For many people, travel is all about experiencing new things you wouldn’t have an opportunity to experience at home. That can mean glorious new food discoveries, testing your tongue around the words of a new language, or learning a few local dance steps and then putting them to practice in a bar. But if that “new experience” involves stripping down to your birthday suit and getting lathered up by a stranger, you might think twice, right?
On a trip to Istanbul, however, you might subject yourself to just such an experience in the form of a visit to a Istanbul Turkish Hammam (Turkish Baths), have been popular throughout different parts of Europe since the mid-1800s, but there’s nothing like visiting one while you’re actually in Turkey.
Here’s a simple guide to keeping your cool
- First, talk to the receptionist (most of them speak English) and decide on the level of treatment you want. DIY wash? Wash with attendant? Oil massage with that? You’ll pay the receptionist and they’ll take you to a change area, usually your own lockable room, where you’ll undress and leave your things.
- ‘Undress’ means pretty much what you want it to mean. Most hamams have separate steam rooms for men and women. In this situation, men are expected to maintain a certain loin-clothy level of coverage, but women can throw caution, as it were, to the winds. Most Turkish women subtly drape themselves with their cloth when they’re not actually bathing, but if you prefer to bask nude no-one will bat much of an eyelid. If you’re feeling shy, part or all of a swimsuit is acceptable; if you find yourself in the kind of hamam that has mixed-sex steam rooms and male attendants, it’s usual to keep on at least the bottom half of a swimsuit.
- The attendants will give you a cloth (resembling, in most establishments, an over-sized red gingham tea towel). You’ll keep this on to travel from the change rooms to the hamam.
- You’ll be given some shoes by your attendant – either traditional wooden clogs or fluorescent flip-flops. Stick with ’em. As a surface for pratfalls, only banana skins beat out wet marble.
- Once you’ve been shepherded into the hamam you’ll be left to lounge on the heated marble. In most cases, there’ll be a göbektaşı (belly stone), a round central platform where you can loll around like a sunning python. If not, take a seat and lean against the walls. The idea is to sweat, loosening dirt and toxins in preparation for your wash.
- If you’re going self-service, follow this up with a loofah-and-soap rub-down and douse yourself with water from the marble basins. If you’ve forked out for an attendant, they’ll catch up with you after you’ve had a good, 15-minute sweat. You’ll be laid down on the edge of the göbektaşı and sluiced with tepid water, then your attendant will take you in hand.
- First up is a dry massage with a kese (rough mitt). Depending on your attendant, this experience can be delicious (a little like being washed by a giant cat) or tumultuous (picture a tornado made of sandpaper). If you get to feeling like a flayed deer, use the international language of charade to bring it down a notch or two.
- Next will be the soap. The attendant will work up an almighty lather with an enormous sponge and squeeze it all over you: it’s a bit like taking a bubble bath without the bath. The foam (attar of roses? Asses’ milk? Sorry, it’s most likely good ole Head ‘n’ Shoulders) will be worked into every inch of you. Next, more sluicing, followed by a shampoo, and voila, you’re clean as a whistle. The shiny kind.
- If you’ve ordered an oil massage, you’ll be ushered into another room for it. Unless you’re particularly flush, it’s probably best to skip this bit: the massages are brief and often lack finesse, and the oils are hardly deluxe.
- After the massage, either soap or oil, you’re on your own. Many tourists splash-and-dash their way through the hamam experience, leaving immediately after their treatment. Don’t be one of them. Hang around. Overheat, cool down with a dousing, and repeat to fade. Let your muscles turn to toffee and your mind go pleasantly elastic. This is what the hamam is really all about.
Best 10 Hamams in Istanbul
- Çemberlitaş Hamam
- Cağaloğlu Hamam
- Galatasaray Hamam
- Beylerbeyi Hamam
- Kılıç Ali Paşa Hamam
- Haseki Hürrem Sultan Hamam
- Çinili Hamam
- Süleymaniye Hamam
- Mihrimah Sultan Hamam
- Firuzağa Hamam
Istanbul, Turkish Baths (Hamam),
This is my second visit to the cemberlitas hammam in istanbul. last year experience was wonderful as it was new. second time it was good but not with the same feeling as the first time. I will still go to the hammam but i will look for cheaper ones. for the first time travellers, do not hesitate, go go go…
It's a traditional Turkish bath experience at Istanbul’s, a gorgeous 16th-century bath house. Cemberlitas Hamam was designed by the great Mimar Sinan, one of the most prominent architects of the Ottoman era. Turkish bath experience remains much the same now as it was during the Ottoman period.
IF you are thinking a Bath House experience in Istanbul is for you then the Cagaloglu Baths are certainly a great historical experience. I did not buy a package but paid the entry then took the bathing experience as an adventure. Men and women's sections are separated. The price reflected value for me.
We had never tried a hammam before but cagaloglu hamam is great this one was highly recommended and we were not disappointed. Clean, safe… and all the cultural experience. Worth visiting. And not expensive.
I was nervous about going to a hamam solo and being completely in the nude so the Ayasofya Hamam was perfect. Everyone made me feel completely at ease and I could leave on my bathing suit bottoms if I wanted. My attendant was lovely and very kind. I chose one package up and got the aromatherapy massage which was totally worth it. This was an incredible experience and I wish I hadn’t saved this to the last day so I could go back and do it again!
This is a great experience and a must when in Istanbul. We did it an a mixed group of family and friends aged from 13 to 76. The site is over 500 years old with traditional hot steam rom and then a scrub down. Afterwards sit back and relax with an Apple tea or Turkish coffee.
Really great experience, to have traditional Turkish bath inside historical building, 600years!!! The hot stone sauna just so comfortable…
it was nice alll marble inside etc.. but i think a rip off for that price it wasnt the best ever atraction in istanbul to see..
The magnificent Suleymaniye Hamam is located close to the Suleymaniye Mosque and adjacent to the Istanbul Spice Market. We chose this Haman because of it character and historic context. The Haman is mixed – we visited in a group comprising four couples.
Such an amazing experience! Woman and men have seperate hamam. Relaxing and invigorating at the same time. No need to take anything with – it’s a traditional Turkish Bath.