Money Money in Istanbul: Currency, Cards, Tipping, and How Much Things Cost

Money in Istanbul: Currency, Cards, Tipping, and How Much Things Cost

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Money in Istanbul: Currency, Cards, Tipping, and
Photo: Getty Images

The Turkish Lira has been on a wild ride. Massive devaluation over the past few years means Istanbul is extraordinarily good value for travelers carrying euros, dollars, or pounds — but it also means prices change frequently, online information goes stale fast, and you need a solid understanding of how money works here to avoid overpaying. This Istanbul money guide covers everything: where to exchange, how to pay, what to tip, and what things actually cost in 2026.

The Currency: Turkish Lira (TRY/TL)

The Turkish Lira (₺) is the only legal currency. As of early 2026, approximate exchange rates hover around:

  • 1 USD ≈ 36–38 TL
  • 1 EUR ≈ 39–42 TL
  • 1 GBP ≈ 46–49 TL

These rates fluctuate, so check XE.com or Google before your trip and periodically during your stay.

Key takeaway for tourists: The lira’s devaluation means your foreign currency goes far. A full restaurant meal that would cost €30 in Paris might cost the equivalent of €8–15 in Istanbul. But prices are rising for locals, so be generous — your “cheap” meal is someone’s premium dining.

How to Get Turkish Lira

Option 1: ATMs (Recommended)

ATMs (bankamatik) are everywhere in Istanbul. Major banks include Garanti BBVA, İş Bankası, Yapı Kredi, Ziraat Bankası, and Akbank.

Tips:

  • Use bank ATMs attached to branches (not standalone machines in tourist areas) to minimize fraud risk.
  • Withdraw TL, not your home currency. When the machine asks “process in your home currency?” ALWAYS select NO. This is called Dynamic Currency Conversion, and the exchange rate is terrible.
  • Most ATMs charge a small fee (15–25 TL). Your home bank may charge an additional foreign transaction fee. Check before you travel.
  • Withdraw larger amounts less frequently to minimize per-transaction fees.

Option 2: Exchange Offices (Döviz)

Found throughout Istanbul, especially in Sultanahmet, Taksim, Grand Bazaar, and Eminönü.

Tips:

  • The Grand Bazaar area consistently has the best rates.
  • Compare 2–3 offices before committing.
  • Ask about commissions — some advertise great rates but add a hidden commission.
  • Use licensed (government-authorized) exchange offices only. They’ll display a blue “Döviz” sign.
  • Bring USD, EUR, or GBP for the best rates.

Option 3: Airport Exchange (Last Resort)

Airport exchange counters have the worst rates. Only exchange a small amount for immediate transport needs (200–300 TL max), then get better rates in the city.

Cards vs. Cash

Card acceptance: Credit and debit cards (Visa, Mastercard) are widely accepted in Istanbul at restaurants, hotels, shops, museums, and supermarkets. Contactless payment works at most terminals.

When you need cash:

  • Small shops and bakkal (corner stores)
  • Market vendors and street food carts
  • Some local restaurants (especially lokantas)
  • Taxi payments (if not using app)
  • Tipping
  • Transit (initial Istanbulkart buy)

Recommended approach: Carry a mix. Card for hotels, restaurants, and larger buys. Cash (small bills: 50, 100, 200 TL) for transit, tips, street food, and markets.

💡 Pro Tip: Always pay in Turkish Lira, whether by card or cash. If a merchant offers to charge your card in dollars/euros, decline. Their conversion rate will be worse than your bank’s.

Tipping Guide

Tipping in Istanbul is appreciated but not as aggressive as in the US. Here’s the standard:

Service Tip Amount
Sit-down restaurant 10–15% of the bill
Café/bar Round up or 5–10%
Taxi Round up to nearest 10–20 TL
Hotel porter 20–50 TL per bag
Hammam attendant 50–100 TL (important — this is a significant part of their income)
Tour guide 100–200 TL per day
Hairdresser/barber 10–15%
Food delivery 10–20 TL

Note: Some restaurants add a “servis ücreti” (service charge) of 10–15% to the bill. If this is already included, additional tipping is optional but still appreciated.

What Things Cost in Istanbul (2026)

Food & Drink

Item Price (TL) Price (USD approx.)
Simit (sesame bread ring) 10–15 $0.30–0.40
Çay (tea) at a café 20–40 $0.50–1.10
Turkish coffee 60–120 $1.60–3.30
Balık ekmek (fish sandwich) 100–150 $2.70–4.10
Döner kebab 80–150 $2.20–4.10
Lokanta meal (workers’ restaurant) 100–200 $2.70–5.50
Mid-range restaurant meal 300–600 $8–16
Fine dining (per person) 1,500–4,000 $40–110
Beer (domestic, in bar) 100–200 $2.70–5.50
Cocktail (rooftop bar) 300–600 $8–16
Rakı (bottle, at meyhane) 800–1,500 $22–41
Water bottle (0.5L) 10–15 $0.30

Transport

Item Price (TL) Price (USD)
Istanbulkart (card itself) 165 $4.50
Single metro/tram ride 42 $1.15
Bosphorus ferry 53–59 $1.45–1.60
Airport bus (Havaist) 275 $7.50
Taxi (short ride, 5 km) 300–400 $8–11

Sights

Attraction Price Notes
Hagia Sophia (tourist area) €25 ~925 TL
Topkapı Palace + Harem 2,750 TL ~$75
Basilica Cistern 1,950 TL ~$53
Galata Tower €30 ~1,110 TL
Dolmabahçe Palace 1,800 TL ~$49
Museum Pass Istanbul €105 5-day, 10+ museums
Blue Mosque Free
Grand Bazaar Free
Bosphorus cruise (short) 65–100 TL ~$2–3

Daily Budgets

Travel Style Daily Budget (excl. places to stay)
Shoestring $20–35 (lokantas, walking, free sights)
Budget $35–60 (mix of paid sights, local food, transit)
Mid-range $60–120 (restaurants, major sights, ferries)
Comfortable $120–250 (fine dining, all sights, taxis when needed)

Common Money Mistakes

  • Exchanging at the airport. You’ll lose 5–10% compared to city rates.
  • Accepting Dynamic Currency Conversion. Always pay in TL, not your home currency.
  • Carrying only large bills. Many small shops can’t break 200 TL notes. Carry 50s and 100s.
  • Not checking the bill. Tourist-area restaurants sometimes add charges (cover charge, bread, water) without asking. Check your bill before paying.
  • Trusting Google Maps prices. Restaurant prices on Google are often outdated due to inflation. Don’t rely on them for budgeting.

Istanbul is generous to foreign-currency travelers right now. Use that advantage wisely — eat well, tip well, and invest in experiences over souvenirs.

What surprised you most about costs in Istanbul? Share in the comments.

Useful links: Booking.com Istanbul · Go Türkiye – Istanbul Tourism

Prices last updated: March 2026. Exchange rate used: 1 USD ≈ 45 TL. Prices in Turkish lira can change frequently due to inflation. Attraction fees set in euros (€) are more stable. Always check official websites for the latest prices before your visit.

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