Este coche en la actualidad no está disponible: empresa inactiva

This car is currently not available: company is inactive

🎁 Use code WELCOME3 during checkout to get discount on your first booking with us. Enjoy! ☀️

Close
cars based on your filters
No cars found

Car rental in Turkey unlocks the country in a way no shuttle bus or organised excursion can match. Distances are large, the road network is solid, and most of what brings people here — from the Lycian coast to Cappadocia — sits a few hours from the airport. The local fleet is broad, the airports are well-connected, and an independent road trip is genuinely the natural way to see it.

For most guests, the car becomes part of the holiday rather than a chore. Three or four days from an all-inclusive resort to reach Pamukkale or the Saklıkent Gorge; a fortnight along the coast between Antalya and Kaş; or a quick city-to-city run in shoulder season when prices drop.

A couple landing in Antalya last May signed the contract on the bonnet by gate D. Five minutes, voucher, keys, off down the D400. The shuttle bus to the big-chain office hadn't even left.

Payment is straightforward. Visa, Mastercard, Maestro and contactless are accepted everywhere; credit cards are required only by the international chains, while local suppliers happily take cash deposits in EUR, USD or Turkish lira. Most guests pay an online deposit of 15–20% to confirm the booking and settle the rest on collection.

The question we get most often is whether you really need a credit card. Not with us. A debit card or a couple of hundred euros in cash is enough at almost every local supplier.

The fleet typically starts with the Fiat Egea — by far the most common Turkish hire car — and runs up to eight-seat minivans for families. Most cars are 2020 or newer.

What you need to rent

The basics are short: a passport with your entry stamp and a valid driving licence. EU and EEA licences are accepted directly. UK licences are accepted for tourists, but the official UK government recommendation is to carry an International Driving Permit alongside, especially for older paper licences or stays longer than a few weeks. The IDP is cheap, valid for a year, and worth the peace of mind at a Turkish police checkpoint.

A British guest drove for two weeks Antalya to Cappadocia on a paper licence last spring. Nobody asked for an IDP — but at a checkpoint near Konya the officer leafed through twice. He bought one online the next morning.

The minimum age is 21 with at least two years' driving experience. Premium models, 4×4 vehicles and minivans are usually 25 and over. Drivers under 25 pay a young driver surcharge of around $10 per day with most local suppliers.

Payment is friendly to most European guests. Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, contactless and Apple/Google Pay all work for the online deposit. On collection, local suppliers also take cash in EUR, USD or Turkish lira; the international chains insist on a credit card in the main driver's name.

Bring a debit card and a couple of hundred euros in cash. That covers almost any combination — deposit, fuel top-up, or a coffee at the airport.

Before you leave the car park, check the car against your voucher: model, year, transmission, fuel type. Quiet substitutions for "the same class" do happen in high season.

Most tourists in Turkey start their trip here

What it costs

Pricing follows the season. In low season, a Fiat Egea — the most common Turkish hire car — starts at $8–10 per day for a manual and $12–15 for an automatic. Mid-range models such as the Renault Megane or Hyundai i30 sit at $12–20. Family minivans run $60–80.

In high season (June–September) prices roughly triple: the Egea starts at $35, mid-range $45–55, minivans $120–180. On the coast in July and August the better cars are gone two to three weeks ahead, so renting in Bodrum or Antalya is best booked early.

August in Antalya is fully booked a month out. A family flying into AYT last summer left it until landing and ended up with a manual Egea for the price of a Duster.

Beyond the daily rate, the voucher usually includes: TPL (third-party liability, mandatory by Turkish law), basic CDW, the airport surcharge, optional Super CDW (Full Coverage), young driver surcharge and a return-elsewhere fee if you drop the car in a different city. Tolls and fines are billed afterwards with a small admin charge from the supplier.

The price on the voucher is the price you pay. If something isn't on the breakdown, it won't be on the bill either.

Cash deposits depend on car class: roughly $100 for an economy, $200–300 for mid-range and up to $500 for a minivan. A few suppliers offer zero-deposit tariffs — pay for Full Coverage and no deposit is held at all.

Real reviews on TakeCars in Turkey

Irina Tarilova
Irina Tarilova
🇷🇺

Opel Corsa in Turkey

Great. Met me at the airport, drove me to the office, rented the car there. Return of the car also in the rental office. Then drove to the airport. The car is excellent. I recommend it.

June 2026
Eduard Taryieladze
Eduard Taryieladze
🇷🇺

Fiat Fiorino in Turkey

Everything was ok, the car was ok, but it was not the one we booked. Because of this our friend could not fit with us and she had to get there separately.

