İstanbul style map
Eat, play, and live like a local.


Beyond a postcard-perfect skyline, tourist crowds and guidebook highlights lies a vibrant daily rhythm - one you can only access by tuning into the city just like a local. Follow our curated tips to uncover the authentic experiences that İstanbul lovingly reserves for those willing to delve a little deeper.
Let our insider’s guide lead you through the coolest city in the world.
Stroll neighbourhoods brimming wıth charm
İstanbul is a microcosm of Türkiye - a sprawling metropolis where each district feels like its own small town, complete with distinct flavours, sounds, and stories. Here, the mood of the day - combined with your own spontaneous instincts - can (and should) help guide your way.
Where to find the local vibe:
- Eminönü: A true crossroads of İstanbul life. The people are eclectic, and the energy is electric as ferries dock and seagulls circle overhead.
- Süleymaniye: Travel back in time as you wander centuries-old cobblestone streets in the shadow of Mimar Sinan’s architectural masterpiece.
- Balat: A photographer’s dream. Capture the many candy-coloured facades - a setting straight out of a storybook - and rejuvenate at one of the many picturesque cafes.
- Karaköy & İstiklal Street: İstanbul’s creative heart. Partake in the many galleries, street musicians, and late-night conversations over delicious meze and accompanying drinks.
- Kadıköy & Moda: Across the Bosphorus (İstanbul Strait) on the Asian side, hipster havens, indie bookshops, open-air markets, and pristine waterside parks brim with effortless cool.
- Yeldeğirmeni: An artsy enclave known for its vibrant street murals, laid-back cafes, and a relaxed multicultural community: This neighbourhood is slow living at its best!
- Kuruçeşme, Arnavutköy & Bebek: Think upscale sophistication. This is where the elite wine and dine along the Bosphorus (İstanbul Strait) and look good while doing it.
- Kuzguncuk: Quaint and inviting. This tree-lined stretch charms with alluring boutiques, neighbourhood cafes, and a slow-paced street life.
Hunt for your very own treasure

From vintage kilims and hand-loomed textiles to intricate ceramics and jewel-like calligraphy, İstanbul offers an abundance of one-of-a-kind finds. Whether you're into flea-market foraging or cutting-edge design, the city’s various stores and bazaars make souvenir shopping an art form.
Where to shop in local style:
- Cevahir Bedesteni within the Grand Bazaar: Antique family jewels and heirloom silver amidst master goldsmiths still practising centuries-old techniques in surrounding hans (caravanserais).
- Mahmutpaşa & Mercan Yokuşu: Colourful fabrics, textiles, and all things home and kitchen.
- Beyoğlu & Karaköy Galleries: Contemporary art and design from İstanbul’s top creatives.
- Galata & Çukurcuma: Old gramophones, film posters, and 19th-century lamps with character - thrift and vintage at their best.
- Nişantaşı & Bağdat Street: Havens of high-street fashion with upscale boutiques and flagship stores of international brands.
- Bebek: Showrooms of fashion designers clustered in a stylish waterside neighbourhood - chic, modern, and unmistakably local.


Dive into the city’s deep gastronomic universe
Fresh, seasonal, and locally sourced - these are the very foundations of Turkish cuisine. In İstanbul, food isn't just sustenance; it’s a ritual. From age-old Ottoman palace recipes to bold modern interpretations by Michelin-starred chefs, the city is a robust culinary capital where every bite tells a story.
Where to savour the flavours:
- Food shopping: Begin your palate-pleasing journey at the Spice Bazaar, where local delicacies await inside the welcoming arched halls of this centuries-old bazaar. Notable offerings include Turkish delights, spices, dried fruits, and hand-blended teas. Just outside, do not skip speciality shops selling freshly ground Turkish coffee, honey, artisanal cheese varieties, olives, cured meats including pastırma, and especially the turşucus - colourful pickle shops that ferment everything from eggplant to pine cones, using traditional recipes passed down for generations.
- Breakfast as serious business: Join locals for a typical quick breakfast, breaking simit (sesame bread rings) with çay (tea) on a commuter ferry as you cross between two continents. For a more traditional kahvaltı (breakfast), choose a waterside cafe or restaurant by the Bosphorus (İstanbul Strait) to indulge in a feast where local cheese and olive varieties, freshly baked bread and börek (filo pastry layered, rolled or folded with endless delicious fillings), eggs with sucuk (spicy sausage), home-made jams, clotted cream and honey are accompanied by endless tea refills.
- Go old school: For a hearty, home-cooked style lunch, discover esnaf lokantasi restaurants frequented by local tradesmen in each neighbourhood. Alternatively, look for street food favourites like balik ekmek (grilled fish sandwiches) and döner (layers of meat roasted on a vertical spit).
- Dine “a la Turca”: For a satisfying and soulful local dining experience, look no further than ocakbaşı and meyhane-style restaurants. Ocakbaşı is one of İstanbul’s most beloved culinary rituals, where locals gather shoulder-to-shoulder around a copper-hooded grill, sharing smoky flavours constantly served by a seasoned kebap master - authentic, communal, and anything but touristy. İstanbul’s meyhane culture, on the other hand, is the quintessential way to enjoy rakı - sipped slowly alongside a spread of mezes like patlıcan ezme (smoky mashed eggplant), haydari (herbed yoghurt), or marinated fish, all picked from a display or presented on a large tray. More than just dining, it’s a shared tradition where conversations flow, neighbouring tables often end the night singing together, and a visiting street musician might prompt spontaneous belly dancing.
- Explore the new-wave cuisine: İstanbul’s culinary frontier is being shaped by chefs who train abroad and then return home to reinterpret Turkish fare through a modern lens. From Michelin-starred hotspots to unconventional kitchens off the beaten path, bold pairings and a flavourful reimagining await.
- And the best world cuisine, too: Global flavours feature prominently in İstanbul’s luxury hotels and trendy new civic hubs like Galataport and Tersane İstanbul. Here you’ll find top-tier French, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Pan-Asian, and even Nikkei restaurants led by award-winning chefs - no passport required.
Relax Turkish style

