Myra Archaeological Site
Myra is the Antalya ruin that gets to the point fast: Lycian rock tombs in the cliff, a Roman theater below, and Demre right beside it. It is compact, exposed, and better as a sharp 45 to 90 minute stop than as the reason for a whole day on the road.
Photos: Buğra Kaan Ersoy (CC BY-SA 4.0), Esginmurat (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Myra is worth it if you are already in Demre or building a Kekova day. I would not make it a standalone trip from Antalya unless Lycian sites are the main thing you came to see.
Worth it for
- Travelers who want a clear, photogenic Lycian site without a long hike
- People pairing Demre with St. Nicholas Church, Andriake, or Kekova
You can skip if
- You dislike exposed ruins in hot weather
- You expect a large excavated city with streets, houses, and long walking routes
Tickets & tours for Myra Archaeological Site
Which ticket should you buy?
What You See
The first view does most of the work. Lycian rock tombs are cut into the cliff above the theater, many with house-like fronts that copy timber architecture in stone. It feels strange in the best way, like a dead city hanging over the modern town.
The theater is the easiest part to explore. You can move through the seating, look at carved blocks and masks, and get the cleanest photos of the tombs from the lower rows and the open ground in front. A lot of ancient Myra is still under silt and modern Demre, so do not expect long streets or a huge excavated city. The visit is short, but the main image is strong.
Why It Matters
Myra was one of Lycia's major cities. Ancient writers link it with the Lycian League, and the site has Lycian inscriptions, coins, rock tombs, and later Roman building work. That mix is the point: local Lycian identity first, then a Roman city layered over it.
Myra is also tied to Saint Nicholas, who was bishop here in the 4th century. His church is a separate ticketed site in Demre, not part of the main theater-and-tombs enclosure. That is why Demre itineraries often combine Myra, the Church of St. Nicholas, Andriake, and Kekova.
The Visit
I would keep Myra simple. Plan on 45 to 90 minutes, wear shoes with grip, and bring water from roughly May through October. Shade is limited, and the pale stone makes summer heat feel harsher than the forecast suggests.
Early morning and late afternoon are the best times. Midday groups often pass through quickly, but they can still block the obvious photo angles in front of the tombs. If that happens, go into the theater first and wait a few minutes. The site usually opens up again.
How To Pair It
Myra is too short to justify the long drive from Antalya on its own. It works much better as part of a Demre day: Myra, the Church of St. Nicholas, the Lycian Civilizations Museum at Andriake, and, if conditions are good, a boat trip toward Kekova.
If you are driving between Kas, Finike, and Antalya, Myra is an easy stop. If you are based in Antalya city without a car, a guided day route is usually less tiring than trying to line up intercity buses, taxis, and boat departures yourself.
Myra Archaeological Site: FAQs
It is in Alakent Mahallesi in Demre, Antalya Province. The official address is Alakent Mahallesi, Dağ Dibi Mevkii, Demre / Antalya, and the commonly used GPS point is about 36.259061, 29.985175.
Most travelers need 45 to 90 minutes. Add time only if you like reading panels, photographing stone details, or waiting out tour groups.
No. The archaeological site has the theater and the Lycian rock tombs. The Church of St. Nicholas is a separate ticketed site in Demre, a short drive or taxi ride away.
No. Visitors view the tombs from below. The best views are from the theater area and the open ground in front of the cliff.
Yes, if you combine it with Demre, St. Nicholas Church, Andriake, or Kekova. For Myra alone, Antalya is a long round trip for a short site.
It can be, because the site is compact and the tombs are easy to understand visually. The problems are heat, uneven stone, and limited shade.
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