Landscape

General

konya
The Konya plain is the flattest part of Turkey and also very green and agricultural in relation to other parts of the Anatolian plateau. Note that the plain stretches east from Konya to the city Karapınar.
antalya
Much of Antalya province is very recognisable for its forests composed entirely of Turkish pines combined with a rocky karst landscape.
adana plain
The Adana plain is one of the largest expanse of flat land in Turkey with a subtropical landscape.The southwest is deadflat with very mixed agriculture consisting of different fruit and vegetable fields as well as cotton and corn, with subtropical plants such as eucalyptus, palms and reeds being common in between. Mountains will normally be visible to the northwest.
adana NE
The northeast is similar, with a very flat landscape, however here you will find fewer subtropical plants, and more temperate crops such as low vegetable fields and fallow corn fields. Mountains will be visible to the east.
adana SE
The southeast is similar to the northeast but has a number of isolated peaks which stand out from the deadflat plain.
adana NW
The northwest is composed of gentle rolling hills, often with fruit or olive plantations but mostly just fallow wheat/sunflower fields.
erzincan plain
Erzincan is situated in a relatively narrow plain with particularly high mountains on both sides, with high peaks to the northeast and southeast. The valley also has a moderate amount of tree cover with black poplars and willows being common.
tunceli
Tunceli is unusually green for an eastern province. It is distinguishable from other forested parts of the country as its forests consist exclusively of oak trees, with slightly reddish soil and exposed dark grey mountain sides further confirming the province.
eastern taurus
The Eastern Taurus are the high mountains that form a chain roughly from Bingöl to south of Lake Van. Like Tunceli, they also form islands of forests in the Southeast, although the soil is less red and the whole region is visibly drier. The valleys will also be full of black poplars
diyarbakir landscape
Diyarbakır province is mostly covered by a flat plain, one of the largest in the dry southeast. It is very distinguishable for the complete lack of trees, and gently rolling golden hills of wheat, distinguishing it from the deadflat regions bordering Syria. The southern third of this plain has darker soil and is mostly used to grow cotton.
eastern mardin
Eastern Mardin has a very distinct landscape of low, craggy hills covered in stone walls and scattered vegetation.
kilis hills
The only similar area to Eastern Mardin (see above) is the hills of Kilis and Gaziantep. The key difference is that these hills are volcanic, meaning the stones and soil are darker, and you will also find more agriculture and fewer scattered bushes in the shallow valleys.
eastern hatay south
Eastern Hatay has a superflat landscape, however unlike the Central Plateau, the soil here is quite red and you will always be able to see mountains to your east & west. It can be divided in two parts - the southern half is wider and more featureless, with mountains often quite distant.
eastern hatay northern half
Meanwhile, the northern half going into Gaziantep forms a more narrow valley with mountains clearly visible on either side. Here you will also find rock walls made of large orange boulders, as well as a more rocky landscape more generally.
nur mountains 1
The Nur Mountains is the range that runs the length of Hatay Province. They are identifiable in various ways - certain types of infrastructure in a green mountainous setting are especially common in Hatay, metal mesh poles and ‘southeast houses’ with flat roofs. Another distinct feature of these mountains is how ‘high up’ many rounds seem. While the Hatay mountains are far from the highest, they rise extremely precipitously, giving the illusion of being incredibly tall when looking down at the coast.
nur mountains 2
Over Musa Dağ, one of the tallest mountains in the range and the westward promontory of the Hatay peninsula, you can find a few roads with very distinct dirt road coverage through heavy high-mountain pine forests.
malatya
North of the city of Malatya is a relatively large flat agricultural area which can look very uncharacteristic for the east. Most of Turkey’s apricots are grown here, so recognising apricot trees can help, otherwise you may be able to see dry mountains from the area, which should indicate you are in Malatya rather than other fruit-producing regions.
igdir
Most of Iğdır province is covered by the Arax plain, shared with Armenia. Here you’ll find a flat landscape covered in grassy fields and loads of black poplars. The best indication that you are here is Mount Ararat to the south, but it can sometimes be hard to see. Besides the landscape, villages in Iğdır usually consist of houses made of large, plain grey bricks and sheet metal roofs, and you’ll also find a lot of tall haystacks here.
strandzha
Strandzha is a hill range on the Bulgarian border in the northern part of European Turkey. It consists of low but very green hills, however it can be extremely difficult to tell apart from other parts of North Turkey. Besides a general ‘European forest vibe’, other clues for Strandzha are small, empty grassy clearings by the roadside, young cottonwood plantations, and yellow bollards which, whilst not exclusive to Kırklareli, are common here while very rare in the rest of the country.
cappadocia
Cappadocia is a very unique and famous area in Central Turkey just east of Nevşehir which is highly distinct for its ‘fairy chimneys’. In the absence of these you can still identify the region through it’s exposed hillsides made of pink and white rock and general ‘Utah-like’ landscape.
mut landscape
Around the town of Mut in western Mersin province, you will find a unique karst landscape of white soil with a mix of conical and table mountains and generally crazy topography, all surrounded by fruit tree plantations.
karaburun Ppeninsula
The Karaburun Peninsula is one of the most mountainous parts of the west coast, and has a unique landscape of either low spongy bushes or olive plantations, often with wind farms visible in the background. The southern part of the peninsula is less mountainous but has a lot of small rocks all over the ground.
kastamonu
Kastamonu is essentially a small plateau within the northern mountains, which is drier and more piney than anywhere else in the north, with a landscape of agricultural, gently-rolling hills, often with slightly taller greener hills visible in the distance. The northern half of this plateau around Devrekani is particular distinct for its mixture of bare with lots of exposed rocks and dry all-pine forests.
menderes massif
The Menderes Massif is a unique geological area covering much of Aydın province. Here you’ll find a lot of grey boulders and exposed rock, leading to the construction of lots of stone walls. Stone pines are also exceedingly common in this region.
usak
Uşak sits on an ancient volcanic basin (technically a northern extension of the Menderes Massif) meaning you will see a lot of scattered rocks on the ground, although these are much lighter coloured than in the Menderes Massif. (This is quite subtle but still useful in flatter, more agricultural areas).
white bluffs
There is a large area between the cities of Ankara and Eskişehir that is full of these low hills with exposed white hillsides, with a generally green, agricultural, but mostly treeless landscape beside it.
A smaller cluster of these exposed hillsides can be found in Çankırı province, where they are more pronounced and have marked striations.
salt pans
In the middle of the Anatolian plateau you can find a number of salt pans, the largest being Tuz Gölü (lit. ‘salt lake’) at the tripoint of Konya, Aksaray and Ankara provinces. Around these lakes you will find a deadflat, pale landscape with very minimal vegetation consisting mostly of thistles. Sometimes the salt lakes themselves will be visible.
central volcanic hills
Stretching from Southern Nevşehir to Karapınar in Konya province are a range of long-extinct volcanoes. In the flatter parts between these volcanoes, where you will find more coverage, you will find numerous isolated, smooth-sloped volcanic hills which are largely unique to this area. (You can find somewhat similar hills in Northern Konya).
karacadag
Karacadağ is a wide, gently-rising volcanic hill with a unique barren, red soil and bushy landscape. The hill itself can be recognised from afar as a gently rising hill with a black stone peak. The area around it is also covered in volcanic rocks. Fun fact, it is on the slopes of this hill that the first evidence of wheat domestication was discovered.
red soil
North of Gaziantep, leaking a bit into Şanlıurfa province, you can find extreme dark red soils, mostly covered in pistachio or olive plantations.

