REVIEW · ALANYA
V.I.P Traditional Turkish Bath and Spa 3-Hour Activity in Alanya
Book on Viator →Operated by Lonely Travel · Bookable on Viator
If you want a Turkish bath without the hunt for directions, this is the kind of shortcut that actually feels good. This VIP traditional hamam and spa experience pairs Ottoman-style bathing rituals with a scheduled massage sequence, plus hotel pickup and drop-off so your day doesn’t get chewed up by taxis.
I especially like how the treatment has a clear rhythm: sauna and steam first, then the main hamam scrub with a kese (that classic scrubbing mitt), followed by massage and a face mask. And yes, the package includes a small pause with a drink option—tea, Turkish coffee, or wine with fruit—which gives you a breather instead of nonstop rubbing.
One thing to consider: the “3-hour” label can feel tight depending on transfer timing and how long the spa portion runs that day, and a couple of people reported being asked for extra money at reception. So go in with a calm expectation and ask what’s included before paying anything extra.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Notice Fast
- What a VIP Turkish Bath Really Means in Alanya
- The Treatment Flow: Sauna, Steam, Kese Scrub, Foam Massage
- The Break With Tea, Coffee, Wine, and Fruit
- The 30-Minute Full-Body Oil Massage and Face Mask Finish
- Price and Value: Is $36.05 Worth It?
- Timing and Transfers: The 3-Hour Promise With Real-Life Add-Ons
- Staff, Group Size, and Comfort Levels
- Facilities: Smell, Age, and What You Should Expect
- Who This Is For (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- Should You Book This Alanya VIP Turkish Bath?
- FAQ
- How long is this experience in total?
- What treatments are included?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Do you get hotel pickup and drop-off in Alanya?
- How many people are in the group?
- Can people with mobility issues participate?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Highlights You’ll Notice Fast

- Hotel pickup and drop-off in Alanya means you start and finish without worrying about transport.
- A set treatment order (steam → kese scrub → foam → oil massage → face mask) helps you know what’s coming.
- English is supported, which makes it easier to communicate needs during a very hands-on experience.
- Small group size (up to 10) keeps it from turning into a cattle-line frenzy.
- A rest-and-drink break (tea/coffee/wine with fruit) adds a humane pause in the middle of the ritual.
- VIP-style framing is meant to reduce waiting, but timing can still vary once transfers are included.
What a VIP Turkish Bath Really Means in Alanya
A traditional Turkish bath (hamam) can sound simple—steam, scrub, rinse, repeat. But the best ones work like a system. Heat softens your skin, the scrubbing loosens what the steam has already loosened, and then massage helps you leave feeling lighter instead of just “clean.”
This VIP format is designed for convenience. You’re not just booking a spa room; you’re booking a scheduled experience that aims to fit into a half-day window. In practical terms, that matters in Alanya because your vacation time is limited, and public transport plus finding the right entrance can eat hours.
I like that the experience starts with cleansing in sauna and steam room before you even reach the main hamam area. That sequence makes the rest of the treatment feel more effective. No one wants to jump straight to scrubbing when your skin hasn’t warmed up.
Also, the tour is offered in English, which is a big deal in a hamam setting. Even when you don’t speak much, knowing you can communicate what you need (comfort level, pace, pressure) helps you relax faster.
Other Alanya tours we've reviewed in Alanya
The Treatment Flow: Sauna, Steam, Kese Scrub, Foam Massage

Here’s the core structure you can expect, in plain language.
First comes the skin cleanse phase. You’ll start in a sauna and a steam room. The goal is to get you warm and prepared—skin becomes softer, and your body responds better to the deeper cleanse that follows. If you’ve ever wondered why hamam rituals feel more intense than a normal shower, this is the reason: you’re getting heat-first, not just water.
