Documenting places through food, neighborhoods, and daily life
Izmir does not shop quietly. It pulls you into old bazaars, distracts you with antique shops, feeds you halfway through, then sends you home with olive oil, tulum cheese, mastic cookies, and possibly a rug you absolutely did not plan to buy.
This is the kind of city where shopping is not just “buying things.” It is a full-body wander. We start in the glorious maze of Kemeraltı Bazaar, where historic inns, tiny workshops, Turkish coffee, and old-school shopkeepers still keep the city’s trading soul alive. Then we drift into Kızlarağası Inn, where carpets, handicrafts, antiques, and souvenirs come with enough atmosphere to make your camera panic.
Prefer something easier, shinier, and air-conditioned? Izmir has you covered there too. From Karşıyaka Bazaar and the shopping malls of Balçova to big names like Forum Bornova, Optimum Outlet, and İzmir Park Outlet, the city has plenty of places for clothes, electronics, food courts, cinema stops, and “we only came for one thing” disasters.
And then there are the souvenirs. Oh, the souvenirs. Urla wine, Şirince fruit wine, Bergama tulum cheese, Nazarköy evil eye beads, Ödemiş olive oil, Alaçatı antiques, Çeşme mastic gum, Foça jams, and Ephesus-inspired figurines — Izmir is dangerously good at making your suitcase feel small.
So yes, bring comfortable shoes. Bring a tote bag. Bring vague financial discipline. We’re going shopping in Izmir.
Planning more of your Izmir adventure?
Shopping in Izmir is not just “buy a few souvenirs and leave.” Please. This is Kemeraltı chaos, leather goods, spices, antiques, local markets, tiny tea breaks, and the dangerous belief that our suitcase has hidden expandable powers. If you’re turning your shopping day into a full Aegean escape, these guides will help you connect the bazaars with food, beaches, day trips, villages, and the wider Turkey route.
- Best Places to Visit in Izmir — perfect if you want to mix shopping with bazaars, waterfront walks, viewpoints, museums, ancient sites, and coastal corners.
- Where to Eat in Izmir — because after Kemeraltı, we need boyoz, kumru, seafood, meze, stuffed mussels, and one very serious snack strategy.
- Best Day Trips from Izmir — the obvious next read for Çeşme, Alaçatı, Urla, Foça, Ephesus, Şirince, and easy escapes beyond the city.
- Best Beaches in Izmir — ideal if your shopping mission needs a recovery plan involving turquoise water, sea air, and pretending we are not carrying five bags.
- Best Beach Clubs in Çeşme — for loungers, clear water, cocktails, music, and a very persuasive argument for adding a beach day.
- Şirince Village Travel Guide — great when you want stone lanes, fruit wine, village views, and a charming inland detour after the city markets.
- Ultimate 10-Day Turkey Itinerary — useful if Izmir is part of a bigger Turkey route with Istanbul, Cappadocia, Pamukkale, Ephesus, and the coast.
- Turkey Packing List — handy for city walks, market days, beach detours, evening layers, and leaving enough suitcase room for “accidental” shopping.
- How to Dress in Turkey as a Tourist — useful for outfits that work for bazaars, seaside towns, ruins, restaurants, and warm Aegean evenings.
Table of Contents
Best spots for Shopping in Izmir
Kemeraltı Bazaar

Hold on to your tote bag — we’re heading into Kemeraltı, and this place does not do “quick little wander.” For more than 400 years, Kemeraltı has been one of İzmir’s great shopping hubs, where the only thing you can’t buy is the past. Why? Because here, the past is free. It’s in the stone walls, the old caravanserais, the tiny shops, the noise, the tea glasses, the bargaining, and the glorious chaos.
The caravanserais that once welcomed merchants and their camels now sit among shops, cafés, workshops, and modern trading life. And love? Yes, you can find that too — buy a small handkerchief from a child for a lira, and you may walk away with the kind of tiny, unexpected affection that stays with you longer than the souvenir.
Let’s be honest: Kemeraltı is chaotic. Every street feels alive and slightly determined to distract you. One minute we’re looking at natural products, the next we’ve somehow drifted past pet shops, bridal stores, porcelain displays, fabric sellers, and a thousand mysterious little corners we absolutely did not plan for.
But don’t panic.The bazaar is arched and surprisingly forgiving. Even if you feel lost, you’ll usually find your way out somewhere close to where you started. And if the forest of shops finally wins? You can easily reach Çankaya or Konak metro stations without asking too many shopkeepers for directions.
Kızlarağası Inn

