Full Coverage Istanbul Walking Tour


Get the inside scoop on Istanbul with this comprehensive full day tour through Turkey's most famous city. Visit all of the major sites including the Hagia Sophia Moseque, the Topkapi Palace museum, and the gorgeous Blue Mosque. Allow your experienced local guide to show you hidden gems, including people watching at the Corlulu Ali Pasa Madrasah and the historic European Pasaji.
- See all the major sights of Istanbul in one comprehensive tour
- Walkby the iconic Hagia Sophia and Blue Mosque
- Explore the city under the care of a professional guide
- Shop at the bustling Grand Bazaar complex
✅ Included
- ✓ Professional Guidance
- ✓ All Local Taxes
❌ Not Included
- ✗ Entry Admissions
- ✗ Pickup/dropoff
- ✗ Tips
Hagia Sophia Grand Mosque
In 537 AD, Emperor Justinian walked into the newly finished Hagia Sophia and reportedly said, "Solomon, I have surpassed you" — a reference to the Temple in Jerusalem. The dome had never been built that large before; it was an engineering gamble that partially collapsed twice. What stands today is the third attempt. Byzantine mosaics, Islamic calligraphy, and Ottoman additions were each layered on top of the last. This building didn't just witness history — it was history's address.
30 minutes · Admission Ticket Not Included
Fountain of Ahmet III
In 1728, Sultan Ahmet III had this fountain built as a statement. The Tulip Era — his era — was Ottoman Istanbul at its most extravagant: European fashions, tulip gardens, poetry nights on the Bosphorus. The fountain offered free sherbet to anyone passing by. Three years later, a rebellion ended it all. The Sultan was dethroned. The tulips were torn up. But the fountain stayed — a marble footnote to one of history's most flamboyant and abruptly finished reigns.
Pass By
Hagia Irene Museum
Most people walk past Hagia Irene without stopping — which is remarkable, because this is where early Christianity nearly tore itself apart. Theological wars over the nature of Christ raged within these walls for decades. Hagia Irene — meaning Holy Peace — saw precious little of it. Unlike every other Byzantine church in the city, the Ottomans never converted it to a mosque; they used it as an armory instead. The cannonballs are long gone. The silence they left behind is something else entirely.
Pass By
Topkapi Palace
For 400 years, every decision shaping three continents was made inside these walls. Topkapı wasn't a palace — it was a city within a city, home to 4,000 people at its peak: sultans, concubines, eunuchs, janissaries, and an entire empire's bureaucracy. The Harem alone had 300 rooms. Suleiman the Magnificent walked these courtyards. So did Roxelana — the slave who became his legal wife and arguably the most powerful woman in Ottoman history. Power always leaves a residue. You can feel it here.
15 minutes · Admission Ticket Not Included
Istanbul Archaeological Museum
In 1887, Ottoman archaeologist Osman Hamdi Bey excavated Sidon in modern Lebanon and returned with something extraordinary — a sarcophagus carved with such precision that historians initially assumed it belonged to Alexander the Great. It doesn't, but the true story of its owner is just as remarkable. The same museum also holds a 3,300-year-old clay tablet recording the world's oldest surviving peace treaty, between Egypt and the Hittites. Most of recorded civilization passed through this city. The proof is in here.
Pass By
Hippodrome
In 532 AD, a chariot-racing rivalry between two fan factions escalated into the Nika Riots — five days of violence that burned half of Constantinople and killed 30,000 people. Emperor Justinian nearly fled. His wife Theodora stopped him, saying she would rather die in imperial purple than live in exile. He stayed. The rioters were lured into this very stadium and massacred. The three ancient monuments still standing here — the Egyptian Obelisk, Serpent Column, and Column of Constantine — watched all of it.
20 minutes · Free Admission
Blue Mosque
Sultan Ahmet I. was 19 when he commissioned this mosque in 1609. He had never won a war — unusual for an Ottoman sultan — and building directly opposite Hagia Sophia was partly compensation, partly ambition. He demanded six minarets, which scandalized the Islamic world: only Mecca's mosque had six. He quietly funded a seventh minaret for Mecca to end the controversy. Ahmet died at 27, just a year after the mosque's completion. He is buried in a mausoleum just outside the wall he never lived to see finished.
15 minutes · Free Admission
Corlulu Ali Pasa Madrasah
Corlulu Ali Pasha served as Grand Vizier under three sultans, survived palace intrigues that finished most men, and built this courtyard complex in the early 1700s. He was eventually executed anyway — that was the standard fate of Grand Viziers who fell from favor. His complex became a madrassa, then a caravanserai, and today it's one of the few corners of the old city where you can sit under plane trees, drink tea, and watch time pass without anyone trying to sell you something.
