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Review: the Ciragan Palace Kempinski Istanbul hotel (Global Hotel Alliance)

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This is our review of the Ciragan Palace Kempinski Istanbul hotel on the shores of the Bosphorus.

Turkey had been on our list for a family holiday for a long time – we had to cancel a previous booking during the pandemic. As we stayed in two hotels with a loyalty angle, and where status and points played a big part, we decided to cover them here.

We paid cash for our stay, albeit reduced using the method Rob described here, and the hotel did not know I would be covering it. As a result, the review might not be all encompassing but there is a lot to say regardless. We stayed here for four nights and then moved on to The Bodrum EDITION (Marriott) for another five nights which I will review tomorrow.

The Ciragan Palace website is here.

Kempinski Istanbul

Arrival

We flew in with British Airways to Sabiha Gökçen Airport (the ‘old’ airport) on the Asian side of Istanbul. We booked a transfer via the Blacklane app which took circa 45 minutes. The entrance to the hotel from the road side is obscured by a wall and you don’t get much of an impression of what awaits.

Location

What makes this hotel really special is its location on a historical site directly on the shores of the Bosphorus Strait. It is a cheap 20 minute taxi ride from the key historical sites of Istanbul and 10 minutes on foot to the Besiktas ferry terminal.

The Kempinski caused quite a stir when it opened 30+ years ago – the first luxury hotel on the edge of the water, partially utilising a historical palace. It has since been followed by Four Seasons (literally next door), The Pensinsula and Mandarin Oriental, but arguably Kempinski has the best spot and the biggest footprint.

The hotel itself is an E-shaped building, clearly designed in the 1980s. Between the hotel and the Bosphorus are gardens and two large swimming pools. The photo above shows the hotel pier and the pool on the lower terrace. You can be picked up here for a private or semi-private boat cruise on the strait.

A brief history of Ciragan Palace – the old building

Adjacent to, but still part of, the hotel is the Ciragan Palace.

The history of Ciragan Palace dates back to the 17th century when it was an Imperial garden for the use of the sultan and his family. The Ciragan mansion was the most famous building on the Bosphorus in the 18th century and used extensively by the reigning sultans.

Ciragan palace

The palace of the present day was completed in 1871 and was visited by European royals such as French Empress Eugenie and German Emperor Wilhelm II. Imperial use ended with the death of an ex-Sultan in 1904 and in 1909 the palace was assigned to the Ottoman Empire’s first parliament. Unfortunately a fire a year later reduced the palace to a shell and the gardens became a well-known sports venue in Istanbul.

After that the ruins remained untouched for 77 years until 1987 when construction began to rebuild the palace behind the remaining facade. To make this project viable as a hotel, the main wing was built in place of the sports venue. The hotel opened its doors four years later in 1991.

What you don’t realise until you stay here is that the palace part is not heavily used by the hotel. There are two restaurants here, mainly frequented by non-residents, and a small number of hotel rooms, but reception, retail and the main restaurants are in the new building.

The main use of the palace seems to be as a very popular luxury party and wedding venue. We saw two weddings over our four day midweek stay – this can cause some noise disturbance, whilst also being an impressive spectacle. We had fireworks!

Hotel guests can wander freely between the two buildings via an arcade which is lined by shops and a museum giving details of the palaces’ history.

The interior of the palace is completely rebuilt and, in my opinion, has a tinge of 1980s about it:

Ciragan palace 1

The grand staircase is particular impressive:

Ciragan palace 2

Inside the new building

You enter the hotel via the new building, starting with a security check with any bags scanned. This is the case for all main tourist attractions in Istanbul these days.

The lobby is impressive with lots of marble, a big chandelier and oriental decor. Whilst there are 317 rooms, it certainly did not feel that busy during our August stay and I suspect occupancy was far lower.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski lobby

From the lobby, heading right leads to restaurants and the shopping arcade with high end oriental rugs, jewellery and fashion shops.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski shopping arcade

To the other side are the lifts, more shops and a hairdresser at the very end.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski ground floor lifts

Our rooms at the Ciragan Palace Kempinski hotel

We had booked two Ciragan Bosphorus view rooms, which have side views to the water. The building is ‘E’ shaped and these are rooms which directly face other rooms on the prongs of the ‘E’.

We have Titanium status in Global Hotel Alliance (the easiest hotel top tier status to earn as we wrote about here – just three stays required!) which is meant to get you a two category upgrade if available.

This is exactly what we got, upgraded to a Grand Deluxe Ciragan Bosphorus view room on the first floor. These rooms – at the end of prongs of the ‘E’ shaped building – have the most direct views of the water.

