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Kalkan beach clubs, Turkey
Kalkan beach clubs

Turquoise Coast

Kalkan beach clubs

Kalkan's substitute for a beach: timber platforms cut into the rocks with ladders into deep, clear water, sunbeds and a restaurant. Sunbed hire runs about 650โ‚บ, usually waived if you eat and drink there.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Kalkan, Turkey

Opening hours

Open access during the season, broadly daytime through to evening from late spring to autumn; most close out of season. Individual clubs set their own hours, so confirm locally.

Tickets

Free โ€” no entry ticket as such. A sunbed and parasol runs about 650โ‚บ a day (roughly ยฃ14), and that fee is usually waived if you spend on food and drinks at the club's restaurant.

Time needed

A half-day or full day, settling in on a sunbed with swims and a long lunch.

In short

Visiting Kalkan beach clubs

Kalkan has no real sandy beach, so the town swims at its beach clubs: timber platforms cut into the rocks with ladders down into deep, clear water, backed by sunbeds and a restaurant. Sunbed hire runs about 650โ‚บ (roughly ยฃ14) a day, but is usually waived if you eat and drink there. They are free to enter on that basis; expect deep water rather than gentle shallows.

How Kalkan swims

Hereโ€™s the thing nobody tells you before booking: Kalkan has no real sandy beach. It is a steep, pretty harbour town tumbling down to rocky shores, and the way the town actually swims is at its beach clubs. These are timber platforms cut into and built out over the rocks, with ladders dropping straight into deep, clear water, backed by rows of sunbeds, parasols and a restaurant. You donโ€™t wade in from shallows; you climb down a ladder into lovely clean water thatโ€™s deep from the off โ€” wonderful for confident swimmers, less suited to small children or nervous paddlers.

The water clarity is the real draw. On a calm day the sea off the platforms is glassy and a deep turquoise, and the clubs are a relaxed place to spend hours between dips.

Costs and the eat-to-swim deal

Thereโ€™s usually no entry ticket as such. A sunbed and parasol runs around 650โ‚บ a day (roughly ยฃ14), but in practice most clubs waive that fee if you eat and drink there โ€” order lunch and a few drinks and the bed comes with it. So budget for a long lunch rather than an entrance charge, which often works out as the better deal anyway. The clubs vary in size, polish and atmosphere, so itโ€™s worth a quick look before you commit your day to one.

They run through the season โ€” broadly late spring to autumn โ€” with most closing out of season, and each sets its own hours. If you genuinely want sand, the famously long beach at Patara and the cove at KaputaลŸ are both a short drive away and make a good day out from Kalkan. But for an easy swim-and-laze day in town, the beach clubs are the answer.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kalkan city guide.

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Kalkan beach clubs FAQs

Does Kalkan have a sandy beach?
Not really. Kalkan is a steep harbour town with rocky shores rather than sand, so swimming happens at the beach clubs โ€” timber platforms built over the rocks with ladders into deep water. For a proper sandy beach you'd head to Patara or KaputaลŸ, both a short drive away.
How much do the Kalkan beach clubs cost?
There's no entry fee as such. A sunbed and parasol typically costs around 650โ‚บ a day (roughly ยฃ14), but most clubs waive that charge if you eat and drink at their restaurant. In practice you settle in, order lunch and drinks, and the bed comes with it.
Is the swimming good at Kalkan beach clubs?
The water is clear, clean and deep, with ladders straight off the platforms โ€” lovely for confident swimmers, less so for small children or those wanting to wade in from shallows. Bring water shoes if you prefer, and pick a club with the facilities and vibe you want, as they vary.