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Tourism in Turkey

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Pamukkale in Turkey is a World Heritage Site. Turkey has 622 national parks.

Tourism in Turkey is focused largely on a variety of historical sites, and on seaside resorts along its Aegean and Mediterranean Sea coasts. Turkey has also become a popular destination for culture, spa, and health care.[1] Since 2021, Turkey is the fourth most visited country in the world.[2]

Number of international tourist arrivals

At its height in 2019, Turkey attracted around 51 million foreign tourists,[3][4] The total number fluctuated between around 41 million in 2015, and around 30 million in 2016.[5][6] However, recovery began in 2017, with the number of foreign visitors increasing to 37.9 million, and in 2018 to 46.1 million visitors.[7][8][9]

Destinations

Istanbul

Dolmabahçe Palace is a popular tourism destination in Turkey.
Ortaköy Mosque and the Bosphorus Bridge

Istanbul is one of the most important tourist spots not only in Turkey but also in the world. There are thousands of hotels and other tourist-oriented industries in the city. Turkey's largest city, Istanbul has a number of major attractions derived from its historical status as the capital of the Byzantine and Ottoman Empires. These include the Sultan Ahmed Mosque (the "Blue Mosque"), the Hagia Sophia, the Topkapı Palace, the Basilica Cistern, the Dolmabahçe Palace, the Galata Tower, the Grand Bazaar, the Spice Bazaar, and the Pera Palace Hotel. Istanbul has also recently become one of the biggest shopping centers of the European region by hosting malls and shopping centers, such as MetroCity, Akmerkez and Cevahir Mall, which is the biggest mall in Europe and seventh largest shopping center in the world. Other attractions include sporting events, museums, and cultural events.

In January 2013, the Turkish government announced that it would build the world's largest airport in Istanbul. The operation has an invested 7-billion euros and was planned to have the first part of a four-part plan completed by 2017.[10]

As a consequence of the continuous fall in tourism to Turkey in recent years, as of October 2016 in Istanbul's famous bazaar once crowded shopping streets are not as crowded as before, "the streams of tourists who used to visit the market each day have trickled to a halt".[5] The number of foreign tourists visiting Istanbul declined to 9.2 million in 2016, a 26 percent decrease compared to 2015.[11]

Ankara

Ankara is the country's capital and second most populated city.[12] It is rich with Turkish history and culture that have roots in the founding of Turkey along with the history of ancient civilizations. The most popular landmark is the Anıtkabir,[13] a mausoleum for Atatürk, the founder of the Republic of Turkey. Another landmark would be the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, a museum that possesses works from Paleolithic, Neolithic, Hatti, Hittite, Phrygian, Urartian, and Roman civilizations.[14]

Izmir

Izmir is a city with historical and geopolitical importance in ancient civilizations such as Macedonia, Persia, Lydia, and the Ottomans.[15] The city has a memorable history in the early years of Turkey as it was the main city that was affected by the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922).[16] Izmir is home to many ancient cities such as Ephesus, Pergamon, and Klazomenai.[17] Besides historical significance, Izmir also possesses many locations for coastal tourism for international travelers. Frequently visited regions that have tourist beaches for local and international tourists would be Çeşme, Mordoğan, and Foça.[18][19]

Other destinations

Ölüdeniz beach
Butterfly Valley, Fethiye

Beach vacations and Blue Cruises, particularly for Turkish delights and visitors from Western Europe, are also central to the Turkish tourism industry. Most beach resorts are located along the southwestern and southern coast, called the Turkish Riviera, especially along the Mediterranean coast near Antalya. Antalya is also accepted as the tourism capital of Turkey.[20] Major resort towns include Bodrum, Fethiye, Marmaris, Kuşadası, Didim and Alanya. Also, Turkey has been chosen second in the world in 2015 with its 436 blue-flagged beaches, according to the Chamber of Shipping.[21]

Attractions elsewhere in the country include the sites of Ephesus, Troy, Pergamon, House of the Virgin Mary, Pamukkale, Hierapolis, Trabzon (where one of the oldest monasteries is the Sümela Monastery), Konya (where the poet Rumi had spent most of his life), Didyma, Church of Antioch, ancient Pontic capital and king rock tombs with its acropolis in Amasya, religious places in Mardin (such as Deyrülzafarân Monastery), and the ruined cities and landscapes of Cappadocia.

