BodrumBooking Centre or Yalikavak · Days 3 to 4 Where to stay in BodrumAgoda Centre or Yalikavak · Days 3 to 4
Two options per stay. Booking works well from outside Turkey; if you are booking from within Turkey, it won't load. You can use the Agoda link instead. Same hotels, just a different platform.
Day04
Bodrum · On the water

A day on a wooden boat

StayBodrum (same)
MoveGulet day, 8h
Don't missHidden coves swim stops
EatMezeler, ızgara balık

Take a boat. Bodrum's gulets, the wooden Turkish sailing boats, are the way to see the peninsula's coves. Karaada (Black Island) and Akvaryum Bay are the standard stops, with mud baths in a thermal cave on Karaada that are actually fun.

The shared six-islands boat is the budget option; a private gulet costs more but is worth it if you can split it with a group. Check current rates when you book.

Lunch is on board, usually grilled fish caught at one of the swim stops. Back to the marina by late afternoon.

Evening, walk the marina. Bodrum is at its best after dark, when the cafes along the waterfront fill up and the white houses on the hill catch the moonlight. Second night in Bodrum.

iii.
Segment 3 · 2 daysDatca peninsula
Day05
Bodrum → Datca

Onward to the quiet peninsula

StayDatca old town
MoveCar ferry or drive
Don't missOld Datca alleys
EatBadem soslu et

Drive south to Datca, around three and a half to four hours. Or take the seasonal car ferry from Bodrum to Datca in summer, which is a third of the time and more enjoyable. Pre-book vehicle ferry tickets weeks in advance for summer travel. Space is limited and walk-on passengers fill quickly.

Datca peninsula is the quiet one. Less developed, fewer hotels, fewer restaurants, more genuine. The town itself is a sleepy harbour, a few good fish places, a lazy waterfront.

Settle in, walk the harbour, swim. Stay in Datca town or one of the cove hotels nearby. Tomorrow is for ruins.

Stay
Where to stay in DatcaBooking Old town · Days 5 to 6 Where to stay in DatcaAgoda Old town · Days 5 to 6
Two options per stay. Booking works well from outside Turkey; if you are booking from within Turkey, it won't load. You can use the Agoda link instead. Same hotels, just a different platform.
Day06
Datca · Knidos & coves

Knidos at sunset, almonds everywhere

StayDatca (same)
MoveDrive west, 45 min
Don't missKnidos at golden hour
EatÇupra ızgara

Drive to Knidos at the western tip of the Datca peninsula, around an hour through pine forest. This was a Greek port city in antiquity, famous in its time for the marble Aphrodite statue by Praxiteles, the first life sized female nude in Greek art. The statue is gone but the city's foundations remain, two harbours flanking a peninsula, with steep stone steps connecting them. Allow two hours and good shoes.

Lunch at one of the small fish restaurants near the Knidos harbour, then back to Datca by sunset.

Quiet dinner in town. The peninsula is for slowing down, lean into it. Second night in Datca.

iv.
Segment 4 · 2 daysFethiye
Day07
Datca → Fethiye

East along the gulfs to Fethiye

StayFethiye centre
MoveDrive 3.5h, scenic
Don't missOludeniz lagoon view
EatBalık ekmek

Drive east to Fethiye, around three and a half to four hours. The road climbs through pine and overlooks the sea on the way. Fethiye is the largest of the southern Aegean towns, with a working harbour and a real local population that does not entirely rely on tourism.

Oludeniz blue lagoon is twenty minutes south of town and the famous photograph. The lagoon itself is a national park, ticketed, with calm shallow water and the contrast of pine forest behind. The strip of beach outside the lagoon is free and just as good for swimming.

Late afternoon, take the cable car up Babadag, the mountain above Oludeniz where paragliders take off. The stations run up to around 1700 and 1800 metres, with the summit higher still, and the views over the entire Lycian coast on one side and the inland valleys on the other are the longest in the region. There are restaurants at the cable car stations, having a meal up top with the view is worth it.

