每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Yes — this is one of the most valued aspects of the Daytrip experience. The coastal road between Fethiye and Kalkan passes through scenery that is genuinely worth pausing for, including the dramatic cliff views above Kaputaş Beach. Drivers familiar with the route can point out local highlights and accommodate stops at viewpoints, beaches, or archaeological sites along the way. When booking, you can browse suggested stops for your specific route and add them to your itinerary. It is worth discussing your interests and timing with your driver at the start of the journey so the day fits your pace rather than a fixed tour schedule.
Kalkan sits along the southwestern Mediterranean coast of Turkey. From Fethiye it is approximately 90 km (56 miles), a journey of roughly 1.5 to 2 hours depending on traffic and road conditions. From Antalya it is around 200 km (124 miles), taking approximately 2.5 to 3 hours. From Kaş, Kalkan is very close — around 25 km (16 miles) and under 30 minutes, making the two towns a natural pairing for a longer day out. A private transfer means you travel directly on your own schedule, with no connections, no shared stops, and no waiting around at bus terminals.
A full day — roughly 5 to 7 hours on the ground — gives you time to explore without feeling rushed. A relaxed morning walk through the old town and harbor, a long lunch at one of the rooftop restaurants overlooking the bay, and an afternoon swim at one of the nearby coves or at Kaputaş Beach (a spectacular gorge beach just 7 km outside town) fills a day very naturally. If you also want to visit Kaş or explore the ancient Lycian ruins at nearby Patara or Xanthos, plan for an early start and discuss the route with your driver in advance so you can see multiple highlights in one trip.
Kalkan is not particularly well connected by direct public transport from most departure points. Reaching it typically involves taking a long-distance bus to a main hub like Fethiye or Kaş, then finding a local dolmuş connection — which means managing luggage across multiple legs, working around fixed schedules, and arriving with no guarantee of a seat during peak season. A private Daytrip transfer takes you directly from your starting point to Kalkan without any of that coordination, and your driver can stop along the way at viewpoints or sites like Kaputaş Beach at no extra complexity. For a destination that rewards arriving relaxed and ready to explore, the difference in experience is substantial.
Kalkan rewards slow, unhurried exploration. The old harbor district is the heart of the town — walk the stone streets, browse artisan shops, and find a rooftop terrace with views over the bay. Kaputaş Beach, just a short drive away, is one of the most photographed beaches on the entire Turkish coast, reached by a dramatic staircase carved into the cliffs above a narrow gorge. History travelers will want to continue to Patara, site of an ancient Lycian city with an impressive theatre and one of the longest unspoiled sandy beaches in Turkey. The combination of scenic coastline, archaeology, and a genuinely charming town center makes Kalkan unusually rewarding as a day trip base.
Kalkan is one of the most visually striking towns on the Turkish Aegean and Mediterranean coasts — a hillside Ottoman-era village that tumbles down to a sheltered marina, with whitewashed houses, bougainvillea-draped terraces, and remarkably clear turquoise water. Unlike the larger resort towns nearby, Kalkan has retained a genuinely boutique character: rooftop restaurants overlooking the bay, boutique shops tucked into narrow cobblestone alleys, and a harbor lined with wooden gulets. For travelers who want a taste of authentic Turquoise Coast atmosphere without the crowds of Marmaris or Bodrum, Kalkan delivers something harder to find.