The Western Lycian Way

The western half of the Lycian Way — Fethiye to Kaş, around 250 km in 12–14 days — is the most popular section for a first multi-day trek in Turkey. It packs the most photographed views (Babadağ, Kayaköy, Kalkan), a pension within reach every night, and access via Dalaman airport with summer direct flights from the UK.

Why pick the western half

The Lycian Way splits into two unequal halves: western (Fethiye → Kaş, ~250 km) and eastern (Kaş → Geyikbayırı/Antalya, ~300 km). Most first-time long-distance walkers do the western half — and here's why:

Western route stages

Day Stage km Difficulty Overnight
1Ovacık → Kayaköy9easyKayaköy (pensions)
2Kayaköy → Faralya14moderateFaralya
3Faralya → Kabak10moderateKabak (bungalows)
4Kabak → Alınca16strenuousAlınca
5Alınca → Gey17moderateGey / Bel
6Gey → Letoon → Patara20moderatePatara
7Patara → Kalkan15moderateKalkan
8Kalkan → Bezirgan14moderateGökçeören
9Gökçeören → Boğazcık13moderateBoğazcık / Sarıbelen
10Boğazcık → Kaş16moderateKaş

Detailed descriptions of each stage with GPS tracks and photos are on the Stages page. If you have fewer than 10 days, you can transfer past most stages by dolmuş or taxi and walk only the highlights.

Ready-made itineraries

7 days — highlights only

If you only have a week, walk the most photogenic stages:

  1. Arrive Dalaman, transfer to Ovacık, walk to Kayaköy (9 km)
  2. Kayaköy → Faralya (14 km, views over Butterfly Valley)
  3. Faralya → Kabak (10 km, descent to the bay)
  4. Rest day in Kabak (beach, recovery)
  5. Transfer to Patara, walk the ancient city
  6. Patara → Kalkan (15 km, through cedar forest)
  7. Transfer Kalkan → Kaş, fly home

14 days — full western traverse

The classic version — every stage from Fethiye to Kaş:

  1. Arrive Dalaman → Fethiye → Ovacık
  2. Day 1: Ovacık → Kayaköy
  3. Days 2–10: all 10 stages from the table above
  4. Day 11: rest day in Kalkan or Patara beach
  5. Day 12: Kaş — diving, sea-kayaking or pure rest
  6. Day 13: transfer Kaş → Antalya
  7. Day 14: fly home

What's on the western route

Butterfly Valley (Kelebekler Vadisi)

A bay at the foot of a 350-metre cliff with a beach and waterfall. The trail passes high above it — descent on the rope ladder is risky and not recommended. Better to look down from the top and, if you want to swim, take a boat from Ölüdeniz.

Kayaköy (abandoned Greek village)

About 500 stone houses on a hillside, abandoned by Greeks during the 1923 population exchange. UNESCO listed. Atmospheric at any time, especially at sunset — a good first stop after Ovacık.

Patara

One of the longest beaches in the Mediterranean (18 km) and the ancient city of Patara (former capital of Lycia, birthplace of Saint Nicholas). The beach is a protected nesting site for Caretta turtles.

Kalkan and Kaş

Kalkan — small white-walled resort town tumbling down to its bay. Kaş — the main hub of the western route: diving, sea-kayaking, ferries to Greek Kastellorizo, cheap eating. More on the Kaş page.

When to walk the western route

Best window: October–November and March–May.

The western half is the hottest part in summer. Already by late May, temperatures on the open slopes climb past 30 °C and water on the trail is scarce. June–September is not recommended — push the trip to autumn.

Difficulty and preparation

The western route is the "beginner-friendly" half: moderate elevation gain, plenty of pensions, few waterless sections. But "easy" in Lycian Way terms is not a stroll. Realistically you need:

Packing list: what to bring. Where to sleep on the trail: see the Lycian Way home for accommodation guides.

Getting there

The closest airport is Dalaman (DLM), 50 km from Fethiye. UK direct flights run April to October from London, Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh (around 4 hours). Off-season, expect to connect via Istanbul. From Dalaman to Fethiye:

Full breakdown: Getting to the Lycian Way.

Watch out: in peak season (July–August) Dalaman airport is jammed with evening charters. Allow 2 hours for baggage and transfer, especially on a late-night arrival.

Frequently asked questions

Can I walk the western route without a tent?

Yes. There are pensions or guesthouses at every stage end (£12–£20 per night with breakfast). A tent is normally only needed on the Kabak → Alınca section and for flexibility in peak season.

Do I need an English-speaking guide?

Not really. The trail is waymarked with red-and-white stripes (the same GR system as France and Spain). Most pensions have Wi-Fi and someone who speaks English. If you want a guide for navigation reassurance or to learn the Lycian history on the spot, see Guided Tours.

What does it cost self-guided?

A self-guided 14-day trip with pension overnights costs roughly £400–£550 per person, excluding flights. That covers nights (£12–£20 × 13), food (£8–£12 a day), local transfers and ancient-site entry.

How does the western differ from the eastern half?

The eastern half (Kaş → Antalya) is mountainous and wild. More altitude (Tahtalı 2,365 m, Musa 2,200 m), fewer pensions, longer waterless stretches. The eastern route is more dramatic but tougher; most walkers come back for it after doing the western half first.