Aşıklar Vadisi (Love Valley)
Love Valley is the Cappadocia stop people joke about first, then remember because the walk is actually good. The tall pale rock pillars are odd, funny, and worth seeing. I would not waste the trip on only a roadside photo, though. The valley makes more sense when you get down onto the dirt path.
Photos: Umay BAHADIR (CC BY-SA 4.0), Handeshahd (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Love Valley is one of the Cappadocia photo stops that is better on foot than from the viewpoint. Go for the strange geology and the easy dirt-track walk, not for a polished attraction.
Worth it for
- Travelers who want a short Cappadocia hike close to Göreme
- Photographers who can arrive at sunrise or late afternoon
- Visitors who enjoy weird natural formations more than museums
You can skip if
- You only have time for one valley and want caves or churches
- You are visiting at midday in hot weather
- You dislike dusty paths and crowded photo viewpoints
Tickets & tours for Aşıklar Vadisi (Love Valley)
Which ticket should you buy?
What You See
Love Valley, also called Aşıklar Vadisi or Bağlıdere, is a valley near Göreme known for its tall fairy chimneys. The formations are pale, rounded, and not subtle, which explains the English name and the jokes you hear at the viewpoint.
The viewpoint is quick and easy, but the better visit is on the valley floor. Down there the pillars stop looking like a backdrop and start feeling like a weird, dusty corridor you can wander through.
How To Visit
You can see Love Valley from viewpoints by car, ATV, horse, jeep, or taxi. Walking is better if the weather is reasonable. From Göreme, many visitors head out by Bilal Eroğlu Caddesi or nearby dirt roads, then drop into the valley paths below the ridge.
The route is not difficult in dry weather, but signs are uneven and small paths branch off. Download an offline map, wear shoes with grip, and expect dust, loose stones, and very little shade.
Best Time
Sunrise is the dramatic choice because balloons may pass near the valley when flights are approved and the wind cooperates. It is also when photographers, couples, and early tours gather at the viewpoints.
For a calmer visit, I would choose late afternoon outside the hottest part of summer. The light is easier on the rocks, the valley floor feels less rushed, and you spend less time working around tripods and staged photo spots.
My Take
Love Valley is worth it if you give it at least an hour. A quick viewpoint stop is fine for a photo, but it misses the texture of the place.
The tradeoff is simple: it is easy to reach, so it gets busy, and summer heat can make a short walk feel longer than it is. Go early or late, bring water, and skip the paid photo setups unless that is the exact shot you came for.
Aşıklar Vadisi (Love Valley): FAQs
Yes. Love Valley is the common English tourist name, Aşıklar Vadisi is the Turkish name, and Bağlıdere is another local name used for the same valley area.
The open valley paths are generally free to enter, with no official public ticket gate for a basic walk. Private parking, cafes, swings, photo platforms, ATV rides, horse rides, and guided tours may charge separately, so check on the day.
Plan 30 to 45 minutes for a viewpoint visit, or about 1.5 to 3 hours if you want to walk part of the valley. Longer routes can continue toward Uçhisar or connect with nearby Cappadocia valleys.
Yes, it can be good for balloon watching, but it is not guaranteed. Balloon flights and routes depend on wind, weather, and daily flight permission.
Yes, but the valley floor is dusty and uneven, with little shade. It suits children who are comfortable walking on dirt tracks. It is not a good stroller route.
Love Valley has the stranger rock shapes and is easier for a short visit. Rose Valley is better for a longer, prettier hike with more color and cave churches.
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