One of the most important and famous cities in the east and southeast of Turkey is called Diyarbakır. This city is considered one of the important options for traveling to the east of Turkey due to its numerous historical, religious and cultural places. For researchers who are interested in cultural studies, this city is a favorable option for study and research due to the accommodation of different ethnic groups (Kurds, Turks, Arabs, Assyrians, Armenians) and religious groups (Muslims, Christians). Due to the civil wars between the PKK group and the central government of Turkey in the 90's, the number of tourists in this region decreased. With the beginning of the 21st century and after the establishment of relative peace and security in these areas, tourism has been increasing again in these areas.[27]

Gallipoli and Anzac Cove – a small cove on the Gallipoli peninsula, which became known as the site of World War I landing of the ANZAC (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) on 25 April 1915. Following the landing at Anzac Cove, the beach became the main base for the Australian and New Zealand troops for the eight months of the Gallipoli campaign.

Cappadocia is a region created by the erosion of soft volcanic stone by the wind and rain for centuries.[28] The area is a popular tourist destination, having many sites with unique geological, historic, and cultural features.

UNESCO World Heritage Sites

Safranbolu was added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage sites in 1994 due to its well-preserved Ottoman era houses and architecture.

As of 2023, Turkey hosts 21 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 19 cultural and 2 mixed.[29]

Turkey's World Heritage Sites, as per their official UNESCO names, are as follows:

  1. Aphrodisias
  2. Archaeological Site of Ani
  3. Archaeological Site of Troy
  4. Arslantepe Mound
  5. Bursa and Cumalıkızık: the Birth of the Ottoman Empire
  6. City of Safranbolu
  7. Diyarbakır Fortress and Hevsel Gardens Cultural Landscape
  8. Ephesus
  9. Gordion
  10. Göbekli Tepe
  11. Göreme National Park and the Rock Sites of Cappadocia
  12. Great Mosque and Hospital of Divriği
  13. Hattusha: the Hittite Capital
  14. Hierapolis-Pamukkale
  15. Historic Areas of Istanbul
  16. Nemrut Dağ
  17. Neolithic Site of Çatalhöyük
  18. Pergamon and its Multi-Layered Cultural Landscape
  19. Selimiye Mosque and its Social Complex
  20. Wooden Hypostyle Mosques of Medieval Anatolia
  21. Xanthos-Letoon

Medical tourism

Acıbadem Hospital in Altunizade, Istanbul

An emerging branch of tourism in Turkey is medical tourism. Commonly performed medical procedures are hair transplant operations, rhinoplasty and cosmetic dentistry as it draws in thousands of foreigner tourists every year.[30][31] In 2021, the revenue generated from medical tourism was given as $1.05 billion with 642,000 people that visited for the purpose of getting medical service.[32] This is due to Turkey offering high-quality clinics for affordable pricing compared to the rest of Europe and its central location between Asia and Europe.[33] Other reasons for the high demand for healthcare in Turkey are foreigners having easy visa procedures and immediate scheduling for operations.[1]

Development of tourism

Most tourist arrivals in Turkey come from the following countries:[34][35][9][36][37]