Then you move into the main hamam area for the star act: the kese scrubbing treatment. A kese is that traditional scrubbing mitt used by trained massage therapists. The scrubbing practice lasts about 20 minutes, and it’s designed to remove dead skin cells. It can feel very vigorous, but it’s typically done in a controlled rhythm rather than chaotic scrubbing.
After the kese, there’s a gentle foam massage. Think of this as the transition step between “scrubbed and exposed” and “okay, now we can slow down.” It helps you settle, and it often makes the next massage feel more luxurious instead of uncomfortable.
This is also where you’ll want to mentally prep for the fact that hamams are hands-on and body contact is part of the process. If you’re shy about privacy, you’ll feel it more than someone who’s done a few spa routines already. One review specifically mentioned comfort concerns around masseur gender and modesty. That’s not something you can fully control, but you can manage your expectations and ask questions at the start.
The Break With Tea, Coffee, Wine, and Fruit

Right after the first round of hamam work, you’ll get a rest period—and a drink.
The included options listed are Turkish tea, Turkish coffee, or wine, served with fruits. This matters more than it sounds. After heat, scrubbing, and foam, your body has a chance to cool slightly and your mind can reset. It also breaks up any feeling of being rushed through one continuous room-to-room process.
A small practical tip: if you’re sensitive to alcohol, choose tea or coffee. And if you’re watching timing because you have other plans later in Alanya, use this break to gauge how quickly the rest of your session will move. The experience runs on a schedule, and knowing where you are in that schedule helps you enjoy it instead of wondering what’s next.
The 30-Minute Full-Body Oil Massage and Face Mask Finish
After the drink-and-rest moment, the program continues with a 30-minute full-body oil massage.
This is your main “slow down” step. The oil massage is meant to refresh your mind and relax your body after the more intense cleansing portion. In a hamam day, this is the part that often makes people say yes, I’d do this again—because you leave feeling worked on in a good way, not just scrubbed raw.
The session finishes with a face mask meant to nourish your face skin. One practical detail: a review mentioned the face mask is applied and then you wash it off, so don’t treat it like a “set-and-forget” souvenir moment.
If you’re planning photos, do your face plans after the whole process. Face masks can be messy, and your skin may feel different for a bit after washing.
Price and Value: Is $36.05 Worth It?
At about $36.05 per person, this is positioned as a budget-friendly VIP hamam. The value comes from the combination, not just a single massage.
You’re paying for a package that includes:
- sauna + steam preparation,
- the kese scrub (about 20 minutes),
- foam massage,
- a break with drink and fruit,
- a 30-minute oil massage,
- and a face mask,
- plus hotel pickup/drop-off and English support.
For Alanya, where massage pricing varies wildly based on what’s included, bundles like this can be a smart way to avoid paying separately for each step. The pickup is also real value: it reduces stress and time loss, especially when you’re juggling a beach day, dinner plans, and a flight schedule.
That said, value depends on time matching the promise. A few people reported that the overall time felt shorter than the marketed 3-hour experience once transfers were counted, and some said they were rushed. If you dislike time pressure during travel, treat this like a “half-day wellness block,” not a leisurely full SPA afternoon.
Also, two reviews flagged extra charges and questions at reception (like paying extra for the scrub or being asked for additional euros even when they thought VIP was included). You can protect yourself with one simple move: confirm what’s included in the VIP package before you hand over any money at the front desk.
Other Turkish bath experiences we've reviewed in Alanya
Timing and Transfers: The 3-Hour Promise With Real-Life Add-Ons
The description says the hamam experience is about 2 hours, and the overall activity is listed around 3 hours. That usually means transfer time is part of the total.
In the real world, that’s where expectations can clash. Some reviewers reported total time closer to about 2 hours once travel was included; others mentioned around 2.5 hours with transport. Even small differences in pickup route, traffic, or how quickly the spa moves groups can change your experience.
So here’s my practical advice: plan your day like this is a half-day event. Don’t schedule a late reservation right after the pickup window unless you’re flexible. And when you’re picked up, stay aware of the clock. If anything feels rushed, it helps to ask politely what’s next and how much time you have left.
