Istanbul.
Where two worlds meet and always have.
The only city in the world on two continents. Capital of three empires. A dome that changed architecture for a thousand years. Bazaars that have traded without interruption for five centuries. And a Bosphorus strait that separates — and connects — everything.
Three empires. Two continents. One city that contains more history per square kilometre than anywhere else on earth.
Istanbul has been the capital of the Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire, and the Ottoman Empire. It sits at the crossing point between Europe and Asia — the Bosphorus strait divides the city into two continents, connected by bridges and ferries. The Hagia Sophia, completed in 537 AD, was the largest building in the world for nearly a thousand years and its dome influenced every major architectural tradition that followed. The Grand Bazaar, trading continuously since 1461, is the oldest and largest covered market on earth. This density of civilisational weight is genuinely singular.
The city today is a megalopolis of 15 million people — chaotic, loud, beautiful, and impossible to reduce to a simple description. The historic peninsula of Sultanahmet contains the Ottoman and Byzantine monuments that most visitors come for. Across the Golden Horn, Beyoğlu is the 19th-century Levantine neighbourhood that has become the city's creative and nightlife centre. Across the Bosphorus entirely, the Asian side — Kadıköy, Moda, Üsküdar — is a completely different city that most tourists never reach and locals love most.
The practical note: Istanbul rewards time. Four days scratches the surface of the historic peninsula. A week lets you cross to the Asian side, explore Beyoğlu properly, take the Bosphorus ferry, and eat your way through the food culture that connects Anatolia to the Mediterranean. The city does not give up its best things quickly — they emerge through walking, repetition, and accepting that the bus will be late.
Sultanahmet for the monuments. Karaköy and Beyoğlu for the life. Kadıköy for the soul.
Istanbul's neighbourhoods are divided by water — the Golden Horn separates the historic peninsula from Beyoğlu, and the Bosphorus separates the European side from Asia. Each area is a different city, connected by ferries, bridges, and the metro.
The historic heart — Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, the Grand Bazaar, the Hippodrome, and the Basilica Cistern all within walking distance. The most convenient base for monument-focused first-timers and the most crowded with tourists. Hotels here range from budget guesthouses to small luxury boutiques in restored Ottoman buildings. Stay here for the monuments but eat elsewhere.
The 19th-century Levantine quarter on the north side of the Golden Horn, centred on İstiklal Avenue — a pedestrian boulevard of 19th-century European architecture leading from Taksim Square down to Galata Tower. The most cosmopolitan neighbourhood in Istanbul — independent bookshops, music venues, rooftop bars, and the city's best restaurant scene in the side streets off İstiklal.
The former Genoese merchant quarter at the foot of Galata Tower, now the most gentrified and creative neighbourhood in Istanbul. Coffee shops, gallery spaces, design boutiques, and the best brunch scene in the city. Directly on the Golden Horn waterfront, with excellent ferry connections. The most pleasant base for visitors who want the best of both the historic and contemporary city.
The beating heart of Asian Istanbul — a dense neighbourhood of produce markets, excellent restaurants, independent bookshops, and a local atmosphere completely different from the tourist-facing European side. The Kadıköy market is one of the finest food markets in Turkey. Most tourists never cross the Bosphorus. Those who do usually wish they had come earlier.
Ottoman palaces and Bosphorus-view suites. At prices that feel like a misprint.
Istanbul is extraordinary value for accommodation — the Turkish lira's weakness against major currencies means world-class hotels cost a fraction of European equivalents. A luxurious boutique hotel in a restored Ottoman building in Sultanahmet costs $80–150 USD. The palatial Çirağan Palace on the Bosphorus costs $400+. Even at the luxury end, Istanbul is one of the great value hotel cities in the world.
A 19th-century Ottoman imperial palace directly on the Bosphorus — a marble exterior, a pool in the strait itself, and the most extraordinary breakfast location in Istanbul (the terrace facing the Asian shore). One of the great hotel experiences in the world and, by comparison with London or Paris equivalents, surprisingly achievable.
Check availability →A converted 19th-century prison in the shadow of the Hagia Sophia — one of the most ironic and celebrated hotel transformations in the world. The courtyard garden where prisoners once exercised now has one of the finest hotel restaurants in Istanbul. An extraordinary location and a genuinely remarkable building.
