Summer, lifting of restrictions see tourists flock to Antalya
Russian tourists arrive in the southern province of Antalya, Turkey, June 24, 2021. (IHA Photo)


The summer season has brought a wave of foreign tourists to Turkey’s Mediterranean resort city of Antalya, driven by the gradual lifting of travel restrictions.

The southern province has welcomed nearly 1.5 million foreign visitors from January through June this year, data compiled from Fraport TAV Antalya Airport showed.

More than 721,000 tourists came in June alone, while travel restrictions allowed for only around 747,000 foreigners to arrive in the five months before that.

Moscow’s lifting of a two-month Turkish flight ban last month prompted a wave of tourists from the country’s top visitor source.

Two other important markets – Germany and France – last month also removed Turkey from their lists of high-risk countries.

Ukrainian tourists led the way among visitors landing in Antalya in the first half of the year with 417,493, followed by Russia with 406,562 and Germany with 198,835, the data showed.

Planes that have been arriving in the southern province since June 22, when Russia lifted its two-month suspension in flights, were reported to have brought in more than 110,000 Russians in a course of just one week.

Around 2.13 million Russians visited Turkey last year, the highest level of any country that year but down from 7 million in 2019.

Among others, the Mediterranean resort city saw some 89,582 tourists arriving from Poland in the January-June period, 46,372 from Belarus, 41,114 from Kazakhstan, 34,886 from Romania, 33,530 from Moldova, 22,114 from Lithuania and over 20,000 from Serbia.