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Istanbul Tourist Pass 5-Day Usage Guide: Day-by-Day Plan

Five days is the length that finally lets Istanbul breathe. Three days forces you to sprint through the headline monuments; five gives you the old city, both shores of the Bosphorus, the Asian side, and a slow day for a market and a bath without ever feeling rushed. The trick is sequencing grouping sights by district so you are not crossing the strait twice a day.

Istanbul.com Creator Community
Istanbul.com Creator Community
May 3, 2026 12 min
Istanbul Tourist Pass 5-Day Usage Guide: Day-by-Day Plan

This is a day-by-day plan paced for a real traveller, not a checklist robot. Each day shows what your pass covers, what you still pay for, and roughly how the hours fall. Activate on the first morning you visit a paid sight; the five-day clock starts on first use, so a late-afternoon arrival day does not burn a day.

How this five-day plan is built

Days are grouped by geography Old City, then the European waterfront, then a slow Bosphorus-and-baths day, then the Asian side, then a flex day so you walk more and commute less.

The expensive monuments are front-loaded into the days your pass already covers entry, so your out-of-pocket spend is mostly food and ferries.

Every price carries a month tag, because Istanbul's gate prices and menus move fast.

Before you start: pacing and pass logic

Two ideas make a five-day trip work. First, two big monuments per day is plenty each of Topkapı or Dolmabahçe can swallow two hours, and stacking three leaves you footsore and unable to remember which gilded room was which. Second, keep one indoor option in reserve each day for a rain shower, which May still delivers. The plan below already does both.

On the logistics side, load an Istanbulkart for trams and ferries on arrival, and book any timed extras the guided walk, a bath session the night before in the app. If this is your first trip, our how to activate your pass walkthrough takes about two minutes and saves a fumble at the first turnstile.

Where to base yourself for five days

For this plan, Sultanahmet or Sirkeci puts you on foot for Day 1 and one tram stop from the Eminönü ferries that anchor Days 2 to 4 the most efficient base for a sightseeing-led trip. Karaköy or Beyoğlu trade a little monument-walking distance for better dinners and nightlife, and still sit beside the cruise quays. Wherever you land, pick a room within 10 minutes of a tram or ferry stop; in this city, transit access matters more than the neighbourhood name.

One scheduling note: many palaces and the major mosques close one day a week, and the day varies. Topkapı is shut on Tuesdays, Dolmabahçe on a different day check each before you lock your five days, and let the flex day on Day 5 absorb anything that lands on a closure. The app lists current opening days alongside each venue.

Day 1 The Old City (Sultanahmet)

Begin where the monuments cluster, on the Sultanahmet peninsula. Be at Hagia Sophia (Ayasofya) for the 9 AM opening pre-booked entry on your pass matters most once the coach groups land around 10. Check the day's visiting rules on the official museum information page, as the building closes to tourists during the five daily prayer times.

Cross the square to the Blue Mosque (Sultan Ahmet Camii), free outside prayer times, then drop into the Basilica Cistern (Yerebatan Sarnıcı), the floodlit underground Roman water chamber whose standalone ticket is one of the steepest in the city also covered, so your wallet stays in your pocket. Break for a köfte (KUFF-teh, grilled meatball) plate near the tram for 180–280 TL (May 2026).

Spend the afternoon at Topkapı Palace: the courtyards, the treasury, and the separately gated Harem can fill two hours, and the terrace over the Golden Horn is the photo you keep. Wind down through Gülhane Park on the way out free, leafy, and downhill to the tram. Our Sultanahmet trio pass guide sequences these four so you never double back.

Day 1 budget

Covered by your pass: Hagia Sophia, Basilica Cistern, Topkapı + Harem.

Out of pocket: lunch + snacks ~280–450 TL · tram ~60 TL · tea and water ~80 TL (May 2026).

Day 2 The European waterfront: Dolmabahçe to Galata

Start on the European shore at Dolmabahçe Palace, the lavish 19th-century seat of the late Ottoman sultans, with its crystal staircase and a four-ton chandelier in the ceremonial hall; entry is included with your pass. Arrive near opening Dolmabahçe runs on timed visiting and the late-morning queue is the day's longest. Give it 90 minutes, gardens included.

From the quay nearby, take the Bosphorus cruise bundled with the pass: the open deck is the whole point, with the waterfront palaces and wooden yalı (yah-LUH, shorefront mansion) sliding past. Sit on the European side heading north for the best run of facades, and confirm sailings on the Şehir Hatları timetable. Lunch in Karaköy afterwards a balık ekmek (bah-LUHK ek-MEK, fish sandwich) by the water is 160–220 TL (May 2026).