November 2025
Iuliia Reshetian
Iuliia Reshetian
🇷🇺

Opel Corsa in Turkey

had another car, a Hyundai. In general, everything was fine. But the man who met us did not have change and I had to look several times to change or change money. In the end I had to go back to the airport and stand in line for inspection. At the same time, I had the amount and without change minus a thousand rubles, we offered to pay it later, he did not agree. It took probably an hour to find it.

October 2025
Dmitrii Borisov
Dmitrii Borisov
🇷🇺

Renault Clio 5 in Turkey

Everything went well. The manager arrived on time. The car was given out promptly and picked up promptly. The Clio was out of stock, so we were given a renault taliant. There were no problems when returning the car. Thank you for the convenient service. Everything was as described and at the right price.

July 2025
Pavel Kirillov
Pavel Kirillov
🇷🇺

Citroen C-Elysee in Turkey

They gave me a different car. They gave me a fiat, everything went fine.

June 2025
Andrei Oreshkov
Andrei Oreshkov
🇹🇷

Citroen C-Elysee in Turkey

I wanted to take a moment to share my feedback regarding my recent rental of the Citroen C-Elysee in Turkey. Overall, I had a fantastic experience! The car was well-maintained, comfortable, and perfect for exploring the area. I would especially like to commend the manager who handled the pickup and drop-off of the vehicle. He was incredibly professional, friendly, and helpful throughout the entire process. His excellent service truly enhanced my experience and made everything seamless. Thank you for providing such a wonderful service. I look forward to renting again on my next visit! Best regards, Andrei

November 2024
Rustambek Djuraev
Rustambek Djuraev
UZ

Renault Taliant in Turkey

The car is good, but the company itself issued a bunch of additional bills so that I could get the car. They did not count the prepayment amount that I paid through the website and told me to pay the full rental price. I'm unhappy with the service.

November 2024
Oleg Raslambekov
Oleg Raslambekov
🇷🇺

Renault Taliant in Turkey

Everything is perfect. All the formalities took 10 minutes. It was 200$ cheaper than at the airport. Very satisfied, thank you.

September 2024
Anton Mazaev
Anton Mazaev
🇷🇺

Opel Corsa in Turkey

We didn't have an Opel, we were given a Renault. Everything went well, the car did not let me down, there were no problems with the reception and delivery of the car. In the future I will definitely contact again. Thank you!

August 2024
Alisa Borodinova
Alisa Borodinova
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea Urban in Turkey

The car rental was excellent. We were met at the airport, were taken by a comfortable car to the parking lot of the rental company (about 10 minutes from Istanbul airport), quickly issued a car in accordance with the reservation. A week later we returned the car to the rental company parking lot and we were transferred to the airport without delay. It was very convenient that in the process of renting it is not necessary to pay for the use of toll roads, and at the time of returning the car you need to pay the total cost of travel on them in the office of the rental company. Next time we will rent a car from the same rental company.

March 2024
Nikita Popovnin
Nikita Popovnin
🇷🇺

Fiat Egea Multijet in Turkey

We were very dissatisfied not so much with the car, but with Mr. Huseyin, who is a representative of the company that provides the car on the spot (Izmir airport). We flew from Antalya and indicated this when booking, including the flight number. Of course, we arrived at the domestic terminal. Huseyin came to meet us in the international terminal. As a result - unnecessary negotiations and lost time. He took us not to the parking lot of the rental company, but to some apartment building. Also he did not have a terminal for payment with a bank card, although in the terms of rental on the site was such a possibility. Then he took from us extra 10 euros for the passage of the car on toll highways, explaining that the car has a built-in transponder for automatic payment and that the amount will be deducted from it and it is just it. There was no information about this payment on the website when booking. The car was all mangled. We took 26 pictures of the damage to document the current condition of the car. But it seemed to drive, and time was a pity, so we decided to take the proposed copy. But after the same day we noticed how wiped the steering wheel and gear lever were. According to the contract the car should have been manufactured in 2022, but we took it in January 2024. A car can't look like this after 2 years of use. We started to look at its technical ticket, and it says that this car is not 2022, but 2018. So it's a different car than we ordered, even though it was the same model. The mileage was listed around 97000 kilometers, but such a wiped steering wheel and gearbox lever said that the car has passed much over 150000km. When we wrote to Hussain about it, he just said that the 2022 car was being repaired and he couldn't give any discounts for an older and beat up car, nor could he change it. In normal rental companies there is a rule, according to which, if the ordered car is not available for any circumstances, then the customers are given a similar or better, but never worse, as we got. And Husein did not say it himself in advance, but tried to hide it. Also with time we realized that the wiper blades and left window washer did not work in the car. Fortunately at least this after a conversation with Hussein managed to eliminate, but for this we had to drive ourselves to a certain car service and again spend our vacation time. In general, we do not recommend dealing with this car supplier (Hussein) and his company.

