The two-storey marble facade of the Library of Celsus at Ephesus, its columns and statue niches glowing at golden hour, with the colonnaded ruins of the ancient city beyond. Selçuk, İzmir, Türkiye.

Walk the marble streets of a Roman city frozen in time

Ephesus skip-the-line — the great Library of Celsus, a theatre that seated 25,000, and the bundled Ephesus Experience Museum. Open-date ticket: visit any day you like.

See ticket options
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site, inscribed 2015
  • 25,000 Seats in the Great Theatre, one of antiquity's largest
  • 1st–2nd C. Marble heart of a great Roman provincial capital
  • Library of Celsus The most photographed facade in the ancient Aegean

Choose your ticket

Adult ticket

Full archaeological site plus the Ephesus Experience Museum — open admission

€59

  • Skip-the-line site entry — open date, no fixed time slot
  • The Library of Celsus, the Great Theatre, Curetes Street and the Temple of Hadrian
  • The bundled Ephesus Experience Museum, the city's immersive multimedia show
  • Mobile e-ticket with QR code, accepted on your phone at the gate — no printing required
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve adult ticket

Terrace Houses add-on

Entry to the separately gated Terrace Houses — requires a site ticket

€25

  • Entry to the covered Terrace Houses — the patrician homes with their mosaics and frescoes
  • Sheltered walkways above the original Roman floors, away from the open-site heat
  • Open date, no fixed time slot — use it on the same visit as your site ticket
  • Mobile e-ticket with QR code, accepted on your phone at the gate — no printing required
  • Requires a valid Ephesus site ticket — this is an add-on, not standalone admission
Add the Terrace Houses
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedBest times, the coolest hours, the rooms most miss.
  • Ready before you flyMobile ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.

5-minute audio guide

Your Ephesus 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns the marble streets into a real story — the great Roman provincial capital, the library raised as a monument and a tomb, and the theatre that held 25,000.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why Ephesus became one of the greatest cities of the Roman world
  • The Library of Celsus — a monumental library built over a tomb
  • The Great Theatre and the assembly that filled its 25,000 seats
  • What to look for in the Terrace Houses — mosaics and frescoes in place

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Ephesus

Ephesus stands near Selçuk in İzmir province on Türkiye's Aegean coast, the most complete classical city in the eastern Mediterranean. Founded in Greek antiquity and rebuilt on a grand scale under Rome, it was for centuries one of the great cities of the ancient world — a provincial capital, a Mediterranean port and a centre of early Christianity. Today you walk its marble streets between standing columns, carved facades and public monuments, with the whole plan of a Roman city laid out around you rather than reduced to scattered stones.

The set-piece is the Library of Celsus, its two-storey marble facade rebuilt from the original fragments and framed by statues representing wisdom, knowledge, intelligence and virtue. From there Curetes Street climbs between the Temple of Hadrian, the public fountains and the foundations of shops and houses toward the upper city. The Great Theatre, cut into the hillside and seating around 25,000, is the largest monument on the site and still hosts the sweep of the ancient stage below. The visit now also includes the Ephesus Experience Museum, an immersive multimedia show that reconstructs the city in its prime.

Ephesus was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2015 for its exceptional record of Hellenistic and Roman urban life and its place in religious history. The standard ticket is open-dated: you choose your day, arrive during opening hours, and walk straight in. The Terrace Houses — the lavishly decorated homes of the city's wealthy, with mosaics and wall paintings still in place under a protective roof — sit behind a separate gate and need an additional ticket.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open daily. Hours vary by season: roughly 08:00–19:00 in summer (last admission about 18:00) and 08:00–18:00 in winter (last admission about 17:30). The Terrace Houses and the Ephesus Experience Museum keep similar hours; allow time to see everything before last admission.
Address
Ephesus Archaeological Site, Selçuk, İzmir Province, Türkiye
Getting there from Selçuk
≈3 km from Selçuk town centre — about 5 minutes by taxi or a short, hot walk in summer. Selçuk has the nearest railway station, on the line from İzmir.
Getting there from Kuşadası
≈18 km, about 25–30 minutes by car or minibus (dolmuş). Kuşadası is the cruise port many visitors arrive through.
Getting there from İzmir
≈75 km south, about 1 hour by car, or a train from İzmir to Selçuk plus a short taxi to the gate.
Two gates
The site has a Lower Gate and an Upper Gate. Entering at the Upper Gate and walking downhill to the Lower Gate is the easier route, as the main street runs gently downhill — useful in the Aegean heat.
Time needed
Allow about 2 to 3 hours for the main site — the Library, the theatre, Curetes Street and the monuments. Add 45–60 minutes for the Terrace Houses and time for the Ephesus Experience Museum.
Accessibility
The main marble street is broadly walkable but uneven, with ancient paving, slopes and some steps; the Terrace Houses are reached by stairs and raised walkways. Parts of the site are difficult for wheelchair users and those with limited mobility — contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
What to bring
There is almost no shade on the open site. Bring water, a hat, sunscreen and comfortable shoes for the marble paving, especially from late spring to early autumn when the midday heat is intense.
Photography
Permitted throughout for personal use. The classic shot is the Library of Celsus facade; the Great Theatre and the colonnaded Curetes Street are the other favourites.

