Ihlara Valley
Ihlara Valley is the long canyon walk many Cappadocia day tours use after the underground cities. I like it because it gives you actual time on foot by the Melendiz River, but it is a poor quick add-on from Goreme. The drive eats a large part of the day.
Photos: Benh LIEU SONG (CC BY-SA 2.0), smus (CC BY 3.0), smus (CC BY-SA 3.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Ihlara Valley is one of the better long stops around Cappadocia because it gives you a real walk instead of another short viewpoint. The tradeoff is distance: from Goreme, it only makes sense when you are ready to spend most of the day on a wider route.
Worth it for
- Travelers who want a river walk, shade, cave churches, and fewer quick photo stops
- People already planning a Green Tour-style route with Derinkuyu or Selime
You can skip if
- You have only one short day in Cappadocia and want the classic Goreme-area sights
- You have mobility issues, knee trouble, or do not want stairs and uneven paths
Tickets & tours for Ihlara Valley
Which ticket should you buy?
What You Are Actually Visiting
Ihlara Valley is a canyon in Güzelyurt district, Aksaray Province, southwest of the main Cappadocia tourist towns. The Melendiz River runs through it, and the walking route follows the water below high volcanic-rock walls.
Its draw is the mix of shade, river, and rock-cut Byzantine churches. The churches are small, worn in places, and sometimes dim inside, so come for the canyon walk as much as for any single chapel.
The Walk
Most visitors walk only part of the valley, not the full route toward Selime. The common tour version starts around the official Ihlara entrance area, goes down a long stairway, then follows the river toward Belisırma, where many groups stop for lunch.
The stairs are the first test. Sources and signs vary on the exact count, so think several hundred steps rather than a casual ramp. It is fine for many active travelers, but it is awkward if you have knee trouble, limited mobility, or no patience for climbing out of a canyon. Wear proper shoes.
Churches And Frescoes
The valley has many rock-cut churches and chapels, with paintings mainly tied to the Byzantine period. Ağaçaltı Church is one of the easiest early stops from the main stair entrance, which is why it gets more attention than quieter caves farther along.
Do not expect spotless museum rooms or perfect fresco cycles. The point is seeing painted chapels where they were carved, with the river below and the cliffs above. That setting carries the visit.
How It Fits A Cappadocia Trip
From Goreme or Uchisar, Ihlara is a long day rather than a spare-hour stop. It pairs naturally with Derinkuyu or Kaymakli Underground City, Selime Monastery, Belisırma, Güzelyurt, and sometimes Nar Lake, which is why it often appears on Green Tour routes.
My take: use a guided day tour if you do not have a car. If you do have a car, go early, choose the section you actually want to walk, and avoid arriving with the lunch crowd if you care about quiet.
Ihlara Valley: FAQs
Yes, in the broad travel sense, but administratively it is in Aksaray Province, away from the Goreme, Uchisar, and Urgup cluster. In practical terms, it is a Cappadocia day-trip stop, not a town-center sight.
Allow about 1.5 to 3 hours for the usual shortened walk with a few church stops. The full valley route takes longer and needs more planning, especially if you need transport at the far end.
Yes. The common walking sections are straightforward, but a guide helps if you want the church history explained or if you do not want to handle one-way transport yourself.
The valley floor is mostly a walk, not a technical hike. The harder parts are the long stairs, uneven patches near the river, and heat in warmer months.
Most first-time visitors use the official Ihlara entrance area on Vadi Caddesi, listed by the museum authority as Main Gate No. 2. Belisırma and Selime can also work, depending on whether you want a shorter walk, a one-way route, or easier access to lunch stops.
Yes if you want a full-day route with walking, cave churches, and a break from viewpoint hopping. Skip it if you only have one short day in Cappadocia or you mainly want balloons, fairy chimneys, and Goreme-area views.
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