January 2024
Dmitrii Iaroslavskii
Dmitrii Iaroslavskii
🇷🇺

Renault Taliant in Turkey

Everything is super! I will definitely apply again!

November 2023
Aleksandr Sinitsyn
Aleksandr Sinitsyn
🇷🇺

Renault Symbol in Turkey

Receipt and return are excellent, the machine itself is in poor condition

July 2022
RENT A CAR
  • Verified reviews on every car

    See how this Egea or this Duster has actually performed, not an average for the supplier.

  • The price on the voucher is final

    All taxes, basic insurance and fees are baked in — no recalculation at the desk.

  • Free cancellation up to 7 days

    Direct messaging with the supplier lets you agree details with the person handing over the keys.

Tolls, bridges and HGS

Since March 2022 Turkey runs a single toll system on its motorways — HGS (Hızlı Geçiş Sistemi). Barriers were removed; neither cash nor cards are accepted at the toll point. Every rental car carries an active HGS sticker on the windscreen, and the charge is deducted automatically as you pass under the gantry.

You don't need to slow down at a toll gantry. The sticker reads at 30 km/h and at 110. What matters is that it's actually on the car.

Istanbul bridges

Bosphorus crossings have their own logic. On three bridges — 15 Temmuz Şehitler, Fatih Sultan Mehmet and Yavuz Sultan Selim — you only pay in one direction, Europe to Asia. Going back is free. The Osmangazi Bridge on the Istanbul–Izmir motorway and the Eurasia Tunnel under the Bosphorus charge in both directions.

A guest doing the Istanbul–Izmir loop in March paid Osmangazi twice and then routed back across 15 Temmuz for nothing. The difference paid for dinner.

What it costs

Rough 2026 figures: Eurasia Tunnel about ₺225 by day, Osmangazi Bridge about ₺795, Istanbul to Ankara around ₺150, Istanbul to Izmir around ₺500. Free alternatives exist almost everywhere but add 30–90 minutes.

HGS is billed after you return the car. A small admin fee on top is normal practice — ours is fixed in the contract from day one, no surprises later. Every car we offer ships with an active sticker, but it's worth confirming on collection.

Insurance and borders

Third-party liability (TPL) is mandatory by Turkish law and included in every rental. Basic CDW (Collision Damage Waiver) is usually bundled too, with an excess: you pay a fixed amount in case of damage and the insurer covers the rest. Standard exclusions: glass, wheels, rims, undercarriage, interior.

About 70% of guests take Full Coverage. In Istanbul or on Cappadocia's switchbacks, a $1,500 excess is one scrape on a wing. Full Coverage removes that risk for $8–15 a day.

What Super CDW covers

Super CDW (Full Coverage by some suppliers) covers glass, wheels, rims and theft, and zeroes the excess. It doesn't cover drink-driving over 0.5‰, off-road tracks, unpaid tolls or towing. For mountain routes it's standard; on the coast at Belek, Side or Kemer many guests stick with basic cover.

After an accident

After any incident, even a small scratch, call 154 (traffic police) and wait. The police report is mandatory — without it no insurance pays out, and the repair comes out of your deposit. Don't move the car until the police arrive; tell your supplier in parallel.

Don't try to settle on the spot. Without the police report Turkish insurance doesn't trigger, and the renter ends up alone with the bill.

Crossing borders

Usually not allowed. Insurance is void at the borders with Greece, Bulgaria, Armenia and Iran. Georgia is sometimes possible with written permission. Northern Cyprus by ferry from Taşucu is occasionally allowed with a supplier's signed approval.

Rates in Turkey vary throughout the year depending on the season and the rental length in days.

39
39
50
53
54
57
65
65
58
49
43
43
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
  • Jan
  • Feb
  • Mar
  • Apr
  • May
  • Jun
  • Jul
  • Aug
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec
chartHow expensive is renting a car in Turkey: average daily rates for a one-week car rental, across all car classes. Delivery across Turkey not included.

Frequently asked questions

Can I return the car in another city?

Yes, between major cities and airports — Istanbul ↔ Antalya, Antalya ↔ Izmir, Antalya ↔ Dalaman and similar pairings. The drop-off fee starts at $200–300 depending on distance and supplier. In high season these cars run out fast, so book early. Returning the car outside Turkey is not permitted.

Are winter tyres or chains required in Turkey?

Not by law, but strongly recommended in eastern Turkey, the Taurus mountains, Cappadocia and the Black Sea coast from November to April. Snow chains are useful as a back-up on steep mountain roads. Studded tyres are forbidden anywhere in Turkey. For Antalya, Bodrum and Izmir, winter tyres are usually unnecessary.

