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Turkey is one of those countries where a hire car genuinely changes the trip rather than simply speeding it up. Distances are long, the coastline stretches for thousands of kilometres, and small towns and natural sites tend to sit just off the convenient transport routes.

Where to rent a car in Turkey

Turkey is one of those countries where a hire car genuinely changes the trip rather than simply speeding it up. Distances are long, the coastline stretches for thousands of kilometres, and small towns and natural sites tend to sit just off the convenient transport routes. So 'I'll hire a car and drive where I need to' actually works here — particularly when more than one destination is on your itinerary.

For most European travellers, Turkey also offers a refreshingly straightforward setup. The country sits outside Schengen, and visa-free access is generous for most Western nationalities. On the rental side, local suppliers tend to be more flexible than international chains: lower deposits, debit cards accepted, and cash settlements in USD or EUR on arrival.

"We treat each booking as its own scenario in Turkey. Some clients want a meet-and-greet at the airport, others prefer hotel delivery, and a few drop in at the office before the journey starts. There isn't a single right answer — there's whichever one suits your trip."

The advantages of having a car become clearest on multi-stop itineraries: the Mediterranean coast from Antalya through to Fethiye, day trips to Cappadocia and Pamukkale, drives between Aegean resorts. On routes like these, a hire car comfortably outperforms taxis and group tours in both time and freedom of pace.

A handful of specifics are worth knowing before you book. Toll roads are managed entirely through the electronic HGS system. Deposits and insurance terms vary considerably between suppliers. Cross-border travel is generally not permitted, even into neighbouring countries. And driving style in larger cities runs at a faster pace than most European visitors expect. None of this is unmanageable — it's simply useful to factor in early.

Turkey is enormous, and most travellers don't approach it as a country in one go but through a specific entry city. If your destination is already set, it's quicker to look at conditions on the dedicated page: car hire in Istanbul, rent a car in Antalya or hire a car in Bodrum.

"Turkey is one of those places people return to. Each visit lands in a different region, with a different itinerary and a different car. That's part of how the country works — there isn't a version of it you can see in a single trip."

Most tourists in Turkey start their trip here

When a hire car in Turkey pays off — and when it doesn't

A hire car works best on routes that link more than one place. Drives along the Mediterranean coast, day trips to Cappadocia or Pamukkale, transfers between Aegean and Mediterranean resorts — on those journeys, your own vehicle is noticeably faster and calmer than coaches, taxis or shared shuttles.

The benefit is most pronounced on longer distances, with children, with luggage or with larger groups. Minivans are a popular choice in Turkey for exactly this reason: two families or a group of friends will often hire one to cover the coast together or reach Cappadocia from the south.

"A common pattern in Turkey is for guests to spend the first few days at their hotel and only then decide they want to go further. For that, hotel delivery for two or three days works very well."

In resort towns, a car is often hired situationally — a day or two, exactly when it's needed. That avoids paying for parking and keeping an eye on the vehicle for the entire holiday, particularly in places where the resort itself already covers most of the day.

A hire car is less obviously worth it for trips that stay tightly fixed: one resort, one beach, one town with no excursions. In that scenario, the car spends more time parked than driven and tends to absorb attention and small costs that don't really pay off.

Real reviews on local car hires in Turkey

Ilia Verigin
Ilia Verigin
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea Cross in Turkey

It went perfectly. No complaints to the hirer - we checked in quickly and handed it over quickly. Instead of Fiat we got a Dacia Duster 2022. Everything is OK, the car is in excellent condition.

June 2023
Filipp Volokhov
Filipp Volokhov
🇷🇺

Opel Corsa in Turkey

Everything went great, thank you!

October 2025
Viacheslav Sokolov
Viacheslav Sokolov
🇷🇺

Skoda Scala in Turkey

Everything was perfect. Easy going. Well return

November 2025
Baksandyk Sansyzbay
Baksandyk Sansyzbay
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 5 in Turkey

The owner took the car away before the rental period expired and did not return the money

April 2025
Sergey Lebedev
Sergey Lebedev
🇷🇺

Opel Corsa in Turkey

We rented a wonderful car Hyundai ai20, because the Corsa was delayed by the previous renters, Everything was perfect! The staff was friendly and helpful, explained everything, they didn't cheat us out of money, I liked everything!

October 2025
Petr Pak
Petr Pak
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea in Turkey

First of all, no one met us. We had to call roaming, explain who we were, they checked, clarified. In the end we arrived twenty minutes later. When we got to the office, we formalized the documents, but they refused to accept the deposit in cash. We explain to them that the voucher says card or cash. They started to check something in the computer, found it, said yes, you can. Everything else went fine. We rented the car at 5 am, we were waited for in the office, we were taken to the airport, the deposit was returned. The main disadvantage was that we were not met at the airport.