About our service

Ephesus Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors purchase skip-the-line tickets for the Ephesus Archaeological Site, which is owned and managed by a Turkish public heritage authority. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the site has its own official ticket channel.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?

Priority entry past the ticket-office queue and access to the whole archaeological site — the Library of Celsus, the Great Theatre, Curetes Street, the Temple of Hadrian and the public monuments — plus the bundled Ephesus Experience Museum. The ticket is open-dated, so you choose your own day.

Is the ticket for a specific time slot?

No. The adult ticket is open admission — valid during opening hours on the day you visit, with no fixed time slot. We issue an open-dated e-ticket so you can arrive whenever suits you and walk straight in.

Are the Terrace Houses included, or separate?

Separate. The Terrace Houses are behind their own gate inside the site and need an additional ticket on top of your site entry. Add the Terrace Houses option to your booking and use both on the same visit — the houses are one of the highlights of Ephesus.

Do I need to print my ticket?

No. Your e-ticket carries a QR code that is scanned from your phone at the gate — just show it on screen. There is nothing to print.

What is the Ephesus Experience Museum?

An immersive multimedia show, included with your site ticket, that reconstructs Ephesus at the height of its Roman prosperity using large-scale projection and sound. It is a short walk from the site and complements the ruins with a vivid picture of the living city.

How long does a visit take?

Allow about 2 to 3 hours for the main site — the Library, the Great Theatre, Curetes Street and the monuments — plus 45 to 60 minutes if you add the Terrace Houses, and a little more for the Ephesus Experience Museum.

Which gate should I use?

The site has an Upper Gate and a Lower Gate. Entering at the Upper Gate and walking downhill to the Lower Gate is easiest, as the main street slopes gently down — a real advantage in the Aegean heat. Your open-date ticket works at either gate.

How do I get to Ephesus?

The site is about 3 km from Selçuk, the nearest town and railway station, around 18 km from the cruise port of Kuşadası, and about an hour south of İzmir. A taxi, minibus (dolmuş) or organised tour covers the last stretch; many visitors arrive by cruise excursion or day tour.

When is the best time to visit?

Arrive at opening or in the late afternoon to avoid the cruise-day crowds and the worst of the heat, which peak around midday in summer. Spring and autumn are the most comfortable seasons. Because the ticket is open-dated, you can simply choose a cooler, quieter day.

Is there shade, and what should I bring?

There is almost no shade on the open site. Bring water, a hat, sunscreen and comfortable shoes for the uneven marble paving, especially from late spring to early autumn. The Terrace Houses are roofed, so they offer a cooler break midway through the visit.

Is Ephesus accessible for visitors with limited mobility?

Only partly. The main marble street is broadly walkable but uneven, with slopes and some steps, while the Terrace Houses are reached by stairs and raised walkways. Parts of the site are difficult for wheelchair users. If mobility is a concern, contact us before booking and we will confirm the current arrangements.

Can I change the date of my visit?

Your ticket is open-dated, so for most visits you simply turn up on the day you choose during opening hours. If you have any concern about your plans, reply to your confirmation email and our concierge team will help.

Is Ephesus suitable for children?

Yes. A vast theatre to climb, marble streets to explore and a real ancient city capture children's imaginations. Note the uneven paving, the open sun and the lack of shade, so bring water and hats and keep younger children close on the steps and in the theatre.

What is Ephesus?

Ephesus is one of the best-preserved classical cities in the Mediterranean, near Selçuk on Türkiye's Aegean coast. A major Greek and then Roman city, it was a provincial capital, port and early-Christian centre. Its marble streets, the Library of Celsus, a 25,000-seat theatre and the Terrace Houses survive in remarkable completeness. It was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2015.

Is Ephesus a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

Yes. Ephesus was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2015 for its exceptional record of Hellenistic and Roman urban life and its importance in religious history, as one of the great cities of the ancient world.