Country 7/2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018
 Russia 3,611,218 6,313,675 5,232,611 4,694,422 2,128,758 7,017,657 5,964,631
 Germany 3,502,628 6,193,259 5,679,194 3,085,215 1,118,932 5,027,472 4,512,360
 United Kingdom 2,434,333 3,800,922 3,370,739 392,746 820,709 2,562,064 2,254,871
 Iran 1,754,719 2,504,494 2,331,076 9,618 385,762 2,102,890 2,001,744
 Bulgaria 1,623,071 2,893,092 2,882,512 1,402,795 1,242,961 2,713,464 2,386,885
 Poland 1,006,273 1,539,123 1,135,903 585,076 145,908 880,839 646,365
 Georgia 856,027 1,633,977 1,514,813 291,852 410,501 1,995,254 2,069,392
 Netherlands 772,099 1,232,220 1,244,756 645,601 271,526 1,117,290 1,013,642
 United States 771,849 1,334,337 1,013,478 371,759 148,937 578,074 448,327
 France 638,178 1,031,824 986,090 621,493 311,708 875,957 731,379
 Romania 625,157 990,005 886,555 496,178 269,076 763,320 641,484
 Saudi Arabia 554,907 820,683 497,914 10,083 67,490 564,816 747,233
 Azerbaijan 533,473 855,445 683,834 470,618 236,797 901,723 858,506
 Kazakhstan 529,417 826,319 712,136 366,076 137,213 455,724 426,916
 Ukraine 525,074 839,729 675,467 2,060,008 997,652 1,547,996 1,386,934
 Iraq 512,795 1,051,721 1,208,895 836,624 387,587 1,374,896 1,172,896
 Greece 397,534 686,480 569,795 157,723 136,305 836,882 686,891
 Belgium 388,017 596,355 596,173 339,529 138,729 557,435 511,559
 Italy 343,923 602,176 420,661 116,806 72,619 377,011 284,195
 Uzbekistan 245,836 470,644 419,673 272,604 102,598 252,138 241,235
 Austria 312,464 496,482 454,638 284,095 112,126 401,475 353,628
 Sweden 245,220 364,984 415,696 192,872 93,703 444,285 384,397
 China 230,819 248,119 89,515 33,641 40,264 426,344 394,109
  Switzerland 224,251 390,044 382,835 219,591 127,643 311,107 269,649
 Czech Republic 223,870 384,158 295,454 89,734 15,642 311,359 228,251
 Denmark 211,949 319,835 356,127 111,499 44,694 335,877 326,278
 Spain 194,310 324,690 298,165 104,848 54,381 257,342 178,018
 India 193,248 274,159 231,579 52,651 44,707 230,131 147,127
 Serbia 186,889 311,738 357,787 238,852 129,284 282,347 225,312
 Jordan 181,303 384,680 494,629 326,633 93,750 474,874 406,469
 Moldova 179,555 288,377 274,257 192,441 109,137 198,867 194,268
 Belarus 177,001 309,216 239,966 220,932 106,426 258,419 245,254
 Kuwait 166,355 363,070 480,123 246,249 120,221 374,191 298,620
 Algeria 166,300 292,505 210,478 48,827 50,121 295,512 288,207
 Lithuania 124,260 277,810 251,619 114,227 14,194 229,704 199,371
 Northern Cyprus 120,454 215,137 182,945 68,353 59,808 268,341 266,859
 Lebanon 116,625 257,781 272,844 191,768 89,337 376,721 338,837
 Canada 115,597 248,868 197,416 72,034 34,210 139,164 108,272
 Morocco 104,243 262,124 251,708 121,333 67,775 234,264 176,538
 Indonesia 102,704 178,800 152,995 49,319 36,690 127,149 119,337
 Libya 99,924 194,351 220,179 197,983 107,251 259,243 188,312
 South Korea 99,016 159,039 99,869 15,206 36,636 212,970 159,354
 North Macedonia 98,111 251,066 266,184 182,045 115,483 222,862 209,519
 Egypt 96,683 187,053 227,850 124,483 68,936 177,655 148,943
 Kyrgyzstan 93,925 169,906 147,487 102,840 52,142 121,364 114,926
 Norway 92,520 203,325 191,789 54,633 25,100 208,330 161,789
 Kosovo 91,946 174,681 193,823 145,931 70,462 152,048 139,500
 Hungary 86,642 222,327 165,842 76,257 16,563 149,523 123,448
 Ireland 81,707 163,165 136,608 36,947 26,176 96,886 71,221
 Bosnia 81,350 177,893 200,698 131,347 61,651 144,445 120,480
 Tunisia 80,285 176,547 206,714 126,970 57,563 172,587 142,372
 Australia 77,059 192,770 118,847 15,674 15,109 120,837 96,488
 Turkmenistan 69,018 120,928 45,249 18,979 43,236 297,706 252,911
 Albania 63,978 142,482 145,032 89,748 49,667 134,869 125,935
 Philippines 59,854 120,347 97,954 55,397 48,440 139,126 95,068
 Pakistan 58,077 140,388 173,621 90,681 51,326 130,736 113,579
 Japan 55,646 78,782 30,610 7,153 19,122 103,320 81,931
 Mexico 55,101 155,155 114,267 34,705 12,775 66,557 36,737
 Finland 55,096 117,123 117,281 32,809 15,003 135,192 128,860
 Brazil 49,597 106,717 84,582 17,788 22,722 101,164 78,691
 Malaysia 47,426 95,444 89,766 9,618 17,892 114,214 95,591
 United Arab Emirates 40,419 120,819 146,438 52,587 3,772 37,500 43,292
 Israel 34,603 2,305,997 843,028 225,238 129,677 569,368 443,732
 Bahrain 31,074 64,771 98,147 62,730 17,852 90,299 77,075
 Qatar 22,940 70,090 92,439 83,831 31,956 108,496 96,327
Total 21,644,659 49,209,180 44,564,395 24,712,266 12,734,213 51,747,198 46,112,592
Visa policy of Turkey
  Republic of Turkey
  Unlimited stay
  Visa not required (90 days and may enter with ID card)
  Visa not required (90 days)
  Visa not required (60 days)
  Visa not required (30 days)
  Visa not required (90 days - conditional)
  eVisa (30 days)
  eVisa (30 days - conditional)
  Visa required

