Turkey · Istanbul
Istanbul
Spend two to three days in Sultanahmet for Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapı Palace and the Basilica Cistern, then cross the Golden Horn to Beyoğlu and Karaköy for food and views, and take a ferry across the Bosphorus at least once.
Panoramica
Istanbul is the only city in the world built across two continents, and it wears that history openly: Byzantine domes, Ottoman palaces, and a skyline of minarets sit beside a fast, modern metropolis of 15 million people. The Historic Areas of Istanbul are a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the Bosphorus that splits Europe from Asia is a working strait, not a postcard backdrop.
If you only take one thing from this guide: do not try to see Istanbul from one neighborhood. The Old City is where the monuments are, but Beyoğlu and the Asian-side neighborhood of Kadıköy are where you actually eat well and see how the city lives now.
Ideale per
First-time visitors to Turkey · History and architecture · Food travelers · Couples · Long weekends
Itinerario giornaliero
4 to 6 days
Most European capitals show you one empire. Istanbul shows you three: Roman and Byzantine Constantinople, Ottoman Istanbul, and the modern Turkish republic, layered into the same streets and often the same buildings.
Miglior periodo per visitare
April to May and September to November are the sweet spots: mild temperatures, manageable crowds at the major sights, and comfortable walking weather. Midsummer is hot, humid and the most crowded at Hagia Sophia and Topkapı.
- April to May: Mild, blooming tulips in city parks, comfortable for long walking days.
- June to August: Hot and humid; the Bosphorus breeze helps on the water, less so inland.
- September to October: Warm days, cooler evenings, often the best combination of weather and crowd levels.
- November to February: Cold and occasionally wet; fewer tourists, lower hotel prices.
Cose da sapere
- Ramadan and the Eid holidays shift each year and change opening hours at some mosques and restaurants.
- Istanbul Tulip Festival in April fills Gülhane Park and other city gardens with plantings.
Dove stare
Sultanahmet (Historic Peninsula)
The UNESCO-listed old city: Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapı Palace and the Basilica Cistern within a short walk of each other. Dense with monuments and tourist infrastructure, thinner on nightlife.
Ideale per: First-time visitors · History · Walking to the major sights
Very touristy around the main squares; restaurants directly on the tourist path are overpriced and average.
Beyoğlu, Galata and Karaköy
The 19th-century European quarter across the Golden Horn: İstiklal Avenue, the Galata Tower, and the harbor district of Karaköy, now full of design hotels, galleries and some of the city’s best modern restaurants.
Ideale per: Food · Nightlife · Design and shopping
İstiklal Avenue is extremely crowded in the evenings; side streets are quieter and often better for dinner.
Beşiktaş and Ortaköy (Bosphorus shore)
The European waterfront: the Ottoman-era Çırağan and Dolmabahçe palaces, the small Ortaköy Mosque on the water beneath the first Bosphorus bridge, and easy ferry access to the Asian side.
Ideale per: Bosphorus views · Waterfront walks · A quieter upscale base
Further from the Old City sights; a tram, bus or ferry connection is needed most days.
Kadıköy (Asian side)
A short ferry ride across the Bosphorus into a neighborhood locals actually live in: a produce and fish market, meyhane bars, and a food scene widely considered better value than the European side.
Ideale per: Food · Local life · A break from tourist crowds
Fewer major sights; best treated as a food and atmosphere trip rather than a monuments base.
Balat and Fener
Colorful old houses climbing the hills above the Golden Horn, historically Greek and Jewish quarters, now dotted with small cafes and vintage shops. Photogenic and increasingly popular, still lived-in.
Ideale per: Photography · A slower afternoon · Off the main tourist track
Steep streets; a working-class residential area, so keep a respectful pace and volume.
