Turkey Trips Stay Open, but One Border Warning Remains
British holidaymakers can still travel to Turkey, with no new countrywide warning from the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) linked to Middle East tensions. Holidays to major Turkish destinations are continuing, but the advice is not a total green light for every area. The FCDO still flags regional risks and keeps one clear "do not travel" zone near Syria.
What UK Travellers Should Check
- Country: Turkey
- UK advice: no blanket warning against travel
- Main restriction: avoid all travel within 10km of the Syria border, including border-side areas of Hatay, Kilis, Gaziantep, Şanlıurfa, Mardin and Şırnak provinces
- Main tourist areas: Istanbul, Antalya, Bodrum, Marmaris, Izmir and Cappadocia are not covered by this border warning
- Documents: passport validity and entry rules before departure
- Updates: sign up for FCDO email alerts
- Cancellations: refund rights depend on provider terms unless official advice changes
The FCDO says regional escalation can bring security risks and travel disruption, so British nationals are advised to follow local authorities, monitor reliable media and keep travel documents up to date. It also tells people to stay away from security or military facilities if tensions rise. This advice matters most for independent travellers moving around Turkey, not only package holiday customers.
Istanbul, Antalya, Bodrum, Marmaris, Fethiye, Izmir and Cappadocia are not covered by the specific Syria border warning. That leaves city breaks, beach holidays, Aegean routes and inland trips on the table: Istanbul for culture and food, Antalya for resorts and the old town, Bodrum and Fethiye for the coast, Izmir for Ephesus, and Cappadocia for valleys and cave hotels.
For flights and holidays, the key point is that Turkey has not been placed under a broad UK "avoid travel" warning. That means standard cancellation rules usually apply if someone decides not to go. Package providers, airlines and insurers may handle changes differently, so travellers should check booking conditions before cancelling, especially if flights are still operating.