Lycian Way Packing List — What to Bring (and Skip) by Season
Most Lycian Way packing lists are written as if April and September were the same trail. They're not. Here are honest season-by-season lists, with what to actually pack, what to leave at home, and the three items hikers consistently regret not bringing.
The constants — every season
These come with you regardless of when you go:
- Broken-in waterproof hiking boots (mid-cut). Ankle support matters on the loose limestone descents.
- 40–55 L backpack with a rain cover.
- Sleeping liner (silk or microfibre). You sleep in pension beds; bring this even in summer.
- 2.5 L water capacity (2× 1 L bottles + 0.5 L extra).
- Trekking poles. Optional on the easy stretches, essential on the western mountains.
- Headtorch + spare batteries. Sun sets by 19:30 even in May.
- Power bank (10,000 mAh) and charging cables.
- Offline maps on phone (Maps.me + Komoot GPX). See our planning guide.
- Phone, charger, EU/UK adapter, passport, copy of insurance.
- Cash. €200–300 in mixed euros and Turkish lira.
- Toiletries (small), microfibre towel, small first-aid kit.
- SPF 50, lip balm, sunglasses, sun hat.
- Electrolyte tablets — the Mediterranean sun and walking 6+ hours will surprise you.
Spring (April–early June) — the popular season
Wildflowers, lambs in the fields, water everywhere. Days warm (18–24 °C), nights cool (8–14 °C). Rain showers possible but rarely heavy. This is the season the most people walk.
- Mid-weight base layers (merino t-shirt + long-sleeve top)
- Light fleece or synthetic mid-layer
- Waterproof jacket (rain rare but it does happen)
- One pair of long hiking trousers + one pair of shorts
- Beanie for cool mornings on ridges
- Sun hat (yes, even in April)
Skip: down jacket (too warm), heavy waterproof trousers (showers are short).
Summer (mid-June to end of August) — only if you're stubborn
Most operators don't run trips. Ridges hit 35–40 °C. Water sources dry up on the western stages. Pensions stay open but it's the worst hiking conditions of the year. If you must go:
- Two ultralight breathable t-shirts (merino or synthetic)
- Convertible trousers or hiking shorts only
- UPF sun shirt (long sleeves but light fabric)
- Wide-brimmed sun hat with neck flap
- 3 L water capacity, not 2.5 L. Drink before you're thirsty.
- Extra SPF 50, lip balm, electrolytes in bulk
- Light fleece for evenings (still cools to 18–22 °C)
Skip: waterproofs (it won't rain), warm layers beyond one fleece, beanies and gloves. Honest take: shift your dates to April or October.
Autumn (mid-September to late October) — the best season
Quieter than spring, water back in streams, sea still 24 °C for swimming. Days warm-to-hot (20–26 °C), nights cool (10–15 °C). Stable weather. If you can choose your dates, pick this season.
- Same base layers as spring
- Light fleece
- Light waterproof (showers possible late October)
- Both long trousers and shorts
- Sun hat + light beanie for evenings
- Swimming kit (sea is warmer than the air at sunrise)
Winter (November–March) — for experienced solo hikers
Most pensions close. Western mountain stages get snow above 1500 m. The coastal sections (Faralya–Kaş, see our 7-day beginner itinerary) stay walkable. Days 10–16 °C, nights 4–10 °C, rain real and sometimes heavy.
- Merino base layer + synthetic mid + fleece + waterproof shell (full layering system)
- Waterproof trousers
- Warm beanie, gloves, neck buff
- Spare warm dry clothes in a dry bag
- More substantial sleeping arrangements — call pensions ahead to confirm they're open
- Personal locator beacon or Garmin inReach if walking alone (mobile coverage drops in storms)
Skip: shorts, lightweight sun shirts. Caveat: if you've never done a winter solo hike, do this in a group with a local guide. See licensed guides.
What to skip — in any season
- Tent and stove. Pensions every night make these dead weight.
- "Just-in-case" books and journals. Bring a Kindle or nothing.
- Camera tripods. Use the phone, or a small gorillapod at most.
- Jeans, cotton t-shirts. If they get wet, they don't dry.
- More than 2 spare socks and underwear. Wash overnight.
The three items hikers always regret leaving
- Trekking poles. "I don't really use poles" turns into "my knees gave up on day 4."
- A proper sun hat. Baseball caps don't cover the neck. By day 3 you're cooked.
- Anti-chafe stick or balm. 14 days of salt sweat does what it does. Bring it.
Total pack weight target
Self-guided: 8–10 kg (everything you own, including water). Supported (luggage transfer): 3–5 kg in your daypack, the rest in the transferred bag. See our self-guided vs guided comparison for which suits you.
Where to buy in Turkey if you forgot something
- Fethiye and Antalya — Decathlon stores, full outdoor selection at lower prices than UK/EU.
- Kaş, Kalkan, Ölüdeniz — smaller shops, expect basic supplies and tourist-priced sunblock.
- Village pension hosts — will sell you electrolyte tablets, sometimes blister tape. Don't expect more.
One last sanity check
Lay everything out on the floor before you pack. Take a photograph. If you can't justify each item, leave it. Every kilo you carry is a kilo on every uphill of every day. Then sense-check it against our cost breakdown to see where the gear budget lands.