August 2024
Sergey Eltsov
Sergey Eltsov
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea in Turkey

We've had a change of departure time. Perhaps because of this, instead of a 2022 gasoline car, I was given a rather old diesel car. I was with my family, my wife and daughter were tired after the flight, and my eldest daughter had been waiting for us in Antalya for more than a day. So, hoping that the car was technically sound, I did not insist on a replacement and accepted what was provided. Unfortunately it was wrong. The car turned out to be technically defective. On the first day, on the way from Antalya to Fethiye, I noticed that the engine was warming up on long climbs. I did not pay much attention to it - I thought that diesel engines have such a peculiarity. In Fethiye we did not travel long distances, so we did not experience any inconveniences, except that the car is old and all beaten up, scratched and not particularly presentable. Before returning we decided to spend one day in the town of Kash. And on the way from Kaş to Antalya we found ourselves in a very unpleasant situation. Now I realize that we were given a car with a faulty cooling system, and antifreeze just flowed out when the car moved "face" up. There are almost no flat streets in Kasha - the car was parked overnight on an uphill slope - it probably leaked a lot overnight. And the rests of coolant when driving on serpentine roads ended by the town of Finike, where we stood up with overheated engine. Imagine our condition: the time is 10.00, our eldest daughter has a flight at 14.00, we are on a broken car in a non-tourist place where no one speaks English. The representative of the rental company does not get in touch. My daughter had to send to the airport by cab (and this is not a cheap pleasure - I think she gave something about 100 euros). And we are not clear what to do. Well helped some local Turk - prompted and helped to buy antifreeze. Then I refilled water all the way to drive. The representative of the company, taking the car, in a rude manner refused to compensate us for any expenses, saying that we broke the car, which is not true. I have a video - in what condition we took it - there was no new damage there. And the very nature of the fault says that it is due to poor technical condition - you can damage the bottom part and then all the coolant would be poured out. And since some of the fluid under normal conditions remained in the system, the damage is somewhere inside. And not because of my actions, but because of wear and lack of maintenance. All in all - I don't recommend it to anyone in particular. I had a flight out the next day, so I was able to return this car in Antalya. If we were all flying out at the same time, I would have had to leave it as is. I can't imagine what consequences that would have had for me.

June 2025
Irina Gostiaeva
Irina Gostiaeva
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 5 in Turkey

everything went fine. The car is new, there were no problems with it. We received and handed over quickly and without problems. One BUT - received with gasoline at zero, but the gas station nearby, it was good that it worked. Otherwise everything is on 5. Thank you!

December 2023
Pavlo Baranov
Pavlo Baranov
UG

Fiat Egea Multijet in Turkey

Guys were very helpful and ready to assist at all times 👏🏽👏🏽

October 2024
Dmitrii Tarasov
Dmitrii Tarasov
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 5 in Turkey

I would like to express my gratitude to your company, very convenient site, quickly received feedback, despite the fact that it was a weekend - the car was provided. Everything went perfectly. Next time I will turn only to you.

January 2026
Aleksei Andronov
Aleksei Andronov
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea in Turkey

Renting a car was easy, there were no difficulties. The car is great. Thank you

August 2025
Sergey Lapin
Sergey Lapin
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 5 in Turkey

Everything went great, we received the car quickly and handed it over quickly. After handing it over, we drove it to the bus stop because we had to go back to the city.

July 2024
Julia Korsakova
Julia Korsakova
🇷🇺

Renault Taliant in Turkey

It went well.

November 2023

Payment, deposits and what to expect

Local Turkish suppliers tend to be more flexible than international chains on payment. A credit card is rarely required — most accept debit cards online for the booking, and the balance plus deposit can be paid in cash on arrival, in USD or EUR. Deposits depend on the car class and the supplier. Economy cars usually start from $100, midsize from $200–500, and minivans up to $500. With several of our suppliers there is no deposit at all, while others waive it when full coverage is taken. "Where a listing says 'no deposit', that always means a specific tariff and a specific insurance policy underneath. So it's worth checking exactly what's covered before booking."

Payment, deposits and what to expect

Local Turkish suppliers tend to be more flexible than international chains on payment. A credit card is rarely required — most accept debit cards online for the booking, and the balance plus deposit can be paid in cash on arrival, in USD or EUR. Deposits depend on the car class and the supplier. Economy cars usually start from $100, midsize from $200–500, and minivans up to $500. With several of our suppliers there is no deposit at all, while others waive it when full coverage is taken. "Where a listing says 'no deposit', that always means a specific tariff and a specific insurance policy underneath. So it's worth checking exactly what's covered before booking."

