Antalya Electric Bike Tour

Antalya by e-bike turns sightseeing into motion. You get a smart, efficient overview of Old Town Kaleiçi, the minarets and gates, then the cliff views down to Lower Düden Waterfalls. I like that the tour feels built for real time in the city, not just photos from a bus. The other big win is the human factor: in particular, guides like Ozcan bring the stories to life and keep things friendly and organized.

What I love most is the ride style. The electric bikes make the route doable for people who might not want a full-on workout, and you still get the pleasure of moving through neighborhoods at your own pace. The second standout for me is how the day mixes big sights with small details, like the fluted minaret, the clock tower by the ancient walls, and the pebble-mosaic courtyard in the Kaleiçi house museum.

One possible drawback to keep in mind: the tour packs in a lot of stops, so many sights are quick photo and look-around moments rather than long, slow museum time. If you want hours in one place, you’ll need a separate visit after.

In This Review

Key highlights at a glance

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Key highlights at a glance

  • Easy e-bike pace across north-to-south coastal Antalya without feeling wrecked
  • Kaleiçi focus on minarets, walls, arches, and restored marina streets
  • Lower Düden Waterfalls with sea-level drama from the city cliffs
  • Yacht marina snack break with tea included in the tour
  • Small group cap of 10 for a more personal guide and smoother logistics

Why Antalya is perfect for an electric bike

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Why Antalya is perfect for an electric bike
Antalya is a city that rewards walking, but walking for hours only works if you don’t mind heat and backtracking. This tour solves that with an electric bike that lets you cover more ground while still stopping often enough to actually see things.

The route also makes practical sense. You start in Kaleiçi, where the streets and historic landmarks cluster close together, and then you move outward toward the beach parks and the cliffside waterfall views. By the time you reach the water, you’re already oriented. You know where the old walls sit, where the main boulevard runs, and how the coastline curves around the city.

Another reason it works so well is how the stops are spaced. Instead of one long stretch with no breaks, you get a steady rhythm of short segments plus look-and-learn stops. That matters in Antalya, because weather and sunlight can change fast.

You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Antalya

Price and what $59 really buys you

At $59 per person, this tour is priced like a value play for a full half-day of guided city coverage. The big reason is what’s included, not just what’s listed.

Here’s what you should count as real value:

  • Hotel pickup and drop-off (central Antalya hotels only)
  • Helmet and vest, plus a safety briefing
  • Local guide and an audio guide
  • Turkish pancake, tea, and bottled water
  • Several paid? No—many of the key viewpoints are admission-free stops in the route

The also-important detail: the tour is capped at 10 people, which usually means less waiting around and more attention from the guide. If you’ve ever been stuck in a big group where you can’t hear anything, you’ll appreciate this setup.

One more cost note: if your hotel is in Belek or Kemer, pickup costs extra (about 10 euro). If you’re staying closer to central Antalya, you’ll likely get the standard pickup without that add-on.

Getting set up: start time, meeting point, and where to be

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Getting set up: start time, meeting point, and where to be
The tour starts at 10:00 am. Pickup is arranged for central Antalya hotels, and you’ll be dropped back at the end. If you’re skipping pickup, the instruction is to show up about 30 minutes early so you have time to fit gear and get oriented.

The meeting point is at the E-Bike Antalya Office, Yeşilbahçe, 1446. Sk. 7 A, 07160 Muratpaşa/Antalya. You’ll also use a mobile ticket, so have that ready on your phone.

On the bike side, the included helmet and vest are part of why this tour feels calm. You’re not guessing about safety. Also, because you get a guide plus audio information, you’re covered whether you’re more into history or just want the story behind what you’re looking at.

Kaleiçi Old Town landmarks: minarets, walls, and Hadrian’s Gate

Kaleiçi is the heart of the tour, and the stop order helps you connect the dots between monuments.

Yivliminare Cami and its famous fluted minaret

You’ll stop at Yivliminare Cami, a mosque built in the 13th century by Seljuk sultan Alaeddin Keykubat. The key visual is the elegant fluted minaret, which has become a symbol of Antalya.

What to do here: take a few minutes to study the minaret shape before you move on. It’s one of those details that looks even better when you’re close enough to see the fluting clearly.

Kesik Minare Mosque: Byzantine roots under Ottoman use

Next is Kesik Minare Mosque. The building’s story is the real draw: it once served as a Byzantine church and later became a mosque. Even if you don’t read the stone, the site tells you how many layers cities like Antalya carry.

