Important rules and guidelines for your visit to Pamukkale and Hierapolis.
Pamukkale has one absolutely strict rule: no shoes on the travertines. The white limestone surface is being slowly destroyed by footprints, and the barefoot policy is enforced everywhere on the slopes, in all weather. Outside of that, the rules are gentle — free photography everywhere, no flash restriction even in the museum, drones require a permit. The Hierapolis ruins and the Cleopatra Pool follow standard archaeological-site rules. See our visitors guide and accessibility page for related info.
A short list — the rest is normal archaeological-site etiquette
Mandatory barefoot walking on the entire white travertine surface — protecting the calcium-carbonate formations from footprint erosion. Carry your shoes in a small plastic bag (sold at the gates for 5 TRY) or leave them in the lockers at the upper gates. Re-shoe at the top for the Hierapolis ruins.
No restrictions on photography or video anywhere on site — including inside the Hierapolis Archaeology Museum and Cleopatra's Antique Pool. Tripods are fine. Drones require a separate permit from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, applied for in advance; permits are rarely granted to tourists.
Swimming and swimwear are allowed only in Cleopatra's Antique Pool (which has changing rooms and lockers). On the open travertine pools, you can wade and dip feet but full bathing is prohibited. No nudity anywhere on site.
Eating, drinking and especially alcoholic beverages are forbidden on the travertine surface itself — to protect the white limestone from spills. There are cafés at both upper gates and a sit-down restaurant near the museum where you can eat properly.
Common questions about what's allowed