Plan your visit

Göbekli Tepe sits about 15 km north-east of Şanlıurfa, an easy day trip from the city. Here is what to expect on the ground — and why the Şanlıurfa Archaeology Museum is an essential second stop.

The Göbekli Tepe archaeology park and visitor approach
The Göbekli Tepe archaeology park and visitor approach.

What you'll see

The main enclosures are sheltered beneath a wide protective canopy (a membrane roof completed in 2017) that guards the fragile limestone from sun and rain. You view the circles from an elevated wooden boardwalk that loops above and around Enclosures C and D, with viewing platforms along a fixed route. The perspective from above is the best way to read the layout of the rings and the placement of the central pillars.

One thing to know before you go: visitors do not enter the enclosures or the excavation trenches. The boardwalk is the visitor route, and stepping down into the structures is not permitted — this protects both the monuments and the ongoing archaeological work. Bilingual interpretive panels along the way explain what you are looking at.

Getting from the entrance to the mound

You begin at the visitor center, where tickets, a café, a shop and restrooms are located. From there it is roughly a 1 km approach to the canopy. A free shuttle runs this stretch, or you can walk it. Allow a typical visit of about 1.5 to 3 hours, depending on how long you linger at the platforms and panels.

Pair it with the museum

Most of the original finds are not on the mound — they are displayed at the Şanlıurfa Archaeology Museum in the city. There you can see carved stone vessels, plaquettes, modified human skulls, a full-scale walk-through replica of Enclosure D, and Urfa Man, the world's oldest known life-sized human statue (around 9000 BCE). Seeing the site and the museum together gives the fullest picture; many visitors do the museum first or on the same day. Our heritage sites guide covers the museum and the wider Taş Tepeler landscape.

When to go

The site is open year-round, but the most comfortable months are roughly April to October. Summer brings strong heat on this exposed ridge, so early mornings are pleasant; the canopy provides shade at the enclosures themselves.

Before you travel: opening hours, last-entry times, ticket prices and pass arrangements (such as the Turkish MüzeKart) change seasonally and from year to year. Always verify the latest details against official sources before you plan your trip.

Practical guides

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