39 Best Restaurants in The Central and Southern Aegean Coast, Turkey

Arşipel Restaurant

$$ Fodor's choice

Summer and winter, the dining room at the Kırkınca Houses Boutique Hotel is the best in town, overlooking the lovely landscape and serving delicious and authentic dishes prepared with oil produced from olives harvested in the garden. You can accompany your meal with wines produced in Şirince, and the sound of mellow live music on Friday and Saturday nights. Among the delicacies on the menu are creamy eggplant soup; şevketi bostanı, a root vegetable cooked with tender pieces of lamb; and delicious homemade pasta, erişte, served in a light cream and almond sauce.

Şirince Köyü, Sirince, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
232-898–3133
Known For
  • lovely atmosphere
  • local wines
  • erişte (homemade pasta, served in a light cream and almond sauce)

Ejder Restaurant

$$ Fodor's choice

This popular spot overlooking the Selçuk aqueduct is run by a friendly family team—husband, wife, and son—and offers a menu that includes such traditional vegetarian dishes as exemplary stuffed peppers and fried eggplant. It may sometimes take a while for the generous, juicy lamb and chicken kebabs to cook in the small hearth, but it's worth the wait.

Gümüşcafé Fish Restaurant

$$$ Fodor's choice

This lovely restaurant on the waterfront specializes not only in fresh fish, seafood, and meze but also serves an excellent summer brunch. Tables are only a few feet from the peaceful waters of the bay, with a truly romantic view of the ancient ruins of Rabbit Island, often with a soft breeze. The waitstaff are cheery and attentive, and though the kitchen has been refurbished almost beyond recognition, it retains a 300-year-old hearth from when it served as the bakery for the surrounding villages.

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Agora Restaurant

$$
This large Turkish restaurant near the Ephesus Museum has an equally large menu, focusing on grilled meats, but also including pide, meze, salads, breakfast, and some specialty desserts. There are also some daily specials, such as roasted lamb on Fridays. Beer, wine, and rakı are available to accompany the well-prepared dishes.
Agora Çarşısı 2, Selçuk, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
232-892–3053
Known For
  • varied menu
  • check the daily specials
  • çökertme kebabı (meatballs on top of shoestring fries with yogurt and tomato sauce)

Alsancak Dostlar Fırını

$

This very popular bakery in hip Alsancak serves up probably the broadest selection you’ll find of boyoz, a round flaky pastry with Sephardic roots that’s these days almost unique to İzmir. Get yours savory or sweet, or perhaps with a hard-boiled egg on the side in traditional style. Go early for the best selection.

Asma Yaprağı

$$

This small and romantic garden restaurant is a highlight of Alaçatı’s dining scene, with chef Ayşe Nur Mıhçı famed for her fresh renditions of Aegean cooking using seasonal, local produce, especially the region’s wealth of wild herbs and greens. There’s no menu, but the staff will help you select from the options on display in the kitchen. Good local wines are available to accompany your meal. Reservations highly recommended.

Asmaaltı Cafe

$

This charming outdoor café and restaurant is just a five-minute walk from the Priene ruins and features a shaded, leafy atmosphere with gazebos and picnic tables. The menu consists of classic Turkish staples and the speciality is gözleme: savory crepes stuffed with either potato, spinach, or cheese. 

Avrasya Lokantası

$$
Hearty traditional Turkish soups, stews, and meat and vegetable dishes are arrayed buffet-style at this cheery lokanta, which is always bustling at lunchtime. At the top of Alaçatı village near the minibus stop, it offers a reasonably priced and reliable alternative to the increasingly expensive fare found farther into town.

Ayasoluk Restaurant

$$

The Ayasoluk Hotel’s restaurant offers meals in a pleasant dining room and romantic courtyard, both with a bucolic sunset view, and features local and organic ingredients for a light, fresh take on Turkish favorites. It's one of the more intimate and sophisticated dining options in town.

Ayşa Boşnak Börekçisi

$
Fresh, delicious food at reasonable prices in atmospheric surroundings—this is a real find tucked away inside a peaceful stone-walled courtyard amidst the chaotic energy of Kemeraltı bazaar. Make your own plate (cost is by weight) from the colorful variety of lovingly displayed salads, vegetarian dishes, savory pastries, and other home-cooked dishes for a bargain lunch. It closes early, at 7 pm, so it's not a practical dinner option unless you are bringing your food home.
1437. Sk. 11/A, Konak, Izmir, 35220, Turkey
232-421–7085
Known For
  • assorted börek (savory pastries)
  • stuffed peppers
  • closes at 7 pm
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner

Babushka Alaçatı

$$
Chef Olga Irez's intimate restaurant takes a farm-to-table approach to the food traditions of her and her husband’s Russian and Turkish grandmothers. There are many vegetarian options among the always-fresh meze and appetizer selections, which change throughout the year to spotlight seasonal produce.
3000 Sok. 38, Alaçati, Izmir, Turkey
232-716–0070
Known For
  • pelmeni (Russian dumplings)
  • spicy beef liver
  • stuffed squash blossoms
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed most weekdays in winter. No lunch

Bağarası

$$$

Tables are tucked into a lovely hidden garden in summer and in cooler weather service is in a quaint, Bodrum-style, one-story house. The Mediterranean cuisine includes some local favorites. Alcohol is served.