Mustafa

Istanbul
4.6
Mustafa

Tolga

Antalya Airport (AYT)
4.6
Tolga

Ramazan

Antalya Airport (AYT)
4.8
Ramazan

Volha

Istanbul
4.7
Volha
RENTACARANYWHERE
RENT A CAR
  • Pay without a credit card

    Local Turkish suppliers accept debit cards online for the booking. The balance and deposit can be paid in cash on arrival, in USD or EUR — without the credit card requirement that international chains insist on.

  • Deposits from zero

    With several of our suppliers there is no deposit at all, and with others the deposit is waived when full coverage is taken. Useful if you'd rather not have a large hold sitting on a card for the duration of the trip.

  • Real photos and reviews

    Each car listing shows the actual vehicle: real photographs, year, condition, reviews from previous clients and the specific terms from that owner. It removes the most common worry — that the car turning up won't quite match the picture.

What's worth knowing before the trip

Turkey works logically as a rental market, but it has a few peculiarities of its own — the toll system, insurance fine print, parking and winter rules. If you're across these before booking, the rest tends to fall into place.

Toll roads and the HGS system

Toll roads, bridges and certain tunnels in Turkey are managed through HGS (Hızlı Geçiş Sistemi) — a fully electronic system. A chip sticker is already mounted on the windscreen of nearly every hire car; at toll points, you simply slow down slightly and the charge is deducted automatically. Cash booths and barriers don't exist for this anymore.

"We always run through how HGS charges are calculated when handing over the car, and at what point they appear in the final invoice. That settles most questions before they arise."

The total for tolls is typically added as a single line on the final invoice at the end of the rental. A small administrative handling fee from the supplier is normal practice on the local market.

Insurance — what's included and what isn't

Third Party Liability (TPL) is included in every Turkish rental by law. Basic Comprehensive cover (CDW) is usually included as well, but it carries an excess and has standard exclusions: glass, tyres, wheels, the underside and the interior are typically not covered. For mountain routes and dense city driving, it's worth taking Super coverage (SCDW) or Full coverage (FDW), which closes those gaps.

"Full coverage only works when the rental terms are followed. If the named driver is at the wheel, the route is permitted, and the incident is reported correctly, there are no financial surprises. Where the contract is broken, coverage may apply only partially."

A note on alcohol. The legal limit in Turkey is 0.5‰, but it drops to zero if there is any passenger in the car — meaning the driver effectively has to be entirely sober. Anything above the limit voids any insurance policy, including Full coverage and Super coverage.

Fuel, fines and parking

Both petrol and diesel are common in Turkey. Diesel tends to be cheaper to run and pulls better on long drives and mountain routes, which is why it's frequently chosen for cross-country trips. Petrol stations are open round the clock; major ones take cards, smaller rural stations are often cash-only.

Turkish traffic enforcement is strict — motorways carry plenty of fixed and average-speed cameras. The good news: paying a fine on the spot earns a 25% discount, and paying within 15 days online or through PTT earns a further 25%.

"The simplest rule for visiting drivers in Turkey is to keep within the limits and to park only where it's clearly permitted. Fines find the car later through the rental supplier — they aren't easy to ignore."

Winter trips and mountain routes

For trips into the eastern provinces or the mountains — Erzurum, Kars, the Taurus range, the ski resorts — winter tyres and overall vehicle setup are worth confirming with the supplier in advance. Winter tyres do most of the work; chains are kept as a backup for heavy snow and difficult sections rather than a substitute for tyres. Cars set up for winter are booked first, so plan ahead.

"Winter rentals in Turkey go faster than people expect. The cars set up properly for snow are taken early in the season, and there is only so much that can be pulled together at short notice once the weather turns."

Roads, driving style and difficult moments

Driving style in Turkey runs at a faster pace than most European travellers are used to. Local drivers change lanes earlier, signal less consistently and rely on quick reactions from everyone around them. It isn't aggression — it's simply tempo. The first hour or two is best spent driving calmly, holding extra distance and adjusting gradually rather than trying to keep up immediately.

"The smoothest first days at the wheel in Turkey usually come from drivers who don't try to match the local pace straight away. After roughly twenty-four hours it stops feeling foreign, and from there it's natural enough."

If something goes wrong on the road, it's safer not to step out of the car or attempt to settle the matter on the spot. Turkish road law has tightened in recent years: stepping out and arguing can be classified as aggression, which carries substantial fines and the possibility of temporary licence and vehicle confiscation. Moving to a safe location and contacting the rental supplier is almost always the better course.

For accidents — even a scratch — the rule is consistent: don't move the vehicle, take photographs, contact the rental supplier and call 112 if the situation requires it. A police report is needed in Turkey for almost every incident; without it, insurance generally doesn't apply. Keeping the rental contract within reach is sensible.

