Belek is where Turkey does luxury properly. In a slim green corridor between the Mediterranean and the Taurus foothills, roughly 35 kilometres east of Antalya, you will find championship golf courses, sprawling all-inclusive resorts, and quiet pine-shaded beaches that feel a world away from the busier towns further along the coast. It is a region built for people who want to arrive, exhale, and let the holiday take over.
The one part of a Belek trip that is easy to get wrong is the very first hour: getting from the aircraft door to your hotel lobby. After a flight with kids, golf bags, or a group that just wants a cold drink by the pool, the last thing anyone wants is a taxi negotiation or a shuttle that stops at nine other hotels before yours.
This guide walks you through exactly how a private airport transfer to Belek works, what it costs, who it suits, and the small details that make the difference between a smooth start and a stressful one. We cover the Bogazkent side, the golf-belt resorts, families and couples, luggage and child seats, seasonal demand, and the real questions travellers ask before they book.
What a private transfer to Belek actually involves
A private airport transfer is a door-to-door service booked in advance for your group only. No sharing, no waiting for strangers, no detours. Your driver is assigned to your flight, tracks it in case you land early or late, and takes you straight to your specific hotel.
With bookridenow, the service to Belek looks like this:
- You book online before you travel, entering your flight number, hotel name, passenger count and arrival time.
- Your flight is tracked, so a delay or an early landing does not cost you your ride.
- A driver meets you inside the arrivals hall with a name sign (meet & greet).
- You are driven directly to your Belek hotel's main gate or reception, with no other stops.
- The return leg is arranged the same way, timed to your departure and the local drive time.
Belek covers a broad area, so "Belek" on a booking form can mean anything from the resorts clustered near the Kadriye roundabout to the quieter properties out toward Bogazkent and the Acisu golf zone. That is why the exact hotel name matters more than the town name, and we come back to this several times below.
Who a Belek transfer is for
Belek attracts a specific kind of traveller, and a private transfer fits nearly all of them:
- Golfers. The region has more than a dozen championship courses. Golf bags are bulky, heavy and awkward in a shared minibus. A private vehicle sized for your clubs is the sane choice.
- Families. Belek is packed with family-focused, all-inclusive resorts. Free child and booster seats, a door-to-door route, and no stranger's schedule to keep make travelling with children far easier.
- Couples. Many Belek hotels are adults-only or honeymoon-oriented. A private sedan is a calm, comfortable start to a romantic break.
- Groups and golf societies. Larger vehicles keep the group together and the banter going, instead of splitting people across taxis.
- All-inclusive guests. When your food, drink and entertainment are all at the resort, the transfer is often the only thing you actually pay for outside the hotel. Getting it right sets the tone.
Belek's hotel zones — where you are actually going
Belek is not one single strip. It spreads across several distinct pockets, and knowing which one your hotel sits in helps you understand the drive time and pickup logistics.
- Kadriye and the central golf belt. The heart of the region, closest to the main resorts and golf clubs. Typically the quickest run from the airport.
- Belek town and beach. The main town area with beach access, shops and the classic resort cluster.
- Acisu / Iskele golf zone. The concentrated golf-course area with several flagship courses and their attached hotels.
- Bogazkent. The eastern, quieter side of Belek toward the Acisu River mouth. A little further from the airport, with a more relaxed, low-key feel, and popular with returning guests who want calm.
Because bookridenow covers roughly 59 hotels across these Belek zones, the driver is routed to your exact property rather than a generic drop point. If you are unsure which zone your hotel is in, the hotel's own confirmation email usually names the nearest landmark or the Kadriye/Bogazkent side.
Journey time and route from the airport
Antalya Airport (AYT), officially operated by Fraport TAV, sits on the eastern edge of Antalya, which puts it on the correct side of the city for Belek. That is good news: you do not have to cross Antalya to reach your hotel. The route runs east along the D400 coastal highway and then turns inland toward the Belek resorts.
| Route | Approx. distance | Approx. drive time |
| Antalya Airport (AYT) → Kadriye / central Belek | ~35 km | ~35 min |
| Antalya Airport (AYT) → Belek town / beach | ~40 km | ~40 min |
| Antalya Airport (AYT) → Bogazkent side | ~45 km | ~45 min |
In practice, most Belek transfers land in the 35 to 45 minute window. Traffic around the airport interchange and along the D400 can add time during summer peak weekends and public holidays, which is another reason flight tracking and a fixed price agreed in advance are worth having.
A quick note on airports: some travellers ask about Gazipasa Airport (GZP) further east. GZP is convenient for Alanya, but for Belek it is the wrong choice — it is well over two hours away by road. For Belek, Antalya Airport (AYT) is almost always the right arrival point.
How hotel pickup and drop-off works
This is the part travellers worry about most, so here is the plain version.
On arrival
- After you clear passport control and collect your luggage, you walk out into the arrivals hall.
- Your driver is waiting there with a name sign, so you do not need to find a desk or make a call.
- If your flight is early or delayed, the driver already knows — arrivals are tracked, so the meeting time adjusts automatically.