Dove dormire
Four Seasons Hotel Istanbul at Sultanahmet
luxury · Sultanahmet
Ideale per: First-time visitors · Walking to every major sight · A special stay
- Two blocks from Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque and Topkapı Palace
- Housed in a converted early-1900s neoclassical building
- Attentive, polished service
- Expensive relative to the neighborhood
- Rooms are smaller than newer luxury builds
- Sultanahmet itself is touristy right outside the door
Çırağan Palace Kempinski Istanbul
luxury · Beşiktaş (Bosphorus shore)
Ideale per: Bosphorus views · A resort feel inside the city · Special occasions
- The only former Ottoman imperial palace operating as a hotel on the Bosphorus
- Waterfront infinity pool and private shoreline
- Large rooms by Istanbul standards
- Away from the Old City sights, needs a taxi, tram or ferry connection
- Among the most expensive hotels in the city
- Palace wing books out well in advance
Georges Hotel Galata
boutique · Galata
Ideale per: Design-led travelers · Bosphorus and Golden Horn views · A quieter base near Beyoğlu
- A restored 1882 building with a rooftop restaurant and Bosphorus views
- 20 individually designed rooms
- Personalized, small-hotel service
- No pool
- Small property, limited room inventory
- Steep, cobbled streets nearby
The Bank Hotel Istanbul (formerly Vault Karaköy), a Member of Design Hotels
design · Karaköy
Ideale per: Design travelers · Karaköy’s café and gallery scene · A non-touristy central base
- A converted mid-1800s bank building with preserved architectural details
- Rooftop bar with Old City and Golden Horn views
- Walkable to Galata Tower and the Karaköy waterfront
- Karaköy nightlife carries some street noise
- Compact rooms typical of a historic conversion
- A 15 to 20 minute walk or short tram/funicular ride to Sultanahmet
Sirkeci Mansion
value · Sirkeci (edge of Sultanahmet)
Ideale per: Budget-conscious first-timers · Walking distance to the Old City · Families
- A 14-minute walk from the Blue Mosque at a fraction of Sultanahmet luxury prices
- Rooftop terrace and hammam on site
- Close to the Marmaray rail crossing for the Asian side
- Simple rooms, not a design property
- Street noise near Sirkeci station
- Breakfast room gets crowded in peak season
Esperienze essenziali
Hagia Sophia
A 6th-century Byzantine cathedral turned Ottoman mosque turned museum turned mosque again; part of the Historic Areas of Istanbul UNESCO site.
Sultan Ahmed Mosque (Blue Mosque)
The early-17th-century mosque famous for its interior blue Iznik tilework, directly across the square from Hagia Sophia and still an active place of worship.
Topkapı Palace
The Ottoman sultans’ residence for roughly four centuries, now a museum of imperial treasures, relics and courtyards overlooking the Bosphorus and Golden Horn.
Basilica Cistern
A 6th-century underground water reservoir, columns rising out of shallow water lit for atmosphere, including two carved Medusa-head column bases.
Süleymaniye Mosque
The great 16th-century mosque complex designed by the architect Sinan for Suleiman the Magnificent, with gardens and a terrace overlooking the Golden Horn.
Grand Bazaar
One of the world’s oldest and largest covered markets, thousands of shops under 15th-century vaulted ceilings; expect to bargain and to get pleasantly lost.
Bosphorus ferry crossing
A short public ferry between the European and Asian shores puts the strait, the palaces and the bridges in view for the price of a transit card fare.
Galata Tower
A 14th-century Genoese watchtower with a circular observation deck giving a 360-degree view over the Old City, the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus.
Cibo e bevande
- Turkish breakfast (kahvaltı): A spread of cheeses, olives, tomatoes, cucumber, honey, jams, eggs and bread; a leisurely weekend institution, not a quick bite.
- Kebab (Adana, Iskender): Grilled minced or sliced meat; Iskender adds tomato sauce, melted butter and yogurt over pide bread.
- Meze: Small cold and hot starters, shared at the start of a meyhane (tavern) meal alongside rakı.
- Balık ekmek: A grilled fish sandwich sold from boats and stalls around the Galata Bridge and Eminönü waterfront.
