Turkey Living Cost Guide 2026

Complete breakdown of monthly expenses, salaries by profession, Turkish income tax system, SGK social security, healthcare, and PPP calculator. For expats and newcomers planning to move to Turkey.

Last updated: June 2026 | Next review: December 2026
Istanbul skyline with mosques and Bosphorus - iconic Turkish landmark

Monthly Living Expenses in Istanbul

For a single adult. All amounts in TRY (Turkish Lira). Based on TUIK, real 2026 data, and expat reports.

Important: These figures are monthly expenses (after-tax spending). Istanbul is the most expensive city in Turkey -- other cities like Ankara, Izmir, and Antalya are 20-40% cheaper. Turkey has experienced significant inflation in recent years, so prices change frequently. See the Tax Calculator tab for details on income tax and SGK contributions.
~25,000
TRY/month (low)
Frugal single in Istanbul
~42,000
TRY/month (high)
Comfortable lifestyle
22,104
TRY minimum wage (gross)
2026 asgari ucret (monthly gross)
17,002
TRY minimum wage (net)
After SGK + income tax deductions
CategoryItemLow (TRY)High (TRY)Notes
Housing
Rent (1-bedroom apartment)12,00020,000Istanbul European side higher; Asian side slightly cheaper
Utilities (electricity, water, gas)2,0004,000Natural gas expensive in winter; IGDAS, ISKI, BEDAS providers
Internet + TV400800Turk Telekom, Turkcell Superonline, Vodafone; fiber widely available
Mobile phone200500Turkcell, Vodafone, Turk Telekom; budget MVNOs available
Housing subtotal14,60025,300
Food & Groceries
Groceries6,0009,000BIM, A101, SOK (budget); Migros, CarrefourSA (mid-range)
Eating out1,5003,500Lokantas (local eateries) 80-150 TRY; restaurants 200-500 TRY
Food subtotal7,50012,500
Transport
Istanbulkart (monthly transit)1,5002,500Metro, Metrobus, bus, ferry, tram; per-ride ~15-20 TRY
Occasional taxi / ride-hailing01,500BiTaksi app; taxis metered; minimum fare ~50 TRY
Transport subtotal1,5004,000
SGK Healthcare
Public healthcare (SGK)00Covered through SGK payroll deductions (see Tax tab)
Private health insurance (optional)03,000Acibadem, Allianz, Axa; faster access, private hospitals
Health subtotal03,000
Personal & Lifestyle
Clothes5001,500LC Waikiki, DeFacto, Koton (budget); malls for international brands
Personal care300700Haircuts, toiletries; Turkish barbers very affordable
Gym & leisure1,0002,500Gym 1,000-2,500 TRY/month; cinema 100-150 TRY per ticket
Household supplies300600Cleaning products, small items
Personal subtotal2,1005,300
Insurance
DASK (earthquake insurance)100300Mandatory for all residential properties; Dogal Afet Sigortalari Kurumu
Home insurance (konut sigortasi)100300Optional but recommended; covers fire, theft, water damage
Insurance subtotal200600
TOTAL MONTHLY EXPENSES~25,900~50,700Realistic range: 25,000 - 42,000 with buffer

Salaries by Profession in Turkey

Monthly gross salaries in TRY. Data from TUIK, Kariyer.net, Glassdoor, and LinkedIn Salary Insights 2026.