- You are walked to the vehicle in the nearby car park and driven straight to your Belek hotel.
At the hotel
- You are dropped at the hotel's main gate or reception, not at a roadside stop.
- Large Belek resorts often have a security barrier and a long driveway; the driver takes you inside to the entrance where the porters are.
On the way home
- Your return pickup is scheduled from the same reception, timed backward from your flight using the real local drive time.
- For a summer departure, allow generous airport time — check-in queues at AYT in peak season are long.
Approximate prices (clearly labelled approximate)
Prices vary by season, vehicle size and exact hotel zone, and they change over time, so treat the figures below as approximate ranges rather than a live quote. Always confirm the exact fare at the time of booking on bookridenow. All figures are one-way, per vehicle (not per person), in euros.
| Vehicle | Best for | Approx. one-way price |
| Private sedan (1–3 passengers) | Couples, solo travellers, small groups | ~€30–€45 |
| Minivan / VITO (up to ~6–7) | Families, golf pairs with bags | ~€40–€60 |
| Minibus (up to ~13–16) | Golf societies, large groups | ~€60–€90 |
Because the price is per vehicle, a private transfer becomes very competitive once you have three or four people sharing it — often close to what individual shuttle tickets would cost, but with none of the waiting.
Private vs shuttle vs taxi vs car hire
There is no single "best" way to get to Belek — it depends on your group and your priorities. Here is an honest comparison.
Private transfer
- Pros: door-to-door, no waiting, fixed price agreed in advance, meet & greet, flight tracking, free child seats, room for golf bags.
- Cons: costs a little more than a bare shuttle seat for a solo traveller; you should book ahead in peak season.
Shared shuttle
- Pros: cheapest option for one or two people.
- Cons: long waits while the vehicle fills, multiple hotel drop-offs, and Belek's spread-out resorts mean your hotel might be the last stop — turning a 40-minute drive into a 90-minute tour of other people's hotels.
Airport taxi
- Pros: available on the spot.
- Cons: price is negotiated after a long flight, no guaranteed child seats, and vehicles may not fit golf bags. You are also not guaranteed anyone will be waiting on the return leg.
Car hire
- Pros: total freedom to explore day trips.
- Cons: Turkish highway driving, parking at resorts, fuel, and the fact that most all-inclusive guests barely leave the hotel — meaning the car sits idle most of the week. Many families book a private transfer for arrival/departure and use day-trip operators for excursions instead.
Luggage, golf bags and child seats
Belek is a golf and family destination, so this deserves its own section.
- Golf bags: flag them when you book. A full set of clubs takes real boot space, and two golfers with bags usually need a minivan rather than a sedan. Getting the vehicle right at booking avoids a squeeze on arrival.
- Standard luggage: tell the booking form your true passenger and case count. A family of four with big cases plus a buggy is a minivan, not a sedan.
- Child seats: bookridenow provides infant, child and booster seats, typically free of charge — just request them and give the children's ages when you book so the correct seat is fitted before you arrive.
- Prams and buggies: mention them too; they fold into the boot but count toward your space.
The booking process on bookridenow
Booking a Belek transfer is designed to take a couple of minutes:
- 1. Enter your route: Antalya Airport (AYT) to your Belek hotel, and pick a return date if you want a round trip.
- 2. Add your details: passenger numbers, flight number, arrival time, and any child seats or golf bags.
- 3. Choose your vehicle: sedan, minivan or minibus, sized to your group and luggage.
- 4. Confirm: you receive a confirmation with your driver meeting instructions.
Booking ahead locks in your price, guarantees the right vehicle and child seats, and means someone is genuinely waiting for you when you land — instead of joining the arrivals scramble.
Seasonal notes for Belek transfers
Belek's rhythm follows the sun and the golf calendar, and both affect transfers.
- Summer peak (June to early September): the busiest window, with hot weather, packed resorts and heavier D400 traffic. Airport arrivals halls are crowded; a meet & greet driver holding your name is a real relief. Book early — vehicles fill up on peak-season Saturdays.
- Shoulder season (April–May and late September–October): arguably the best time for Belek. Mild, pleasant weather, quieter roads, and prime golf conditions. Transfers are easier to secure at short notice.
- Winter (November to March): Belek stays busy with golfers who come specifically for off-season play on green, uncrowded courses. Weather is cooler and can be wet, so a reliable private car beats standing around waiting for a shuttle.
For a sense of what to pack, it is worth checking a seasonal weather reference for the Antalya region before you travel, and confirming your terminal and flight details on the official Antalya Airport site.
Insider tips from the road
- Use your exact hotel name, not just "Belek." With dozens of resorts spread from Kadriye to Bogazkent, the precise name is what routes your driver correctly.
- Screenshot your confirmation. Antalya arrivals can have patchy signal; an offline copy of your driver's meeting details saves stress.
- Book the return in advance too. The departure leg is where taxi travellers most often get stranded. A pre-booked return removes that risk entirely.
- Give yourself airport buffer in summer. AYT security and check-in queues in July and August are long; ask your transfer to build in extra time.