- Baklava: Layered filo pastry with pistachio or walnut and syrup; Istanbul bakeries take it seriously as a craft.
- Turkish coffee and çay: Thick, unfiltered coffee served with water and a small sweet; strong black tea (çay) is the everyday drink.
Dinner runs later than in much of Europe, often from 8pm; meyhane meals are long, multi-course affairs built around meze and conversation.
Dove mangiare
Karaköy Lokantası
modernA blue-and-white-tiled dining room serving refined versions of home-style Turkish dishes.
Ultima ricerca 2026-07-15
Hamdi Restaurant
institutionA long-running kebab house near the Spice Bazaar with rooftop seating over the water.
Ultima ricerca 2026-07-15
Çiya Sofrası
institutionA Kadıköy institution rotating dishes from across Turkey’s regions, often cited as one of the city’s most serious kitchens.
Ultima ricerca 2026-07-15
Albe
Çamlıca Hill (Asian side)
Istanbul’s highest point on the Asian shore gives a wide panorama back across the Bosphorus to the Old City skyline as the sun comes up.
Year-round
Tramonti
Süleymaniye Mosque terrace and gardens
The mosque grounds sit on a hill above the Golden Horn; the gardens and surrounding cemetery terrace catch the evening light over the water and Galata.
Year-round · The mosque courtyard is open outside prayer times; dress modestly.
Pierre Loti Hill
A hilltop café above the Golden Horn cemetery, reached by cable car or a walk, with one of the classic wide views back over the water to the Old City.
Year-round · A small cable car (teleferik) runs up from Eyüp; it gets busy at golden hour.
Ortaköy waterfront
The small Ortaköy Mosque sits directly on the Bosphorus beneath the first bridge; the strait catches the sunset with the bridge lights coming on behind it.
Year-round
Escursioni giornaliere
Princes’ Islands (Büyükada)
A car-free island an hour by ferry from the city center, with 19th-century wooden mansions, pine forests, and bikes or horse-drawn carriages for getting around.
About 1 to 1.5 hours each way by public ferry · Full day
Bursa
The first Ottoman capital, roughly 2 hours from Istanbul by ferry and bus or high-speed connections, known for the Grand Mosque, historic hans, and Turkish bath culture.
About 2 to 2.5 hours each way · Full day
Full Bosphorus cruise to Anadolu Kavağı
A longer public ferry route up the full length of the strait to a small fishing village near the Black Sea mouth, with a ruined Byzantine castle above it.
About 1.5 hours each way · Full day
Itinerario giornaliero
Five days in Istanbul: Old City, Bosphorus and the Asian side
Two to three nights in or near Sultanahmet, then a night or two in Beyoğlu or on the Bosphorus, with a half-day across in Kadıköy.
- 1
Sultanahmet essentials
moderateHagia Sophia early, before the tour groups.A simple lunch near the Hippodrome.Blue Mosque and the Basilica Cistern.Süleymaniye Mosque terrace.A kebab dinner near the Spice Bazaar.A quiet walk back through Sultanahmet.Everything today is walkable.Stima: Swap the cistern for the Istanbul Archaeological Museums if it is quieter.
- 2
Topkapı and the bazaars
fullTopkapı Palace, allowing at least three hours.Lunch inside or near the palace grounds.Grand Bazaar and the nearby Spice Bazaar.Galata Tower viewpoint.Dinner in Karaköy.A drink with a Bosphorus view in Karaköy.Tram from Sultanahmet to Karaköy, or walk across the Galata Bridge.Stima: Skip the Grand Bazaar crowds for the calmer Arasta Bazaar near the Blue Mosque.
- 3
Beyoğlu and Galata
moderateWalk İstiklal Avenue and the surrounding streets.Modern Turkish lunch in Karaköy.Galata district cafes and design shops.Pierre Loti Hill via the Eyüp cable car.Meyhane dinner off İstiklal.Live music bar in Beyoğlu.Funicular from Kabataş to Taksim, then walking.Stima: Substitute a Bosphorus dinner cruise for the meyhane night.