The rooms were very comfortable with oriental furniture and a lot of attention to detail. We were walked to our room, given a tour and then asked which sort of pillows housekeeping should bring!

Ciragan Palace Kempinski room 1

The bathroom is fully marble and was very impressive. There is no ban on single use toiletries yet in Turkey and surprisingly large individual bottles were provided. The products are crafted exclusively for Ciragan Palace by Turkish brand Atelier Rebul.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski room 2

In the corridor to the main room were plenty of wardrobes.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski room 3

The room itself was very spacious with two seating corners, a welcome bottle of sparkling wine, fruit and sweets.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski room 4

Our second room was very similar but had a slightly different lay-out and a slightly larger balcony but was technically the same category. The bed here did not directly face the water but a larger balcony was compensation.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski room 5

Whilst we loved our rooms the best part was the view from our balconies. In the far distance we could see old Istanbul with the Blue Mosque and Topkapi Palace.

The Bosphorus Strait is an important waterway connecting the Mediterranean and Black Seas with small and large merchant vessels passing in close proximity. As a former shipping banker I couldn’t help checking each vessel’s ownership, origins and destinations on the Marine Traffic app …..

This photograph from our balcony also shows the larger of the outdoor pools, which sits a level above the pool you can see in the photo on the very top. Note the original palace off to the right.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski garden

Food and drink at the Ciragan Palace Kempinski hotel

Due to its size and location the hotel is a eating and drinking destination in Istanbul with five restaurants to chose from and two bars.

Below is the Gazebo restaurant which has afternoon tea and dinner:

Ciragan Palace Kempinski Gazebo restaurant

You can sit here for coffee and cake during the day if you wish:

Ciragan Palace Kempinski Gazebo restaurant 1

We had dinner twice at Gazebo, sitting outside on the terrace. The menu is informal and good for families with sandwiches, soups, appetizers, various mezze and burgers. Below is a picture of burrata with tomatoes, avocado and grilled zucchini on the hotel’s custom-designed peacock china.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski Gazebo restaurant 2

On another occasion I had a tuna tatare and various dips. The food was delicous.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski Gazebo restaurant 3

Breakfast

Breakfast is served at its own dedicated restaurant on the ground floor offering indoor ….

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast

…. and outdoor seating.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 1

The buffet was one of the most extensive I have seen, easily on par with a Middle Eastern luxury resort hotel. It was more of a brunch buffet with many cooked dishes and huge amounts of choice – I counted ten different olive varieties to choose from, for example.

There are also à la carte dishes which can be ordered.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 2

There are international and Turkish breads and pastries, constantly refilled.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 3

Here is the display of sushi, dips and salads.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 4

Turkish coffee is freshly prepared in front of the guest.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 5

The selection of smoked and pickled fish and seafood is plentiful.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski breakfast 6

Another evening option is The Bosphorus Grill which has a great position right next to the strait. The view from here is fantastic, especially at night when the suspension bridge and the opposite embankment are illuminated.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski Grill

Right next to the Bosphorus Grill is the C bar, also looking good.

Ciragan Palace Kempinski C Bar

Spa

Whilst we didn’t have time to use it, the hotel has a lovely spa and a gym. Treatments such as Turkish bath rituals are available.

Conclusion

The Ciragan Palace may now have strong competition from Four Seasons, The Peninsula and Mandarin Oriental, but the owners have continued to invest and the hotel is in great condition. Having cruised past the other three hotels, it also appears to have the largest grounds.

Unless you need the highest level of personal service, the Kempinski can probably offer you more, for less, than any of the above – not that there is anything wrong with the Kempinski staff, who were very considerate and friendly. I have to praise the excellent service from the concierge team after we were (genuinely accidentally) overcharged for a semi-private Bosphorus river cruise they booked for us (€200 for four).

The rooms we originally booked (side view of the Bosphorus) were €700 per night and this seems fairly standard for peak season. The rooms we were upgraded into and are shown above are around €1,700 per night in peak season – it’s well worth getting Global Hotel Alliance Titanium status for that double upgrade! You will pay more if you book within a couple of weeks of arrival.

PS. You won’t find this in your guidebook yet, but Yildiz Palace has just reopened after several years of restoration. It is a beautiful place with lovely gardens, a great cafe and steeped in history. Yildiz Palace is in walking distance from the hotel but as it is on top of a steep hill I would go by taxi out and walk back. It is still a bit of a secret and was an excellent recommendation by the concierge team.

How to book

The Ciragan Palace website is here. You should also check pricing via the GHA Discovery / Global Hotel Alliance app.