Asgari Ucret (Minimum Wage) 2026: Turkey's minimum wage is 22,104 TRY/month gross (net approximately 17,002 TRY after SGK and income tax deductions). The minimum wage is reviewed twice yearly (January and July) due to inflation. A significant portion of Turkish workers earn at or near minimum wage.
Software Engineer (Sr)
80,000 TRY
Doctor (Specialist)
70,000 TRY
IT Director
65,000 TRY
Data Scientist
60,000 TRY
Engineer (Civil/Mech)
55,000 TRY
Software Engineer (Mid)
45,000 TRY
Lawyer (Avukat)
45,000 TRY
Doctor (GP)
40,000 TRY
Pharmacist (Eczaci)
35,000 TRY
Accountant (Muhasebeci)
33,000 TRY
Marketing Manager
30,000 TRY
Teacher (Ogretmen)
27,000 TRY
Nurse (Hemsire)
25,000 TRY
Police Officer
24,000 TRY
Electrician (Elektrikci)
23,000 TRY
Retail / Service Worker
22,104 TRY
Key notes: (1) Istanbul salaries are 20-40% higher than other cities. (2) Tech sector salaries have grown rapidly due to remote work for international companies. (3) Many workers earn minimum wage or close to it -- roughly 40% of employed population. (4) Salaries are typically paid monthly on the last working day.

Turkish Tax System (Gelir Vergisi)

Turkey uses progressive income tax plus mandatory SGK (Sosyal Guvenlik Kurumu) contributions. Updated for 2026 tax year.

Income Tax Brackets (Gelir Vergisi Dilimleri)

Annual Taxable Income (TRY)Tax RateCumulative Tax at Top
0 - 110,00015%16,500 TRY
110,001 - 230,00020%40,500 TRY
230,001 - 580,00027%135,000 TRY
580,001 - 3,000,00035%982,000 TRY
3,000,001+40%Marginal rate
Important: Turkish income tax brackets are applied on a cumulative basis throughout the year. This means your effective tax rate increases as your cumulative earnings move through higher brackets during the year. January paychecks have the lowest deductions while December paychecks have the highest. Employers withhold tax monthly based on cumulative earnings.

SGK (Social Security) Contributions

ContributionEmployee ShareEmployer ShareTotalNotes
Disability, Old Age, Death Insurance9%11%20%Main pension contribution
General Health Insurance (GSS)5%7.5%12.5%Covers SGK healthcare
Unemployment Insurance1%2%3%Issizlik sigortasi
Total~14%~20.5%~34.5%Employee pays 14% of gross; employer pays additional 20.5%

Stamp Tax (Damga Vergisi)

Additional deduction: A stamp tax (damga vergisi) of 0.759% is also deducted from gross salary each month. This is unique to Turkey and reduces net pay slightly beyond income tax and SGK contributions. Total employee deductions are roughly: 14% SGK + income tax + 0.759% stamp tax.

Net Salary Calculator

Quick Reference: Net Pay by Gross

Monthly GrossAnnual GrossSGK + Tax + StampNet Monthly (avg)Effective Rate
22,104265,248~5,102~17,00223.1%
30,000360,000~7,800~22,20026.0%
45,000540,000~13,500~31,50030.0%
60,000720,000~20,400~39,60034.0%
80,000960,000~29,600~50,40037.0%

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Calculator

Compare how far your Turkish salary goes in other countries. Based on World Bank/OECD 2025-2026 PPP indices. Turkey = 100.

CountryPPP Index (TR=100)Region30,000 TRY buys equiv. of
How to read: Turkey = 100. If Switzerland has a PPP index of 371, your 30,000 TRY in Turkey has the same purchasing power as 30,000 x (371/100) = 111,300 TRY equivalent in Switzerland. You would need 271% more money in Switzerland for the same standard of living. Turkey is one of the most affordable countries for daily living.

Cost of Living by City

Comparing major Turkish cities. Istanbul = 100 (most expensive baseline). Data: TUIK, Numbeo, Sahibinden 2026.