Mountains

ararat
Mount Ararat is the tallest peak in Turkey and the tallest in the Middle East outside Iran. It is particularly recognisable as it also has a prominent secondary peak called Masis. It is situated near the Armenian border on the border between Ağrı (its Turkish name) province and Iğdır province.
erciyes
Mount Erciyes is the second tallest volcano in Turkey after Mount Ararat. It is located south of the city of Kayseri where it can be seen for some distance, and is particularly identifiable for the numerous volcanic ridges and sub-peaks surrounding the main peak (which is usually not visible).
hasandag
Another important volcano is Hasandağ southeast of the city of Aksaray. Unlike Erciyes it is a more clear cone volcano and due to the dryness of Aksaray province its peak is more likely to be visible.
süphan dagi
Süphan Dağı is an isolated, snow-capped volcano on the northern shore of Lake Van, which makes it an excellent reference point for pinpointing your position on the lake, but also for the remote dirt roads to the north of the mountain.
köse dagi
Köse Dağı is the highest peak of the Aras range, located to the northwest of the Ağrı valley. Being far more prominent than the surrounding peaks, and having a relatively smooth shape, it is a good way to identify the valley.
uludag
Uludağ is the highest mountain in the northwest of Turkey. It is useful for identifying Bursa and the plain around it, as the mountain creates a huge, cloud-shrouded wall to the south.
aladaglari
In Aladağları Milli Park (National Park) you will find a huge steep wall of mountains to your east which is highly recognisable, even from some distance.
medetsiz tepe
Medetsiz Tepe is one of the highest massifs in the Taurus Mountains forming a fairly long, roughly east-west ridge, which is visible from a stretch of the D750 and some remote villages and mountain roads as a wall of snow-capped mountains to the south.
küre daglari
Within the northern forested mountains of Turkey there is one area that is topographically very different from the rest, situated in Bartın province very near the coast covered by the Küre Mountains National Park. What’s unique about these mountains is that they form a plateau with steep cliffs on most sides which are visible from numerous angles, very different from the interlocking peaks in the rest of the north.

