REVIEW · SIDE
Turkish Bath and Massage with Transfers
Book on Viator →Operated by Coyav Travel · Bookable on Viator
A real hammam experience in under two hours. This Turkish bath package in Side pairs the full heat-and-scrub routine with hotel transfers, an included tea pause, and English support. It’s also a private setup for your group, so you’re not stuck waiting your turn.
I like that the circuit covers multiple “heat rooms” (salt room, sauna, steam, then the Turkish bath) rather than a quick one-room stop. I also like the included pampering extras: scrub and foam, plus Turkish tea and a face mask. One thing to consider: the session can feel sales-y, so if you want only the included treatment, set boundaries early and keep an eye on timing.
In This Review
- Key things that make this hammam worth considering
- A Real Hammam Routine in Side, With Transfers Included
- Salt Room, Sauna, and Steam: The Heat Rooms That Do the Work
- The Turkish Bath Part: Scrub and Foam Massage (The Main Event)
- Included Massage, Face Mask, and the Oil-Massage Finish
- Price and Value: Why $18 Can Make Sense
- Transfers, Timing, and How to Keep the Day Relaxed
- Who This Experience Is Best For (And Who Should Rethink It)
- Should You Book the Turkish Bath and Massage in Side?
- FAQ
- How long does the Turkish bath and massage experience last?
- Where is this experience located?
- Is pickup and drop-off included?
- What’s included in the package?
- Are there optional add-ons?
- What is not included?
- Is this experience offered in English?
- Is it a private activity?
- What is the cancellation policy and what if weather is bad?
Key things that make this hammam worth considering

- Pickup and drop-off included so you spend less time sorting logistics
- Salt room, steam, and Turkish bath for the classic heat-to-scrub flow
- Scrub and foam massage included which is the heart of any good hammam
- Turkish tea and a face mask included for a more complete ritual
- 20-minute classic massage as part of the package
- Optional add-ons are offered so decide in advance what you actually want
A Real Hammam Routine in Side, With Transfers Included

If you’re in Side and craving a traditional hammam reset, this is a simple way to get it without building a plan from scratch. The whole thing runs about 2 hours, and pickup is offered so you’re not hunting for the spa on your own. You meet the driver at your hotel entrance security point, which is a small detail but it makes the start feel smoother.
This is also booked as a private activity for your group. That matters because hammams can be a little hectic if you’re sharing space with lots of people. With a private setup, you’re more likely to get the “walk-through” feel—heat rooms, scrub, massage, then out the door.
The other practical win is language support: the experience is offered in English, which helps when you’re confirming what’s included, what’s optional, and what you want your therapist to focus on. If you’re the type who likes clarity before you lie down, you’ll probably feel comfortable here.
One note I’d take seriously: the total time can get tight if you add extra services. The core package is designed to fit into that 2-hour window, so if you’re interested in add-ons, decide before you start slipping deeper into a longer day.
Other Turkish bath experiences we've reviewed in Side
Salt Room, Sauna, and Steam: The Heat Rooms That Do the Work
The hammam format here is built around a step-by-step warm-up. You generally move through multiple environments—starting with a salt room, then sauna, then steam, before the Turkish bath part of the ritual. That progression is the whole point: you’re loosening up first, then exfoliating, then sealing the deal with massage.
Here’s what each stage tends to do for you:
- Salt room: The idea is gentle warming in a salt-based environment. It’s usually where people start to feel the calm.
- Sauna: Expect more heat and more sweat. This is where muscles loosen and skin softens.
- Steam bath: Steam does two jobs at once: it continues the loosening effect and helps you get ready for the scrub.
What I like about this setup is that it doesn’t rush straight to the massage. You’re given time to acclimate to heat, which makes the scrub and foam part feel less jarring. If you’ve ever tried to do a “hard exfoliation” right after stepping into a spa, you know how uncomfortable that can be.
A quick consideration: you should have moderate physical fitness. That doesn’t mean you need to be an athlete. It just means you should be comfortable with getting around in a heated environment, moving between rooms, and staying seated/lying down for different parts of the routine.
The Turkish Bath Part: Scrub and Foam Massage (The Main Event)

This is the heart of the experience: the scrub and foam massage. In a classic hammam, exfoliation isn’t just a nice extra. It’s what gives you that “clean, smooth, lighter” feeling afterward.
What you should expect:
- A therapist applies a scrub designed to lift dead skin gently.
- Then you move into the foamy massage step, where you’re relaxed and rinsed back into comfort.
A well-run scrub-and-foam session should feel like it’s doing two things at once: loosening you up physically and making your skin feel refreshed without turning the whole experience into pain management. In your session, pay attention to communication. If you feel the scrub is too intense or the pressure isn’t right, speak up right away. Therapists often can adjust the strength once they realize what you prefer.
Also, there’s a “ritual” element to the Turkish bath. You’re not just booking a treatment; you’re going through a sequence that’s meant to reset your body and mind. That’s why the extra steps—tea and face mask—are included. They turn the day from a quick service into a proper hammam break.
Included Massage, Face Mask, and the Oil-Massage Finish

