How to Travel Between Antalya and Gazipaşa Airports

Here's the short version: Antalya airport (AYT) and Gazipaşa airport (GZP) sit about 180 km apart along the D400 coastal road, and the drive takes roughly 2 hours 30 to 3 hours in normal conditions. There's no train, no tram and no direct flight between the two — this is a road journey, plain and simple.

If you're doing this at all, it's usually because a flight got rebooked, you're catching a connection, or you flew into one airport and fly out of the other. So the honest answer up front: for a timed airport-to-airport run where missing the flight isn't an option, a pre-booked private transfer is the only realistic option that gives you a fixed pickup and door-to-door timing. There's a much cheaper intercity bus route via Alanya, but it's slow and involves a change — fine if you've got hours to spare, risky if you're chasing a departure.

Below I'll lay it all out honestly so you can decide for yourself.

The quick answer — how to get from Antalya airport to Gazipaşa airport

OptionJourney timeRough costBest for
Private transferAbout 2h30–3h, directFixed price — get an instant quoteCatching a flight, fixed timing, luggage, groups, families, night runs
Intercity bus (via Alanya, with a change)Considerably longer — allow well over 3h plus waitingBudgetTight budget, plenty of time to spare, no flight pressure
Car hireAbout 2h30–3h, directMid-range + tolls/fuelConfident drivers who want the car onward; one-way drop-off can be pricey

You'll notice there's no dolmuş (shared minibus) or single direct bus in that table — and that's deliberate. No single shared service runs this whole 180 km airport-to-airport stretch. The public option here means an intercity bus with a change around Alanya, which I've covered honestly below.

Distance and road conditions

The whole route runs along the D400, the main coastal highway that threads the eastern Antalya coast. It's about 180 km end to end, and in clear conditions you're looking at roughly 2h30–3h of actual driving. Real time varies a lot with traffic and the season, though — through peak summer (June to September) the coastal towns clog up and the road slows noticeably.

The pressure points are the built-up stretches: leaving the Antalya airport area, then the resort belt through Side and Manavgat, and especially the approach into and out of Alanya, which is the busiest chokepoint on the route. Gazipaşa itself sits east of Alanya, so you're effectively driving the full length of the coast past all the big resort towns before you get there. Add a comfortable buffer if you're timing this for a flight — more on that below, because it matters.

Private transfer — the only realistic timed option

For an airport-to-airport run, this is where a private transfer genuinely earns its place. You get a fixed pickup time, a driver who knows the D400 and the Alanya bottleneck, and a direct door-to-door run with no changes — which is exactly what you need when there's a flight to catch at the other end.

Pros: direct, no changes, fixed price agreed at booking, takes your luggage without fuss, and you can build in a sensible time buffer. Cons: it costs more than the bus — no getting around that.

It makes sense here in almost every scenario where timing matters: a connecting or rebooked flight, arriving at one airport and departing the other, travelling as a group or family, or arriving/leaving at an awkward hour. Because this is a long haul (180 km is well past the distance where a transfer wins), the maths tilts this way for most travellers. The price is fixed when you book and depends on distance, vehicle size and season, so the simplest move is to get an instant quote and see the number before you commit. For the fuller picture on airport transfers generally, see our complete guide, and if you're specifically weighing a metered ride against a fixed one, taxi vs private transfer breaks it down.

Intercity bus via Alanya — the budget route

Here's the honest budget option. There's no single direct bus covering the full AYT–GZP run, but you can piece it together on intercity coaches heading east along the coast, changing around Alanya (the main hub for onward services toward Gazipaşa). It's the cheapest way to do this by a wide margin.

The catch is time and reliability. You're looking at a journey that runs well over 3 hours once you factor in the change and any waiting, and you'll be handling your own luggage across the transfer. Bus timetables and fares here shift with the season, so confirm the current schedule and price locally before you travel — don't assume a connection will be waiting. Frankly, if you're catching a flight out of Gazipaşa, I wouldn't gamble a departure on a bus change; the risk isn't worth the saving. But if you've got a whole day free, no flight pressure and you're watching every lira, it's a perfectly valid choice.