Lakes

burdur gölü
Burdur is a saline lake in the west of Turkey, and therefore contained within a valley surrounded by mountains (unlike the salt lakes of Central Anatolia). The only other such lake is Acı Gölü just north of it.
balik gölü
Balık Gölü is one of two lakes in far eastern Turkey (beside Lake Van) situated within a pristine, green steppe-like environment. The other is Çıldır Gölü, the main distinction being that Balık Gölü is smaller and surrounded by mountains.
cildir gölü
Çıldır Gölü is the other far-eastern steppe lake, situated much further north near the Georgian border. It is larger, greener, and surrounded by gentler slopes.

Cities

Afyonkarahisar
The city of Afyonkarahisar has numerous small but steep-sided hills in the middle of town that can appear very close even on very urban rounds.
Amasya
The city of Amasya is tightly bound within a valley surrounded by rocky hills. The city centre is overlooked by a hill with a castle on top and imposing Pontic tombs carved within it.
Bitlis
Bitlis is one of the smallest provincial capitals. It is a very green city surrounded by dry mountains. The city itself is also very historical, with a huge castle in the middle and lots of old stone mosques.

Vegetation

General

stone pine
Stone pine (Pinus pinea) can be recognized by its rounded crown, where all the branches and needles are concentrated towards the top of the tree. It is found predominantly along the west coast.
turkish pine
Turkish pine (Pinus brutia) is perhaps the most difficult pine species to identify in Turkey. It tends to have a less dense crown and brighter needles than other pines, the bark can be brown and can sometimes have a red tinge, but there is no stark contrast between the bottom and top sections of the trunk as there is with Scots pine. It is mainly found along the south and west coast.
scots/baltic pine
Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) is recognized most easily by its red bark, but beware that the bottom section of the trunk is generally darker and not red. You can find it in inland regions along the north coast.
black pine
European black pine (Pinus nigra) is widely found in the northern and southwestern mountains, but it is very rare in the center of Anatolian plateau and eastern part of the country. This species features a lot of clusters of needles.
lebanon cedar
Lebanon cedar(Cedrus libani), which can be recognized by their big cones and fairly horizontal branches and leaves, is found in high mountains along the Mediterranean coast. NOTE: This species is often found planted in central-western plateau, in much shorter height. When the terrain is not mountainous, you should better ignore these trees.
caucasian spruce
Caucasian spruce(Picea orientalis) is the only spruce species found in Turkey, and it is most common in the far northeastern part of the country.
cypress
Mediterranean cypress (Cupressus sempervirens) is a conifer tree that features a very sharp crown resembling a spear and is mainly found along the south coast and the southern west coast, but also less commonly in the northwest of the country.
firs
Firs (Abies spp.) are difficult to tell apart from other conifers, but the biggest clue lies in their branching structure, each branch coming off the trunk shaped like a flat fan. When viewed from the right angle you can often see the layers of flat branches stacked on top of one another. This contrasts with the branching structure of spruces, where secondary branches usually droop down from the primary branch. It is most common in the central northern mountains.
eucalyptus
Eucalyptus is restricted to the southern and western coastal parts of the country, with particular concentrations in certain areas such as Muğla. In an agricultural setting between fields, it is essentially unique to the Adana plain.
hungarian oak
Hungarian oak (Quercus frainetto) is one of several oak species found in Turkey and can be recognized by the shape of its leaves. It has typical oak leaves, but they are larger and more deeply lobed than on other oak species.
hungarian oak info
Not to be confused with Turkey oak, which has similar but smaller leaves with smaller lobes and is found in many more regions throughout the country. Hungarian oak by contrast is exclusive to the northwest of the country.
fan palm
Fan palms (Washingtonia robusta) are, as the name suggests, palms featuring fan-shaped leaves and are a good clue that you are somewhere along the south coast, especially around the cities of Antalya and Adana.
poplar plantations
Also known as ‘Düzce trees’ - while poplar plantations can be found here and there in most temperate parts of Turkey, large orderly plantations are particularly common in the Düzce and Sakarya valleys.
ferns
Ferns in Turkey are mainly found along the north coast and less commonly in other coastal areas.
alder
Alder (Alnus glutinosa) can be recognized by its round leaves and pronounced leaf veins. It is very concentrated in the northeast of the country.
pickly pear
Prickly pear (Opuntia ficus-indica) is a type of cactus that consists of flat round pads and is found along the south coast and southern west coast.
mastic
Mastic is a common Mediterranean shrub that can be used to identify the southwest coast, although it does exist less commonly up to halfway down the southern coast.
azaleas
These violet-purple azalea flowers (Rhododendron ponticum) are seen in May, and are most commonly found in the mountains around Kocaeli and Sakarya.
NOTE: Although this species itself is widely found along the Black Sea coast, the flowers are not found in the rest of Turkey because May coverage is limited to this area in the northern coastal part of the country.
van mullein
In northern Van there are numerous remote/dirt roads with ‘yellow flower spam’. Known as mullein (Verbascum sp.), it is very distinct for its tall stem with yellow flowers all along it.

