In Bodrum
15 places · narrow by district and visit style
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Bodrum Castle
A 15th-century Crusader castle on the harbour, now home to the Museum of Underwater Archaeology and its famous shipwreck halls.
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus
Foundations of the tomb of Mausolus — one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, and the origin of the word 'mausoleum'.

Ancient Theatre of Halicarnassus
A Hellenistic theatre cut into the hillside above Bodrum, one of the oldest in Anatolia and still used for summer concerts.

Bardakçı Cove
A small cove in Bodrum town, just a 10-minute walk from the marina, with calm clear water and a view of the castle.
Bitez Beach
A sheltered bay east of Bodrum town, known for calm water, tangerine groves, and windsurfing when the meltemi blows.
Datça Old Town
Stone houses, blue shutters, alleys draped in bougainvillea. The old town is where you go to hear your own footsteps and nothing else.
Gümüşlük
A whitewashed fishing village on Bodrum's west coast, with sunken ancient Myndos walls visible in the shallows.
Myndos Gate
The surviving western gate of ancient Halicarnassus, where Alexander the Great's siege broke through in 334 BC.

Pedasa Ancient City
A fortified Lelegian city in the hills above Bodrum, with Cyclopean walls and almost no visitors.

Turgutreis
Bodrum's western resort town, with a long sandy beach, a busy weekly market, and ferry links to the Greek islands.

Yalıkavak
A north-coast Bodrum town with a superyacht marina, old stone alleys, and windmills on the hill above the bay.
Knidos Ancient City
An ancient Greek city at the tip of the Datça peninsula. Originally a Carian settlement, by the 4th century BC it sat opposite Triopion Island with two natural harbours.
Labraunda Sanctuary
High in the Carian mountains, this sacred sanctuary of plane trees was enriched by the Hecatomnid dynasty. Walk among Hellenistic houses, streets, and carved inscriptions.