Car hire — for confident drivers

Hiring a car works if you're comfortable driving the D400 and want the vehicle for the rest of your trip. The road is straightforward enough, but bear in mind the motorway/toll system uses HGS electronic tolling — check with the rental company how tolls are handled so you don't get a surprise charge later. Parking at both airports is easy enough, but the real sting is the one-way drop-off fee: picking up at one airport and dropping at the other 180 km away usually carries an extra charge, so get that quoted before you book. Car hire suits independent drivers doing a longer regional trip — not someone who just needs a one-off airport-to-airport hop.

Which option is right for you?

TravellerBest choice
Solo, light luggage, no flight pressureIntercity bus via Alanya to save money — or a private transfer if you value the time
Solo, catching a connecting flightPrivate transfer — don't risk a bus change
CouplePrivate transfer for the direct timing; bus only if budget's tight and time's flexible
Family with young childrenPrivate transfer with a child seat — 180 km on a coach with kids is no fun
Group of 5+Private transfer — one vehicle, all the luggage, one fixed price
Late-night or early-morning airport runPrivate transfer — buses thin out and a change is impractical at odd hours
On a tight budget, time to spareIntercity bus via Alanya (confirm the schedule first)
Heavy or bulky luggagePrivate transfer — no lugging bags across a bus change

When a private transfer is genuinely worth it here

I'll be straight: on plenty of short local hops I'd tell you to just grab a dolmuş or a taxi and not bother with a transfer. This route isn't one of those. At 180 km with a flight on the line and a tricky change if you go by bus, a private transfer is the one option that gives you a fixed pickup, a direct run and a time buffer you control. If catching that departure matters — and it usually does when you're crossing between two airports — it's worth it. The price is locked in when you book, so there are no surprises: get an instant quote and decide with the real number in front of you.

Frequently asked questions

How long does it take to get from Antalya airport to Gazipaşa airport?

Roughly 2 hours 30 minutes to 3 hours by direct car or transfer along the D400, covering about 180 km. That's in normal conditions — expect it to run longer in peak summer (June to September) and through the Alanya bottleneck. If you go by bus with a change, allow well over 3 hours plus waiting time.

Is there a direct bus between the two airports?

No single bus runs the whole airport-to-airport route. The budget public option is an intercity coach along the coast with a change around Alanya. It's cheap but slow, and timetables shift with the season, so confirm the current schedule locally before you rely on it.

Is there a train or tram between Antalya and Gazipaşa?

No. There's no rail or tram link on this route — it's a road journey by transfer, bus or car only. Antalya's tram network doesn't reach anywhere near Gazipaşa, so don't plan around one.

How much time should I leave to catch my flight?

Build in a generous buffer beyond the 2h30–3h drive, especially in summer when the D400 and Alanya slow right down. A private transfer lets you set a fixed early pickup so you're not cutting it fine. If you're going by bus, the change makes timing much harder to guarantee — which is why we'd steer you away from it for a flight-critical run.

Why would I need to travel between these two airports at all?

Usually because of a rebooked or connecting flight, or because you arrived at one airport and depart from the other — for example flying into Antalya but out of Gazipaşa near Alanya. It's a common enough scenario, and it's exactly the case where a pre-booked transfer earns its keep.

Can I get a taxi the whole way?

A taxi could physically do it, but a metered 180 km run is expensive and unpredictable, and a standard taxi seats only four with limited luggage room. For a long airport-to-airport haul, a private transfer with a fixed price agreed in advance is the more sensible and usually more economical choice.

What does a private transfer between the airports cost?

The price is fixed at the time of booking and depends on the distance, the vehicle size and the season — so rather than guess, get an instant quote and you'll see the exact figure before you commit. It's the same fixed price whether traffic is light or heavy on the day.

Is Gazipaşa a good alternative airport for the Alanya side?

It often is — Gazipaşa (GZP) is much closer to Alanya than Antalya airport, which can make the ground transfer far shorter if your flight schedule allows it. We compare the two directly in our Antalya vs Gazipaşa airport for Alanya guide.

To sum up: between Antalya (AYT) and Gazipaşa (GZP) you're looking at about 180 km and 2h30–3h along the D400, with a private transfer being the only realistic timed option for a connection and an intercity bus via Alanya as the slower budget alternative. If a flight's on the line, book the transfer and keep your timing in your own hands — book a private transfer or get an instant quote at bookridenow.com/en. Heading elsewhere on the coast instead? See our guides for Antalya airport to Alanya and the Gazipaşa airport (GZP) transfer guide.

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