Nevşehir Bus Terminal (Nevşehir Otogarı) is Cappadocia's main intercity coach station, about 10 km from Göreme. Major companies like Metro, Kamil Koç and Ulusoy run buses here from Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir, and most tickets include a free servis shuttle onward to Göreme, Ürgüp, Avanos and Uçhisar.
Yes. Almost every intercity coach ticket includes a free onward shuttle called a servis that runs from the terminal to Göreme, Ürgüp, Avanos and Uçhisar. When you buy or collect your ticket, tell the desk your town and confirm the servis is included; it nearly always is. If not, a dolmuş or taxi from the terminal will take you.
An overnight coach from Istanbul to Nevşehir takes roughly eleven to twelve hours. Most services leave in the evening and arrive around dawn, so you can sleep on the bus and reach Cappadocia in time for a full first day. Ankara is much closer, about four to five hours away.
Frequent dolmuşes (shared minibuses) run from Göreme, Ürgüp and Avanos and pass through or terminate at Nevşehir; the ride from Göreme takes about twenty minutes. If you have an intercity coach to catch, arrive early, since the servis from your hotel follows the coach company's schedule, not yours. A taxi is the faster alternative.
No. The Nevşehir otogar is the large regional intercity terminal where long-distance coaches arrive, about ten kilometres from Göreme. Göreme has its own small bus stop that handles short local dolmuş hops between the villages. If you are travelling to or from another Turkish city, you will use the Nevşehir terminal.
The terminal has ticket desks for the major coach companies, small cafés for a glass of çay, simple shops, toilets and usually a left-luggage counter. It is functional rather than fancy. Carry a little cash for snacks or a taxi, as not every small kiosk accepts cards, and you will not need to spend more than about fifteen minutes here.
Göreme Bus Station is the small central otogar where nearly every Cappadocia journey begins, ends, or connects. It sits right in the heart of the village, an easy walk from most cave hotels, pensions, and the main strip of cafés and tour offices. It is not a place you visit for its beauty, but you will pass through it constantly, and knowing how it works quietly makes your whole trip smoother. Despite the grand word otogar, this is a modest, friendly hub rather than a sprawling terminal. You will find a cluster of small ticket offices belonging to the intercity bus companies, a few simple cafés and kiosks, benches, and the loading bays where the local dolmuş minibuses idle. There is usually a helpful staff member or driver who will point you to the right vehicle if you look lost, and the whole thing is compact enough that you can take it in at a glance. The station's main daily role is as the launch point for dolmuş minibuses, the shared minivans that are the cheapest and most authentic way to move around Cappadocia. From here regular services run to Nevşehir, the provincial capital, often passing through Uçhisar and Ortahisar on the way. Another well-loved line heads north toward Avanos, stopping near Çavuşin, Paşabağ, and the Zelve area, which makes it a favourite for reaching the open-air valleys without a tour. Services also connect toward Ürgüp. You generally pay the driver or conductor in cash on board, and there is no need to book in advance. For longer journeys, the picture is a little different. Overnight and daytime intercity coaches to Ankara, Istanbul, Izmir, and other cities do not usually run directly from tiny Göreme. Instead you travel the short distance to the much larger Nevşehir bus terminal, from where the big coaches depart. The good news is that most reputable bus companies include a free servis, a shuttle minibus that carries you between Göreme and the Nevşehir terminal at no extra cost. When you buy a long-distance ticket, always ask whether the free servis is included and where it picks you up, as this saves both money and confusion. Getting to the station itself is simple. From anywhere in Göreme it is a short, flat walk, rarely more than five to ten minutes from the accommodation clusters. Coming from Ürgüp or Nevşehir, you can arrive on the same dolmuş network that departs from here, so the station doubles as your gateway into the village. Arriving from Nevşehir Kapadokya Airport, most people use a pre-booked hotel transfer or the shuttle services, which drop you close to this central point. The best time to use the station is during daylight and mid-morning to early afternoon, when dolmuş frequencies are highest. Services thin out noticeably in the evening, on Sundays, and during the quieter winter months, so it pays to check the last departure if you are heading out to a valley or village. You will rarely spend more than a few minutes here beyond waiting for your minibus, though it is a pleasant enough spot to grab a çay or a simnit while you watch the small-town rhythm. A few honest tips will serve you well. Carry small Turkish lira notes and coins, as drivers appreciate exact change and card payment is not reliable on local minibuses. Confirm your destination with the driver before boarding, since some minibuses share similar routes. If you have an early flight or a long overnight coach, plan the servis timing carefully and give yourself a comfortable buffer. Finally, keep your expectations realistic: this is a working village transport stop, not a polished modern terminal, and that unpolished, local character is exactly what makes it useful and genuinely Cappadocian. Treat Göreme Bus Station as your practical anchor. Once you understand the dolmuş lines fanning out from it and the free servis link to Nevşehir, you can explore the whole region cheaply, flexibly, and on your own terms, without depending on organised tours for every outing.