Foreign tourist arrivals increased substantially in Turkey between 2000 and 2005, from 8 million to 25 million, which made Turkey a top-10 destination in the world for foreign visitors. 2005 revenues were US$20.3 billion which also made Turkey one of the top-10 biggest revenue owners in the world. In 2011, Turkey ranked as the 6th most popular tourist destination in the world and 4th in Europe, according to UNWTO World Tourism barometer.[38] See World Tourism rankings. At its height in 2014, Turkey attracted around 42 million foreign tourists, still ranking as the 6th most popular tourist destination in the world.[4] From 2015, tourism to Turkey entered a steep decline.[39][40] In 2016, only around 30 million people visited Turkey. 2016 is described as the second year of huge losses on both visitor numbers and income, a "year of devastating losses", with Turkish tourism businesses stating that they "cannot remember a worse time in the sector".[5] The number of foreign visitors started recovering in 2017 with 37.9 million visitors being recorded. The recovery was partly due to intense security campaigns and advertising. The number of Russian tourists increased by 444% after the recovery of bilateral relations, resulting in Russia becoming the top tourism market for Turkey once again.[7][8] Increases were also recorded in the British, Dutch and Belgian markets.[41]

In early 2017, the Turkish government urged Turkish citizens living abroad to take their vacations in Turkey, attempting to revive the struggling tourism sector[42] of an economy that went into contraction from late 2016.[43] After the April 2017 constitutional referendum, another sharp drop in tourist bookings from Germany was recorded.[44] In 2018, however, the German Tourism Industry Association recorded a growth in German tourist bookings for Turkey, with a 70% increase being recorded by the TUI Group alone.[45]

Government policy and regulation

The AKP government has been promoting "halal tourism" for years,[46] politically reaffirming this stance over the course of 2016.[47] In March 2017, a Turkish court banned global travel fare aggregator website Booking.com from offering services to Turkish tourists for lack of a national licence,[48] while the Hoteliers Association of Turkey campaigns for a lifting the ban of the enterprise on which its members relied for up to 90 percent of their turnover.[49] In April 2017, the police department of the prime resort city of Antalya issued a directive banning the consumption of alcohol outside of buildings.[50]

Sex tourism

Prostitution is legal and regulated in Turkey. The secularization of Turkish society allowed prostitution to achieve legal status during the early 20th century. Sex tourism has been part of Turkey's tourism industry and has been growing over the decades both for foreigners and locals. Many foreigners come to Turkey to work for local Turks in the prostitution business, while many Turks travel abroad as consumers of sex tourism, mostly to Eastern Europe for the purpose.[51] Anyone who encourages someone to commit prostitution, facilitates it, or mediates or provides a place for prostitution is punished with imprisonment from two months to four years and a judicial fine of up to three thousand days.[52][53]

COVID-19 pandemic

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of tourists arriving in Turkey declined to around 16 million in 2020.[54] This was the lowest number of tourists in the last decade.[54] The revenue from international travel was reduced to $13.7 billion which only made up 1.91% of the total economy in 2020.[55][56] In 2021, Turkey's tourism recovered from the pandemic as it contributed $59.3 billion to the GDP, which made up 7.3% of the total economy.[57][58]

See also

References

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Requirements for Urgent Visa for Turkey

Further reading