Antalya Clock Tower by the old city walls

Then you reach Antalya Saat Kulesi, a 19th-century tower by the ancient walls, built from rough and hewn stone. It’s the kind of stop that’s short but satisfying because the setting is so photogenic.

Kaleiçi itself: old streets, houses, and waterfront activity

After the landmark stops, you get time for Kaleiçi itself. This is where you’ll see wall-stoned and wooden houses, bazaars, and Turkish bathhouses. The area is also active now thanks to renovated marina and waterfront developments, plus hotels and restaurants.

That’s useful for you because it grounds the history in reality. You’re not just looking at ruins—you’re seeing a living neighborhood that still functions.

Hadrian’s Gate: three arches that still impress

Finally in this Old Town cluster, you reach Hadrian’s Gate, built around 130 to celebrate Emperor Hadrian’s visit. The three double arches are dramatic even from a quick stop.

Practical note: with so many photo stops, it helps to keep your phone handy and ready. You’ll get just a few minutes at each place, and that’s normal for this style of tour.

Beach parks and Taurus views: Konyaalti and Karaalioglu

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Beach parks and Taurus views: Konyaalti and Karaalioglu
Once Kaleiçi winds down, the route shifts toward the coast—where Antalya starts to feel like a seaside resort.

Konyaalti Plajları: cliffs framing a beach backdrop

You’ll stop at Konyaalti Plajları, with the Taurus mountains in the background and cliffs at either end. Even a short pause here gives you a big-picture sense of where Antalya sits geographically: sea, stone, and mountain lines all in one view.

If you’re thinking about what to wear, this is a good moment to check your sunscreen and water. This part of the route is open and scenic, even if individual stops stay brief.

Karaalioglu Park: a flower-filled break

Next is Karaalioglu Park, an urban green space known for colorful exotic flowers. This is the kind of stop that works whether you like plants or you just want a calm stretch before the next sightseeing push.

Lower Düden Waterfalls: sea-level power from the city cliffs

Then comes the standout natural moment: Lower Düden Waterfalls. The Duden River spills off the Antalya city cliffs into the Mediterranean. The tour notes that you can feel droplets from the falls.

Expect this to be short but memorable. Ten minutes is enough for photos, a quick close-up look, and that moment where you realize the waterfall isn’t staged—it’s right there in the open air.

Marina pause and tea: Atatürk House, a Kaleiçi museum, and cliffside breaks

After the waterfall, the route keeps moving through sights that connect Antalya’s Ottoman and modern stories.

Atatürk House & Museum: a presidential stop in Antalya

You’ll have a stop at Ataturk House & Museum. Ataturk stayed here when he visited Antalya, which is a neat reminder that the city isn’t only about ancient monuments. It also has its modern-era chapters.

This is also a good stop for context. Once you see how the city evolved past the old walls, the later museums and monuments start to make more sense.

Kaleiçi Marina: fishing boats and yachts in a crescent bay

You’ll reach Kaleiçi Marina, described as a crescent-shaped harbor where fishing boats rub shoulders with smart yachts. This stop pairs well with the included break: you’ll have a snack and tea here, and it’s one of the more pleasant parts of the tour because you’re sitting with sea views.

If you’re hungry, timing matters. Eat during the break so you’re not running on willpower for the next stretch.

Suna Inan Kirac Kaleiçi Museum: the courtyard is the star

You also stop at Suna Inan Kirac Kaleiçi Museum, housed in a traditional Kaleiçi house. The courtyard has the typical pebble mosaic floor, and the back area is a former church now used for exhibitions. There are also small shops with a good book selection, plus an upper floor that shows what life in a 19th-century Kaleiçi house could feel like.

This stop works well because it’s not just information. It’s atmosphere. Even if you only get a quick look, the courtyard design gives you a real sense of how houses functioned here.

Hıdırlık Kulesi and the beach park rhythm

You’ll also stop at Hıdırlık Kulesi, described as a Roman Empire-period tower. Then there’s a brief stop near the Beach Park, with restaurants and coffee shops nearby. These little timing breaks help you reset your body, not just your mind.

Culture Park and Ottoman-era mosques: Mermerli Beach to Tekeli Mehmet Pasa

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Culture Park and Ottoman-era mosques: Mermerli Beach to Tekeli Mehmet Pasa
As the day continues, the route leans into landmarks around the waterfront and the Ottoman-era layers of Antalya.

Atatürk Parkları and cliff-top dining views

You’ll stop at Atatürk Parkları, noted for nice cliff-top restaurants. Even when you don’t eat, the setting is worth it because it gives you a wide-angle sense of the coast. It’s the kind of place where you can look out and understand the route you just rode.

