Turquoise Coast
Kaputas Beach
The postcard cove 7km west of Kalkan — turquoise water at the foot of a gorge, the 190-step descent, and how to time it before the crowds.
Where
Kalkan, Turkey
Opening hours
Open access (always open) as a public beach. The staircase from the road is unfenced; the seasonal kiosk and sunbed hire run daytime hours, busiest late spring through summer. Lifeguard cover, where present, is seasonal.
Tickets
Free — no ticket needed to use the beach. You only pay if you hire a sunbed and parasol or buy food and drink at the kiosk. Parking on the road above can be tight in peak season.
Time needed
A half-day if you want a proper swim and sunbathe; an hour or two if you just want the photo and a quick dip.
In short
Visiting Kaputas Beach
Kaputas is the cove everyone photographs: a small pebble beach wedged at the mouth of a gorge about 7km west of Kalkan, with startlingly clear turquoise water. It is roughly 190 steps down from the coast road, has limited space, and fills up by late morning. Free to access; sunbeds and a snack kiosk cost extra. Go early or late.
The cove, the steps and the water
Kaputas is the beach that sells the western Turquoise Coast: a small wedge of pale pebbles and coarse sand caught at the mouth of a gorge, about 7km west of Kalkan on the road to Kas. The draw is the water — genuinely the vivid, clear turquoise of the postcards, deepening fast a few metres out, so it is a real swimming beach rather than a paddling one. The setting, hemmed in by cliffs with a ribbon of road bridging the ravine above, is the other half of the appeal.
The catch is getting onto the sand. From the roadside it is a steep staircase of roughly 190 steps down, and the same back up afterwards — in full summer heat that climb is the bit people regret. There is no step-free access, so it is genuinely hard for anyone with mobility issues, pushchairs or a lot of kit. Wear proper shoes and carry water.
How to make it work
The beach is small, and that is the whole problem with timing. Use of the sand is free, but the limited sunbeds and parasols and the single seasonal kiosk fill quickly, and so does the roadside parking. By late morning the boat trips out of Kalkan and Kas, plus minibus day-trippers, turn it from idyll to elbow-room, especially in July and August.
So go early or late. First thing gives you the clearest light and an almost empty cove; late afternoon clears as the boats leave. Most visitors taxi or take the dolmus the few kilometres from Kalkan rather than walk the cliff road, which has little safe verge. Bring water shoes for the pebbles, accept that there is no shade once the sunbeds go, and treat it as a half-day swim rather than a full day camped out — there is little behind the beach but the staircase and the road.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kalkan city guide.