Pınarlı Cad. 59, Bitez, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-363–7693
Known For
  • çıtır mantı (crispy fried Turkish-style ravioli)
  • lokum pilav (rice prepared with local herbs and spices)
  • girit köfte (Crete-style meatballs)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Bitez Köftecisi

$$
A pleasantly old-fashioned place popular with locals, this cozy, casual restaurant a short walk back from the beachfront offers a range of Turkish-style grilled meats, plus a smaller selection of appetizers and meze. Portions are small, but quality high. Alcohol is served.
Şah Cad. 31, Bitez, Mugla, 48470, Turkey
Known For
  • köfte (meatballs)
  • pirzola (lamb chops)
  • ciğer (liver)

Can Döner

$$

Not far from the clock tower at the entrance of Kemeraltı, this small local favorite has served traditional İskender kebabı (and only İskender kebabı) from the city of Bursa since 1981. The spit-roasted meat is sliced thin and topped with melted butter and tomato sauce. A glass of homemade ayran (salted yogurt drink) is the traditional accompaniment to the meal. Alcohol is not served. Come for lunch or a very early dinner, as they're only open until the meat runs out, usually around 6:30 pm.

Milli Kütüphane Cad. 6/B, Izmir, Izmir, 35250, Turkey
232-484–1313
Known For
  • ayran (a salted yogurt drink) to accompany the kebabs
  • no alcohol
  • closes early (by 6:30 or sometimes sooner)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner

Çardaklı Restaurant

$$$
Bedecked with blossoms, this waterfront restaurant has a classic Aegean air and wide selection of meze, including stuffed zucchini flowers and yogurt with hot red peppers, as well as grilled fish and meat. In high season, the outside tables are usually full with Turks and foreign visitors alike.
İskele Cad. 13, Yalikavak, Mugla, Turkey
252-385–2444
Known For
  • grilled octopus
  • vine-leaf-wrapped levrek (sea bass)
  • levrek marin (marinated sea bass)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Dallas Balik Ekmek Lokantasi

$

The more blue-collar or on-the-go way to eat fish in Turkey is the balik ekmek, a salty grilled fish sandwich often stuffed with onion, tomato, and lettuce. With Dikili's access to quality fresh fish, the flavor multiplies at this portside restaurant, with tables spilling out onto the street. Other classic Turkish seafood dishes available include fried calamari and mussels stuffed with rice, pine nuts, and currants.

20 Atatürk Cd., Dikili, Izmir, Turkey
0232-671–4116
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards

Denizhan Et Lokantası

$$$

Famed for its kebabs and other meat dishes, Denizhan also serves up very good meze and appetizers, including lahmacun (Turkish-style whisper-thin flatbread topped with spices and minced meat) and vegetable dishes such as mustard greens salad. The restaurant has a prime location on the Bodrum waterfront and an extensive wine list.

Neyzen Teyfik Cad. 182/C, Bodrum, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-313–2728
Known For
  • excellent veggie meze
  • Adana kebab
  • kuzu pirzola (lamb chops)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Dost Pide & Pizza

$$

Stopping here for pide (Turkish-style pizza or calzones, piled with a variety of ingredients that can include cheese, spinach, meat, or egg) is a highlight of a trip to Ilıca and a great choice for a quick lunch, or even breakfast, though on the pricey side compared to similar fare elsewhere. The menu also includes kebabs, soup, pizza, and traditional Turkish desserts.

Dükkan

$$

This small and colorful eatery serving Greek and Turkish fare is an increasingly rare find in ever more chic Bodrum. Choose from meze like smoked fish or roasted eggplant with tahini sauce, followed by fresh fish, ending perhaps with a cream-topped candied mandarin for dessert. Reservations are recommended.

Adliye Sok. 5, Bodrum, Mugla, Turkey
530-341–6620
Known For
  • grilled squid
  • fried calamari
  • homey vibe
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch

Eski Ev

$$

The Ottoman motifs seem a bit touristy, but the place is done up nicely, in the peaceful, open-air courtyard of an old house, shaded by a towering grapefruit tree. Eski Ev ("old house" in Turkish) serves a wide selection of Turkish meze (appetizers) and main dishes, including some nice choices for vegetarians. The restaurant's specialty is a delicious concoction of lamb, vegetables, and rice, served on a copper dish with its own tiny flame beneath.

