Kekova tours from Antalya start from €55 per person, with hotel pickup from Antalya, Belek, Kemer, Side and Alanya. This full-day excursion combines four ancient sites — the Sunken City, Simena Castle, Myra and the Church of St. Nicholas — in a single day along Turkey’s Lycian Coast.
Key facts before you book your Kekova tour from Antalya
The full-day Kekova tour from Antalya covers 170km of Lycian coastline to reach one of Turkey's most protected ancient landscapes. Kekova Island itself is uninhabited — no hotels, no roads, no beach clubs. The Turkish government designated it a Special Environmental Protection Area specifically to preserve what lies beneath the water on the island's north shore: the submerged ruins of the ancient Lycian settlement of Dolchiste.
A sequence of earthquakes in the 2nd century AD caused part of the coastline to drop. House foundations, stairways leading into the sea, cisterns and sections of the harbour wall went with it. The structures are visible 3–6 metres below the surface through water that stays clear for most of the season. Viewing from the boat is the only legal way to see the ruins — swimming directly over them is prohibited under Turkish law. The captain navigates slowly along the north shore so passengers can see everything from the deck.
The day continues to Simena Castle above Kaleköy village — accessible only by boat, no road reaches it — then on to Myra ancient city with its rock-cut Lycian tombs and Roman theatre, and finally the Church of St. Nicholas in Demre, the actual tomb church of the 4th century bishop who became the basis of the Santa Claus legend. Full guide to visiting the Kekova Sunken City →
What makes Kekova different from every other ancient site in Turkey
The ancient settlement of Dolchiste occupied the north shore of Kekova Island during the Lycian period. In the 2nd century AD, a series of earthquakes caused the coastline to subside — dropping part of the city below sea level. The submerged section includes house foundations, stairways that continue straight down into the water, cisterns, and sections of the ancient harbour wall.
Because Kekova Island is a protected area, the ruins have been undisturbed. No construction has occurred on the island since the protection order. What you see from the boat today is what was there when the earthquakes happened — just moved a few metres lower.
Swimming over the ruins is prohibited by Turkish law and actively enforced. The restriction exists to prevent physical damage to the ancient architecture from foot contact and anchor dragging. Fines are substantial. The boat tour navigates at low speed so you can see the structures clearly from the deck without getting in the water.
What the full-day Kekova tour from Antalya includes
Group tour or private — same sites, different pace
Water clarity matters as much as the weather
May, June and September offer the best balance: warm enough to swim in Aquarium Bay, calm enough for excellent underwater visibility over the ruins, and fewer boats than peak July–August. April is excellent for the ruins visit though the sea is cooler for swimming.
What to know before booking your Kekova tour
Other day trips from Antalya worth combining with Kekova
Straight answers before you book