
meets considered living.
Bodrum was Halicarnassus once — home to one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, the Mausoleum of Mausolus, of which very little survives beyond a name and the Knights' Castle built from its stones. The castle stands at the entrance to the harbour, restored and open, its underwater archaeology museum the best in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The modern city is built on a particular aesthetic: whitewashed walls, bougainvillea, the Aegean light that makes everything look slightly better than it is. It has attracted the Turkish intelligentsia since the 1950s and an international clientele since the 1990s. The result is a city with a better restaurant-to-population ratio than almost anywhere on this coast.
Our Bodrum programme is built around the intersection of aesthetic medicine and considered recovery. Guests come here for rhinoplasty, dental rehabilitation, and increasingly — given the new regenerative medicine clinics that opened in 2023 and 2024 — for longevity programmes. The city absorbs the recovery week without fuss. You do not feel like a patient here; you feel like a guest who has had a procedure.
This guide is for guests who want to understand Bodrum before they arrive — the city, the clinical infrastructure, and why it is one of the two places on this coast we build serious aesthetic programmes around.