Pass By
Grand Bazaar
The Grand Bazaar didn't begin as a market. Mehmed II built a small stone bedesten — a lockable vault for storing valuables — shortly after conquering Constantinople in 1453. Merchants clustered around it. Then more merchants, then hans, coffee houses, mosques, and fountains. Over 500 years it expanded organically into 61 streets and 4,000 shops. It has burned and been rebuilt multiple times, because trade could not stop. Some families have held the same shop for generations. The commerce never paused long enough for them to leave.
15 minutes · Admission Ticket Not Included
Spice Market (Egyptian Bazaar)
The name means Egyptian Market — not because it sold Egyptian goods, but because it was built using tax revenues collected from Egypt, then an Ottoman province. Completed in 1664, the income from these shops funded the upkeep of the Yeni Mosque next door. That arrangement — commerce sustaining religion — was very Ottoman. The spice trade filling these vaulted corridors once moved the entire global economy. Today the same stalls sell saffron, sumac, and Turkish delight. The scale changed. The smell hasn't.
15 minutes · Free Admission
Galata Bridge
There have been five bridges on this spot. The first was a pontoon of lashed boats. Leonardo da Vinci submitted a design for a replacement in 1502 — it was rejected. Michelangelo was also approached and declined. The current bridge opened in 1994. Beneath its deck, restaurants hang over the water. Above, fishermen line the railings at all hours. The Golden Horn it spans was the very harbor the Byzantines blocked with a great chain in 1453 — and which the Ottomans bypassed by dragging their warships overland.
Pass by
Pera Museum
In 1906, Ottoman painter Osman Hamdi Bey completed The Tortoise Trainer — a man coaxing tortoises with a flute. It sounds whimsical. It was not. Hamdi Bey was arguing that the Ottoman world was not static or backward — it was being guided somewhere. He was also the man who passed the law banning antiquities from leaving the country, which is why Istanbul's museums are as rich as they are. His painting anchors Pera Museum's collection. Both the art and the argument it was making still hold up.
Pass by
Avrupa Pasaji
Built in 1870, Avrupa Pasaji was designed for the European merchants and diplomats who filled Pera — then the cosmopolitan quarter where Greeks, Armenians, Jews, Levantines, and Western Europeans lived side by side under Ottoman rule. Its iron-and-glass structure was borrowed directly from Parisian arcades. The embassies are mostly gone now. Those communities were scattered across the 20th century by war, taxation, and population exchanges. The architecture stayed. Walk through slowly — the building remembers what the city prefers to forget.
5 minutes · Fee Admission
Cicek Pasaji (Cité de Péra)
Cicek Pasaji — the Flower Passage — got its name from White Russian refugees who sold flowers here after fleeing the 1917 revolution. Before that it was a grand 1876 arcade called the Cité de Péra. It fell into beautiful ruin, became a corridor of meyhanes and working-class taverns, was restored in the 1980s, and now exists somewhere between both versions of itself. Writers, fishmongers, opera singers, and exiles all passed through. Order a rakı at one of the tavern tables. Some traditions deserve to continue.
5 minutes · Free Admission
St. Antuan, Anthony of Padua Church and Istiklal Street
St. Antoine was built by the Franciscans on a street that was once the most cosmopolitan avenue in the Islamic world. İstiklal — then called the Grand Rue de Péra — was lined with European embassies, theaters, and patisseries. St. Antoine served the Italian community; nearby stood Greek Orthodox, Armenian, and Jewish congregations. That pluralism was deliberate — the Ottomans strategically settled different communities in designated neighborhoods. İstiklal still carries that layered identity today, even as the communities themselves have thinned.
15 minutes · Free Admission
Galata Tower
The Genoese built Galata Tower in 1348 as the centerpiece of their fortified trading colony — a self-governing enclave operating under its own laws, entirely separate from Byzantine Constantinople across the water. After the Ottoman conquest it served as prison, observatory, and — according to the Ottoman historian Evliya Çelebi — the launch point of Hezarfen Ahmet Çelebi, who allegedly strapped on wings in 1638 and glided from the tower clear across the Bosphorus. Whether true or not, Istanbul claimed the story as its own. That alone tells you something.
Pass By
German Fountain
Binbirdirek, At Meydani Cd, 34122 Fatih/Istanbul, Turkiye
In front of green domed fountain in Sultanahmet square
Galata Tower
Bereketzade, 34421 Beyoglu/Istanbul, Turkiye
What a great experience this tour was! Rose is highly knowledgeable, she made history sound very interesting and gave me a great appreciation of the history of this country. She was very accommodating with my time and purpose of the walking tour. She even taught me how to get the metro and go back home. Whether you have limited time in Istanbul or you wanna have an overview before deciding where you want to spend more time of your time, this is the perfect tour. I highly recommend.
This tour guide was THE BEST experience for those who appreciate a warm, kind, well-informed, magical experience of learning about Istanbul, its history and and it's layers of mythology, anthropology and adventure... Turkish hospitality and warmth; and for those of you who want to understand the richness of the sites... this is THE tour guide!!!