Alternatively, this is the day to paraglide if you want to. Tandem flights launch from Babadag and land on Oludeniz beach. You can book through the operators along the Oludeniz seafront or the links below.

You can also spend the day on the water. Fethiye is a boat town, and a day cruise around the bay and the nearby coves is one of the best ways to experience this coast. Dinner in Fethiye, walk the marina. Stay in Fethiye centre or out on the Oludeniz strip.

For an evening out, the beach clubs around Oludeniz and the Kayakoy coves are the move in season. Sea Me Beach has the lively party atmosphere, DJs after dark and a bohemian setting on the bay. So Beach, in the Kucuk Boncuklu cove near Kayakoy, leans more toward food and music, with a beachside restaurant and live sets against the sea.

Getting there
Stay
Where to stay in FethiyeBooking Near the coves · Days 7 to 8 Where to stay in FethiyeAgoda Near the coves · Days 7 to 8
Two options per stay. Booking works well from outside Turkey; if you are booking from within Turkey, it won't load. You can use the Agoda link instead. Same hotels, just a different platform.
Day08
Fethiye · Departure

Slow last morning, ferry or fly

Stay-
MoveDrive to Dalaman
Don't missA last Mediterranean breakfast
EatMenemen, gözleme

If you have time before your flight, drive to Kayakoy, the abandoned Greek village above Fethiye. The population was exchanged in 1923 and the houses have stood empty since, slowly losing roofs to weather. Walk through it as the morning light hits the stone. From Kayakoy you can continue down to Gemiler Bay nearby for a last swim and a short coastal walk, but only if the timing works.

If you have a full extra day instead, the Tlos and Saklikent combination inland is a good one. Tlos is an ancient Lycian city with rock cut tombs in a cliff, and Saklikent is an eighteen kilometre canyon, walkable in summer when the water is low, the river icy even in August. Bring water shoes, the riverbed is rocky, and lunch at one of the riverside places suspended over the stream.

Dalaman airport is about fifty minutes from Fethiye centre, with direct flights to most of Europe. Allow at least ninety minutes for the drive if you are coming from Saklikent.

Returning the car
You picked the car up in Izmir. At the end you can either drive it back to Izmir, around five hours from Fethiye, or arrange a one way rental and drop it at Dalaman airport, just fifty minutes from Fethiye. One way drop-offs can cost significantly more, sometimes a lot, so check the fee carefully when you book and weigh it against the drive back. Either works, depending on where you fly out from.

General notes

Getting around. No flights on this route, and the easiest way to do it is by car. Rent one in Izmir, ideally right at the airport when you land. The coast road is one of the most scenic stretches in the country. The only water crossing is the short Bodrum to Datca car ferry, which saves you the long drive around the gulf. When you are done, loop back to Izmir or arrange a one way rental and drop the car at Dalaman near Fethiye.

Where to stay. Alsancak in Izmir for the Kordon and the seafront. Bodrum centre for the harbour and easy boat access. Datca old town for the smaller, quieter feel. Fethiye centre or a cove hotel near Oludeniz for the last two nights.

Pace. Eight days is the relaxed Aegean. Trimming to six means dropping Datca, which is the wrong cut. Adding more time, the natural extension is the Lycian coast east of Fethiye, all the way to Antalya.

Lock the dated things in first.

The gulet day and the Ephesus entry are the bookings that fill up in season. Stays and transfers stay flexible.

Getting around
One rental car · the whole coast
Rent a car in IzmirDay 1 · Pick up · DiscoverCars
Drive Izmir → BodrumDay 3 · ~3h30 · own car
Car ferry Bodrum → DatcaDay 5 · check timetable · Bodrum Feribot
Drive Datca → FethiyeDay 7 · ~3h30 · own car
Pick the car up in Izmir. At the end you can either drive it back to Izmir, around five hours from Fethiye, or arrange a one way rental and drop it at Dalaman airport, just fifty minutes from Fethiye. One way drop-offs can cost significantly more, sometimes a lot, so check the fee carefully when you book and weigh it against the drive back. Either works, depending on where you fly out from.

Or pick a different shape.

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8 days · Aegean Coast Escape
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