Kayseri Erkilet Airport (IATA: ASR) is one of the two main gateways to Cappadocia, sitting about 75 to 80 kilometres east of Göreme. It shares its runways with an air base on the edge of Kayseri, a busy central Anatolian city, and that dual role is part of why it works so well for travellers. The airport handles far more daily flights than little Nevşehir, with frequent domestic connections from Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and other Turkish cities, plus a handful of seasonal international routes. For most visitors the practical takeaway is simple: Kayseri usually offers more departure times and, quite often, noticeably cheaper fares than flying into Nevşehir Kapadokya. If your plans are flexible, it pays to compare both before you book. The terminal itself is modern and easy to navigate, with car rental desks, ATMs, cafes, a few shops and the usual arrivals hall where transfer drivers wait with name boards. It is not a place you visit for its own sake, but it is a smooth, low stress place to begin or end a Cappadocia trip, and after a short flight you can be watching balloons over the fairy chimneys the very next morning. Getting from Kayseri to the Cappadocia towns is the main thing to plan. The drive to Göreme, Ürgüp or Uçhisar takes roughly an hour to an hour and a half depending on traffic and your exact hotel. The easiest option is a pre booked shuttle or private transfer, which most hotels and local agencies arrange; drivers meet your flight and drop you at your door, and shared shuttles are the budget friendly choice. Car rental is straightforward if you want the freedom to explore the valleys and outlying villages at your own pace. There are also public buses and the Havaş style airport service that run into Kayseri city centre, from where intercity buses continue to Nevşehir and onward, but with luggage and connections this is slower and only worth it if you are counting every lira. Coming the other way, arrange your airport transfer the day before you fly out, because early morning departures are common and taxis are not always waiting in the smaller towns. There is no single best time to use Kayseri airport, since it runs year round, but the shoulder seasons of April to June and September to October give you the kindest weather for ballooning and hiking once you arrive. Summer brings the most flights and the biggest crowds, while winter can be magical with snow on the fairy chimneys, though the occasional storm may delay flights into central Anatolia. You will not spend long at the airport itself: allow the usual couple of hours before a domestic departure, and on arrival budget the transfer time into your day rather than any sightseeing at the terminal. A few honest tips make the trip smoother. Confirm your transfer includes your specific town, as Göreme, Ürgüp, Avanos and Uçhisar are all different distances and some cheap shared shuttles only cover the main stops. If you land late, book your ride in advance rather than hoping to find one on the spot. Withdraw a little cash at the airport ATMs for small purchases and tips, since some village spots still prefer it. Keep your passport handy even on domestic flights, as security checks here can be thorough given the shared military use. And do not underestimate the drive: it is a genuine hour plus across open Anatolian steppe, so factor it into any tight balloon booking the next dawn. Handled with a little forethought, Kayseri is a reliable, wallet friendly door into one of the most extraordinary landscapes in Turkey, and many seasoned travellers quietly prefer it to the alternative.
Nevşehir Kapadokya Airport (IATA: NAV) is the closest airport to Cappadocia's main sights, roughly 40 minutes by road from Göreme. For most travellers heading to the fairy chimneys, this small regional airport is the fastest way in. It sits on the plateau between Nevşehir and Gülşehir, about 30 kilometres northwest of Göreme, and it exists almost entirely to serve tourism and the surrounding towns. Compared with the sprawl of a big-city terminal, NAV feels refreshingly simple: one modest passenger building, a short walk from the plane to the exit, and luggage that usually arrives before you do. If you have flown into Istanbul or Ankara and connected onward, this is often where your Cappadocia trip truly begins, with the first glimpse of the pale volcanic landscape appearing under the wing on descent. The airport handles domestic flights, mainly from Istanbul and Ankara, so many international visitors reach it with a single connection through one of those hubs. Schedules are seasonal and can be lighter in winter, so it is worth checking current timetables when you plan, as some routes run more frequently in the busy spring and autumn months. There is no dramatic history to tour here, but the story worth knowing is a practical one: NAV is not Cappadocia's only gateway. Kayseri Erkilet Airport (ASR) to the east is larger and often has more flight options, but it sits roughly an hour to an hour and a half away by road. When flight times and prices are similar, NAV is simply the more convenient arrival for the Göreme and Ürgüp side of the region. Getting from the airport to your hotel is straightforward. Shared shuttle services are timed to meet arriving flights and drop passengers directly at accommodation in Göreme, Ürgüp, Uçhisar, Avanos and the smaller villages. These shuttles are the most popular choice and usually the best value; the easiest approach is to book a seat in advance or ask your hotel to arrange the transfer, since many guesthouses handle this as a matter of routine. Private taxis are also available at the exit if you prefer to leave immediately, and the ride to Göreme takes around 40 minutes across open countryside. There is no direct public dolmuş from the airport terminal itself, so pre-booked shuttles or taxis are the realistic options rather than waiting for a local minibus. Once you are on the ground, the airport does not ask much of your time. Facilities are limited but cover the essentials, with a café, car-rental desks, and basic services inside the terminal. If you are renting a car to explore the valleys at your own pace, collecting it here is convenient and saves a transfer into town. Because the building is compact, you do not need to arrive as absurdly early as you would for a major hub; still, give yourself a comfortable buffer for check-in and security, especially in peak season when a couple of flights can depart close together and the small terminal fills up quickly. The best time to fly into NAV mirrors the best time to visit Cappadocia in general: spring and autumn bring mild days, clear skies for the hot-air balloons, and the fullest flight schedules. Summer is hot but busy and well served, while winter is quieter and can be beautiful under snow, though you should double-check that your chosen route is still operating. As for how long to spend here, the honest answer is: as little as possible. The airport is a means to an end, not a destination, and the real reward is the short drive that follows. A few honest tips before you go. Confirm your flight is domestic and note which city you are connecting through, as Istanbul has two airports and it is easy to book the wrong one for a tight connection. Arrange your transfer before you land rather than after, so you are not negotiating with your suitcase in hand. And if the NAV schedule does not fit your dates or budget, do not rule out flying into Kayseri instead, then arranging a longer transfer, since the extra road time is often worth the wider choice of flights.

The best time to visit is during the sunrise golden hour. Don't forget your camera!