After the heat rooms and scrub steps, you’ll move into massage and finishing touches. The included program lists a classic massage (about 20 minutes), and it also includes a full body oil massage. The exact flow can vary from place to place, but the overall idea is consistent: you’re smoothing out the tension you loosened in the heat rooms.
A good oil massage should feel like a gentle continuation of the ritual rather than a separate appointment. If the therapist is attentive, you’ll feel your body settle into the end of the session—especially around tight spots like shoulders, back, calves, and legs.
You’ll also get a face mask and Turkish tea as part of the included treatment set. Tea is more than a drink here. It’s the pause that helps you stop rushing and start actually recovering from the heat cycle. And a face mask is a nice touch because it treats your skin as a whole-body experience, not just something cleaned and forgotten.
One interesting detail: you may meet a standout therapist named Tamer Hanken, who has a reputation for very hands-on work focused on limb and body alignment. If that kind of bodywork appeals to you, you might want to mention it to your therapist so you understand what they plan to do.
Price and Value: Why $18 Can Make Sense

At $18 per person, the value comes from what’s bundled. You’re not only getting a massage. You’re also getting:
- Sauna/steam/salt room elements
- Turkish bath plus scrub and foam
- Turkish tea
- Face mask
- Massage time (including a classic massage component)
- Transfers to and from your hotel
When you price out those parts separately in many places, it adds up fast. Here, the low cost is mostly explained by a tight, pre-built service flow: you get the core hammam sequence plus a massage finish, but you’re not paying for a long menu of add-ons.
That said, this is also where you should stay alert. Some experiences like this include upselling during the session. If you want to keep your spend exactly on the included package, make your preference clear before the heat rooms begin, and don’t let the session drift into longer add-on negotiations. If you’re offered extra services, you can politely decline and return to the plan you booked.
Also keep in mind that quality can depend on timing and the therapist handling your session. You might find the room presentation is a bit more basic than the slick photos you’re used to seeing online, so your expectation should be “traditional hammam experience,” not luxury showroom.
Transfers, Timing, and How to Keep the Day Relaxed

The big reason many people book a hammam like this is to avoid hassle. Pickup is offered, and you meet at the hotel entrance security area. Drop-off is included too, so you don’t have to problem-solve transportation after you’re warm, soapy, and slightly sleepy.
In practice, transfers work best if you’re ready when the driver arrives. These services often run on a schedule, especially with multiple hotel pickups. If you’re late or still gathering towels, your entire session can feel rushed.
Timing is also the key to protecting the relaxing part. The total program is about 2 hours, which leaves little slack. If you add extra treatments, you may lose some “rest room” pacing and shorten the calmer moments between steps. That’s the trade.
Here’s my simple strategy:
- Decide what you want before you arrive.
- If you’re offered something extra, ask how it changes the timing.
- If you only want the included hammam, repeat that once clearly.
- Then focus on the sequence: heat, scrub, massage, finish, out.
If you do this, you’ll get the benefit of the package without the stress of renegotiating it mid-session.
Who This Experience Is Best For (And Who Should Rethink It)

This is a strong fit if you want a traditional Turkish bath experience and you like the idea of a step-by-step routine. It’s also good for families who want a single, structured activity with transfers handled.
It’s especially suitable if:
- You want heat-room variety (salt room, sauna, steam)
- You care about the scrub-and-foam ritual
- You’d like tea and a face mask as part of the package
- You prefer a private experience for your group
- You’re comfortable communicating in English for confirmations
It might be less ideal if:
- You only want quiet luxury and don’t want any sales pressure during your spa time
- You’re sensitive to changes in how long each room feels during the session
- You expect the massage quality and setting to match top-tier resort spas
One more practical point: this experience requires good weather. That doesn’t mean you’ll be outside sweating in the sun, but it does mean rescheduling can happen if conditions aren’t right.
Should You Book the Turkish Bath and Massage in Side?

I’d book it if your goal is a classic hammam ritual with transfers and a fair price. For $18, the combination of heat rooms, Turkish bath scrub and foam, Turkish tea, face mask, and massage time is a lot of “real spa sequence” for the money. If you set boundaries on add-ons and keep an eye on timing, you can protect the relaxation part and walk away feeling cleaned and loose.
I’d think twice if your priority is zero upselling or a spotless, modern spa look. You might find the experience shifts toward sales efforts once you’re inside, and you might also find the session pacing is faster than you expected if add-ons are added.
If you’re flexible, curious, and ready for a traditional hammam rhythm, this is the kind of Side experience that actually changes how you feel the rest of your day.
FAQ
How long does the Turkish bath and massage experience last?
The total duration is approximately 2 hours.
Where is this experience located?
It’s in Side, Turkey.
Is pickup and drop-off included?
Yes, transfers are included to and from your hotel. You should wait at the hotel entrance security for pickup.
What’s included in the package?
Included items are sauna (including salt room and steam room), Turkish bath, peeling, Turkish tea, full body oil massage, face mask, and a classic massage (20 minutes).
Are there optional add-ons?
Yes. Additional facials or massages can be chosen as optional add-ons.
What is not included?
Extra therapy massages are not included. Also not included are drinks (could and alcohol drinks) and body mask/body are.
Is this experience offered in English?
Yes, it is offered in English.
Is it a private activity?
Yes, it’s a private tour/activity, and only your group will participate.
What is the cancellation policy and what if weather is bad?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.



























