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Car hire in Kemer is about stepping beyond the all-inclusive bubble. Kemer is one of the main Russian-speaking resorts on the Antalya Riviera and the perfect base for the region’s most memorable day trips: ancient Olympos, the turtle beach at Çıralı, the eternal flames of Yanartaş, and the Tahtalı cable car at 2,365 metres.
“Kemer works like this: seven nights at Rixos or Phaselis Rose, and somewhere around day three you start wanting to see something other than your own beach. That’s when you need a car.”
Antalya Airport (AYT) is 40–50 km away along the winding D400. The road cuts through the Taurus Mountains with tunnels, steep drops and hairpin bends. The drive from the airport is already a mini road trip.
“The D400 from Antalya to Kemer is short but striking. Mountains plunge into the sea on the right, while bays open up on the left.”
“The beauty of hiring in Kemer is that you don’t need the car for the whole holiday — just one or two days for specific day trips. Olympos one day, Tahtalı and Phaselis another.”
Reseñas sobre alquiler de coches en en Kemer
The classic reason to hire in Kemer is the day you manage to see three completely different places in one go: ancient Olympos, the turtle beach at Çıralı, and the eternal flames of Yanartaş. No standard hotel excursion puts them together in the right order.
Morning: Olympos
Olympos is 50 km / 1 hour south of Kemer on the D400. The ancient city sits right by the sea, with a gorge running alongside the river. Ticket ₺75–100. The walk through the ruins to the beach takes 2–3 hours.
“Olympos is best visited in the morning — before the heat builds and the tour groups arrive. By eleven the car park is filling up and the site starts to feel crowded.”
Afternoon: Çıralı
Çıralı is the neighbouring beach, just 5 km from Olympos, famous for its loggerhead turtle nesting grounds. A quiet village with fish restaurants right on the sand.
“Çıralı is the complete opposite of Kemer. No towering hotels, no animators — just a long beach, small guesthouses and restaurants on the sand. The perfect contrast.”
Evening: Yanartaş
Yanartaş is the mountain of eternal methane flames — 50 km from Kemer plus a 30-minute uphill walk. It’s best at dusk or after dark when the flames are clearly visible. Parking ₺50, entry ₺75.
“Yanartaş only really comes alive after dark — during the day the flames look weak, but at night they’re surreal. With your own car you can time it perfectly for sunset, when group tours rarely go.”
Local Kemer operators deliver the car straight to reception. The price depends on the hotel zone.
Free zone: Kemer centre, Göynük, Kiriş
Central Kemer, Göynük (10 km), Kiriş (5 km) — delivery is usually free. This includes Akka Antedon, Crystal Sunrise Garden, Mirage Park Resort, Karmir Resort, Limak Limra.
“In central Kemer and Göynük delivery is automatically free — this is the standard radius for local operators. The car arrives at reception within 30 minutes of your request.”
Beldibi, Çamyuva: €5–15
Beldibi (5 km towards Antalya) and Çamyuva (10 km south) carry a small delivery fee. Club Med Palmiye and Sherwood Exclusive are located here.
Tekirova: €10–20
Tekirova is 17 km south. The major resorts — Rixos Premium Tekirova, Maxx Royal Kemer Resort, Phaselis Rose, Amara Premier Palace — all offer lobby delivery.
“If you’re staying at Rixos or Maxx Royal, book delivery and skip the trip to AYT. The €15 fee easily pays for itself by saving an hour of shuttle time.”
Çıralı: €25–40
The furthest zone is Çıralı and the guesthouses near Olympos. The price is higher, but it makes sense if you plan to stay 2–3 days there without returning to Kemer.
“Delivery to Çıralı costs more, but you don’t need to bring the car back to Kemer either — you return it at the guesthouse. That works well too.”
Not every day in Kemer has to be a full road trip. There are half-day options and very local ones, and then the simple question arises: hire a car or join a hotel excursion?
“Tahtalı is the cable car that lifts you to 2,365 metres in just 10 minutes. It can be 28 °C at sea level and only 5 °C at the top. Bring a jacket — you’ll be glad you did.”
Tahtalı (Olympos Teleferik) is 30 km from Kemer with free parking at the lower station. Return ticket around €30 per adult. It’s a half-day trip that pairs nicely with Phaselis (15 km from Kemer) — Lycian ruins with three swimming bays for ₺100–150 entry.
“Phaselis is the laziest day trip from Kemer. 15 km, park the car, spend two hours among the ruins, three hours on the beach, and you’re back at the hotel in time for dinner.”
Hire versus hotel excursion is straightforward maths. The hotel-led Olympos+Çıralı+Yanartaş tour costs €40–60 per person; a family of four pays €160–240. An economy car for the day at €25–35 plus €15 of fuel comes to €40–50 for everyone. Plus you set your own pace: you can be at Yanartaş at dusk instead of following the bus schedule.
“The big advantage of hiring is timing flexibility. Group tours visit Yanartaş in daylight when the flames are barely visible. With your own car you get there at the perfect moment.”
El precio del alquiler de coches en Kemer varía según la temporada y la duración del alquiler.
- enero
- febrero
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- agosto
- septiembre
- octubre
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- diciembre
- Ene
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1. Compara coches en Kemer
Te facilitamos la comparación de precios y condiciones de alquiler en Kemer para que puedas alquilar un coche más fácilmente
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2. Asegure su reserva en línea
Reserve su vehículo con un pequeño depósito y le garantizamos que le estará esperando a su llegada en Kemer.
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3. Comparta su experiencia de alquiler
Ayuda a otros a tomar la decisión correcta al alquilar coches en TakeCars Kemer.
D400 — Kemer’s mountain road
The D400 links Kemer with Antalya, Olympos and Tahtalı. It’s a winding road through the Taurus Mountains: tunnels, long climbs and hairpin bends. The surface is good, but the pace is noticeably different from the flatter D400 around Belek.
In summer
A perfectly manageable road — any car will cope. The main features are the long descent into Kemer from the north, several tunnels, and the climb towards Tahtalı and Olympos. Allow around 60 km/h on the mountain sections.
“The D400 west of Antalya isn’t just a motorway, it’s an experience. The scenery is better than around Belek, but drive carefully — hairpin bends are common.”
In winter (December–February)
Additional risks appear: fog over the pass, occasional landslides after heavy rain, and snow above 1,500 m near Tahtalı. Most resorts in Kemer are closed in winter; only the major chains at AYT remain active. Avoid driving the D400 at night without local experience and consider a mid-range car or SUV.
“The golden rule for the D400 in winter: never drive at night unless absolutely necessary. Fog over the pass and wet roads aren’t what you want to test on a hire car.”
HGS
There are no toll sections on the D400 itself. The car already has an HGS sticker, but you’ll only need it if you head further afield towards Burdur or onto the O-21.