Kızlarağası Inn is one of those places where we walk in for “just a quick look” and somehow lose all sense of time. With its beautiful historic architecture and maze of around 200 small shops, this 300-year-old inn feels less like a shopping stop and more like a shortcut into old İzmir.
Inside, you’ll find souvenir shops, tattoo studios, antique dealers, and little corners packed with objects that look like they’ve collected more stories than most people. Old clocks, radios, cameras, dusty curiosities — the antique shops alone are worth a slow wander.
Every floor, archway, and courtyard seems to breathe history. Pick up a souvenir for yourself, grab a few gifts for people back home, and then do the proper thing: sit down at the coffee house in the heart of the inn for a strong Turkish coffee. Because if Turkish coffee gives you 40 years of memory, Kızlarağası makes sure they’re beautifully vintage ones.
Karşıyaka
Karşıyaka Bazaar

Karşıyaka Bazaar begins almost theatrically. We step off the Konak–Karşıyaka ferry, cross the road at the traffic lights, and there it is: a wide avenue stretching ahead like it has been waiting for us to make poor financial decisions.
The moment we enter, shops line both sides in a steady, tempting parade. Trouser shops, cafés, international brands, snack stops, and yes, probably a coffee shop with a queue long enough to suggest caffeine has become a local sport. Technically, you could walk the avenue in a few minutes if you marched straight through without looking left or right. But who does that? Certainly not us. Karşıyaka Bazaar simply will not allow it.
One shop pulls you in with a “just browse” promise. Another flashes something shiny, practical, unnecessary, or suspiciously discounted. Then the smell of kokoreç and döner drifts through the air, and suddenly shopping becomes an endurance sport requiring a food break. Fair enough. We’re only human.
And the bazaar is not done yet.
Once you’ve eaten and regained your will to continue, the side streets start working their magic. There are inexpensive boutiques, old-school shoemakers who still make custom shoes, bookstores, and small local shops with the kind of personality shopping malls can only dream of. All along the way, friendly, chatty shopkeepers keep the mood warm and unmistakably İzmir. That easygoing friendliness alone makes you think: yes, we are definitely here.
By the time you reach Karşıyaka train station, you may realize you’ve walked much farther than expected. Your hands are full, your stomach is happy, and Karşıyaka has left its flavor — quite literally — lingering behind.
Karşıyaka Shopping Malls
Karşıyaka also has several large shopping malls, especially toward Mavişehir and Çiğli. These are the places to go when you want famous brands, technology stores, air-conditioning, and the comfort of knowing you probably won’t get lost in a maze of side streets.
You can find everything from shoes and clothing to electronics and the latest devices. The food courts are equally practical, with options ranging from fast food and Turkish dishes to desserts and coffee.
Shopping Malls in Balçova
Balçova is the last neighborhood we pass through before the road opens toward the Çeşme highway, and apparently it decided to become İzmir’s unofficial kingdom of shopping malls. One mall after another lines this area, each large enough to have its own bus stop in front — which tells us everything we need to know. These are not tiny “pop in for socks” places. These are full-scale shopping expeditions.
And yes, naturally, we have to go and investigate.
Agora Shopping Mall

Agora takes its name from the ancient word for a market, bazaar, or trading place, which is fitting because this place is very much built for modern-day wandering, browsing, snacking, spending, and pretending we only came for one thing.
Inside Agora Shopping Mall, you’ll find a wide range of stores covering clothing, accessories, cosmetics, home textiles, music, books, electronics, services, department stores, toys, hobbies, entertainment, and cinemas. In other words, if you came in looking for a shirt, you may leave with a candle, a phone case, cinema tickets, and a sudden interest in home décor. These things happen.
Agora also has restaurants serving different cuisines from around the world on both floors. The open-air à la carte restaurants continue serving after 10 PM, with both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks, making it a good option not just for shopping, but also for a relaxed evening meal.
KİPA