- Golfers, book tee times and transfers together in your head. If you have an early first-morning tee-off, a smooth arrival transfer the day before is worth every euro.
Common mistakes travellers make
- Choosing the wrong airport. Booking Gazipasa (GZP) for a Belek hotel means a two-hours-plus drive. For Belek, it is Antalya (AYT).
- Under-counting luggage. Booking a sedan for four adults with big cases and golf bags leads to an awkward reshuffle on arrival.
- Forgetting child seats. Turning up with a toddler and no seat requested slows everyone down. Add them at booking.
- Relying on airport taxis in peak season. Prices negotiated after a night flight are rarely in your favour, and the return leg is never guaranteed.
- Assuming all Belek hotels are close together. A Bogazkent-side property is a good 10 minutes further than a Kadriye one; plan return timing accordingly.
Once you have arrived: day trips from Belek
Belek's central-coast location is one of its quiet advantages: several of the region's best excursions are an easy drive away. Once you have settled into your hotel and the golf clubs are stowed, popular options include a boat day out along the coast with Side boat trips, the cool green gorge and turquoise water of a Green Canyon boat tour, and, for families who want an adrenaline hit, a buggy and quad safari in the pine forests inland. All three pair well with a relaxed resort week and are simple to slot around your tee times or pool days.
Frequently asked questions
How far is Belek from Antalya Airport?
Belek is roughly 35 to 45 km from Antalya Airport (AYT), depending on your exact hotel. Central Belek and Kadriye are about 35 km; the Bogazkent side is closer to 45 km.
How long does the transfer from Antalya Airport to Belek take?
Typically 35 to 45 minutes. Traffic on the D400 during summer weekends and holidays can add some time, which is why flight tracking and a fixed price are useful.
Which airport should I use for Belek — AYT or GZP?
Antalya Airport (AYT), almost always. Gazipasa (GZP) is far to the east and best for Alanya; from GZP to Belek is well over two hours by road.
How much does a private transfer to Belek cost?
As an approximate guide, a private sedan is around €30–€45 one-way, a minivan around €40–€60, and a minibus around €60–€90. Prices are per vehicle and vary by season and hotel, so confirm at booking.
Is the price per person or per vehicle?
Per vehicle. That is why a private transfer becomes very good value once three or four people share it.
Will the driver meet me inside the airport?
Yes. It is a meet & greet service — your driver waits in the arrivals hall with a name sign, so you do not need to search or make a call.
What happens if my flight is delayed or early?
Your flight is tracked, so the driver adjusts to your real landing time. You will not lose your transfer because of a delay.
Do you provide child seats?
Yes. Infant, child and booster seats are available, usually free of charge. Request them and give the children's ages when you book so the right seat is fitted in advance.
Can you carry golf bags?
Yes, but flag them at booking. Two golfers with full bags usually need a minivan rather than a sedan for a comfortable fit.
Do you drop off at the hotel or a central point?
Directly at your hotel's main gate or reception. Belek's large resorts often have security barriers and long driveways, and the driver takes you all the way to the entrance.
Can I book a return transfer as well?
Yes, and we recommend it. The departure leg is where taxi travellers most often get caught out. A pre-booked return is timed to your flight and the local drive time.
How many hotels in Belek do you cover?
bookridenow covers roughly 59 hotels across the Belek zones, from Kadriye and the central golf belt to the quieter Bogazkent side.
Is a private transfer better than a shared shuttle?
For families, golfers and groups, yes. A shared shuttle waits to fill and drops at multiple hotels, which in spread-out Belek can double your journey time. A private transfer goes straight to your door.
What is the best time of year to visit Belek?
Summer is peak for beach and family holidays; April–May and September–October offer mild weather and prime golf; winter draws golfers to quiet, green courses. Transfers run year-round.
How do I book a transfer to Belek?
Book online on bookridenow: enter your route (AYT to your hotel), add flight number, passenger count, child seats and golf bags, choose your vehicle, and confirm. You will receive your driver meeting details.
Do I need to pay the driver in cash?
No cash haggling is involved — your fare is agreed and confirmed when you book, so there are no surprises on arrival.
Can you handle large golf societies or groups?
Yes. Minibuses seat up to around 13–16 passengers, keeping your group together with room for everyone's clubs and cases.
Conclusion
Belek rewards travellers who plan the boring parts well. A championship golf week, a five-star family holiday, or a quiet couple's escape on the Bogazkent side all start the same way — with that first drive from Antalya Airport. Get it right and the holiday begins the moment you step off the plane; get it wrong and you spend your first hour negotiating with a taxi or touring other people's hotels on a shuttle.
A private transfer removes all of that. You get a driver waiting with your name, a car sized for your group and your golf bags, free child seats for the little ones, flight tracking so a delay never costs you your ride, and a straight run to your hotel's front door.
Ready to start your Belek holiday the easy way? Book your private Antalya Airport to Belek transfer on bookridenow.com today — confirm your price in minutes, tell us your flight and hotel, and let your driver take care of the rest.