- 4
Cross to Kadıköy
relaxedFerry from Karaköy or Eminönü to Kadıköy.Regional Anatolian dishes at a Kadıköy institution.Kadıköy market streets and the Moda waterfront.Moda seaside park, looking back at the European skyline.Dinner in Kadıköy before the ferry back.Ferry back across the Bosphorus after dark.Public ferry both ways; an Istanbulkart transit card covers it.Stima: Extend the day with the Princes’ Islands ferry instead of Kadıköy.
- 5
Bosphorus shore and departure
relaxedDolmabahçe Palace or Ortaköy waterfront.A last meal in Beşiktaş or Ortaköy.Free time or last-minute shopping.Departure.Leave buffer time for airport traffic; Istanbul Airport is roughly 45 to 60 minutes from the center.Stima: If time allows, add the Bursa day trip and shift departure to day 6.
Come muoversi
- Istanbul Airport (IST) on the European side is the main international gateway, about 45 to 60 minutes from Sultanahmet by metro and tram or taxi.
- Sabiha Gökçen Airport (SAW) on the Asian side handles many budget and domestic flights and is further from the historic center.
- An Istanbulkart contactless card covers trams, the metro, buses and ferries at a flat, low per-ride cost.
- The T1 tram connects Kabataş, Sultanahmet and the Grand Bazaar area; the Marmaray rail tunnel crosses under the Bosphorus.
- Public ferries are both practical transport and the cheapest way to see the Bosphorus.
Cose da sapere
- · Trying to walk between the Old City and Beyoğlu instead of taking the tram or a ferry.
- · Booking Hagia Sophia or Topkapı for midday in peak season instead of the first hour.
- · Assuming a car is useful; Istanbul traffic makes public transport and ferries far more reliable.
Budget
| Basso | Previsto | Comfortevole | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stile di alloggio / per notte | 1800 TRY | 4500 TRY | 12.000 TRY |
| Stile culinario / al giorno | 600 TRY | 1400 TRY | 3000 TRY |
| Trasporto locale / al giorno | 150 TRY | 400 TRY | 900 TRY |
| Stima / al giorno | 200 TRY | 800 TRY | 2000 TRY |
Stima · TRY · 2026-07-15. Accommodation is per room per night (two sharing), in Turkish lira. Lira prices move quickly with inflation, so treat these as a rough shoulder-season order of magnitude rather than exact figures, and check current rates before budgeting.
Cose da sapere
Domande frequenti
How many days do you need in Istanbul?
Four to six days is comfortable. Four covers the Old City and Beyoğlu without rushing; six adds the Asian side and a day trip to the Princes’ Islands or Bursa.
What is the best area to stay in Istanbul for the first time?
Sultanahmet for walking distance to the major sights, or Beyoğlu and Karaköy for better food and nightlife with a short tram or ferry ride to the Old City.
When is the best time to visit Istanbul?
April to May and September to October: mild temperatures and thinner crowds at the major monuments than the hot, busy summer months.
Do you need to book Hagia Sophia and Topkapı Palace in advance?
Advance or skip-the-line tickets are strongly recommended in peak season; arriving at opening time is the reliable way to avoid the longest queues.
Is Istanbul walkable, or do you need transport?
The Old City and Beyoğlu are walkable within themselves, but the city is large; an Istanbulkart for trams, the metro and ferries makes moving between them far easier.
Fonti (3)
- Historic Areas of Istanbul, including Hagia Sophia, Topkapı Palace, the Blue Mosque and Süleymaniye Mosque, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site · unesco · 2026-07-15
- Istanbul overview, attractions and practical travel information · tourism-board · 2026-07-15
- Istanbul Airport as the city’s primary international gateway · tourism-board · 2026-07-15