KİPA brings together a large furniture store, a two-story department store, and well-known Turkish and international brands. It’s one of those practical malls where you can shop for everyday needs, browse bigger home items, and still somehow end up wandering into a clothing store “just to check.”
The food court has several pleasant restaurants, and there’s also a gym for anyone who wants to balance shopping bags with actual exercise. Large cinema halls are located on the same floor too, so it works well for a full afternoon: shopping, food, film, repeat.
Asmaçatı Shopping Mall

Asmaçatı Shopping Mall takes inspiration from the traditional gazebo, with a sheltered open-air design and a metal canopy inspired by leaves and vines. So yes, it’s a mall, but at least it makes an effort to feel breezy rather than boxed-in.
This two-story shopping and meeting point focuses on daily and essential needs, with shops, restaurants, a hypermarket, an appliance store, furniture and technology stores, a large gym, and a café on the ground floor. There is also open and covered parking, which is always good news because nothing ruins a shopping day faster than circling a car park like a tired shark.
Selway Outlet

Selway Outlet is where we go when we want famous brands without paying full prices. It brings together a wide range of national and international stores, with options for women’s, men’s, and children’s clothing, accessories, shoes, bags, optics, electronics, cosmetics, toys, hobby products, home textiles, bedroom goods, kitchenware, and more.
Around 2,000 square meters are dedicated to food and drink, so you won’t be left hungry while hunting for bargains. The outlet has blocks on both sides of the highway, connected by specially designed bridges, which makes the place feel like a small shopping city with traffic infrastructure. It’s also close to the airport and the exhibition center, and about 30 minutes from Çeşme, making it a convenient stop before or after a coastal trip.
Media Markt

Media Markt is a huge two-story technology store at the Üçkuyular entrance of Balçova. If it plugs in, charges, lights up, cleans, streams, cools, heats, prints, or makes your life slightly more expensive but theoretically easier, there’s a good chance you’ll find it here.
You can shop for white goods, televisions, computers, phones, vacuum cleaners, MP3 players, and plenty of other electronic products. It’s a useful stop if you need practical tech, household appliances, or just want to wander around pretending you understand all the specifications.
Palmiye Shopping Mall
Palmiye Shopping Mall covers a mix of everyday shopping and services, with stores for clothing, jewelry, gifts, shoes, bags, carpets, and more. There are also food court options and a tea house, which is essential because shopping without tea is just labor.
The mall also has a polyclinic and a cinema in the basement, making it more functional than flashy. It’s not necessarily the place for a dramatic shopping pilgrimage, but for practical errands, a bite to eat, or a casual cinema stop, it does the job.
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Other Shopping Malls in İzmir
Forum Bornova

Forum Bornova is a bit of a big deal in İzmir shopping history: it was the first open-air shopping center in both İzmir and the wider Aegean Region. Located in the northeast of the city, right next to Ege University, it’s one of those malls that works as more than just a place to buy things. It’s shopping, food, cinema, wandering, and “wait, how did we end up in IKEA?” all rolled into one.
Built on a massive 200,000-square-meter area, Forum Bornova mixes indoor and outdoor sections, which makes it much more pleasant than a fully enclosed mall on a nice day. Inside, you’ll find IKEA, Kipa Extra hypermarket, 127 stores with local and international brands, a seven-screen Cinemaximum cinema, entertainment areas, and parking for around 3,000 vehicles. In other words: come with comfortable shoes and low expectations of leaving quickly.
Optimum Outlet

Optimum Outlet is one of İzmir’s most practical malls, especially if you’re looking for big-name stores and easy transport. It houses large shops such as 5M Migros, Koçtaş, Media Markt, and Decathlon, so it’s a good stop for everything from groceries and home goods to electronics and sports gear.
It also has a food court with options for different ages and tastes, along with terraces where you can pause before going back into shopping mode. Families will appreciate the children’s play areas, and there’s even an ice rink, because apparently İzmir decided that shopping and skating should be part of the same afternoon. Optimum Outlet is close to the new exhibition center and Adnan Menderes Airport, and you can reach it easily by getting off at the İZBAN Esbaş station.
İzmir Park Outlet