"Following the routine carefully is what protects the driver: don't leave the scene, photograph everything, message us. The administrative side and the insurance side become our problem from there."

Vehicle handover deserves a moment of attention as well. Filming the body, wheels, glass, bumpers and interior at both pick-up and drop-off takes only a few minutes and removes most disagreements about pre-existing damage. It's also worth allowing extra time at return so the inspection doesn't sit awkwardly against a flight check-in.

When to book

There isn't a single peak season across Turkey. Istanbul fills up in spring and around long weekends. The Mediterranean coast peaks through summer and into early autumn. Mountain and ski regions are busiest in winter. Minivans and one-way rentals between cities run out earliest, so for those, booking well ahead is sensible. In quieter months the choice is wider and rates noticeably softer.

Below — the average daily rental price in Turkey by month.

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need a credit card to hire a car in Turkey?

Not with most local Turkish suppliers. They typically accept debit cards for the online booking and allow the balance and deposit to be settled in cash on arrival, in USD or EUR. International chains in Turkey still tend to require a credit card in the main driver's name and rarely accept cash deposits, so it's worth filtering for local suppliers if a credit card isn't an option.

How does the HGS toll system work?

HGS is a fully electronic toll system covering Turkey's motorways, paid bridges and certain tunnels. A chip sticker is already mounted on the windscreen of most hire cars; at toll points you slow down slightly and the charge is deducted automatically. Cash booths no longer exist. Total toll charges are usually invoiced as a single line on the final bill at the end of the rental.

What deposits are typical, and are zero-deposit options available?

Deposits depend on the car class and the supplier. Economy cars usually start from $100, midsize from $200–500, and minivans up to $500. With several suppliers there is no deposit at all; with others, the deposit is waived when full coverage is taken. Choosing this configuration at the booking stage is more straightforward than trying to negotiate it on collection.

Can I take the hire car across the border to Greece or Bulgaria?

In most cases, no. Cross-border travel from Turkey is not permitted by the majority of suppliers. That includes Greece, Bulgaria, Armenia, Iran, Iraq and Syria. If your itinerary involves crossing into a neighbouring country, the practical approach is to drop the car on the Turkish side and continue with a separate rental or local transport from the border.

Can I drop the car off in a different Turkish city (one-way)?

Yes, between major airports and cities — Istanbul, Antalya, Izmir, Dalaman, Ankara — most suppliers offer one-way rentals. The relocation fee scales with distance and typically starts from around $200–300. Stock for these journeys runs out faster in the high season, so booking in advance avoids disappointment.

What's the alcohol limit when driving in Turkey?

The general limit is 0.5‰. However, if there is any passenger in the vehicle, the limit drops to zero — effectively requiring the driver to be entirely sober. Anything above the limit at the time of an accident voids any insurance policy, including Full coverage and Super coverage, and carries a substantial fine.

What's the minimum age and licence experience required?

Most suppliers require drivers to be at least 22 years old with a minimum of two years' driving experience. Premium and 4x4 categories often start at 25. For drivers under 22 or 23, some suppliers will still arrange the rental but apply a young driver surcharge — typically around $10 per day.

Which driving licences are accepted, and is an IDP needed?

Most European licences are accepted in Turkey on their own. UK government guidance recommends carrying an International Driving Permit alongside the domestic licence as a precaution, though it is not strictly required for short visits. For licences in scripts other than the Latin alphabet, an IDP is sensible.

What should I do if there's an accident or even a scratch?

Don't move the vehicle. Photograph the damage and the wider scene, contact the rental supplier and call 112 if the situation is serious. A police report is needed in Turkey for almost every incident — without it, insurance typically doesn't apply. The supplier will then guide the formal handling and the insurance side from their end.

Is there a daily mileage limit on hire cars in Turkey?

Often, yes. Many local Turkish suppliers apply a 150–250 km daily mileage cap, with each kilometre over the limit charged separately. For longer routes — the coastal drive from Antalya to Fethiye, or a trip to Cappadocia — choosing an unlimited-mileage tariff at booking is the more practical option. The setting is filterable when comparing cars.

What should I check when I receive the car?

The body, wheels, glass, bumpers, lights and interior are best filmed on a short video. Check the fuel level and the presence of the HGS sticker, the first-aid kit and the warning triangle. Any noted damage should be marked on the contract before driving away. The whole process takes a couple of minutes and removes most disagreements at return.

Is fuel cheaper in Turkey than elsewhere in Europe?

Generally, yes. Both petrol and diesel typically run noticeably below the prices in Greece, Italy and most of Western Europe — often the difference funds a meaningful share of the trip's driving budget. Diesel is the cheaper option per kilometre in Turkey and is usually preferred for long-distance and mountain routes.

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