Agriculture

hazelnuts
Hazelnuts absolutely dominate the landscape of much of the forested northern parts of the country. It is cultivated throughout the coastal hills from Kocaeli province all the way to Artvin, however it is especially dominant in Ordu, Giresun and Sakarya (usually in the latter province they are found in a flatter landscape). Hazelnut trees can be identified by their multiple thin stems emanating from a single point and round leaves. Hazelnut-covered mountains are even distinct from afar as they have a seemingly fuzzy texture with a sort of green-purple colour.
rice
Rice is most common along the Greek border, and in northern Balıkesir, however it can be found in a few other distinct hotspots in the flat ‘deltas’ of Samsun province, numerous river valleys in Çorum, Sinop and Çankırı, and eastern Hatay.
citrus
Citrus plantations are found on much of the Mediterranean coast from Aydın all the way to Hatay, being most common in the Adana plain.
apples
The valleys around Eğirdir Gölü in Isparta account for most of Turkey’s apple production.
grapes
Besides the dense vineyards of the Alaşehir valley, there are a few other grape producing regions of Turkey. Just east of this valley, north of Denizli, is a unique red soil landscape with low, sporadic vineyards. There are also vineyards in the valley near the Gaziantep-Hatay border, particularly just south of İslahiye, as well as small isolated vineyards spread around Thrace and Cappadoccia.
pistachios
Pistachios are mainly grown around Gaziantep.
almonds
Almonds are a decent meta for Adıyaman province when found in isolated plantations. Another noteworthy hotspot in the southwest however is the Datça peninsula. where they grow abundantly.
cherries
Cherries are mainly produced in three distinct areas - the Kemalpaşa valley just east of İzmir, the Sultandağı valley stretching south to Akşehir and the Bursa Valley just northeast of Bursa city, where it grows alongside many other fruit. Cherries can be recognised in spring by pink cherryblossoms and in summer by their short trunks and tall branches with long droopy leaves. And in summer by their short trunks and tall branches with long droopy leaves.
pears
Pears are mostly produced in the aforementioned Bursa valley.
figs
Aydın province produces 70% of Turkey’s figs, with most of the rest produced just across the border in İzmir.
cabbage
Samsun province produces the vast majority of Turkey’s cabbages, and most of those are produced in the flat Bafra district that sticks out from the coast.
opium
White opium poppies, yes you heard that right, are cultivated licitly in the valley around Afyonkarahisar, and they are very recognisable. A good mnemonic for this is that the name ‘Afyon-kara-hisar’ literally translates as ‘opium-black-fortress’.
greenhouses
Along the southern coast of Turkey you will find numerous dense clusters of plastic and glass greenhouses. The westernmost of these clusters is around Kınık on the Muğla-Antalya border and the easternmost lies just east of Mersin. Note that individual greenhouses can be found all over the country, it is best to use this meta if you find greenhouses on multiple sides.
inland greenhouses
Greenhouses in a drier, more inland landscape, often without roofs, are common in the Elmalı valley and neighbouring inland regions of Western Antalya province.

Architecture

Wooden Architecture

In general, any wooden features on a building should encourage a more western guess, and prominent wooden features such as ‘German-styletimber-framing (or ‘Fachwerk’) architecture or even houses made entirely out of wood are almost exclusively found in the northwest in an arc stretching from Bursa to Kastamonu.
düzce
In Düzce province, you can often find clean timber-framed houses with well-defined edges and colours.
kastamonu
Kastamonu timber-framed houses often feature a pattern of downward-pointing bricks.
bilecik mud bricks
In Bilecik and large parts of neighbouring provinces like Bursa, Bolu and Sakarya, you can commonly find the combination of timber-framed houses with mud bricks.
bartin
In older parts of Bartın you will find many old all-wooden houses.
elmali
One noteworthy cluster of wood-framed houses outside the northwest is in the Elmalı valley in Antalya province. Here the frames are notably intricate with many small beams packed together and eight beams meeting at one point - rare in the NW.
ottoman
Ottoman architecture is characterised by plain-white walls with wooden window frames and shutters, as well as wooden outlines on most (but not all) buildings and an overhanging second floor. It correlates well with the original homeland of the Ottomans in the Northwest (particularly around Bolu). Some historical towns (e.g. Safranbolu, Taraklı) even have predominantly Ottoman architecture.