Over the centuries, İstanbul has perfected the art of leisure. In addition to immersive museum visits and lengthy shopping sprees, locals also know how to decompress - and so should you.
Where to unwind in the metropolis:
- Princes’ Islands: Just a short ferry away, the car-free streets and pine forests of Büyükada or Heybeliada offer a natural antidote to the city’s urban stress.
- Historic hammams: Soothe your senses in classical Ottoman bathhouses like Kılıç Ali Paşa or Zeyrek Çinili Hamam, both recently restored with luxurious touches. The latter also holds regular art exhibitions in an old cistern.
- Rowing on the Golden Horn: Early mornings are best for calm waters and sweeping views of the Old City.
- Set sail: Join a local sailing club off the shores of Fenerbahçe or Kalamış to enjoy the shimmering waters of the Marmara Sea, with the Princes’ Islands as the backdrop.
- Kilyos beach clubs: In the summer, this stretch of the Black Sea coast is where İstanbulites go to bask in the sun and sea.
- Fishing along the Bosphorus: Cast a line from Galata Bridge alongside seasoned locals to catch istavrit (horse mackerel) and lüfer (bluefish) - a beloved pastime and relaxing urban tradition.


Unfold layers of history

At the heart of İstanbul’s magnetic pull is its history - layer upon layer, civilisation upon civilisation, etched into every stone. The Historic Peninsula, surrounded by 22km (14 miles) of largely intact city walls, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This area alone is a living museum of Eastern Roman and Ottoman wonders.
Where to discover past civilisations:
- Underground tours: Explore İstanbul’s subterranean treasures with an art historian, and visit ancient cisterns, foundations of Eastern Roman palaces and crypts, as well as Ottoman cellars. Some highlights include Basilica Cistern, a huge underground water reservoir and engineering masterpiece that kept the city hydrated through centuries of peace - and siege. Zeyrek Cistern and Şerefiye Cistern are two other unmissable gems restored to their former glory in the Old City to host visitors, as well as occasional concerts and cultural events.
- İstanbul archaeological museums: This awe-inspiring museum is home to more than a million artefacts excavated on the territories that once belonged to the Ottoman Empire, stretching from Europe and İstanbul down to Egypt! Among the standout items are the world’s oldest known love poem in Sumerian and the first peace treaty signed between Hittites and Egyptians, both recorded onto terracotta tablets and dating back to the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, respectively.
- Hagia Sophia: The iconic Hagia Sophia, meaning ”Holy Wisdom”, rises at the epicentre of the Historic Peninsula of İstanbul. Hagia Sophia has stood the test of time since the 6th century CE, with its monumental dome and architectural ingenuity that not only defined the skyline of İstanbul but also set a timeless paradigm for both Eastern and Western sacred architecture.
- Imperial mosques: Discover how these architectural marvels, commissioned by successive Ottoman sultans like Mehmet II the Conqueror, Suleiman the Magnificent and Sultan Ahmet I, are still popular spots for city residents to visit, hang out and pray. Learn about Mimar Sinan, the empire’s greatest architect and engineer, who pioneered the development of a unique dome structure in Ottoman mosques.
- Ottoman palaces and residences: Some of the city’s most beautiful spaces are former palaces of the Ottoman royal family. While the sultans first resided in Topkapı Palace, the court later moved to grand waterfront palaces like Dolmabahçe, Çırağan, Feriye and Beylerbeyi - many of which now serve either as museums or luxury hotels. A Bosphorus cruise is the best way to glimpse these majestic landmarks, along with the elegant yalıs - the summer residences of the Ottoman elite, showcasing a mix of Ottoman Baroque, European Neoclassical, and Turkish vernacular styles. Come in spring, when the hillsides blush with blooming Judas trees - a vivid violet symbol of İstanbul’s timeless charm and uniquely welcoming embrace.
