Olympos to Çıralı
Stage 18 of the Lycian Way — Olympos to Çıralı, mixed terrain.
About this stage
A short and easy coastal stage from Olympos to the peaceful village of Çıralı, walking along the beach and through the ruins of ancient Olympos. Çıralı is home to the Chimaera — eternal flames that have burned naturally from the mountainside for thousands of years. A perfect rest day location with yoga retreats, organic pensions, and a loggerhead turtle nesting beach.
Stage highlights
- Chimaera eternal flames
- Loggerhead turtle nesting beach
- Olympos ruins walk-through
- Çıralı village organic pensions
What to expect on the trail
The terrain mixes coastal cliffs, forest paths and open ridges, often with archaeological sites along the way. Varied underfoot and visually rewarding.
Shade is patchy. Pine forest sections offer relief, but exposed coastal stretches and ridge walks require a sun hat, sunscreen and frequent water breaks in summer.
This is an easy stage suitable for hikers of any fitness level. A good choice for a warm-up day, a recovery day after a tougher section, or as a half-day walk if you start late.
Getting there
Public transport access between Olympos and Çıralı is limited. Most hikers reach this stage by walking from a neighbouring section, or by private taxi from Antalya or Fethiye (a 1-2 hour drive depending on the trailhead).
Where this stage fits in the trail
This is stage 18 of 27, part of the Demre & Olympos section — the eastern coast around Demre, Finike, Adrasan and the ancient site of Olympos. It connects stage 17 (Adrasan to Olympos) to stage 19 (Çıralı to Beycik (Inland Alternative)), and works well as part of a multi-day section walk.
Best time to walk this stage
The Lycian Way is best walked in spring (mid-March to mid-May) or autumn (mid-September to mid-November). October and April offer the most reliable weather: mild temperatures, clear skies, wildflowers in spring or olive harvest in autumn, and far fewer hikers than the shoulders of those windows. Summer (June-August) is generally too hot for comfortable walking — coastal stages routinely exceed 35°C and water sources dry up. Winter (December-February) brings rain to the coast and snow to mountain passes; the trail is walkable but conditions are unpredictable, especially on the higher inland stages.