İzmir Park Outlet serves visitors with 65 stores and more than 80 brands, offering a wide mix of products across supermarkets, electronics, home care, clothing, leather, accessories, and larger retail stores. It’s a compact but useful mall if you want a straightforward shopping stop without getting swallowed by a mega-complex.
The center also has 35 boutiques, 5 full-service restaurants and cafés, and 12 fast-food restaurants, so you won’t be short on food options when shopping fatigue arrives. There’s also a game center and cinema halls on the top floor, making it easy to turn a quick shopping trip into a longer outing.
Folkart Bazaar
Folkart Bazaar, located inside Folkart Towers in Bayraklı, is designed more like a social life center than a classic shopping mall. It’s built around daily convenience: the kind of place where we can grab coffee, get errands done, meet someone for food, browse a few shops, and pretend the whole thing was very efficient.
Set in İzmir’s developing new city center, Folkart Bazaar brings together international and national brands alongside local names closely associated with İzmir. You’ll find everything from hairdressers and markets to cafés, restaurants, and clothing stores. It’s also easy to reach from different parts of the city, which makes it especially practical if you’re staying or working around Bayraklı.
Best Souvenirs to bring from Izmir
Wine from Urla

We are starting strong here, because yes, İzmir does wine too. Not just “nice holiday wine you drink because the sunset is pretty” wine, but proper, award-winning bottles worth making space for in your suitcase.
Although Türkiye is one of the world’s oldest lands for viticulture, Turkish wine has only recently started nudging its way onto the global stage and saying, “Hello, we’ve been here for thousands of years, actually.”
You’ll find wine regions across the country, but Urla — just 35 km from İzmir city center — is one of the loveliest places to sip, swirl, and pretend we know exactly what “mineral finish” means.
If you want to bring home a bottle of Urla red wine, Urla Winery is a great place to start.
Carpets and Handicrafts from Kızlarağası Inn

Turkish rugs are the kind of souvenir that makes your living room look instantly more cultured, even if the rest of your interior design plan is “chair, plant, chaos.”
With their deep colors, detailed patterns, and traditional craftsmanship, Turkish rugs and carpets are among the most popular things to buy in İzmir. And if you want to shop somewhere atmospheric, historic, and delightfully easy to get lost in, head to Kızlarağası Hanı.
Known as an indoor handicrafts market, Kızlarağası Inn is filled with small shops selling rugs, textiles, ceramics, jewelry, and local crafts. It’s a good place to buy from more established sellers rather than taking your chances with a mystery carpet from a random corner of the internet.
You’ll find rugs in different sizes and designs, from small suitcase-friendly pieces to larger statement rugs. For anything too big to carry home, ask whether shipping is available.
Tulum Cheese from Bergama

Now we enter the edible souvenir zone. Dangerous territory. Delicious territory. The kind where your suitcase smells faintly like cheese and you have no regrets.
Bergama tulum cheese, also known as İzmir tulum cheese, is one of the region’s best local cheeses. It has a firm texture, salty depth, and a stronger flavor than many soft breakfast cheeses. In Turkish cuisine, cheese is a breakfast essential, but honestly, tulum cheese works beautifully in salads, pastries, meze plates, and those late-night “just one bite” fridge raids.
This cheese is aged in brine, which gives it its bold taste and distinctive texture. It usually reaches markets and cheese shops after around 3–6 months of aging.
To buy tulum cheese from Bergama, look for Bergama Cheese Shop or visit the cheese vendors at the Bergama regional market.
Evil Eye Beads from Nazarköy

If you want a classic İzmir souvenir with sparkle, symbolism, and just enough superstition to keep life interesting, head for the evil eye bead.
Nazarköy, a village about 38 km from İzmir city center in the Kemalpaşa district, is famous for both its fresh air and its bead-making workshops. Since the mid-20th century, local artisans have been producing glass objects here using traditional techniques.
The village is especially known for its annual Bead Festival, but you can visit outside festival season too. Beaded glass objects, evil eye jewelry, wall ornaments, keyrings, and decorative charms are all popular souvenirs.
For evil eye bead gifts, Kıvırcık Bead Workshop in Nazarköy is a good stop.
Olive Oil from Ödemiş and Seferihisar

