Hot air balloons floating over Cappadocia valleys with fairy chimneys at sunrise
Practical Guide12 min read

Cappadocia 5-Day Itinerary: Balloon Flight, Valley Hikes & Underground Cities

Five days in Cappadocia sounds generous—until you realize how much this region holds. Between the sunrise balloon flight, six hikeable valleys, two underground cities, a dozen cave churches, and some of the best food in central Turkey, five days fills itself without a single wasted hour. We have helped hundreds of guests plan this exact trip length, and it hits the sweet spot: enough time to go deep without rushing, but not so long that you run out of things to do.

This itinerary assumes you are staying in Goreme, which puts you walking distance from most trailheads and 10 minutes from the balloon launch site. Adjust the order based on weather—if your flight gets cancelled on Day 1, slide it to Day 2 or 3.

Day 1 — Sunrise Balloon Flight + Goreme Exploration

4:30 AM — Hotel pick-up

Our van collects you from your cave hotel. The exact pick-up time is confirmed the evening before via WhatsApp. Coffee and tea are waiting at the launch site while the crew inflates the balloon.

5:30–7:00 AM — Balloon flight

Forty-five to 90 minutes above fairy chimneys, Rose Valley, Love Valley, and Pigeon Valley. You see the full landscape from 300–900 meters—the same terrain you will be hiking through over the next four days. After landing: champagne toast and flight certificate. For a full breakdown of what happens, see our what to expect guide.

8:00–9:30 AM — Turkish breakfast

Back at your hotel for a full spread: simit, borek, olives, tomatoes, honey with kaymak, eggs, and unlimited cay. Do not rush this. Turkish breakfast is an experience, not a meal.

10:00 AM–1:00 PM — Goreme Open Air Museum

A UNESCO World Heritage Site with rock-cut churches and monasteries dating to the 10th–12th centuries. The frescoes inside the Dark Church (Karanlik Kilise) are among the best-preserved Byzantine paintings in Turkey. Entry is about EUR 15, with the Dark Church as a separate ticket. Go early—tour buses arrive by 11 AM.

Afternoon — Pigeon Valley walk

An easy 2 km downhill walk from Uchisar to Goreme along cliff edges dotted with carved pigeon houses. Takes about 45–60 minutes. Stop at Uchisar Castle first for the best panoramic view of the region. You can see the fairy chimneys you flew over that morning.

Day 2 — Rose Valley & Red Valley Hike

This is the best hike in Cappadocia, full stop. Start at the Rose Valley trailhead (5-minute drive or 15-minute walk from Goreme center). The 4 km trail winds through pink-toned rock formations, hidden cave churches with faded Byzantine frescoes, tunnel passages, and vineyard paths. You emerge at Cavusin village after 2–2.5 hours.

In the afternoon, visit Pasabag (Monks Valley). The fairy chimneys here have mushroom-shaped caps that look like something from a science fiction film. Free entry, 30–45 minutes to explore. Then drive 5 minutes to Devrent (Imagination) Valley, where the rock formations look like camels, snakes, and dolphins.

Day 3 — Underground Cities

Cappadocia has over 200 underground cities carved into the volcanic rock. Two are open to visitors and worth the 30-minute drive from Goreme.

Morning: Derinkuyu Underground City. The deepest of the underground cities, reaching 8 floors below the surface. Early Christians sheltered here from invaders, with space for 20,000 people, ventilation shafts, churches, stables, and wine cellars. Entry is about EUR 8. Go early—the narrow tunnels get crowded and warm by midday.

Afternoon: Kaymakli Underground City. Smaller than Derinkuyu but equally fascinating, with 4 floors open to visitors. The two cities were once connected by an 8 km tunnel. Entry is about EUR 8.

If you still have energy, stop at the Ihlara Valley viewpoint on the return drive. The canyon stretches 14 km with a river at the bottom—you will hike part of it tomorrow.