Check availability →A converted early 20th-century bank building in Karaköy — the original bank vault now an extraordinary lobby bar, original marble and iron details throughout. The best boutique hotel in the most interesting neighbourhood for food and culture. Excellent rooftop with Bosphorus views.
Check availability →A beautifully restored Ottoman wooden house (konak) in Sultanahmet with a rooftop terrace overlooking the Sea of Marmara and the Princes' Islands. Family-run, genuinely warm, and excellent value. The best mid-range option in the historic peninsula.
Check availability →One of the most consistently praised hostels in Istanbul — a restored building in Sultanahmet with a rooftop terrace, excellent communal atmosphere, and the best location for walking to all the major monuments. Private rooms from $35. Book well ahead in summer.
Check availability →Opened in 1892 for Orient Express passengers, the Pera Palace is the most historically storied hotel in Istanbul — Agatha Christie wrote Murder on the Orient Express here, Kemal Atatürk stayed in Room 101. The restored grand hotel retains its extraordinary Belle Époque interior. A genuinely historic experience.
Check availability →Find and compare hotels across Istanbul's neighbourhoods.
One of the great food cities on earth. And almost nobody outside Turkey knows it yet.
Turkish cuisine is one of the world's great culinary traditions — more complex, more varied, and more regionally specific than the kebab-and-meze shorthand the rest of the world uses to describe it. Istanbul is where Anatolian, Ottoman, Balkan, Caucasian, and Mediterranean traditions converge. The street food alone — simit, midye dolma, balik ekmek, kokoreç — constitutes a full culinary education. The meze culture of sharing small dishes over raki is one of the great social rituals in the world.
Grilled mackerel in a bread roll with lettuce, onion, and a squeeze of lemon — sold from boats rocking at the Eminönü waterfront below the Galata Bridge. The fishermen cook on the boats themselves. Istanbul's most iconic street food experience and genuinely one of the best cheap sandwiches in the world. Eat standing at the waterfront watching the ferries pass. The golden light of late afternoon on the Bosphorus is part of the flavour.
A circular sesame-crusted bread ring — crispy on the outside, chewy inside, and sold from red carts on every street corner in Istanbul. The city's defining street food and breakfast staple. Eaten plain, with tea, with white cheese (beyaz peynir), or with tomato. The simit vendors wheel their carts from 6am and sell them still warm. One of the great cheap foods anywhere.
The great Istanbul social ritual: a table of small dishes — stuffed mussels (midye dolma), white bean salad (piyaz), fried eggplant, octopus salad, taramasalata, shepherd's salad — shared over glasses of raki (anise-flavoured spirit, drunk with water as "lion's milk"). The meal lasts three hours and covers everything from appetiser to dessert in small increments. The meyhane tradition in Beyoğlu's Çiçek Pasajı (Flower Passage) is one of the great dining experiences in Turkey.
A Turkish breakfast is a full table of small dishes: white cheese, kaşar cheese, tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, honey, clotted cream (kaymak), eggs (fried, menemen, or boiled), simit or white bread, and endless glasses of çay (black tea). Van breakfast — a regional variant from eastern Turkey with even more varieties — is a specific Istanbul institution. Çamlıca in Kadıköy and the breakfast restaurants on the Princes' Islands are celebrated destinations.
Black tea brewed in a double-stacked çaydanlık (teapot) and served in small tulip-shaped glasses with two sugar cubes on the side. The social currency of Istanbul — offered in every shop, at every carpet dealer (accept it, it does not obligate you to buy anything), in every tea house (çay bahçesi) along the Bosphorus. Turkey is the world's largest per-capita consumer of tea. Declining a glass of çay in Istanbul is mildly rude. Accepting one is the first step to a conversation.
Hagia Sophia at dawn. Bosphorus ferry at sunset. Grand Bazaar in between.
Istanbul's activities range from monuments of world-historical significance (Hagia Sophia, Topkapi Palace) to genuinely unique city experiences (the Bosphorus ferry crossing, the Grand Bazaar's labyrinth) to neighbourhood pleasures (the Kadıköy market, the rooftop bars of Beyoğlu) that make every visit different.
Built in 537 AD, the Hagia Sophia was the largest enclosed space in the world for nearly a thousand years. The dome — 55 metres high, appearing to float on a ring of windows — was an engineering feat that defined Byzantine architecture and influenced every dome that followed, including the Pantheon-sized influence on Michelangelo's St Peter's. Now an active mosque. Enter outside prayer times, remove shoes, cover shoulders and knees, women cover hair. Go at opening (around 9am) for the fewest people.
