Lycian Way Itinerary

The full Lycian Way takes 27 walking days end-to-end. Most hikers don't have that. This is a practical itinerary guide for shorter trips — by number of days, by region, and by what you actually want from the trail: archaeology, beaches, summit climbs, or all three.

The 30-second verdict. If you have 7 days and it's your first Lycian Way trip, walk Fethiye → Patara in the west — most varied, most archaeology, classic ending on the longest beach in Turkey. If you have 10–14 days, do half the trail. If you have less than 3, base in Kaş or Çıralı and day-hike — don't try to itinerate fragments.

How long do you actually need?

Days available Realistic plan What you'll see
1–2Day-hike base in Kaş or ÇıralıTwo stages, no logistics, return to same bed
3Patara → Kalkan → Kaş + Kekova boat dayCoast classic, ruins, swimming
5Fethiye → Ovacık → Faralya → Patara (with transport between)Western highlights, no full section
7One coherent section (west, central, or east)~75–95 km, full experience of one part
10Kaş → Olympos (central)Ports, summit, ancient sites, eternal flames
14Half the trail (west or east)Fethiye–Demre OR Kaş–Antalya
21The classic three-week trip~80 % of the trail with rest days
29+Full Lycian Way, end to endThe thru-hike

Less than 3 days isn't long enough for a meaningful Lycian Way experience — half a stage is not the Lycian Way. If you're in Turkey only briefly, take a guided day tour from Fethiye or Kaş instead.

3-day itinerary: Coastal classic

The fastest way to taste the Lycian Way. Patara, Kalkan, Kaş and Kekova back-to-back — three days of cliff walking, harbour dinners, and a boat over a sunken city. No need to carry luggage between pensions if you base in Kaş and shuttle by dolmuş.

Day 1 — Patara to Kalkan

12 km · 4–5 hours walking · Moderate

Mostly clifftop with the longest beach in Turkey (18 km of sand) as your backdrop. Start at the Patara ruins, finish in Kalkan with dinner overlooking the harbour. Audio guide for Patara's ancient capital is available here.

Day 2 — Kalkan to Kaş

15 km · 5–6 hours walking · Moderate

Mediterranean walk past the Sıçak peninsula and Aperlae's underwater ruins. End in Kaş, the trail's beating heart — a bohemian harbour town with rooftop restaurants and the best diving on the coast.

Day 3 — Kaş to Üçağız (boat day)

No walking; boat 5–6 hours · Easy

The sunken city of Kekova, ancient Simena rising from the rocks, swim stops at hidden coves. Boats leave Kaş harbour each morning. Audio guides for Kekova and Aperlae are worth downloading the night before.

Best for: first-timers, couples, hikers limited to a long weekend, anyone who wants the trail without the trail logistics.

5-day itinerary: Western highlights

Pick the best three walking stages of the western trail and link them with rest/transit days. You'll miss the continuous trail feeling but see the most striking landscape.

  1. Day 1 — Fethiye to Ovacık (6 km, easy half-day). Afternoon in Kayaköy ghost village.
  2. Day 2 — Ovacık to Faralya (14 km, big day). Babadağ ridge with Butterfly Valley below.
  3. Day 3 — Rest day in Faralya. Cliff path lookouts, paragliding (optional).
  4. Day 4 — Transit to Patara by dolmuş or transfer. Afternoon at the beach and the ruins.
  5. Day 5 — Patara to Kalkan (12 km). Finish on the rooftop in Kalkan.

This is a sampler, not a section hike. If you want a continuous experience of one part of the trail, do the 7-day western section instead.

7-day itinerary: Western section (Fethiye → Patara)

The classic one-week Lycian Way — Fethiye to Patara through the western archaeology belt. About 86 km total, no transit days, one stretch of trail end-to-end.

Day Stage Distance Difficulty Highlight
1Fethiye → Ovacık6 kmEasyEasy start, Kayaköy ghost village
2Ovacık → Faralya14 kmHardBabadağ ridge, Butterfly Valley descent
3Faralya → Alınca12 kmModerateCliff path above Butterfly Valley
4Alınca → Gavurağılı18 kmHardPine forest, Sidyma ruins
5Gavurağılı → Letoon16 kmModerateUNESCO World Heritage site
6Letoon → Xanthos8 kmEasyLycian capital ruins
7Xanthos → Patara12 kmModerateFinish on the longest beach in Turkey

Add a rest day in Faralya or Alınca if you want a swim, yoga session, or paragliding break built in. Most operators include one. Audio guides for Letoon, Xanthos, Patara and Sidyma are all available free from the audio guides page.

Where to sleep. Faralya (George House, sunset views), Alınca (Bayram's), Gavurağılı (village pension), Letoon/Yediburunlar (Yediburunlar Lighthouse), Patara (Akay Pension). See the full accommodation guide for the rest.

10-day itinerary: Central section (Kaş → Olympos)

The trail's most varied stretch — ancient ports, summit climbs, eternal flames, the only true mountain stage of the western half. Roughly 130 km with rest days built in.

