Basilica Cistern tickets & tours | Price comparison

Basilica Cistern

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Basilica Cistern, also known as Yerebatan Sarnıcı or the Sunken Palace, is the strangest cool-down in Sultanahmet: a reservoir from the 6th century AD where 336 columns, dark water, and the famous Medusa heads turn a practical Byzantine structure into a full mood shift under Yerebatan Caddesi. Reopened in 2022 after its biggest restoration, it feels part archaeological site, part stage set.

For a first visit, book a skip-the-line ticket with an audio guide, because it keeps your timing flexible, cuts ticket-line friction, and gives the Medusa corners real context.
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Skip-the-line tickets and audio guides

Best if Basilica Cistern itself is the priority: you stay flexible inside Sultanahmet, avoid ticket-desk friction, and get enough context for the Medusa heads without committing to a fixed group pace.
Istanbul: Basilica Cistern Fast-Track Entry and Audio Guide
4.5(8470)
 
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Istanbul: Basilica Cistern Skip-the-Line Entry & Audio Guide
4.6(1480)
 
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Basilica Cistern Skip-the-Line Entry Ticket and Audio Guide
4.6(2498)
 
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Basilica Cistern: Skip The Line Ticket
4.3(260)
 
tiqets.com
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See all Skip-the-line tickets and audio guides

Guided tours through the cistern

Choose these when you want myths, Byzantine engineering, and the imperial context around the site explained as you walk, sometimes with a wider Sultanahmet route or a water-side add-on handled in one booking.
Istanbul: Basilica Cistern Skip-the-line Entry & Guided Tour
4.4(266)
 
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Istanbul: Basilica Cistern Walking Tour with Entry Ticket
4.8(52)
 
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Topkapi Palace, Harem & Basilica Cistern Guided Walking Tour
5.0(65)
 
viator.com
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Basilica Cistern Skip-the-Line Ticket with Guided Tour
4.1(286)
 
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Topkapı combo tickets

These are the smart value play if you also want Topkapı Palace: one booking covers two of the district's strongest indoor highlights and reduces the back-and-forth of buying separately.
Basilica Cistern & Topkapi Palace Combo Ticket + Audio Guide
4.4(140)
 
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Istanbul Combo Topkapi Palace and Basilica Cistern
5.0(1)
 
viator.com
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7 tips for visiting the Basilica Cistern

1
Book ahead for midday
If you want the cistern in the middle of a classic Sultanahmet day, do not leave the decision to the gate. Midday is the easiest time for ticket friction, and online entry keeps the stop short enough to pair with Hagia Sophia or Blue Mosque. That way you save time for the stones, not the line.
2
Choose audio if you want freedom
If your priority is moving at your own pace, pick the audio-guide format rather than a live group. You can linger at the Medusa heads, double back for photos, and still keep the rest of Sultanahmet open. So the stop stays flexible instead of scripted.
3
Use a guide for the Medusa story
If you care more about legends, reused Roman pieces, and how the cistern worked under Constantinople, a guided tour earns its keep. The room is atmospheric, but the details can blur together in the dark on a first visit. A good guide makes the space read faster.
4
Go early or after 7:30 pm
The calmest rhythm is usually right after opening or in the evening session from 7:30 pm. Morning gives you the easiest fit with the rest of Sultanahmet; evening gives you the moodiest reflections, but at a higher ticket price. Choose the version of the place you actually want, so you do not pay extra for the wrong vibe.
5
Keep payment digital
At the entrance, card payment or İstanbulkart is the cleanest assumption, so do not count on a last-second cash fix. This is especially worth remembering if you arrive after walking over from Hagia Sophia in the evening. You avoid one very boring kind of travel drama.
6
Give it one good hour
Most visitors do well with about an hour here, even though the room itself is not huge. That gives you time for the columns, the Tear Column, the Medusa heads, and a few photo pauses without turning the stop into a museum marathon. So you leave impressed, not overbooked.
7
Pair it with one or two icons
The cleanest nearby trio is Hagia Sophia, Blue Mosque, and Topkapı Palace, but you rarely need all three on the same half-day. First-time visitors usually do better with the cistern plus two neighbors, while repeat visitors can slow down and give the underground atmosphere more room. That keeps Sultanahmet rich, not rushed.

Ticket formats at Basilica Cistern

The best booking here depends less on budget than on how you want to use your Sultanahmet hours. Decide first whether this is a focused underground stop, a story-rich guided visit, or part of a bigger imperial route, and the right product reveals itself quickly.

Choose the audio-guide ticket for flexibility

Best for most first-time visitors: the skip-the-line ticket with audio guide keeps the stop independent, which matters in Sultanahmet where plans shift block by block. You get context for the Medusa heads and the reused columns without locking yourself to a group pace or a long combined tour. This is the cleanest format when Basilica Cistern is the main target and the rest of the district is still in play. Book now.

Use guided tours when the stories matter

Choose this if your priority is explanation, not just atmosphere. Guided formats are strongest when you want the cistern's Byzantine engineering, the Medusa legends, and its place beside Hagia Sophia or Topkapı Palace unpacked as you go. They also work well for travelers who would rather listen than read in the dark. Book now.

Pick the Topkapı combo for an imperial half-day

If you already know you want Topkapı Palace, the combo ticket is usually smarter than buying in fragments. It groups two of the district's best indoor visits, reduces separate ticket friction, and makes sense on hot, rainy, or winter days when you want history without a long outdoor detour. Families and first-time visitors usually feel the value fastest here. Book now.