CityAvg Rent 1-bed (TRY)Monthly Transit (TRY)Kebab Meal (TRY)Cay (TRY)Livability Note
Istanbul12,000-20,0001,500-2,500100-18010-20Most expensive; massive city spanning two continents; traffic legendary
Ankara8,000-14,0001,000-1,80080-1408-15Capital; government/university city; more affordable than Istanbul
Izmir9,000-15,0001,200-2,00090-15010-18Aegean coast; progressive vibe; excellent seafood and climate
Antalya8,000-13,0001,000-1,80080-1408-15Mediterranean coast; tourism hub; popular with expats and digital nomads
Bursa7,000-12,000900-1,50070-1208-12Industrial city; Iskender kebab homeland; Uludag ski resort nearby
Eskisehir5,000-9,000700-1,20060-1005-10University town; very affordable; vibrant student life; tram system
Istanbul vs the rest: Istanbul is by far the most expensive city in Turkey, with rents 50-100% higher than Ankara or Antalya. However, it also has the highest salaries and most job opportunities, especially in tech, finance, and international business. Many Turkish professionals choose Ankara or Izmir for better quality of life relative to income. Eskisehir is particularly popular among students and young professionals for its extremely low cost of living.

Turkish Healthcare System (SGK - Sosyal Guvenlik Kurumu)

Turkey has a universal healthcare system funded through SGK contributions, covering all registered employees and their dependents.

Universal
SGK coverage
All employees and dependents covered via SGK
~5%
Employee GSS contribution
General Health Insurance (Genel Saglik Sigortasi)
Free
Public hospital visits
No fees at SGK-contracted public hospitals
Low copay
Private with SGK
SGK-contracted private hospitals charge small difference

Public vs Private Healthcare

FeaturePublic (Devlet Hastanesi)Private with SGK (Ozel Hastane)Full Private
CostFree (funded by SGK contributions)Small copay (fark ucreti) per visit3,000-8,000 TRY/month insurance
Wait timesCan be long; crowded in major citiesShorter; appointment-basedMinimal; priority access
QualityGood; university hospitals excellentVery good; modern facilitiesExcellent; international standards
Specialist accessReferral from family doctor via MHRSDirect access with SGK copayDirect access; no referral needed
MedicationsSGK covers most; small pharmacy copaySame SGK drug coverageFull coverage depending on plan
DentalBasic dental covered at public hospitalsLimited coverageComprehensive dental plans available

What's Covered (SGK Public System)

ServiceCostNotes
Family doctor (Aile Hekimi)FreeAssigned by address; first point of contact; MHRS appointment system
Specialist visit (public)FreeReferral recommended; university hospitals are centers of excellence
Hospital stayFreeAll inpatient care covered at public facilities
Emergency (Acil Servis)FreeAll hospitals must accept emergencies; call 112 for ambulance
Prescription drugs10-20% copaySGK covers most medications; copay at pharmacy varies by drug type
Dental (basic)Free/lowExtractions and basic treatments at public dental clinics
MaternityFully coveredPrenatal, delivery, postnatal care all covered; 16 weeks maternity leave
Mental healthFreePsychiatry available at public hospitals; psychotherapy limited in public system
Medical tourism: Turkey is one of the world's top destinations for medical tourism, especially for dental work, hair transplants, eye surgery (LASIK), and cosmetic procedures. Istanbul and Antalya are major hubs. Prices are 50-80% lower than Western Europe for equivalent quality procedures. Many private hospitals have international patient departments with English-speaking staff. This is separate from the SGK system.

Housing in Turkey (Konut)

The Turkish rental market has seen rapid price increases. Understanding key terms and legal protections is essential.

Key Terms

Turkish TermEnglishExplanation
DepozitoSecurity depositTypically 1-2 months rent; legally capped at 3 months maximum; should be returned at end of lease
Kira artisiRent increaseAnnual rent increases capped at TUFE (CPI) rate; government has periodically imposed 25% caps during high inflation
AidatMaintenance feeMonthly building/site maintenance; covers security, cleaning, garden, pool; 500-3,000 TRY in Istanbul
DASKEarthquake insuranceDogal Afet Sigortalari Kurumu; MANDATORY for all residential properties; ~100-500 TRY/year
TapuTitle deedOfficial property ownership document; verify before any purchase
EmlakciReal estate agentCommission typically 1 month rent from each party (tenant + landlord)
Kira kontratiRental contractShould be notarized; register with tax office within 1 month; standard 1-year renewable