Which airport is best for hiring a car in Turkey?

Istanbul IST suits the city and the north-west. Sabiha Gökçen SAW is closer to the Asian side and a useful base for Cappadocia. Antalya AYT is the main hub for the Turkish Riviera. Dalaman DLM serves Marmaris, Fethiye and Ölüdeniz; Bodrum BJV the Aegean coast; Izmir ADB Ephesus and Çeşme.

Is it true that the car can be handed over with an empty fuel tank?

It happens more often in Turkey than in Western Europe. Some suppliers hand the car over with a minimal amount of fuel and ask for it back the same way — the full-to-full convention isn't universal here. Photograph the dashboard at collection and make sure the fuel level is recorded on the inspection sheet by the supplier.

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

Not with our local suppliers. A debit card, Maestro or contactless is enough for the online deposit, and the balance plus refundable security deposit can be paid in cash on collection (EUR, USD or Turkish lira). A credit card in the main driver's name is required only by the international chains that work in Turkey to their own standards.

Can I drive on my UK or EU licence in Turkey?

Yes. EU and EEA licences are accepted directly. UK licences are accepted for tourists for up to six months from your date of entry. Older paper UK licences and stays longer than a few weeks are easier with an International Driving Permit alongside. Foreign licences in non-Latin alphabets typically require an IDP.

Do I need an International Driving Permit (IDP) in Turkey?

For EU drivers, no. For UK drivers, an IDP is officially recommended by gov.uk and easy to get from the Post Office for £5.50, valid one year. It's not a strict requirement at most rental desks, but it removes the small risk of a misunderstanding at a Turkish police checkpoint and is standard for any longer trip.

What is the minimum age to hire a car in Turkey?

21 with at least two years of driving experience. Premium cars, 4×4s and minivans usually require 25. Drivers aged 21–24 pay a young driver surcharge of around $10 per day. There is rarely an upper age limit, though some suppliers ask for a medical note above 70.

How much deposit will be held and when is it returned?

It depends on the car class: roughly $100 for economy, $200–300 for mid-range and up to $500 for a minivan. With local suppliers the deposit is usually paid in cash and returned on the spot when the car is handed back undamaged. Zero-deposit tariffs exist if you pay for Full Coverage upfront.

How does HGS work and what do tolls cost?

HGS is the only electronic toll system on Turkish motorways since 2022. Every hire car has an active sticker and the charge is deducted as you pass under the gantry. Rough figures: Istanbul to Ankara around ₺150, Istanbul to Izmir around ₺500. The supplier bills HGS after the car is returned, with a small admin fee fixed in the contract.

Do I pay a toll on the Bosphorus bridges in Istanbul?

Only when crossing Europe to Asia. The three suspension bridges (15 Temmuz, Fatih, Yavuz) are free in the opposite direction. The Osmangazi Bridge on the Izmir motorway and the Eurasia Tunnel under the Bosphorus charge both ways. Payment is HGS only — neither cash nor cards are accepted at the toll point.

What is the drink-driving limit in Turkey?

0.5‰ for a driver alone in the car, and 0.0‰ as soon as any passenger — adult or child — is on board. This rule catches a lot of visitors out. Motorbikes, vans and any vehicle with a trailer have a 0.2‰ limit. The fine for a first offence is roughly ₺6,400 and any insurance becomes void above 0.5‰.

Do I need a police report for a small scratch?

Yes. Turkish law requires a police report (call 154, the traffic police) for any damage, including a scratch. Without it the insurance does not pay out and the repair is taken from your deposit. Don't move the car until the police arrive. Let your supplier know in parallel — they'll guide you on the spot.

Can I take the hire car to Greece, Bulgaria or Northern Cyprus?

Crossing into Greece, Bulgaria, Armenia, Iran, Syria or Iraq is not allowed — insurance is void at the border. Georgia is sometimes possible with individual permission and a surcharge of $100–200. Northern Cyprus is occasionally allowed by ferry from Taşucu or Mersin with written approval. The Republic of Cyprus is closed to Turkish hire cars.

Is there a daily mileage cap?

Often yes — 150–250 km per day with some Turkish suppliers, which is a step away from the unlimited mileage that's standard in much of Europe. Going over costs $0.20–1 per km. For long routes such as Istanbul to Cappadocia (730 km) or Antalya to Pamukkale (240 km), choose an unlimited-mileage tariff at booking.

Got questions?

Feel free to ask and we'll reply within 2 hours.

0/240

PRICE PER DAY

Transmission

Deposit types

OPTIONS

Seats

INSURANCE

Car types

Crossing borders

Car brand

Supplier