Architecture

syriac architecture
Tur Abdin is a cultural region in Eastern Mardin centered around Midyat. It is the cultural center of Syriac Orthodox Christianity and many buildings here have a very unique design defined by blocky buildings made of ‘Malta stone’, rich decoration and frequent use of balustrades. There is also a rarer ‘diamond stone’ wall type that is found here. The architectural influences of this area extend beyond it too. Certain features such as the stone type and prominent arches, as well as twin semi-circle windows on façades, extend into villages in southern Batman too.
NE coast
Whereas the northwest of Turkey features a lot of traditional architecture with wooden elements, the northeastern coastal hills (roughly from Ordu province eastwards) feature almost entirely concrete buildings even in remote villages, as the extreme humidity of this region makes more traditional materials less viable.
grass roofs
In the inland northeast of Turkey it is very common in villages to find low stone structures with grass roofs - these are mostly storehouses although rarely they constitute actual houses.
cow dung
In remote villages in far eastern Turkey you can find cow dung being used as a construction material, mostly for walls. Cow dung ‘bricks’ or ‘slabs’ are often kept in large, very recognisable piles.
kurdish mountain villages
Villages in more remote and mountainous parts of the Southeast, particularly in provinces like Siirt and Bitlis, have a distinct architecture consisting of flat-topped, tightly-packed stone houses. These are also identifiable from afar as house clusters look like ‘steps’ on the mountainside.
kayseri
These larger blocks made of volcanic stone are very common in the architecture of Kayseri.
kayseri 2
They come in a number of colours, most uniquely pink, and often feature ‘quoins’ (prominent corner stones).
usak stone
Because of the volcanic nature of Uşak, stone houses are more common here than other parts of Western Turkey. These are either white-beige, with a mix of large and small stones, or made of darker brown-grey stone. Quoins are common too. (This looks similar to houses in some regions further east such as Konya, however Uşak is the only region where this type of stone is abundant outside of mountains).
ankara
Within Ankara you can find many large townhouses, often with triangular roofs and sharp painted and/or mosaic patterns.
ankara outskirts
Meanwhile the outskirts of Ankara are infamous for their urban sprawl, with strange skyscraper cities in the middle of Central Anatolian nothingness.
Diyarbakır
The city of Diyarbakır is one of the poorest cities in Turkey and the largest in the southeast, consequently, it has many slums. These differ heavily from those in Adana however, with equally narrow streets but far taller buildings creating lots of dark alleys. The pavement visible in the image is unique to these slums.
diyarkakir center
The old center of Diyarbakır however is a very strange place. Much of it was destroyed during the Turkish-Kurdish conflict in 2016 and now much is being rebuilt in this unique, oddly clean, modern style, with a lot of dark grey clean-cut bricks.
kars
Older buildings in the city of Kars will usually be made of this unique black tuff.
kahramanmaraş
Kahramanmaraş was the worst-affected city by the 2023 earthquake. As a result, even though a lot of the coverage was taken two years later, you will still find a lot of rubble, construction sites and empty lots here. (Similar scenes can be seen less frequently in neighbouring provinces)
mugla chimney
The city of Muğla (and to a lesser extent other towns in Muğla province) have these very unique chimneys which have openings on four sides and little flashings on top.
bozcaada
Houses on Bozcaada feature many brightly coloured houses with wooden shutters and often wooden second floor façades.
prince islands
The Prince Islands off the coast of Istanbul are famous for their predominantly wood panel, all-white, elegant architecture. The islands are also car-free, so the only vehicles you’ll see will be trikes and bikes.