Guided tours →The administrative centre of the Ottoman Empire from the 15th to the 19th century — a complex of courtyards, pavilions, the Imperial Treasury (containing the Topkapi Dagger and the 86-carat Spoonmaker's Diamond), and the Harem. Allow four hours minimum. The Treasury and the Harem are separate ticketed sections both worth visiting. Book online to avoid long queues.
Book with guide →The oldest and largest covered market in the world — 4,000 shops across 61 covered streets, trading continuously since 1461. Gold, spices, ceramics, leather, carpets, and everything else. The main tourist lanes are overpriced and persistent; walk two or three streets off the main drag for the actual market. Accept the tea. Bargain on everything. Getting lost is the correct approach.
Bazaar tours →The public Bosphorus ferry from Eminönü runs the full length of the strait to the Black Sea and back — past Ottoman palaces, yalı (waterfront mansions), the Rumelihisarı fortress, fishing villages, and the point where the Bosphorus meets the Black Sea. One of the great urban ferry journeys in the world and entirely public transport. Take a tea from the ferry café, find a seat on the upper deck, and watch the city from the water.
Bosphorus tours →A vast underground Byzantine cistern built in the 6th century — 336 marble columns reflecting in shallow water, dramatic low lighting, and the famous Medusa head columns at the far end. One of the most extraordinary subterranean spaces in Europe. Recently renovated with new lighting and audio experiences. Book online; queues can be significant in summer.
Book tickets →Cross the Bosphorus to the Asian side and spend a morning in the Kadıköy market — one of the finest food markets in Turkey, with cheese vendors, spice sellers, pickle shops, fishmongers, and bakeries all competing for the neighbourhood's business. Walk to the adjacent Moda neighbourhood for coffee and the best sea view in Istanbul. The return ferry at sunset with the Sultanahmet skyline rising as you cross is one of the great Istanbul experiences.
Asian side tours →The Istanbulkart covers everything. Ferries are the best part.
Istanbul has an extensive but complicated transport network — metro, tram, funicular, bus, and ferry, all operating on a single Istanbulkart (rechargeable card). The historic peninsula is walkable for most sights. The ferries connecting the European and Asian sides are both practical transport and one of the great pleasures of the city.
The T1 tram connects Sultanahmet, Karaköy, and the Galata Bridge. The M2 metro runs from Taksim to the airport. Buy an Istanbulkart at any station (minimum 100 TRY, card is 70 TRY). Tap on and off. The card covers trams, metro, bus, and ferries at a reduced rate versus single tickets.
~15 TRY per journey (Istanbulkart)The Istanbul ferry network is run by İDO and Şehir Hatları. Cross the Golden Horn (Eminönü to Karaköy) for 15 TRY. Cross the Bosphorus to Kadıköy or Üsküdar for 15 TRY. The full Bosphorus cruise to Anadolu Kavağı runs twice daily. All use the Istanbulkart. The ferries are punctual, comfortable, and scenic.
~15 TRY per crossing (Istanbulkart)Uber works in Istanbul. BiTaksi is the local metered taxi app. Yellow taxis are metered and generally reliable — ensure the meter is running. Traffic in Istanbul is famously heavy, particularly between the European and Asian sides via the bridges. For cross-city journeys the ferry is often faster than a taxi.
100–300 TRY most journeysIstanbul Airport (IST) is far from the city — 45km northwest. The Havaist airport bus costs 120 TRY to Taksim (60–90 min). The M11 metro to Gayrettepe then M2 onwards costs ~50 TRY but takes 90+ min. A taxi costs 500–700 TRY. Sabiha Gökçen Airport (SAW) on the Asian side is served by the Havaş bus to Taksim (90 min, 150 TRY).
120 TRY (bus) / 600 TRY (taxi from IST)An extensive network covering areas the metro misses. Same Istanbulkart. The Metrobüs (express bus on dedicated lanes) is useful for cross-city journeys. Dolmuş (shared minibus taxis running set routes) are a local option for shorter distances.
~15 TRY (Istanbulkart)Turkish SIMs (Turkcell, Vodafone TR, Türk Telekom) are available at the airport. A tourist SIM with data costs 200–400 TRY for 7–30 days. An Airalo eSIM for Turkey also works well. Coverage is good across the city and on the ferry network.
SIM from 200 TRY / eSIM from $6Outstanding value due to the Turkish lira. But inflation means prices change — check before you go.