Day 4 — Ihlara Valley Hike & Selime Monastery

Ihlara Valley is 45 minutes from Goreme, but it is the most dramatic hike in the region. The trail follows the Melendiz River through a 100-meter-deep canyon, passing over a dozen rock-cut churches along the way.

The full valley is 14 km, but most visitors hike the 3.5 km section from Ihlara village to Belisirma, where you can eat lunch at one of the riverside restaurants (grilled trout, fresh bread, cay—about EUR 10). The descent into the canyon involves 382 stone steps. Wear proper hiking shoes.

After lunch, drive 15 minutes to Selime Monastery, the largest rock-cut monastery in Cappadocia. It looks like a cathedral carved into a cliff face. The rooms include a church, kitchen, and stables—all connected by tunnels and staircases.

Day 5 — Love Valley, Pottery & Departure

Start with an early morning walk through Love Valley. The trail is short (1.5 km) but dramatic, with tall rock pillars rising on both sides. You will recognize these formations from your balloon flight on Day 1.

Mid-morning, visit a pottery workshop in Avanos, the pottery capital of Cappadocia. The town sits on the Kizilirmak (Red River), and potters have been using its red clay for over 4,000 years. Most workshops offer hands-on sessions where you can throw your own pot on a wheel (EUR 10–20). It makes a better souvenir than anything in the gift shops.

Have a final lunch in Goreme, pick up a bottle of Turasan wine for the flight home, and head to Kayseri or Nevsehir airport. For transfer details, see our airport transfer guide.

5-Day Cost Estimate

ItemCost per person
Balloon flight (Standard)EUR 175
Cave hotel (4 nights)EUR 200–400
Museum entriesEUR 35–50
Meals (5 days)EUR 100–175
Local transport / car rentalEUR 50–100
Total estimateEUR 560–900

Tips for Planning 5 Days in Cappadocia

  • Schedule the balloon flight for Day 1. If weather cancels it, you have four backup mornings. We reschedule at no extra cost. See our weather and cancellation policy.
  • Rent a car for Days 3–4. Ihlara Valley and the underground cities are too far for walking. A rental car costs EUR 25–35/day, cheaper than organized tours and more flexible.
  • Book a cave hotel in Goreme. You want to be central for early morning pick-ups and walking to trailheads. Our cave hotel guide covers the best options with balloon-view terraces.
  • Pack layers. Mornings at altitude are cold (5–10°C in spring/autumn). Afternoons in the valleys can hit 25–30°C. Our what to wear guide has season-by-season advice.
  • Bring hiking shoes. You will use them every day. The valley trails are rocky, uneven, and sometimes involve scrambling through narrow passages.

Which Flight Tier for a 5-Day Trip?

With five days, you have the budget flexibility to upgrade. The Comfort flight (EUR 250) gives you a smaller basket with 12–16 passengers, a longer flight, and professional photos included. If you are celebrating something special—a honeymoon, anniversary, or proposal—the Private flight (EUR 500) is an exclusive basket for 2–4 people with a custom route. Compare all three tiers side by side.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 5 days too long for Cappadocia?

Not at all. Five days lets you hike multiple valleys, visit underground cities, take an ATV tour, enjoy pottery workshops, and explore at a relaxed pace without rushing between sites.

Can I fly the balloon twice during a 5-day trip?

Yes. Many guests book a Standard flight on Day 1 and a Comfort or Private flight later in the trip. The experience feels different each time because of wind direction, altitude, and lighting changes.

What should I budget for a 5-day Cappadocia trip?

Roughly EUR 175–350 for balloon flight(s), EUR 300–750 for 5 nights in a cave hotel, EUR 50–80 for museum entries, and EUR 100–200 for meals. A comfortable 5-day trip runs EUR 700–1,400 per person.

Start Day 1 with a Sunrise Flight

Balloon flights from EUR 175 per person. Hotel pick-up, breakfast, and champagne celebration included.