Climb the hill to Galata Tower for the 360-degree panorama, also covered, then wander İstiklal Avenue toward Taksim as the light drops the nostalgic red tram and side-street record shops are free theatre. For how the boat benefit works and where to board, see our Bosphorus cruise pass benefits.

Day 2 budget

Covered by your pass: Dolmabahçe Palace, Bosphorus cruise, Galata Tower.

Out of pocket: lunch ~220–360 TL · transport ~60 TL · optional rooftop drink ~280–380 TL (May 2026).

Day 3 A slow Bosphorus-and-baths day

Day three deliberately drops the pace. Take the free guided walking tour included with your pass booked the night before in the app to get the back-story of the old city from someone who lives it; an hour or two with a local guide reframes everything you saw on Day 1. Then ride a commuter ferry up the strait simply for the view, hopping off at Ortaköy for its waterside square and the Ortaköy mosque under the bridge.

In the afternoon, slot in a hammam (hah-MAHM, Turkish bath) session if you hold a higher-tier pass a warm marble scrub is the right antidote to two days of walking, and several historic baths are included on the upper tiers. Reserve a slot in the app rather than walking in cold. If you want the full ritual explained first, our hammam entry guide covers etiquette, what to bring, and what is included.

Day 3 budget

Covered by your pass: guided walking tour, hammam (on higher tiers).

Out of pocket: ferries ~80 TL · lunch ~220–350 TL · tea and a bath tip ~150 TL (May 2026).

Day 4 The Asian side: Kadıköy and Moda

Cross to Asia on the Eminönü–Kadıköy ferry for about 35 TL (May 2026) 20 minutes across the water with the old-city skyline behind you, one of the best-value rides anywhere. Kadıköy is the city's most food-obsessed district and refreshingly light on tour groups. Graze the Kadıköy market fishmongers, pastry windows, pickle shops then walk the Moda seafront to a çay (chai, tea) garden where locals nurse one glass for an hour.

This is the day to let the pass rest a little and let the neighbourhood lead. If you would rather have structure, a local-led market walk on the Asian side pairs well here; our Kadıköy and Moda guide maps a half-day route through the stalls and the seafront. Back on the European side by evening, the ferry deck at sunset is the cheapest Bosphorus cruise in town.

Day 4 budget

Covered by your pass: optional Asian-side walking tour (where offered on your tier).

Out of pocket: ferries ~70 TL · market food ~250–400 TL · tea and pastries ~100 TL (May 2026).

Day 5 Flex day: the Grand Bazaar, the Spice Market, or the islands

Day five is the buffer that makes five days feel generous. Use it to fill gaps. Option one stays in the old city: the Grand Bazaar (Kapalıçarşı) and the Spice Bazaar (Mısır Çarşısı) for browsing and snacking both are free to enter, with the Süleymaniye Mosque a short uphill walk between them. Option two heads to the Princes' Islands, a 90-minute ferry to car-free Büyükada for bicycles and pine-shaded lunches; the ferry is included on many pass tiers.

If the weather turned, swap in an indoor monument you skipped the Istanbul Archaeology Museums or the Chora (Kariye) Mosque with its Byzantine mosaics, both covered by the pass. For the island option specifically, our Princes' Islands day-trip guide covers ferry times and what the bicycle benefit includes.

Day 5 budget

Covered by your pass: islands ferry (on many tiers), Archaeology Museums, Chora Mosque.

Out of pocket: lunch ~250–450 TL · transport ~70–120 TL · a small bazaar buy, your call (May 2026).

What the pass covers vs. buying tickets

Here is the honest math for the paid monuments across these five days, using individual gate prices for May 2026. Add them up, then weigh them against a single city pass that also bundles the cruise, the guided walk, the islands ferry, and an airport transfer.

Paid sight in this 5-day planIndividual ticket (May 2026)
Hagia Sophia (gallery + audio)~1,500 TL
Basilica Cistern~1,300 TL
Topkapı Palace + Harem~2,500 TL
Dolmabahçe Palace~1,250 TL
Bosphorus cruise~650 TL
Galata Tower~850 TL
Chora (Kariye) Mosque~500 TL
Total if bought separately~8,550 TL (≈ $267 USD)

Gate prices are estimates for May 2026 and differ for residents. Confirm current pass pricing on the Plan & Save page before you publish.