Choose evening only for the atmosphere

The evening window from 7:30 pm to 10 pm is not just later; it is a different experience, with darker reflections, fewer daylight distractions, and occasional Night Shift programming. Choose it if atmosphere is the goal, not because you ran late in Sultanahmet. If your priority is simple value, the daytime ticket is the easier buy. Book now.

History and highlights of Basilica Cistern

This is one of those Istanbul places that works on two levels at once. You feel the chill, the echo, and the theatrical dark immediately, but the real magic comes from remembering that this was a practical Byzantine water machine before it became one of the city's strangest stages.

A reservoir beneath the Stoa Basilica

The cistern was built under Justinian I in the 6th century AD on the site of the former Stoa Basilica, which explains both the modern name and the nickname Yerebatan Sarayı, the Sunken Palace. It supplied the Great Palace and nearby buildings, so what feels mystical today started as serious urban infrastructure.

Why the forest of columns feels so cinematic

Inside, 336 marble columns turn a rectangular engineering chamber into something that feels almost impossible on first sight. Many of the supports were reused from older structures, which is why the capitals do not all match and why the space feels slightly improvised in the best possible way. The result is less polished than a palace hall, and more memorable because of it.

Head straight to the Medusa corners

The two Medusa heads at the bases of columns are the most famous detail, and they deserve the attention. One lies sideways and the other upside down, probably as reused Roman pieces rather than as a dramatic ancient riddle, but that has never stopped the legends. If you want the classic photo and the strongest sense of the place's odd genius, this is the moment to slow down.

The Ottoman city never fully forgot it

After 1453, the cistern continued to serve Topkapı Palace for a time, and by the 16th century Petrus Gyllius helped reintroduce it to Western scholarship. Later Ottoman restorations, followed by major work between 1985 and 1987, turned the buried structure into a visitable monument rather than a hidden utility space. That long afterlife is part of what makes the site feel layered instead of frozen.

The 2022 reopening changed the feel

After its most extensive restoration, the museum reopened on July 22, 2022 and now leans more openly into art, light, and event programming. That is why the visit can feel half archaeological wonder, half performance venue, especially in the evening. Repeat visitors often notice this shift most clearly, because the cistern now stages its atmosphere rather than leaving it entirely to chance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is online booking worth it for Basilica Cistern?

Usually yes, especially if you want the cistern around midday or on a busy Sultanahmet day. The self-guided online formats cut gate friction and make it much easier to keep Hagia Sophia or Blue Mosque in the same walking loop.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

For most visitors, 30 to 40 minutes inside is enough, and about 1 hour is the comfortable version if you want photos or an audio guide. The stop is atmospheric rather than huge, so quality of time matters more than raw duration.
Read more.

What is the difference between the day and evening ticket?

The daytime window runs from 9 am to 6:30 pm and is the easier value choice. The evening window runs from 7:30 pm to 10 pm, costs more, and works best if your priority is atmosphere, reflections, and a more theatrical feel.
Read more.

Are there discounts for children or students?

Yes. Visitors under 7 enter free, and visitors aged 65+ with Turkish citizenship also enter free. Student discounts are limited to Turkish students and international students studying in Turkey, so do not assume a general tourist-student rate.
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Can I pay cash at the entrance?

Do not plan on it. The current entrance rule is card payment or İstanbulkart, so a digital payment option is the safe assumption.
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Which nearby POIs pair best with Basilica Cistern?

The strongest nearby pairings are Hagia Sophia and Blue Mosque for the classic Sultanahmet loop, or Topkapı Palace if you want a longer imperial-history half-day. Most visitors should choose one of those directions rather than trying to do everything at once.
Read more.

Do guided tours really add value here?

They do if this is your first visit and you want more than atmosphere. The best guides make the reused Roman pieces, the Byzantine water logic, and the Medusa legends click much faster than a silent walk does.
Read more.

What will I actually see inside?

Expect a forest of columns, dark reflective water, the famous Tear Column, and the two Medusa heads used as column bases. The atmosphere is half engineering, half myth, which is exactly why the stop works so well.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The current published visiting hours are daily from 9 am to 10 pm. The visit now runs in a daytime window from 9 am to 6:30 pm and a separate evening window from 7:30 pm to 10 pm, so choose the session you actually want instead of drifting into the gap.

address

Basilica Cistern
Yerebatan Cad., Alemdar Mah. 1/3
34410 Sultanahmet-Fatih
Istanbul
Türkiye

website

tickets

Current on-site pricing retrieved on 2026-04-08:
- Day entry, 9 am to 6:30 pm: 1,950 TL
- Evening entry, 7:30 pm to 10 pm: 3,000 TL
- Visitors under 7: free
- Visitors 65+ with Turkish citizenship: free
- Student discounts: limited to Turkish students and international students studying in Turkey

Only credit/debit cards and İstanbulkart are accepted for entry. Online products on this page often add skip-the-line access, an audio guide, or a guide.

how to get there

The cleanest public-transport anchor is the T1 tram to Sultanahmet, then a short walk along Yerebatan Caddesi. If you are already at Hagia Sophia or Blue Mosque, just walk; the cistern sits between the district's classic icons better than it works as a separate taxi errand.
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