Blue Flag swimming, a 2.9 km shoreline and a canyon out back — Göynük is Kemer's effortless beach day.
Tucked beneath the pine-clad Beydağları mountains just north of Kemer, Göynük Beach stretches for almost 2.9 km of clean, gently shelving shoreline. The shore is a mix of fine grey sand, small pebbles and smooth stones, so water shoes are handy — but the reward is famously clear, deep-turquoise water that earns Göynük its Blue Flag. The long public stretch sits beside the manicured beach parks and resort fronts, with sunbeds, showers, changing cabins and a string of cafes and snack bars. There are buoyed swimming zones, parasailing, jet skis and banana boats, and the dramatic Göynük Canyon rises right behind the bay. Calm, scenic and well-organised rather than wild and partying, it suits families, couples and anyone who wants a polished Mediterranean beach day without a long drive.
Fixed EUR per Eco Van (1–6 guests). Vito (up to 7) and V-Class (executive) +50% / +100%.
Round-trip includes up to 6 hours wait time. Need longer? Message us for a flat day-rate.
It's about 45 km — roughly a 50-minute drive via the coastal D400 toward Kemer. The simplest option is a SooTransfer private transfer: we meet you in arrivals, help with bags and drive you straight to the beach or your Göynük hotel. A private return (round-trip) typically runs around €70–90 for the car, and we offer a wait-and-return service so the same driver brings you back.
For Göynük, yes. Local buses mean changes and waiting in the heat with luggage, metered taxis can be pricier and unpredictable, and group tours run on a fixed schedule. A SooTransfer private car is fixed-price, door-to-door, on your timetable, and can add stops like Göynük Canyon — ideal for families and anyone with bags or beach gear.
Yes — Göynük is one of Kemer's Blue Flag beaches, recognised for clean, clear water and good facilities. The sea is generally calm with marked, buoyed swimming zones. As with any public beach, supervise children and swim within the flagged areas.
It's a mix of fine grey sand, small pebbles and smooth stones, with gently shelving, shallow entry that suits families. Water shoes are recommended. The organised, well-serviced vibe — showers, cabins, cafes — makes it more of a relaxed family beach than a loud party spot.
Public access is free; a sunbed-and-umbrella set is usually about €8–15 a day, with smarter beach-park and resort sections costing more. It can get busy on summer weekends and midday in July–August, so arriving before 11:00 or visiting in June or September gives you more space and easier parking.