Where to Search

PlatformTypeNotes
Sahibinden.comAll typesLargest classifieds platform in Turkey; essential for housing search; direct owner and agent listings
Hepsiemlak.comAll typesMajor real estate portal; good filtering options; agent-heavy
Emlakjet.comAll typesGrowing platform; user-friendly interface; both rent and sale
AirbnbShort-termPopular for initial stays while searching; furnished apartments
Facebook groupsAll types"Istanbul Kiralik Daire" groups; expat housing groups in English
Local emlakci officesAll typesWalk-in real estate offices in your target neighborhood; often have unlisted properties
Earthquake awareness: Turkey is in a major seismic zone. The devastating 2023 Kahramanmaras earthquakes underscored the importance of building safety. When renting or buying: (1) Check the building's deprem risk raporu (earthquake risk report). (2) Prefer buildings constructed after 2000 with modern seismic standards. (3) DASK earthquake insurance is mandatory. (4) Istanbul specifically has a high probability of a major earthquake -- consider building age and construction quality seriously. (5) Look for buildings with a yapi kullanim izin belgesi (occupancy permit).
Rent increase cap: Due to high inflation, the Turkish government has periodically imposed rent increase caps (typically 25% annually for existing tenants). This means your landlord cannot raise rent beyond the legally permitted rate at renewal, even if market rents have risen more. Always reference the current TUFE-based or government-mandated cap when negotiating renewals.

Transport in Turkey (Ulasim)

Turkey has extensive public transport in major cities, cheap domestic flights, and a growing intercity bus network.

~15-20
TRY per ride
Istanbulkart single trip (metro/bus/tram)
Marmaray
Under the Bosphorus
Rail tunnel connecting Europe and Asia
~40
TRY/litre petrol
Gasoline is heavily taxed in Turkey
200+
TRY domestic flights
Pegasus, AnadoluJet from 200 TRY one-way
Transport TypeCostDetails
Istanbulkart (rechargeable)~15-20 TRY/rideUsed for metro, bus, tram, ferry, Metrobus; transfer discounts apply
Metrobus (Istanbul)~15-20 TRY/rideDedicated bus rapid transit; runs 24/7; crucial for cross-city commuting
Marmaray (Istanbul)~15-20 TRY/rideRail line under the Bosphorus; connects European and Asian sides
Istanbul ferries (vapur)~10-15 TRY/rideIDO and Sehir Hatlari; scenic commute across Bosphorus and Sea of Marmara
Dolmus (shared minibus)15-30 TRYFixed-route shared minibuses; very common in all Turkish cities
Taxi (taksi)Minimum ~50 TRYMetered; use BiTaksi app to avoid scams; indi-bindi (short trips) common
Pegasus Airlines200-800 TRYLow-cost carrier; Istanbul SAW hub; flights to all Turkish cities
AnadoluJet (THY subsidiary)250-1,000 TRYAffordable domestic flights; Ankara hub; wide domestic network
Intercity bus (otobus)300-800 TRYMetro Turizm, Kamil Koc, Pamukkale; comfortable; snacks included; obilet.com for booking
YHT (high-speed train)150-400 TRYAnkara-Istanbul, Ankara-Konya, Ankara-Eskisehir; TCDD operates; modern trains
Istanbul commuting: Istanbul is a megacity of 16+ million spanning two continents. Commuting can take 1-3 hours each way. The Metrobus is the backbone of the system, running on dedicated lanes and operating 24/7. The Marmaray tunnel under the Bosphorus revolutionized cross-continental commuting. Ferries (vapur) across the Bosphorus are both practical transport and one of Istanbul's great pleasures -- grab a cay from the onboard vendor and enjoy the views. Get an Istanbulkart immediately upon arrival.

Working in Turkey (Turkiye'de Calismak)

Turkish employment law, work culture, and practical info for expats and newcomers.