Cam Piramit: the glass pyramid in Culture Park

Next up is Cam Piramit, the glass pyramid in Culture Park. It’s a modern design contrast against the older landmarks, and it makes for a fun change of pace from stone towers and historic walls.

Mermerli Beach: crystal water on Antalya’s first beach

A short stop at Mermerli Beach is included. It’s described as Antalya’s first beach with crystal-clear water. In practice, this is a quick reset: look at the water, take a photo, and then get back on the bike.

Tekeli Mehmet Pasa Mosque: an 18th-century Ottoman centerpiece

You’ll stop at Tekeli Mehmet Pasa Mosque, an 18th-century structure in the Kalekapisi district. It’s described as one of the most important Ottoman mosques in Antalya.

Even if your interest is casual, Ottoman architecture usually gives a strong visual payoff. It also fits the tour’s theme: layers of civilizations, not one single era.

Republic monuments and Antaliiskaya Fortress: finishing strong

Antalya Electric Bike Tour - Republic monuments and Antaliiskaya Fortress: finishing strong
Near the end, the route continues with open-air landmarks and a finale that feels like a proper send-off.

Atatürk Monument in Republic Square

You’ll stop at Atatürk Monument in Republic Square. This is another modern-era anchor point that helps you understand how Antalya presents itself today, right in the middle of daily city life.

Antaliiskaya Fortress: the city looking back at you

Finally, you’ll reach Antaliiskaya Fortress. Even with a short stop, fortress viewpoints tend to give you the kind of perspective that ties the day together: old walls, coastline angles, and the way the city spreads across the terrain.

After that, the tour ends back at the meeting point.

Extra sights you might see along the route: aquariums, dolphin shows, and museum halls

The broader route info includes additional attractions that can fit into a half-day city overview. Depending on how your exact departure is timed, you may see references to:

  • Dolphin shows and Aqualand
  • The longest tunnel aquarium in Europe
  • A museum with 13 display halls, from the Paleolithic Age to Ottoman times, plus a children’s section
  • A street market
  • General sights and landmarks along the route

You should treat these as part of the wider Antalya attraction zone. If you’re someone who wants a full theme-park day, you’ll likely still want a separate outing. But as quick looks during the bike loop, they add variety without hijacking your day.

The guide factor: small group comfort and that calm, friendly flow

This tour feels good partly because of how it’s run. The group size is max 10, and you’re on bikes that are described as easy to ride.

In the reviews data you provided, the guide experience is a major theme. People highlight Ozcan (and an owner-guide named Oscan/Ozcan) for being friendly, organized, and genuinely invested in showing the city. One nice detail from the review notes: he even took people to his favorite coffee shop and chatted—those are the kinds of moments that turn a route into a story.

You should also expect logistics to be handled. A safety briefing happens, you wear helmet and vest, and you get both a local guide and an audio guide, which helps if you want to focus more on riding than on reading every sign.

Also, the stops include small breaks with tea and snacks. That keeps energy steady, especially if it’s a hot day.

Who should book this e-bike tour, and who might not love it

This is a strong fit if you:

  • Want an easy way to cover a lot of Antalya in about 4 hours
  • Like guided stories but don’t want to sit on a bus
  • Appreciate a mix of Old Town sights and sea views
  • Prefer small-group pacing with time for quick photo stops

It may not be your best match if you:

  • Need long museum time in one place
  • Feel nervous riding in urban areas, even with an e-bike
  • Are traveling with very small children beyond the stated limit (babies under 3 aren’t allowed)

Should you book the Antalya Electric Bike Tour?

I think this is a very sensible booking when you want your first or second day in Antalya to feel efficient but not rushed. The value comes from the combination: easy e-bikes, a small group, real landmarks across Old Town and the coast, and included food with tea and Turkish pancake.

If your priorities are deep, slow museum visits or you hate the idea of lots of quick stops, plan on doing those separately. But if you want a broad, friendly introduction to Antalya that also leaves you energized to explore after, this is an easy yes.

FAQ

FAQ

What’s the duration of the Antalya Electric Bike Tour?

The tour lasts about 4 hours.

How much does the tour cost?

It’s $59.00 per person.

Is hotel pickup included?

Yes, hotel pickup and drop-off are included for central Antalya hotels. Pickup in Belek and Kemer costs extra (about 10 euro).

How many people are in the group?

The tour is limited to a maximum of 10 travelers.

What languages are offered?

The tour is offered in English.

What’s included for food and drinks?

You get Turkish pancake, tea, and bottled water. Other food and drinks aren’t included unless specified.

What if weather is poor?

The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

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