1005 Sok. 1/A, Selçuk, Izmir, 35920, Turkey
232-892–9357
Known For
  • the Old House special (lamb with vegetables and rice)
  • good vegetarian options
  • pleasant atmosphere

Fatma Bacının Yeri

$
Simple, hearty dishes are what’s on offer at this casual restaurant in the middle of Turgutreis’s bazaar. Choose from traditional Turkish favorites or get an omelet at any time of the day.
Plaj 2 Sok. 15, Turgutreis, Mugla, 48960, Turkey
252-382–5615
Known For
  • mantı (Turkish-style ravioli in garlicky yogurt sauce)
  • çiğ börek (deep-fried savory pastry)
  • gözleme (Turkish-style savory crepes)

Gemibaşı

$$$

For almost half a century, this popular, no-frills restaurant near the marina has been serving the freshest seafood in town. House specialties include fish soup and octopus with pilaf, and their fried calamari has been voted one of the best versions in Turkey. Reservations recommended.

Neyzen Teyvfik Cad. 176, Bodrum, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-316–1220
Known For
  • popular with locals
  • balık köfte (fish "meatball")
  • shrimp on a bed of pureed eggplant
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Gunbatimi

$$

By early evening, the white tables spread across the green lawn in front of Gunbatimi are full of customers coming to witness the inspiration for the restaurant's name, "the sunset." To accompany the visual spectacle, the owner and his culinary team cook up the classics of Aegean seafood dishes, with particular pride displayed in the grilled octopus.

396 Sk., off Ugur Mumcu Cad., Dikili, Izmir, Turkey
0232-671–7570
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards, Closed in winter. No lunch

Hoca'nın Yeri

$

The specialty of the house at this simple eatery on the boardwalk in Türkbükü is large, rather greasy portions of çiğ böreği, a Crimean dish brought to Turkey that consists of flat, fried pastry stuffed with ground beef, onion, and spices. One of the few unpretentious (and relatively inexpensive) places left on the Türkbükü shoreline, this place has a beach-hut vibe, its own little patch of sand, and a family clientele.

Liman Cad. 77, Göltürkbükü, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-377–5907
Known For
  • baked or fried mantı (tiny Turkish "ravioli," stuffed with minced meat)
  • gözleme (Turkish savory crepes with various fillings)
  • Turkish breakfast
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Oct.–Apr., Credit cards accepted

Kavaklı Köfteci

$$

Köfte (Turkish-style meatballs) are the mainstay of this popular, no-frills eatery, and you can enjoy them as a sandwich or with a side of piyaz (navy bean salad, with or without onions), homemade bread, and ayran (salted yogurt drink). The only other dish on the menu is çöp şiş, small pieces of skewered grilled lamb. No alcohol served.

Kayaş Restaurant & Bar

$$

This cheery traveler favorite just off Pamukkale’s main square serves up better-than-average grilled meats, güveç (casseroles), and other traditional Turkish dishes (plus international staples like omelets and pasta) on an outdoor patio under a thick canopy of grapevines. Portions are on the small side, but nicely presented. 

Atatürk Cad. 3, Pamukkale, Denizli, 20280, Turkey
534-561–1080
Known For
  • mixed grill
  • karnıyarık (stuffed eggplant)
  • full bar including a good selection of bottled beer

Köfteci Bilal'ın Yeri

$

Turkish grilled meatballs and home-style cuisine, served at just a few tables in a no-frills setting, have been a hit for more than half a century. Accompany any dish you order with homemade plain yogurt. Alcohol is not served.

Yeni Çarşı 2. Sok. 11, Bodrum, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-316–3666
Known For
  • busy lunch crowd
  • delicious meatballs
  • stewed okra
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.

Körfez

$$$

This long-standing, family-run fish house overlooks the harbor and is especially noted for a wide selection of Cretan dishes and seafood appetizers that include delectable shrimp cooked in butter, garlic, and seaweed. A local institution with courteous waitstaff, Körfez also serves some meat dishes.

Kumrucu Şevki

$

Ilıca is known for kumru—Turkish-style panini prepared with special sesame-seed rolls and stuffed with salami, sucuk (beef spicy sausage), cheese, tomatoes, and pickles—and this place serves the best in town. Pair your sandwich with a glass of ayran, a refreshing yogurt drink. There are multiple locations in Ilıca and branches of this popular local chain in Alaçatı and Çeşme as well. It's open 24 hours.

5066 Sok. 2, Ilica, Izmir, 25700, Turkey
232-723–2392-Ilıca waterfront branch
Known For
  • they also do a good Turkish breakfast
  • there are multiple locations
  • the place for kumru

Limon Cafe

$$$

Settle into a lovely, fig-scented garden about 2 km (1 mile) outside town, overlooking citrus trees, the sea, and the ancient city of Myndos and enjoy a meal in these rural surroundings. While the late-risers' breakfast, served until 3 pm daily is a draw, the crowds come for dinner at sunset. Lunch or dinner should begin with the excellent fried calamari; the mantı (Turkish-style ravioli) is homemade.

Kardak Cad. 7, Gümüslük, Mugla, 48400, Turkey
252-394–4044
Known For
  • house-specialty cocktails
  • the sunset views
  • homemade mantı (Turkish-style ravioli)
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Oct.–Apr., Reservations essential