14
Vacation days/year
Minimum for 1-5 years tenure; increases with seniority
45h
Weekly hours
Standard work week (5 or 6 days)
Kidem
Tazminati
Severance: 1 month salary per year worked
15+
Public holidays
National + religious holidays (Bayram)
TopicDetailsNotes
Calisma izni (Work permit)Required for all foreign workersEmployer applies to Ministry of Labor; processing 30-90 days; tied to employer
SGK registrationMandatory for all employeesEmployer must register employee with SGK from day 1; carries heavy penalties if not
Annual leave (Yillik izin)14 days (1-5 yrs), 20 days (5-15 yrs), 26 days (15+ yrs)Minimum legal entitlements; cannot be waived or paid in lieu during employment
Work hours45 hours/week maximum; distributed over 5 or 6 daysOvertime must be paid at 1.5x rate; max 270 hours overtime per year
Kidem tazminati (Severance)1 month gross salary per year of servicePaid upon qualifying termination, retirement, or resignation after 1+ years for specific reasons; subject to annual ceiling
Ihbar tazminati (Notice pay)2-8 weeks depending on tenure0-6 months: 2 weeks; 6-18 months: 4 weeks; 18-36 months: 6 weeks; 36+ months: 8 weeks
Probation (Deneme suresi)Maximum 2 months (4 months by collective agreement)Either party can terminate without notice or severance during probation
Maternity leave16 weeks total (8 before + 8 after birth)Paid at 2/3 salary by SGK; can be extended by 2 months unpaid
Paternity leave5 days paidMust be taken within first week after birth
Bayram holidaysRamazan Bayrami (3.5 days), Kurban Bayrami (4.5 days)Religious holidays; dates shift annually based on Islamic calendar; most businesses close

Work Culture Tips

Turkish work culture essentials: (1) Relationships are paramount -- building personal trust (guven) comes before business; expect tea and small talk before meetings. (2) Hierarchy matters -- respect for seniority and titles (Bey/Hanim for Mr/Ms) is important; decisions often come from the top. (3) Cay (tea) is business currency -- never refuse tea offered in a work setting; it's a sign of hospitality. (4) Flexible time culture -- punctuality is valued in corporate settings but meetings may start 10-15 minutes late in smaller companies. (5) Networking is key -- "torpil" (connections) play a significant role in hiring and business; LinkedIn is widely used.

Turkish Daily Life & Local Prices

Essential everyday costs, cultural norms, and practical information for daily life in Turkey.

Everyday Prices (Istanbul, 2026)

ItemPrice (TRY)Notes
Cay (Turkish tea)10 - 20Ubiquitous; served in tulip-shaped glasses; offered everywhere for free in shops
Turk kahvesi (Turkish coffee)30 - 50Served with water and lokum (Turkish delight); UNESCO intangible heritage
Kebab meal80 - 150Iskender, Adana, Urfa varieties; lokanta (local eatery) prices
Simit10 - 15Sesame-crusted bread ring; ubiquitous street food; Turkish bagel
Lahmacun30 - 60Thin Turkish pizza; squeeze lemon, add parsley, roll up
Pide60 - 120Boat-shaped flatbread with toppings; Turkish pizza alternative
Beer (bira - 50cl)80 - 150Efes, Bomonti; alcohol heavily taxed (OTV); much cheaper at markets
Raki500 - 1,500Anise-flavored national spirit; 70cl bottle; very high alcohol tax
Cinema ticket100 - 150Mars Cinema, Cinemaximum chains; cheaper on weekdays
Gym membership1,000 - 2,500Per month; budget gyms from 800 TRY; premium clubs 3,000+ TRY
Hamam (Turkish bath)300 - 1,000Traditional experience; tourist hamams 500-1,500 TRY; local ones much cheaper
Haircut (erkek berberi)100 - 300Turkish barbers are world-famous; includes face massage, ear hair burning

Tipping Culture (Bahsis)

Tipping in Turkey: Tipping (bahsis) is appreciated but not obligatory. General guidelines: Restaurants: 5-10% of the bill; round up for small amounts. Taxi: Round up to the nearest convenient amount. Hotel: 20-50 TRY per bag for porters; 50-100 TRY/day for housekeeping. Hamam: 15-20% of service cost. Hairdresser/Barber: 10-15%. Service charge (servis bedeli) is sometimes included -- check the bill.