İzmir sits proudly on the Aegean coast, which means olive oil is not just an ingredient here. It is a lifestyle, a personality trait, and possibly the reason everyone seems so relaxed.
Aegean cuisine is full of mezes, vegetables, herbs, and dishes cooked with olive oil. So if you want a useful, authentic souvenir from İzmir, good local olive oil is an excellent choice.
The best part? You do not need to buy it from a fancy airport shelf with a suspiciously elegant label. You can find quality olive oil directly from producers in local markets and village shops around İzmir.
Two of the best places to buy olive oil are:
- Seferihisar
- Ödemiş
For olive oil from Ödemiş, Gülcü Olive Oil is a good option.
Clothing and Accessories from Cyprus Martyrs Street
If you like shopping streets with energy, variety, and the occasional “where did the last two hours go?” effect, Kıbrıs Şehitleri Street — Cyprus Martyrs Street — is your İzmir stop.
Located in Alsancak, this lively street is packed with shops of all sizes and styles. You’ll find everything from handmade ethnic-style bags and leather shoes to hats, accessories, casual fashion, and well-known international brands.
The side streets between Alsancak Train Station and Kıbrıs Şehitleri Street are also worth exploring, especially if you like second-hand bookstores. Because nothing says “excellent travel day” like coffee, old books, and accidentally buying another tote bag.
Mastic Gum from Çeşme

When we say Çeşme, we think beaches, wind, whitewashed streets, and mastic gum. It’s practically a local flavor signature.
Mastic gum has been valued throughout history for its aroma and supposed healing properties, but today it is mostly loved for being delicious. You’ll find it in Turkish coffee, ice cream, cookies, desserts, and sweets across Türkiye.
Although mastic originally comes from Chios Island, Çeşme is also famous for mastic-flavored treats. If you want to bring back something edible, fragrant, and very İzmir-coded, mastic gum cookies are a brilliant choice.
For a tasty stop, visit Cafe Dalyan Hüseyin Usta in Çeşme.
Beachwear from Alaçatı
Alaçatı is where cobbled streets, bougainvillea, boutique hotels, and highly photogenic doors all come together and quietly ruin your camera storage.
If you visit Alaçatı during your İzmir trip, leave time for wandering. The streets are filled with souvenir shops, antique stores, jewelry boutiques, and clothing shops, many of them selling beachwear that feels made for breezy Aegean holidays.
You’ll find both local and international designers here, with options ranging from affordable pieces to “this kaftan costs how much?” resort wear.
For beachwear shopping, Passo Alaçatı and Kızçe Alaçatı are good places to check out while exploring the streets.
Antiques from Alaçatı

Alaçatı is not just about beach dresses and photogenic breakfasts. It also has one of Türkiye’s best-known antique markets.
The Alaçatı Antique Market was one of the first of its kind in the country and still attracts visitors throughout the year. Located about 80 km from İzmir city center, Alaçatı is a great place to browse authentic, vintage, and antique items sourced from different parts of Türkiye, including İzmir, Ankara, Kütahya, Bursa, and even the Greek Islands.
The market is held every weekend near the Pazaryeri Mosque, a building converted from an old church. Come for the antiques, stay for the atmosphere, and prepare to develop sudden emotional attachment to an old mirror.
Homemade Jams from Foça
One of the best ways to begin a day in İzmir is with a village breakfast. We’re talking fresh bread, olives, cheeses, eggs, herbs, tea, and jars of homemade jam that make supermarket jam look like it has given up on life.
Across İzmir’s villages, locals prepare jams in their own kitchens and sell them at local markets. These make lovely gifts because they are easy to pack, genuinely useful, and much more personal than a fridge magnet shaped like a boat.
Foça is especially interesting for jam lovers. This seaside town is known for unusual local varieties like horsetail jam and walnut jam.
On Sundays, a market is set up in central Foça, where you can find a wide variety of homemade jams. For organic products, visit Yeryüzü Pazarı, Foça’s organic market.
Figurines from the Ancient City of Ephesus

Ephesus is one of those places where you walk in expecting ruins and leave feeling like history has personally grabbed you by the shoulders.
Dating back thousands of years, the ancient city of Ephesus is one of Türkiye’s most important archaeological sites, filled with temples, theaters, libraries, houses, marble streets, and sculptures. It is grand, dramatic, and wildly photogenic.
During your visit, you can buy figurines, decorative objects, and small souvenirs inspired by the ancient city’s famous structures and statues from the shops nearby.
For souvenir shopping around Ephesus, Diana Ephesus Silver & Souvenir is a good option.
Wine from Şirince