This is exactly the kind of tour where a calm, “I’m here for the ritual, not the stopwatch” mindset can save the day.
Staff, Group Size, and Comfort Levels
The group size cap is 10 travelers. Smaller groups usually mean less waiting and less chaos. That’s good in a hamam setting because everyone’s moving between rooms and changing pace depending on comfort.
The experience is also designed for broad participation. The “most travelers can participate” note matters, and one review specifically praised staff patience for a friend with mobility issues. That suggests the team may be used to adjusting within the flow.
Still, comfort is personal. One review raised a concern about privacy and discomfort when the masseur was male for a female guest, especially while topless and without enough covering. That’s not guaranteed to happen, but it’s a reminder to think about modesty preferences in advance.
If you have strong preferences about who massages you, it’s smart to raise it early—ideally at check-in—while the staff can still adjust.
Facilities: Smell, Age, and What You Should Expect
One review said the place felt a bit damp and old/tired. That’s not shocking in bathhouse environments. Hamams are wet by design. But it does mean you should go in with realistic expectations: you’re not coming for “new luxury hotel spa vibes.” You’re coming for the function—heat, scrubbing, massage.
If the facility is worn, that doesn’t automatically mean the service is bad. In multiple comments, the massage quality and staff care were praised as the deciding factors. Still, if aesthetics and fresh, crisp cleanliness are your top priority, keep your expectations practical.
Your best bet is to focus on what you can control: the pace you ask for, your comfort level, and clarifying included items at reception.
Who This Is For (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)
This VIP hamam works best if you want:
- an authentic Turkish bath style experience in Alanya,
- a scheduled sequence that saves you time,
- a massage included in the package,
- and a hotel pickup that keeps the day smooth.
It’s also great as a first Turkish bath. If you’ve never done hamam before, this kind of guided structure helps you understand the ritual without guessing.
You might want a different option if:
- you want a long, slow “spa day” with lots of downtime,
- you’re very sensitive to being rushed,
- or you need strict control over modesty and massage therapist gender.
If you’re traveling with kids, one review mentioned a fish spa option enjoyed by children. That kind of add-on may exist at the venue, but it’s not guaranteed by the core description, so treat it as a possible extra rather than part of the guaranteed VIP steps.
Should You Book This Alanya VIP Turkish Bath?
I’d book it if you’re after a practical, classic hamam routine with hotel pickup, English support, and a solid mix of cleansing plus massage in one block. The price-to-inclusions ratio is strong, especially when you factor in the pickup and the full sequence ending with an oil massage and face mask.
But I would book with eyes open. Expect the 3-hour window to depend on transfer time, and be ready to ask what’s included before paying any extras at the reception. If you want slow luxury and lots of padding in your schedule, you may feel a bit pushed.
If you go with a flexible mindset—half-day wellness, not a leisurely day spa—you’ll probably leave happy, clean, and relaxed in the best kind of “warmed up from the inside” way.
FAQ
How long is this experience in total?
The total experience is listed at about 3 hours. The hamam part is described as about 2 hours, and the remaining time comes from pickup and drop-off.
What treatments are included?
You’ll do skin cleansing in a sauna and steam room, then the main hamam with a kese scrubbing mitt (about 20 minutes) and a foam massage. The package also includes a rest period with a drink option, a 30-minute full-body oil massage, and a nourishing face mask.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes. The experience is offered in English.
Do you get hotel pickup and drop-off in Alanya?
Yes. Pickup is from your hotel or apartments in Alanya, and you receive pickup details via phone.
How many people are in the group?
This experience has a maximum of 10 travelers.
Can people with mobility issues participate?
Most travelers can participate, and one review specifically praised staff for being patient with a friend who had mobility issues.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. Cancellation changes made less than 24 hours before the start time are not refunded.





























