Pamukkale Visitors Guide

Your essential guide to visiting Pamukkale and Hierapolis, covering practical tips and must-see sights.

Pamukkale is unusual because the visit has two completely different halves: the otherworldly natural terraces of mineral-white travertine on the lower slope, where you walk barefoot through shallow thermal pools; and the sprawling Greco-Roman city of Hierapolis on the plateau above, with its 12,000-seat theatre, colonnaded Frontinus Street, vast Necropolis and on-site Archaeology Museum. They share a single ticket, but they're a 30-minute walk apart and feel like different worlds. This guide walks you through which gate to use, what to wear, and the order to do everything in. Pair with our opening hours and best time to visit pages.

What to see at Pamukkale & Hierapolis

The Travertines

The white terraces themselves — a 2.7 km cascade of calcium-carbonate basins fed by 35°C mineral springs. The lower third is partially flooded with shallow thermal water (the photogenic part) and walkable barefoot. Higher up, the formations are drier and the views over the Lycus Valley open out. The dramatic top-down route from the South Gate gives the iconic descending photos; the bottom-up route from the Travertine Gate is the classic climb. Allow 1.5–2 hours.

Hierapolis ruins

The Greco-Roman spa city on the plateau above the travertines, founded 2nd century BC by Eumenes II of Pergamon. Highlights: the well-preserved Roman Theatre (12,000 seats, restored stage building), the long colonnaded Frontinus Street and Domitian Gate, the vast Necropolis of over 1,200 tombs, the Plutonium (the toxic CO₂-emitting "gate to the underworld"), and the octagonal Martyrium of St Philip. Allow 1.5–2 hours.

Museum & Antique Pool

The Hierapolis Archaeology Museum, housed in the magnificent restored 2nd-century Roman Baths, holds sarcophagi, statuary and grave goods from the site — included in your combined ticket. Right next to it, Cleopatra's Antique Pool lets you swim above submerged Roman columns in warm 36°C thermal water for an extra ~€6. Allow 30 minutes for the museum and 60–90 minutes if you swim.

Getting to Pamukkale and the first ten minutes inside

The site address is Pamukkale Mahallesi, 20190 Pamukkale / Denizli, Turkey. Pamukkale sits inland in southwestern Anatolia — the great majority of visitors arrive on an organised transfer or day tour rather than self-driving. Getting there:

From Denizli (10 km, 20 minutes) — frequent dolmuş minibuses run all day from Denizli otogar (bus station) directly to Pamukkale village for about 15 TRY. The dolmuş drops you at the lower (Travertine) gate.

From Denizli Çardak Airport (DNZ) — 71 km, about 1 hour by shared shuttle (~€10) or private taxi (~€70). Airport shuttles connect with most flight arrivals; book ahead in high season.

From coastal resorts — Antalya is 240 km (3 hours), Marmaris 200 km (3 hours), Bodrum 270 km (4 hours), Kuşadası and Selçuk 200 km (3 hours), Fethiye 220 km (3 hours). Day tours from any of them are €60–€110 per person including bus, guide, lunch and entry — far easier than driving yourself.

From Istanbul — fly to Denizli Çardak Airport (1 hour) and continue by shuttle, or take an overnight bus (12 hours). 2-day overland tours from Istanbul exist but are tiring.

Three gates lead onto the site. The South Gate (upper) is the smartest entry for the top-down travertine descent. The North Gate (upper) brings you in via the Necropolis and Frontinus Street. The Travertine Gate at the bottom of the cliff is closest to Pamukkale village.

Visiting Pamukkale — FAQ

Practical answers to plan your visit

Which gate should I enter from?
For a first visit, the South Gate at the top — you walk down the travertines (the iconic photo direction) and finish at the bottom where the Pamukkale village restaurants and minibus stops are. The Travertine (lower) Gate is for the classic uphill barefoot climb. The North Gate at the top is best if you want to start by walking the long colonnaded Frontinus Street and the Necropolis.
Do I need to bring anything special?
Plastic shoe bag (sold at the gates for 5 TRY), swimwear if you're using Cleopatra's Antique Pool, sun cream and a wide-brimmed hat in summer (the white travertines reflect sunlight intensely), 1.5–2 litres of water per person, and a small towel. A change of dry clothes if you're swimming. Comfortable walking shoes for the Hierapolis ruins — you put them back on at the top of the travertines.
What is the recommended route?
Enter at the South Gate at dawn (06:30 in summer), spend the first hour walking the empty travertines from top to bottom while the early light is on the white slopes, leave shoes in a locker at the top before the climb down. Walk the ruins of Hierapolis on the way back up via the Roman Theatre and Frontinus Street, finish at the Archaeology Museum, and finally swim in Cleopatra's Antique Pool before lunch. See best time to visit for timing.
Can I drive there?
Yes — there is paid parking at both upper gates and at the Travertine Gate. From Denizli the road is 10 km and signposted; from coastal resorts the drive is 3–4 hours each way. Most visitors prefer an organised day tour or shuttle because the drive is long and the parking-then-shoe-removal-then-locker logistics are easier with a guide.
Can I take photos in the museum?
Yes — non-flash photography is allowed throughout the Hierapolis Archaeology Museum and free everywhere across the site, including the travertines, the theatre, the Necropolis and Cleopatra's Antique Pool. Drones require a separate permit.
Is there food or water on site?
Yes — small cafés at both upper gates sell water, ice cream and basic snacks at inflated tourist prices. The Hierapolis plateau also has a sit-down restaurant near the Cleopatra Pool. For a proper meal, head to Pamukkale village at the bottom of the cliff after your visit. See our food & drinks page.
Can I bring children or strollers?
Yes. Children love the warm shallow thermal pools on the travertines and the Roman theatre on the plateau. Strollers do not work on the travertines — the surface is uneven and you're barefoot. A baby carrier is essential. The Hierapolis plateau on top has some paved paths usable for strollers.
How long should I plan for the visit?
Half a day minimum (4 hours) to do the travertines, the theatre, the museum and a quick swim. A full day if you also want to walk the full Necropolis and the Martyrium of St Philip, plus lunch in Pamukkale village. Most coastal-resort day tours give you only 2–3 hours on site — book a one-night stay in Pamukkale village if you can.
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