  1. Day 1 — Kaş to Üçağız (boat day or hike).
  2. Day 2 — Üçağız to Aperlae and back (a half-day excursion to the underwater ruins).
  3. Day 3 — Üçağız to Demre. Lunch with the St. Nicholas Basilica.
  4. Day 4 — Demre to Finike (citrus groves, lemon farms).
  5. Day 5 — Rest day in Adrasan.
  6. Day 6 — Adrasan to Olympos (8 km cliff walk).
  7. Day 7 — Olympos sanctuary, swim at the beach. Audio guide here.
  8. Day 8 — Olympos to Çıralı; sunset Chimaera flames climb.
  9. Day 9 — Çıralı to Beycik (start of Tahtalı approach).
  10. Day 10 — Beycik to Tahtalı summit (1,400 m climb, or cable car), descent to Tekirova.

Use the Trip Planner to add or remove rest days and match the pace to your fitness.

14-day itinerary: Half the trail

Two clean choices, depending on what you want.

Western half (Fethiye → Demre, 14 days)

Archaeology-heavy. Includes Patara, Xanthos, Letoon, Tlos, Pinara, Patara beach, and the Sıçak peninsula. Easier walking overall, more cultural sites per day. Best for first-time visitors and groups including non-hikers who want to skip stages.

Eastern half (Kaş → Antalya, 14 days)

Summit-heavy. Includes the Tahtalı climb (2,365 m — or the cable car if you'd rather), Adrasan beach, Olympos sanctuary in pine forest, the Chimaera flames, the final descent into Antalya. More dramatic terrain, less archaeology. Best for experienced hikers and groups happy to camp some nights.

14 days, full trail — possible?

Technically. You'd average 35–40 km per day with no rest days, which on Lycian Way terrain means 8–10 walking hours daily. Not fun, not safe, and you'd see everything as a blur. The full trail in 14 days isn't recommended for anyone who isn't a fell runner.

21-day itinerary: The classic three-week trip

This is what most experienced through-hikers do. The official 27 walking days, compressed by combining short stages and skipping one or two pure-transit days. Includes 2–3 rest/swim days. About 450 of the 540 km walked, the rest covered by dolmuş or boat.

A reasonable 21-day plan splits as:

The full Lycian Way (27–29 days)

The thru-hike. 27 walking days for the official route, plus 2–4 rest days for laundry, weather contingency and one full day on Mount Tahtalı. Spring (late March–May) and autumn (September– November) are the only realistic windows — see our best time to hike page for month-by-month conditions.

Through-hikers typically:

See the full stage list with elevations and water sources on the Lycian Way Stages page.

Spring vs autumn timing

Both work, both have trade-offs. The short version:

For a section hike: late April or early October is the sweet spot. For the full trail: start in early September (warm sea, cool by the time you reach the eastern mountains) or early April (wildflowers, then warming through). Detailed month comparison on our best time to hike page.

Building your custom itinerary

The Lycian Way Trip Planner generates a personalised itinerary from your dates, pace and preferred sections — with operator matches, pansiyon options and luggage transfer included if you want it. You get a PDF day-by-day plan, downloadable GPX, and direct contact for the operator if you want them to handle bookings.

For a guided version of any of these itineraries with a TUREB- licensed local operator, see our guided tours comparison. For accommodation along whichever sections you choose, see our accommodation guide.

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need for the Lycian Way?

The full trail end-to-end takes 27–29 walking days. Most hikers walk a section: 7 days for one coherent stretch, 10–14 days for half the trail, 21+ for the full route with rest days. Less than 3 days isn't long enough for a meaningful experience.

What is the best section of the Lycian Way?

For first-time hikers, the western section Fethiye → Patara (7 days) offers the most varied mix of archaeology, cliff walking and a beach finale. The eastern section Adrasan → Olympos → Tahtalı is the most dramatic for experienced hikers who want summits and pine forest.

Can you do the Lycian Way in a week?

Yes — one full coherent section in 7 days. Best choices: Fethiye → Patara (west, ~86 km), Kaş → Demre (central, ~75 km), or Adrasan → Antalya (east, ~95 km). You won't see the full trail but you'll have a complete experience of one part.

Can the Lycian Way be done in 14 days?

Half the trail. Two clean options: the western half Fethiye → Demre (more cultural, easier walking) or the eastern half Kaş → Antalya (more dramatic, includes Mount Tahtalı). The full trail in 14 days requires 35–40 km days and isn't recommended.

How long does it take to walk the full Lycian Way?

27 walking days for the official route, plus 2–4 rest days, so 29–33 days door to door. Most through-hikers take 5 weeks to walk comfortably with weather contingency. Spring (late March–May) and autumn (September–November) are the only realistic windows.

Do I need to book pensions ahead?

In April, May, September and October — yes, at least 5–10 days ahead, more on Saturdays in peak weeks. In March, November and early December, walk-up is usually possible but call the same morning. June–August is the wrong time to hike. See the accommodation guide for the detail.

Can I do the Lycian Way solo?

Yes — many do. Trail markings are clear, pensions are family-run and welcoming, and the Lycian Way app's safety check-in lets you share your route with emergency contacts. For specific advice on solo travel as a woman, see our solo female guide.