Cultural

kurds
Kurds are an Iranic ethnic group that populate much of Southeastern Turkey. In some of the most Kurdish provinces such as Mardin, Şırnak, Hakkâri or Diyarbakır you can occasionally find signage in Kurdish. Kurdish bilingual road signs are particularly common in Diyarbakır and less so in Mardin. The Kurdish language is identified by the presence of circumflex accents (e.g. ê, î) as well as letters that Turkish lacks such as ‘q’, ‘w’ and ‘x’.
shiism
Iğdır is the only Shia-majority province of Turkey (not counting Alevis/Alawites). In Shiite areas you will often see black flags with Arabic slogans on them (even without sometimes), as well as pictures of Husseyn.
alawites
Alawites are a unique sect within Shiism who are pretty much only found in Hatay (especially southern Hatay). Their mosques look completely different, usually being small, lacking a minaret, and painted all white, often with green highlights.
arabic signs
There is a substantial Arab population living in certain border provinces like Şanlıurfa, Kilis and Mardin, as well as large numbers of refugees in those regions. These are most common in the border towns of Akçakale and Nusaybin, and to a lesser extent in Şanlıurfa and Kilis.
bulgarian signs
In towns near the Bulgarian border you can sometimes find Bulgarian translations on signs.
russian signs
In Antalya and nearby tourist resorts you will sometimes find Russian signs as the area is very popular with Russian tourists.

Toponymy

hüyük
-hüyük
oba
-oba
alan
-alan
kisla
-kışla
-kuyu
-kuyu
özü
-özü

Infrastructure

Trashbins

trashbins
Some cities have unique designs on their dumpsters which can be recognised from afar.
ghost municipalities
Certain large cities are covered by ghost-municipalities which do not cover the same name. It is worth learning these as trash bins and street signs will show a name that does not appear on the map. The most important of these includes:
  • Altınordu = Ordu
  • Artuklu = Mardin
  • Efeler = Aydın
  • İlkadım = Samsun
  • Menteșe = Muğla
  • Ortahisar = Trabzon
  • Süleymanpaşa = Tekirdağ
  • Şehzadeler = Manisa

Cities divided between two municipalities:
  • Balıkesir = Karesi (north), Altıeylül (south)
  • Denizli = Pamukkale (east), Merkezefendi (west)
  • Eskișehir = Tepebaşı (north), Odunpazarı (south)
  • Gaziantep = Şehitkamil (north), Şahinbey (south)
  • Kahramanmaraş = Dulkadiroğlu (east), Onikişubat (west)
  • Kayseri = Kocasinan (north), Melikgazi (south)
  • Malatya = Battalgazi (north), Yeşilyurt (South)

Cities divided between 3+ municipalities
  • Adana = Çukurova (north), Seyhan (east), Yüreğir (west), Sarıçam (further west)
  • Antalya = Muratpaşa (center), Aksu (east), Kepez (north), Konyaaltı (west)
  • Bursa = Osmangazi (center), Nilüfer (west), Yıldırım (southeast), Gürsu (northeast), Kestel (further east)
  • Diyarbakır = Sur (east), Bağlar (southwest), Kayapınar (west),
  • Yenişehir (northwest)
  • Erzurum = Aziziye (northwest), Yakutiye (northeast), Palandöken (south)
  • Konya = Selçuklu (north), Meram (west), Karatay (east)
  • Mersin = Yenișehir (center) Toroslar (north), Mezitli (southwest), - - Akdeniz (southeast)
  • Sakarya = Adapazarı (center), Serdivan (west), Erenler (east)
  • Şanlıurfa = Haliliye (northeast), Eyyübiye (southeast), Karaköprü (west)
  • Van = İpekyolu (center), Tușba (north), Edremit (south)

In the case of Istanbul, Ankara and İzmir, those cities are divided into too many municipalities, although professional players may consider learning them for pinpointing.

Chevrons

single and double
There are two types of chevrons in Turkey; single type and double type.Single type chevrons have one plate on a post, while double type chevrons have two plates on a post. Single type chevrons are usually seen in pairs at the curves of the roads.
single type
Single type chevrons can be found across the country, but they are more common in the northeast and along the Mediterranean coast. Especially in Balıkesir, Aydın and Trabzon, most of the chevrons are this type. They still exist in the central part of the country, but are rare.
double type
Conversely, double type chevrons are more common in inland provinces. NOTE: These tips cannot be applied for chevrons with multiple arrows and ones on divided highways, which are usually single type regardless of the provinces
black on yellow
The very rare black on yellow chevron can be found along a stretch of the D785 in Sinop province and an even smaller stretch of the D030 in Samsun province.
yellow edge chevrons
Chevrons with yellow edges are found mainly in four provinces; İstanbul, Sakarya, Bursa in the northwest, and Adana in the south. They are rarely found in other provinces(see the map below)NOTE: İstanbul, Bursa and Adana mainly use double type chevrons. When you see single type chevrons with yellow edges and the landscape does not look Mediterranean, you are likely to be in Sakarya.
balikesir chevron
Single type yellow on black chevrons are almost exclusive to Balıkesir province.
bursa chevron
Double type yellow on black chevrons are almost exclusive to the Bursa province.NOTE: In Çanakkale province, yellow on black chevrons are found almost only on divided highways.

