Delphin Be Grand Resort
One of the best all-inclusives on the strip — excellent food, large pool complex, private beach.
Check availabilityAlanya for luxury is mostly a polite no. The city has a long strip of large all-inclusive 5-stars (Granada Luxury, Delphin Be Grand, Justiniano Deluxe) that look the part but lean Russian-and-German package-tour in operation, with mass-market kid clubs and buffet dinners — closer to Bulgaria's coast than to Belek. There is no boutique luxury, no Mandarin-tier address. If you want true Turkish Med luxury with real spa and Michelin-track restaurants, base in Belek (90 minutes west) and treat Alanya as a day-trip for the castle. The exception: Cleopatra Beach front-row Justiniano-grade resorts deliver fine value at the all-inclusive 5-star tier — just don't confuse it with international luxury.
Alanya's luxury tier sits east in Mahmutlar and west in Konaklı — large all-inclusive resorts with private coves, 10-minute shuttle to Cleopatra Beach and the Seljuk citadel. Alanya's luxury tier sits on the Turquoise Coast — Mediterranean water that holds 27°C through August, pine-fringed coves, and 5-star resorts that have spent 20 years refining the all-inclusive formula for European travelers. Expect $300–$700 per night with most or all meals, multiple pools, kids' clubs at the larger properties, and a private beach or cove. The boutique tier (under 30 rooms, designer-led) is smaller but growing — typically $250–$500 with breakfast only. Book peak July–August 8 weeks ahead; May, June, September, October are the better months to visit.
One of the best all-inclusives on the strip — excellent food, large pool complex, private beach.
Check availabilityLarge family-friendly 5-star with waterpark, kids' programs, beachfront setting.
Check availabilityWhich beach, which old-town stay, the Damlataş + castle morning, and the day-trips most visitors miss.
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Luxury travelers in Alanya usually want either a historic landmark or a modern resort on the water.
The postcard side — castle on the cliff, sandy Cleopatra Beach, busy promenade.
Alanya Center & Cleopatra Beach is the tourist engine of the city, built around the 13th-century Seljuk castle that looms over the peninsula. The main drag, Damlataş Caddesi, runs from the Atatürk statue to the cable car station, lined with kebab shops, carpet stores, and döner joints. Cleopatra Beach itself is a rare stretch of actual sand (most of the coast is pebbles) and gets packed by 10am in July. The marina area has pricier seafood places and sunset cocktail bars. This is the right base if you want to step out of your hotel and be in the middle of the action — but expect noise, touts, and crowds. Hotels here are mostly mid-range chain-style blocks (think Club Hotel Falcon or similar) rather than boutique character.
Pick this for your first Alanya trip if you want the full tourist experience with beach, castle, and nightlife at your doorstep.
Cliffside hotel with elevator down to a private beach — great value 5-star near the center.
Check availabilityLarge resort near Cleopatra Beach with good all-inclusive food and multiple pools.
Check availabilityThe quieter residential strip just east of the center — mid-range resorts, less chaos.
Oba and Tosmur form a 4km strip of residential apartment blocks and mid-range family hotels between the center and the Oba River. The beach here is mostly pebbles and concrete sunbathing platforms rather than sand, but the water is clean and the crowds are thinner. Most hotels are all-inclusive resorts with large pools and kids' clubs — think the Oba Star or similar. The main street, Atatürk Bulvarı, has a few bakeries, a Migros supermarket, and dolmuş stops. There is no real nightlife; people take a 10-minute dolmuş into the center for that. This area suits families who want a quieter base with pool time and occasional beach walks, and don't mind the residential feel.
Pick this if you want a calmer, family-oriented stay with pool-focused resorts and easy dolmuş access to the center.
Beachfront family resort with waterslides, kids' club, and reasonable all-inclusive pricing.
Check availabilityReliable mid-range family hotel with a pool, 5 min from the beach.
Check availabilityThe expat value zone — long pebble beach, Russian/German shopfronts, cheap long-term stays.
Mahmutlar is a 7km-long suburb that has become a de facto expat enclave, with Russian and German signage on most shops and cafes. The beach is a long pebble strip with wooden sunbeds and a few beach clubs. The main street, Barbaros Caddesi, has cheap restaurants, bazaars, and a Saturday market that sells everything from counterfeit sneakers to fresh olives. Rents and hotel prices are the lowest in Alanya — you can find a decent studio for $40/night in shoulder season. There are several gyms, a large Migros, and a municipal park. The downside: you could be anywhere in Eastern Europe. Turkish culture is thin on the ground. The dolmuş to Cleopatra Beach takes 15-20 minutes and runs frequently.
Pick this if you're on a tight budget, staying long-term, or prefer an expat-heavy environment with cheap amenities and a long beach.
Modern apart-hotel with kitchenettes near Mahmutlar beach — popular with digital nomads.
Check availabilityGood-value central Mahmutlar hotel with a rooftop pool and short walk to the beach.
Check availabilityBudget guesthouses in Mahmutlar or Oba start around $30-50/night. Mid-range hotels in Tosmur or near Cleopatra Beach run $60-100. A 5-star resort on the beachfront averages $120-200 in summer, dropping to $70-100 off-season. Check our /planner/ for real-time rates per neighborhood.
For a mid-range week (hotel, meals, local transport), budget $500-700 per person. Luxury with a 5-star resort and dining out runs $1,200-1,800. Budget travelers in Mahmutlar apartments can manage $300-400. Use our /planner/ to estimate based on your style.
Which beach, which old-town stay, the Damlataş + castle morning, and the day-trips most visitors miss.
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