Those seven entries alone come to roughly 8,550 TL (about $267 USD, May 2026) before the cruise, the guided walk, a bath session, the islands ferry, or the airport transfer the pass bundles. For a sightseeing-led five-day trip, that is where the value sits: fewer separate tickets, less queuing, one tap to enter. Compare tiers and match them to your days in our 5-day vs 3-day pass comparison.

Daily budget at a glance

With monuments covered, your real daily spend is food, transit, and the odd treat. Here is a realistic per-person day on top of the pass and your room (May 2026).

Spending categoryPer person, per day (May 2026)
Breakfast (terrace or simit + tea)70–260 TL
Lunch (street food or market)180–350 TL
Dinner (local lokanta or meyhane)350–650 TL
Public transport (tram, ferry, bus)70–130 TL
Tea, water, snacks90–160 TL
Realistic daily total~760–1,550 TL (≈ $24–48 USD)

Monument entries are excluded because your pass covers them. Figures are estimates for May 2026.

Where to eat each evening

Dinner is where a five-day trip earns its character, and none of it touches the pass. On the old-city nights (Days 1 and 5), a meyhane (meh-hah-NEH, tavern) in Kumkapı or a lokanta (loh-KAHN-tah, home-style canteen) near the Spice Bazaar keeps a full meal around 400–650 TL (May 2026). On the waterfront nights (Days 2 and 3), Karaköy's fish spots and Beyoğlu's side streets run a touch higher but reward the walk.

Day 4 in Kadıköy is the standout: the Asian side's meyhane lanes off the market serve meze (meh-ZEH, small plates) and rakı (rah-KUH, aniseed spirit) at prices the European shore gave up years ago. Wherever you eat, tap water is fine to skip in favour of bottled, and a glass of çay arrives free more often than not.

Getting around on a budget

  • Trams and ferries beat taxis for both price and traffic. A single ride is a few lira on an Istanbulkart; top it up at any kiosk.

  • Walk the Old City. Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, the Cistern, and Topkapı sit within a 10-minute radius Day 1 needs almost no transit.

  • Treat ferries as scenic transport. The Eminönü–Kadıköy crossing doubles as a mini Bosphorus trip for ~35 TL (May 2026).

  • Eat where the queue is local köfte houses, pide (PEE-deh, boat-shaped flatbread) salons, and market stalls are filling and cheap.

Plan your five pass days

Activate on the first morning you visit a paid sight, not the day you land the clock starts on first use. Set your five days to fall on this plan, keep one indoor option per day for a shower, and you will cover every major monument without buying a single separate ticket. Get your pass and start planning.

Frequently asked questions

Is five days enough for a first trip to Istanbul?

Yes, comfortably. Five days covers the old city, both Bosphorus shores, the Asian side, and a flex day for a market or the islands without rushing. Three days forces a sprint; five lets you slow down and still see the headline monuments at an easy two-per-day pace.

How many attractions should I plan per day?

Two major monuments per day is the sweet spot. Each of Topkapı or Dolmabahçe can take two hours, so stacking three leaves you tired and blurred. This plan pairs one heavy sight with lighter free stops parks, markets, ferry decks to keep the days balanced.

When does the five-day pass start counting purchase or first use?

The clock starts on first use at your first attraction, not at purchase. Buy in advance, then activate on the morning you begin sightseeing, so a late arrival day does not waste one of your five days.

Will I run out of things the pass covers over five days?

No. Between the monuments, the Bosphorus cruise, a guided walk, a bath, the islands ferry, and museums like Chora and the Archaeology Museums, there is more included than five days can hold. The flex day exists precisely because the list outruns the clock.

What will I still pay for with a pass?

Food, public transport, tea, and any optional extras like a rooftop drink. Budget roughly 760–1,550 TL per person per day for meals and getting around (May 2026), depending on how you eat and shop.

Can I do this five-day plan without a car?

Entirely. Trams, ferries, and your own feet reach every stop, including the Asian side and the islands. A taxi is only worth it late at night or for the airport run, which your pass transfer may already cover.

Useful Turkish for your trip

Istanbulkart (ee-STAN-bool-kart) the rechargeable card for trams, ferries, and buses

yalı  (yah-LUH) a wooden waterfront mansion lining the Bosphorus shores

köfte  (KUFF-teh) grilled meatballs, a cheap and filling staple

çay  (chai) tea offered everywhere, often free

ne kadar?  (neh kah-DAR) how much? handy at markets and stalls

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