Signs

Edirne town entry
The province of Edirne has these unique town entry signs with a trapezoid welcome sign followed by the province name (Edirne), followed by the district, followed by the municipality.
gallipoli signs
The Gallipoli peninsula (the European part of Çanakkale province) is famous for the WWI battles fought between Anzac forces of the British Empire and the Ottoman Empire. You will often find unique yellow-on-brown road signs here indicating tourist sites. There is also ample trekker coverage of the military cemeteries here, so if you get a cemetery trekker, go Gallipoli.
istanbul signs
Most of the signs and chevrons in İstanbul province have a round post and metal fittings, which almost never appear in the rest of the country. You can sometimes find folded sign backs like in the image, and they are unique to the province as well.
kocaeli sticker
In Kocaeli province, you can often find an orange sticker on the sign backs.

Street Signs

street signs general
These cities use unique and recognizeable street signs:
istanbul variants
The İstanbul design has many different variants with the color of the bottom strip changing from city to city:
canakkale street signs
The Çanakkale design has 3 different variants with the color of the bottom strip chaing from city to city:
Note that standard blue and red street signs can be seen anywhere, even in the cities we mentioned above.

House numbers

housenumbers
While house numbers are often standardised by province, this is not true everywhere, therefore the house numbers included here are accurate for provincial capitals but may be unreliable for other cities.
blue orangeframe
Some designs cover a number of provinces. The first are these blue, three-part signs with orange frames.
full red
Istanbul, Kırklareli and Adıyaman use plain red house numbers with no outline or writing.
red - white outline
These provinces use red house numbers with a white outline.
red
The following provinces use red house numbers but with extra features:
  • Balıkesir
  • Diyarbakır
  • Kars
  • Van
  • Hatay
  • Batman
  • Siirt
  • Şırnak
blue
Most remaining provinces use blue house numbers, the most common type. Within this category however are some unique designs:
  • Kocaeli
  • Zonguldak
  • Konya
  • Çorum
  • Bayburt
  • Kahramanmaraş
  • Hakkari (Yüksekova)
  • Şanlıurfa
  • Kayseri
  • Kırşehir
  • Karaman
  • Afyonkarahisar
  • Aydın
  • Birecik
adana
In Adana house numbers are painted on walls without a consistent design.

Bollards

gaziantep
Gaziantep
balikesir
Balıkesir
izmir
İzmir
aydin
Aydın
karabük
Karabük
kocaeli
Kocaeli
Samsun
Samsun
İl Özel İdaresi
İl Özel İdaresi (İÖİ) - Bollards in these provinces often carry the insignia ‘İl Özel İdaresi’ meaning “special province district”.

Poles

Turkey is neatly divided into various electricity companies or ‘EDAŞ’ (Elektrik Dağıtım A.Ş.). The names of these can occasionally be seen in certain places such as electricity boxes, but they are most useful when it comes to pole markers, as most of these regional companies use distinct pole markings that are worth learning.
Trakaya
Trakya - Numbers can be red or black
Boğaziçi
Boğaziçi
Kayseri
Kayseri
Yeşilırmak
Yeşilırmak
Aras
Aras
dicle
Dicle
osmangazi
Osmangazi
These three EDAŞ regions use the same style of black plaques with a 4-letter + 3-number code (almost always starting with ‘D’). The only difference between these is the name, although this can be hard to read most times.
Baskent
Başkent
Anadolu Yakası
Anadolu Yakası (AYEDAŞ)
toroslar
Toroslar
concrete
Concrete poles are most commonly found West of Kayseri. This is less reliable in urban areas but generally should help with 50-50s between West and East dry regions. If it looks like the South, you’re most likely in Mardin.

