TOLL FREE 1-800-890-3731 LOCAL: 1 (727)-738-2832 EMAIL 24/7: info@paylessturkey.com
You are here: home | Destinations Guide
Destinations Guide

Denizli

No records found!
Denizli

No records found!
Marmaris


Marmaris, Muğla


Marmaris is one of the most famous sea resorts in Turkey and the largest yacht port on the Turkish coast. Situated in the province of Mugla, the town is very popular among native and foreign tourists drawn to it by its natural beauty, abundant night life and rich cultural heritage. There are many isolated bays formed by the nearby hills that run into the sea. There are 28 660 people leaving in the town to date, but in the tourist season, the number goes to 400 000 people.


read more
Nemrud Dagh


Nemrud Dagh


The Sanctuary of Nemrud Dagi is one of the most remarkable, best preserved, but least known monuments of Asia Minor. The site, called by its builder a hierothesion, or "common dwelling place of all the gods next to the heavenly thrones," is situated 2150m above sea level atop one of the highest peaks in the Anti-Taurus Mountains of southeastern Turkey near the banks of the Euphrates River. The monument is one of the premier sites of the Late Hellenistic period. It was constructed by King Antiochus I of Commagene in the mid-1st century BCE to command a 360o view of the ranges, plains, and towns that comprised his ancient kingdom. It became the main sanctuary of his ruler cult to which worshippers from all over this kingdom were expected to go on the monthly and yearly anniversary of the king's birth and his accession to the throne.


read more
Kuşadası

No records found!
Pamukkale


Pamukkale


Pamukkale is one of the most curious and spectacular natural phenomena not only in Turkey, but in the whole world. Located in Denizli Province in the soth-western part of Turkey, the unique white terraces are a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

read more
Istanbul


Istanbul


One of the world's most magical and evocative cities, viewed by the West as the gateway to the East with all its tantalising promise, Istanbul is the only city to stand astride two continents.

read more

Haghia Sophia


Haghia Sophia or St. Sophia lies near the famous Hippodrome in Instanbul, formerly Constantinopole, right in the middle of the Golden Horn, the narrow inlet that houses the most beautiful monuments in the city, including the Topaki Palace, the residence of the Ottoman sultans. The church, dedicated to Divine Wisdom ( its name in Greek), was built by Emperor Justinian in A.D. 532-37 after a violent popular insurrection had caused a fire that destroyed the preceding basilica. It was the largest Christian church in the world until 1453, when Constantinople fell to the Ottoman Turks and it was converted into mosque, complete with minarets and the furnishings typical of the Islamic religion.

read more
The Black Sea Coast

No records found!
Eastern Turkey

No records found!
Cappadocia


Cappadocia


Cappadocia is an area in Central Anatolia in Turkey best known for its unique moon-like landscape, underground cities, cave churches and houses carved in the rocks.

read more
Anatolia


Antalya – the face of the Turkish Riviera


Antalya is a city situated in the southwest part of Turkey on the Mediterranean coast of the country. The city is an administrative centre of the vilayet that bears the same name – Antalya and it is also one of the most important places of the so called Turkish Riviera.

read more
Medeterranean Turkey


Gumusluk


Once a Carian city of Myndos, now the town of Gumusluk... though its been thousands of years, the spirit of the sea-shore village is still the same.


read more

Bodrum


Bodrum is among the most popular coastal towns in the Turkish Aegean Region. Part of the Mugla province, the town lays on the southern coast of the Bodrum peninsula and faces the Greek island of Kos. It`s situated 270 km south of the largest city in the region Izmir and 180 km south of Kusadasi – the most popular Turkish resort.


read more
The Aegean Coast

No records found!