Şirince is the kind of village that looks like it was built specifically for slow wandering. Stone houses, narrow streets, hillside views, fruit wines, and a pastoral atmosphere — yes, we are absolutely staying longer than planned.
Located in the Selçuk district, Şirince is famous not only for its beauty and Greek heritage houses, but also for its wines. So if you are wondering what to buy in İzmir, a bottle of Şirince wine is an easy answer.
You’ll find wines made from local grape varieties such as Öküzgözü and Emir, along with European grape varieties and fruit wines. It’s also a great gift to bring home, assuming it survives the trip without being opened “just to taste.”
For wine shopping in Şirince, Şirince Kaplankaya Wines is a good choice.
FAQs
Is Izmir good for shopping?
Yes, Izmir is excellent for shopping because it offers a mix of historic bazaars, local markets, modern malls, outlet centers, antique shops, and coastal boutique streets. You can shop for everything from carpets, ceramics, and evil eye beads to clothes, electronics, wine, olive oil, cheese, and local sweets.
What is the best bazaar in Izmir?
Kemeraltı Bazaar is the most famous and atmospheric bazaar in Izmir. It has been one of the city’s main trading areas for centuries and is packed with small shops, cafés, workshops, old caravanserais, street food, textiles, jewelry, souvenirs, and everyday local goods.
What should I buy in Izmir?
Some of the best things to buy in Izmir include Urla wine, Şirince fruit wine, Bergama tulum cheese, olive oil from Ödemiş or Seferihisar, evil eye beads from Nazarköy, mastic gum sweets from Çeşme, Turkish rugs, local handicrafts, Alaçatı antiques, homemade jams from Foça, and Ephesus-inspired souvenirs.
Where can I buy souvenirs in Izmir?
For classic souvenirs, start with Kemeraltı Bazaar and Kızlarağası Inn in Konak. For handmade evil eye beads, visit Nazarköy. For wine, head to Urla or Şirince. For antiques and beachwear, Alaçatı is a good choice. For food souvenirs like olive oil, tulum cheese, and homemade jams, local markets around Ödemiş, Bergama, Foça, and Seferihisar are ideal.
Is Kemeraltı Bazaar worth visiting?
Yes, Kemeraltı Bazaar is one of the best places to visit in Izmir, even if you are not planning a serious shopping trip. The area is full of history, local character, street food, small shops, tea houses, mosques, inns, and hidden corners. It is more chaotic than a modern mall, but that is exactly why it is so memorable.
Are there modern shopping malls in Izmir?
Yes, Izmir has many modern shopping malls. Popular options include Forum Bornova, Optimum Outlet, Agora Shopping Mall, İzmir Park Outlet, Selway Outlet, Asmaçatı Shopping Mall, and several malls around Karşıyaka, Mavişehir, Çiğli, and Balçova.
Where can I shop for clothes in Izmir?
For clothes, try Karşıyaka Bazaar, Kıbrıs Şehitleri Street in Alsancak, Forum Bornova, Optimum Outlet, Agora Shopping Mall, and İzmir Park Outlet. For more boutique-style beachwear and resort pieces, Alaçatı is one of the best places to browse.
Where can I buy local food souvenirs in Izmir?
You can buy local food souvenirs in markets and specialty shops across Izmir. Look for Bergama tulum cheese in Bergama, olive oil in Ödemiş and Seferihisar, mastic gum sweets in Çeşme, homemade jams in Foça, and wine in Urla or Şirince.
Is shopping in Izmir expensive?
Shopping in Izmir can be as affordable or as expensive as you make it. Local bazaars, markets, outlets, and smaller shops often have budget-friendly options, while boutique stores in Alaçatı, antique markets, wine producers, and larger malls can be more expensive depending on what you buy.
Can you bargain in Izmir markets?
You may be able to bargain in some traditional market stalls, antique shops, and souvenir stores, especially in places like Kemeraltı Bazaar. However, prices are usually fixed in modern malls, brand stores, supermarkets, and most food shops. Keep it friendly and realistic — this is bargaining, not a duel.
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