Istanbul is currently exceptional value for visitors paying in USD, EUR, or GBP due to the Turkish lira's sustained weakness. A full restaurant meal with wine costs what a coffee costs in London. This situation has existed for several years but Turkish inflation means prices in local currency rise constantly — the relative value for foreign visitors has nonetheless remained strong. Always check current exchange rates before planning your budget.
| Category | Budget ($30–50/day) | Mid-range ($80–150/day) | Comfortable ($200+/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | $15–30 Hostel dorm or budget guesthouse |
$70–130 Boutique hotel, Sultanahmet or Karaköy |
$250+ Çirağan Palace or Four Seasons tier |
| Food | $8–15 Simit, balik ekmek, local restaurants |
$25–50 Meyhane dinner with raki and meze |
$80+ Fine dining, Bosphorus-view restaurants |
| Transport | $3–6 Istanbulkart (tram, ferry, metro) |
$8–20 Istanbulkart + occasional taxi |
$40+ Taxis throughout, private Bosphorus boat |
| Activities | $5–15 Hagia Sophia (free), Grand Bazaar, Kadıköy |
$20–40 Topkapi Palace + Cistern + Bosphorus ferry |
$60+ Guided palace tours, hamam, private cruise |
April to June and September to November. Winter for atmosphere and empty monuments.
Istanbul has a mild but variable climate. Spring (April–June) and autumn (September–November) are the best times — comfortable temperatures (15–25°C), reasonable crowds, and the city at its most atmospheric. July and August are hot (30–35°C) and the most crowded. Winter (December–February) is cold and rainy but remarkably atmospheric — the Hagia Sophia in the mist with almost no other tourists is a different experience entirely.
Generally safe in tourist areas. Know the specific scams before you arrive.
Overall safety score — Low–Medium Risk
Istanbul is generally safe in the main tourist areas. The risks are primarily tourist-targeted scams rather than violent crime. Check your government's current travel advisory.
The most common tourist scam in Istanbul. A shoe-shiner drops his brush near you; you pick it up and hand it back; he insists on shining your shoes "for free" as thanks; then demands an extortionate payment. Simply keep walking. If a stranger drops anything near you on the street in Sultanahmet, do not pick it up.
A friendly English-speaking local strikes up conversation, suggests a "local bar" or tea house, and you end up with a bill for hundreds of dollars. If someone you have just met is suspiciously keen to take you somewhere specific, politely decline. Book bars and restaurants independently rather than following strangers' recommendations.
Sultanahmet, Beyoğlu, Karaköy, Kadıköy, and Üsküdar are all safe for tourists during the day and evening. The main tourist-concentrated areas have police presence. Avoid unlit side streets in unfamiliar outer neighbourhoods after midnight, but the central areas are fine.
Istanbul is manageable for solo female travellers with specific awareness. Verbal attention (unsolicited conversation, catcalling) is more common than in northern European cities and best ignored firmly. Dress modestly in Sultanahmet and religious sites. The European neighbourhoods (Karaköy, Beyoğlu) are more comfortable than some older areas. Use Uber or BiTaksi rather than hailing street taxis alone at night.
What İstanbullular never think to tell tourists.
Princes' Islands are 90 minutes by ferry. Gallipoli and Troy are a full day.
Nine car-free islands in the Sea of Marmara — Victorian Ottoman wooden mansions, horse-drawn carriages, pine forests, and excellent fish restaurants. Büyükada (the largest) is the most visited. The ferry journey through the Marmara is beautiful. Go on a weekday in spring or autumn to avoid the Istanbul weekend crowds.
Turkey's former European capital with the Selimiye Mosque — considered by its architect Mimar Sinan to be his masterpiece and by many architectural historians to be the finest mosque ever built. Less visited than Istanbul but architecturally extraordinary. Bus from Istanbul's Esenler otogar.
The Gallipoli peninsula — site of the WWI Dardanelles campaign — has deeply moving battlefield cemeteries and memorials. Çanakkale across the strait has Troy (accessible by dolmuş, 30 min). Better as an overnight than a day trip for those for whom it is significant.
The first Ottoman capital — a UNESCO-listed city at the foot of Uludağ mountain with the Grand Mosque, the Silk Bazaar, the Green Mosque, and the best İskender kebab in the world (invented here). Take the ferry to Yalova then bus to Bursa. Best as an overnight.