Energy Infrastructure

Yellow, street-sign like plaques are quite common in Turkish cities and they will usually contain information helpful for regionguessing. Some companies simply contain the place name, such as Çorumgaz (Çorum) or Samgaz (Samsun), however some companies need to be learnt.
aksa
Aksa Doğalgaz is found in many different provinces, although together they form three memorable ‘clusters’ for regionguessing. Aksa plaques are generally all yellow with the logo/name either on the top or the bottom corner and the Tel. number 187 on the bottom.
akmercan
Akmercan is another trans-provincial company that is worth learning for more advanced players. Plaques are either divided into 3 colours, or feature the logo quite prominently.
gazdas
Gazdaş has two main divisions - Trakya and Gaziantep. The first operates in the three Thracian provinces of Edirne, Kırklareli and Tekirdağ, whereas the second operates in Gaziantep and Kilis. Its plaques are yellow, red and white, similar to some Akmercan plaques.
kargaz
Kargaz operates in 3 provinces: Karabük, Kastamonu and Çankırı. Its plaques are relatively simple and have the logo in the bottom right.
kirgaz
Kırgaz operates in both ‘Kır’ provinces (Kırşehir and Kırıkkale) and has these unique white plaques.
oil fields
Oil fields are a good meta for Batman province, particularly just south of Batman city. They exist in other provinces too, but are far more common here than anywhere else. You will also rarely see oil fields in eastern Adıyaman.
wind farms
Wind turbines are mostly found in the far west of the country, particularly the northwest. Particularly strong hotspots include Balıkesir province, western Istanbul and the Karabunar peninsula and Yenişakran areas in İzmir province.

Provinces

Advanced Turkey players might consider learning the province numbers. These are in alphabetical order from 01 (Adana) until 67 Zonguldak, but after that numbers 68-81 are given to unordered smaller provinces created after the original system was designed. Province numbers can be found in the following locations:
province road markers
Province road km markers - province roads have two 2-digit numbers on the first road, the first of these numbers is the province number. E.g. 13 = Bitlis Province
taxis
Taxis - province numbers are found on license plates, which are almost always printed (and unblurred) on the sides and/or roofs of taxis (as well as rarely in certain other contexts). In the example below 24 = Erzincan province.
security cameras
Security cameras - security cameras have an electricity box attached to them which will typically have a sequence of numbers and letters on it - formats may differ, but within that sequence you will find a two digit number and three letters: that is the province number and the municipality abbreviation (for example below, 45 = Manisa Province, SMA = Soma).
electricity boxes
The aforementioned type of boxes can sometimes be found in other random contexts, so remember to check them (in this case 58 = Sivas Province, YLD = Yıldızeli).
provinces
Map of Turkish province codes
province logos
Province logos are also worth learning for advanced learners as they appear in various places from bus stops to bins to other infrastructure. İzmir even has its lighthouse logo on bollards.

Road Features

rumble stripes
Turkish motorways sometimes use rumble strips, although these are not spread evenly across the country. By far the longest stretches of motorway that use them are the D100 (E80) from Çerkeş to just east of Erzincan, and the D400 (E90) from Tarsus to just west of Nusaybin. Besides that the remaining areas are quite clustered around İzmir, northwest of Konya and north out of Antalya.
NOTE: rumble stripes can be seen elsewhere less frequently
rumble stripes eastern
The only places where you will find rumble strips on the classic 4-lane no-divider eastern roads is the highways just outside of Van and Yüksekova.
yellow short lines
Yellow short lines just next to the road lines are sometimes found in southeastern provinces. They usually appear on highways, but sometimes appear on narrow roads as well.
aydin logo on street
Aydın province often puts its logo on signs and roads
hatay logo
Hatay sometimes puts its logo on streets.

Trams

This is a map showing all the Turkish cities that have tram systems colour-coded for the base colour of the trams (grey = different colours).
istanbul
Istanbul trams will always have the ‘Metro Istanbulsymbol on either end (also found at metro stations).
antalya
Antalya uses ‘swole trams’.
bursa bug trams
Bursabug trams’.
gaziantep
Gaziantepcute trams

Recognisable Roads

O-52
Along the following stretches of the O-52 you will find a lane of fresh dark asphalt in the outer lane on both sides of the motorway.
E99
The E99 leading into Azerbaijan is very identifiable. It is a very straight NW-SE road leading through a wetlands environment with dry mountains on either side. Mount Ararat is faintly visible to the northwest.
d400
The part of the D400 that runs along the Iraqi border is very recognisable. It runs through a narrow and very dry canyon with lots of poplars and a small stream (the border itself) at the bottom.
D885
The D885 between Tunceli and Pülümür is quite recognisable. It goes through a typical Tunceli landscape (see above) however it consistently follows a stream with the road following the bottom of a valley. Furthermore, at many points along the road you’ll find these mini tunnels, and there is frequent graffiti/political posters for Kurdish militant groups (PKK/HPG) and the left-wing HDP party (vastly more popular in Kurdish regions than other parts of the country - posters are always purple).
D915
The D915, or ‘Turkey’s death road’ (not an official title, you heard it here first) is extremely recognisable. It crosses over the mountains between Bayburt and Of - the highest part consists only of a thin gravel road with a steep drop on one side.
samandağ-kale
The coastal road around Musa Dağ (Hatay) is identifiable by the segregated cycle path that follows the length of the road between Kale and Samandağ.