A city on two continents, capital of three empires, and home to 15 million people who treat breakfast as a two-hour ceremony. Hagia Sophia was a cathedral for nearly 1,000 years, a mosque for 481, a museum for 85, then a mosque again. The Grand Bazaar has been open since 1461. The ferries cost almost nothing and the sunset crossing is free.
Hagia Sophia's dome appears to float — 40 windows at its base dissolve the wall into light
The "French" Quarter is actually Beyoglu, built by Genoese colonists across the Golden Horn
Take the commuter ferry, not the tourist boat — same Bosphorus, a fraction of the price
Built 1892 for Orient Express passengers. Agatha Christie's room 411 is a museum.
BeyogluA 1917 prison became a luxury hotel. Hagia Sophia from the rooftop terrace.
SultanahmetOttoman bank vaults as design features. Walk to Galata Bridge and the ferry.
KarakoyApartment suites in bohemian Cihangir. Bosphorus views. Live like a local.
CihangirMusa Dagdeviren's library of disappearing Anatolian recipes. Daily menu, always different.
KadikoyNew Anatolian cuisine on a rooftop. Golden Horn, minarets, and the Bosphorus below.
BeyogluCharcoal-grilled adana kebab. The benchmark. Visible from the street, smelled from further.
BeyogluMeatballs since 1920. One dish, done right, across from the Blue Mosque.
SultanahmetPomegranate and sumac in cocktails. The best rooftop drink in Istanbul.
BeyogluPera Palace Hotel, 1892. Art Nouveau marble. Where Christie drank.
BeyogluCourtyard wine garden. Turkish reds from Cappadocia. Trees overhead, no traffic.
KadikoyBasement jazz near Galata Tower. Named after Miles Davis. Stone walls, real musicians.
BeyogluCathedral, mosque, museum, mosque. The dome has floated since 537 AD.
Sultanahmet336 columns underground. Two upside-down Medusa heads. The city's hidden basement.
Sultanahmet4,000 shops, 61 streets, 550 years. No GPS will save you. Get lost.
SultanahmetByzantine mosaics that rival Ravenna. In Balat, away from the crowds.
BalatTurkish coffee cooked on sand in copper cezve. Since the 1920s. UNESCO-inscribed culture.
Kadikoy"The buffalo doesn't sink" — named for foam so thick it defies gravity.
BeyogluIstanbul's specialty coffee pioneer. Competition baristas. Cihangir sunshine.
Cihangir- Buy an Istanbulkart at any metro station — works on all transit including ferries, and costs a fraction of single tickets
- The Eminonu-Kadikoy ferry at sunset is the single best free experience in the city. Sit on the right.
- Tea (cay) is offered constantly and often free — accept the small tulip glass. Refusing feels rude.
- Haggle in the Grand Bazaar (start at 40% of asking price). Never haggle in restaurants or cafes.
- Remove shoes in mosques. Women cover heads and shoulders — scarves are available at entrances.
- The Asian side (Kadikoy, Uskudar) is where Istanbul actually lives. The ferry takes 20 minutes.
- Insist on the taxi meter or use BiTaksi app. Say "taksimetre" and point at it.
- Turkish breakfast is a commitment — twenty small dishes, two hours, unlimited tea. Budget the morning.
Where Things Are
Four neighborhoods to orient your first visit
Sultanahmet
Historic peninsula: Hagia Sophia, Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, Grand Bazaar. Two thousand years of empire in walking distance.
Beyoglu
Istiklal Caddesi, meyhanes, rooftop bars, galleries. Where modern Istanbul goes out.
Karakoy
Waterfront between Galata Bridge and the cruise port. Third-wave coffee, galleries, street food.
Kadikoy
Asian side hub: food market, vinyl bars, local energy. The Istanbul tourists skip.
Balat / Fener
Colorful Ottoman houses, Greek Patriarchate, emerging cafe scene. Photogenic and increasingly gentrified.
Cihangir
Bohemian hilltop with Bosphorus views, brunch culture, and cats that own the streets.
