Turnacıbasi
Cd. No:48, Beyoglu, Istanbul
Agahamami.com/ &
Tripadvisor.com
+ 90
(0212) 249 50 27
10:00 - 22:00
The Historical Aga Hamam is located on a back street
down the well known Istiklal Avenue. From Istiklal,
walk down street (Sadri Alisik), which is across
from the small mosque in the middle (Huseyin Aga
Cami). When you come to the end of the Sadri Alisik
street you will be in front of the entrance. It is
10-15 minutes walking distance to Taksim Square and
the metro station. The owners claim that Aga Hamamı was
constructed and used
as a private hamam by Mehmed the Conqueror and his
sons.
Recent Reviews & News
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Traditional Package: (Entrance + Peeling + Foam bath): 3300 TL (apprx $75) Massage Package: (Entrance + Peeling + Foam bath + Oil Massage: 5800 TL ($120) Click here for detailed prices on official website.." (Google / March 2026) |
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"Overpriced tourist hammam. I have visited most hammams in Istanbul and this one has been the most disappointing in terms of value for money. It is almost as expensive as the legacy hammams in Istanbul, with a cramped environment, little attention to customer service, strictly timed schedules and constant reminders to leave a tip (tips are not part of the culture, this was put in place once the saw how easily Americans can be suckered into parting with even more money). The place was also very noisy and not relaxing at all, both due to staff talking loudly to each other and other visitors being disrespectful and not being encouraged to be quiet by the staff." (Google / March 2026) |
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"Wonderful experience! Tradicionat massage for my and my daughter.I recommend it.." (Google /Feb 2026) |
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"To give some context, when you pay by cc, it costs roughly $75 USD for a normal service with no hot oil massage. And then of course a tip. You can make an appt online. For anyone who has not been to a Turkish bath, it might not be obvious that there’s no sitting in hot water involved, like say an Onsen. When you enter you go into a changing room and wrap yourself in a towel, then you are guided into a warm room with a giant marble slab and various small sink basins. You can use the basins to rinse if you like. I found the marble slab far too hot to actually lie on, so I sat there. It was clean and smelled fine. The rooms you enter into the Hammam ( more public spaces wreak of moth balls. I find that smell very distasteful." (Google / Feb 2026) |