Marmara
Basilica Cistern
How to visit Istanbul's Basilica Cistern: the day vs night ticket, finding the Medusa-head columns, the queue, and whether the short visit is worth it.
Where
Istanbul, Turkey
Opening hours
Daily 09:00–18:30 for the daytime ticket, then closed 18:30–19:30 while staff switch over, then a separate Night Shift 19:30–22:00. Always confirm your date on yerebatan.com.
Tickets
Daytime entry 1,950 TL (about £32); the Night Shift after 19:30 is 3,000 TL (about £49) and is sold only at the door on the day. Card or Istanbulkart only — no cash. Under-7s free.
Time needed
30–45 minutes inside on the raised walkways; add up to 1–1.5 hours of queue at the door in high season if you haven't booked ahead.
In short
Visiting Basilica Cistern
An underground Roman cistern a two-minute walk from Hagia Sophia, with 336 floodlit columns rising from shallow water and two reused Medusa heads at the back. It's a short visit — 30 to 45 minutes is plenty — so treat it as a half-hour stop between bigger sights, not a half-day. Pay by card or Istanbulkart (no cash), go just after the 09:00 opening or in the last 90 minutes to dodge the midday coach crowds, and only pay the higher Night Shift price if the slow, near-empty atmosphere is the point for you.
How to visit without overpaying or overqueuing
The Basilica Cistern is a 6th-century underground reservoir two minutes’ walk from Hagia Sophia, where 336 marble columns rise nine metres out of a few inches of floodlit water. You walk a loop of raised walkways above carp swimming between the pillars, ending at the back where two Medusa heads — recycled Roman stone — sit as column bases, one tipped on its side and one fully upside down. Nobody is sure why they were placed that way, which is half the appeal.
Two things to get right before you go. First, pay by card or Istanbulkart — cash isn’t accepted at all, which catches people out. Second, decide between the two tickets: the daytime entry is 1,950 TL (about £32) and shows you everything, while the Night Shift after 19:30 is 3,000 TL (about £49), sold only at the door, for the same space with fewer people and moodier lighting. The Museum Pass Istanbul is not valid here, so you’re buying separately either way.
Beating the queue, and is it worth it?
This is one of the city’s busiest sights, and the on-the-day line can run an hour to ninety minutes in summer. A timed online ticket with a QR code skips it; if you’d rather just turn up, go right at the 09:00 opening or in the last 90 minutes before 18:30, and avoid roughly 11:00 to 15:00 when the coach tours and cruise groups arrive. The Medusa heads are in the far north-west corner — follow the walkway to the end and look for the crowd.
It’s worth the short detour, but keep your expectations sized to a 30-to-45-minute visit rather than a major attraction. The atmosphere is genuinely strange and photogenic, but you’ll have seen the best of it quickly. Pair it with Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque next door rather than building a day around it, and only pay the night premium if a quiet, empty cistern is specifically what you’re after.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Istanbul city guide.
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