Cultural Essentials

Cay (tea) culture: Tea is the lifeblood of Turkish social life. Turkey consumes more tea per capita than any other country. Tea is served in small tulip-shaped glasses (ince belli bardak), always hot, with sugar cubes on the side. You will be offered cay everywhere -- in shops, offices, homes, even by strangers. Accepting tea is a sign of friendliness. The tea break (cay molasi) is sacred in workplaces.
Bazaar culture: Turkey's grand bazaars (Grand Bazaar, Spice Bazaar in Istanbul) are iconic but bargaining extends to many local shops too. In bazaars and small shops, haggling is expected -- start at 40-50% of the asking price and negotiate. In modern shops, malls, and restaurants, prices are fixed. Learn "cok pahali" (too expensive) and "indirim var mi?" (is there a discount?).
Hospitality (misafirperverlik): Turkish hospitality is legendary. If invited to a Turkish home: (1) Remove your shoes at the door. (2) Bring a small gift (pastries, chocolate, flowers). (3) You will be offered endless food and tea -- politely declining once before accepting is normal. (4) The phrase "Elinize saglik" (health to your hands) compliments the cook. (5) "Afiyetolsun" (bon appetit) is said before and during meals.

Minimum Earnings to Survive in Turkey

What salary do you need in Istanbul? Here's the realistic breakdown for 2026.

~22,000
TRY/month minimum
Bare minimum in Istanbul (minimum wage)
~38,000
TRY/month comfortable
Comfortable single life in Istanbul
~17,002
TRY net minimum wage
After all deductions from 22,104 gross
~15,000
TRY/month in Ankara
Minimum comfortable in the capital
LifestyleMonthly Expenses (TRY)Gross Salary Needed (TRY)Net After TaxBuffer
Survival (Istanbul)
Shared flat, very frugal, minimum wage
15,00022,10417,002+2,000
Basic single (Istanbul)
Own flat in outer district
22,00032,00024,000+2,000
Comfortable single (Istanbul)
Good neighborhood, eating out regularly
35,00050,00037,000+2,000
Comfortable (Ankara/Izmir)
Single, good lifestyle
20,00028,00022,000+2,000
Family (Istanbul)
2 adults + 1 child
50,00070,00052,000+2,000
Newcomer checklist (first 2 weeks): (1) Get your ikamet izni (residence permit) -- apply online via e-ikamet.goc.gov.tr within 30 days of arrival. (2) Get a vergi numarasi (tax number) from any tax office (vergi dairesi) -- needed for banking, phone contracts, everything. (3) Open a bank account (Ziraat Bankasi for simplicity, or Garanti BBVA, Isbank for full-service). (4) Get an Istanbulkart or local transit card immediately. (5) Get a Turkish SIM card (Turkcell, Vodafone, Turk Telekom) -- foreign phones must be registered (IMEI) within 120 days or get blocked. (6) Register your address at the nufus mudurlugu (population directorate). (7) If employed, ensure your employer has completed SGK registration and applied for your calisma izni (work permit).
IMEI registration warning: Turkey requires all mobile phones to be registered via their IMEI number. Foreign-purchased phones must be registered within 120 days of first use with a Turkish SIM, or they will be blocked. Registration costs approximately 20,000 TRY (tax). Many expats use eSIM or dual-SIM workarounds, or buy a phone locally. This is one of the highest hidden costs for newcomers.
Data note: All figures updated June 2026. Turkey experiences significant inflation, so prices can change rapidly. Always verify current rates with official sources (GIB tax authority, SGK, TUIK statistics) before making financial decisions. The minimum wage is reviewed twice yearly (January and July).