
with a medieval heart.
The castle was built in 1226 by Alaeddin Keykubad. It sits 250 metres above the harbour, visible from every terrace in the city, and at dusk it turns the particular shade of amber that makes guests reach for their phones and then put them away again. Alanya is one of those places that photographs better in memory than in reality — which is to say it photographs very well.
The city has been popular with Northern European health travellers since the 1970s, when the combination of dry Mediterranean air, warm shallow water, and long sunny winters first attracted German and Scandinavian guests in search of something between a holiday and a cure. The infrastructure that built around those early arrivals — German-speaking clinics, rehabilitation centres with sea views, long-stay hotel programmes — has matured into something more considered.
Our Alanya program is built around recovery: post-surgical guests who need two weeks of warm air, shallow water, and gentle movement before returning to a northern winter. The city is suited to this more than almost anywhere else on the Riviera. It is large enough to have real restaurants, small enough to be navigable on foot from the central hotels.
This guide is for guests already considering a Turkish Riviera program — and for those who want to understand the city they will spend their recovery inside.











