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7 Hours
Daily Tour
6 people
English, Espanol
Cappadocia Red Tour is a popular sightseeing tour that covers popular sights and attractions of the northern part of Cappadocia, such as valleys, fairy chimneys, viewing points, villages, castles, and Avanos pottery workshops and Göreme Open Air Museum. Tours are conducted by a professional tour guide and driver.
Spanish Guide 260 USD
Portuguese Guide 260 USD
French Guide 260 USD
Japanese Guide 260 USD
Italian Guide 280 USD
Pick-up available from all hotels in Cappadocia. We also can meet travelers at a meeting point. You must contact the local service provider to verify your exact pickup time.
Admire the views of Devrent Valley
Pasabag or Pasha's Vineyard is situated on the Zelve road between the popular town of Goreme and traditional pottery-making town Avanos. Here you can find spectacular cone topped rock pillars known as Fairy Chimneys standing tall throughout the vineyard, Pasha was a in important officer in Ottoman times when the region was captured. However Pasabag is more commonly known as Monks Valley, it earned its name from the many monk refuges carved into the soft rock cones.
Visit the pottery village of Avanos
Enjoy the extra attention of your guide as you explore the Göreme Open Air Museum.
The 'Red Route' is the classic Cappadocia route that includes spectacular views of the fairy chimney valleys.
See the Uçhisar Castle that rises up over the Cappadocia plain and is visible for miles in any direction
Kaymakli underground city is built under the hill known as the Citadel of Kaymakli and was opened to visitors in 1964. The people of Kaymakli (Enegup in Greek) village have constructed their houses around nearly one hundred tunnels of the underground city. The inhabitants of the region still use the most convenient places in the tunnels as cellars, storage areas and stables, which they access through their courtyards. The Kaymakli Underground City has low, narrow and sloping passages. While the underground city consists of 8 floors below ground, only 4 of them are open to the public today, in which the spaces are organized around ventilation shafts.