If you are booking a flexible rate, you should also consider booking via our luxury hotel booking partner Emyr Thomas. Bookings via Emyr come with:

  • Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
  • Complimentary breakfast for two daily for duration of the stay
  • $100 equivalent Food & Beverage or spa credit once per stay
  • Early check-in / late check-out, subject to availability

You will pay the standard Best Flexible rate on the Kempinski website and pay at check-out as usual. You can contact Emyr via the form on this page of HfP.


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Comments (49)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Lumma says:

    SAW isn’t the old airport, that’s Atatürk airport, which is still open for private jets

    • Greg says:

      Exactly. A bit unfair. I think of SAW as “the Gatwick of Istanbul”

      Ataturk airport is better described as “the old airport” especially when it was replaced by what is known locally as “the new airport”

      • Tom says:

        I think SAW is more the Stansted of Istanbul, it’s all a bit depressing I find (took the BA flight to SAW yesterday again). I don’t think you can get to most of the European side in less than an hour either. The paid arrival fast track is excellent, however, used it twice in the last month and no queue either time vs. what looked like a 30 min to 1 hour queue for non-Turkish passport holders each time.

        At the Park Hyatt again this weekend but this looks a lot better even if you don’t have GHA status. The crazy GHA promo is still running by the way, I’ve just triggered my 10th stay bonus.

        • Greg says:

          I agree but conversely you can’t get to the Asian side from IST in less than an hour either, and I find the taxi drivers “less unfair” at SAW

          However I think that if you are using the Metro you can probably get to Taxim or Sultanahmet quicker from SAW than IST.

          The new airport was designed meticulously and built at record speed but somebody forgot public transport.

          • mecrash says:

            The metro now goes to bomonti /sisli area from the airport..
            With connections to the metro to taksim etc..

          • apbj says:

            Indeed, the establish metro from SAW runs frequently from directly under the terminal, has 4G and WiFi, runs around the clock and is charged at standard metro rates. The metro to the new airport has limited hours, has a separate tariff, only runs every 20 or 30 minutes, is only four cars long (I’ve never ever had a seat) and is basically a Faraday cage. Plus the endless escalators and lifts required to ground level and the absurd distance from the station to the terminal add to the inconvenience.

            As noted above, public transport was forgotten in the rush to get the new airport open.

          • flyforfun says:

            Going Istanbul this week. Flying into IST and out of SAW as that’s all that I was offered via award seats in J. Arriving 12.30am into IST so should I prebook a taxi or just grab one from the rank? Staying in Taksim Sq.

            Leaving Sunday for the 4pm flight, is the Metro reliable/comfortable etc or should I book a taxi from there too?

          • apbj says:

            @flyforfun Taxi from rank at IST is fine and I’d be tempted to get taxi out to SAW too as the you’d need to change lines from Taksim and it’s a bit of a faff. Leave plenty of time as traffic in general is terrible. For taxis, I recommend the BiTaksi app – it works like Uber but hails local taxis and you can pay in cash or with an international card. If you pre-tip generously, you’ll get more ‘takers’. The road journey in from IST at that time is quick as drivers generally take advantage of the rare absence of traffic to drive at insane speeds.

    • TimM says:

      +1

      • Nick says:

        If you’re staying at Taksim there’s no need for taxi, it’s a major hub for airport transport even at midnight. Public transport is reliable in Istanbul so I’d say you’re safe both ways tbh.

        Istanbul Taxi drivers are the most dishonest I’ve ever come across anywhere in the world, so after some very bad experiences I now avoid them as much as possible. Even Uber isn’t really Uber, it’s just a regular taxi with app booking (and no protection against being scammed).

        • louie says:

          I’d echo Nick’s comments about the taxi drivers. Much as most Turks I’ve encountered (been there maybe 15 times) have been lovely and scrupulously honest, I now avoid regular taxis as it’s just too stressful dealing with the bad ones. If you are going to use one from IST or SAW, find out how much it should cost beforehand. And check the meter before you start your journey – I was once caught (I later realised) when the driver hadn’t stopped the meter after his inbound journey, which resulted in an unpleasant debate. No doubt only a minority of drivers and we’ve had other good experiences, but stressful nonetheless.

          I took the train to SAW last time and was impressed. Depending on the time of day, can be just as quick as driving and obviously much cheaper. I prefer SAW to IST unless I’m transferring and can access the TK lounge at IST! The SAW PP lounge is fine and has always been quiet when I’ve been there.

  • Sevy says:

    I used to stay there regularly for business 18 years ago. Amazing hotel. However, it was more like $200 per night back then. Crazy what has happened to 5-star hotel pricing in that time-period.

    • Ahmet K. says:

      I am a Turk, born, raised, and still living in Istanbul. In fact, I even had my high school graduation party at Ciragan Kempinski!

      Not only have I never been to a hammam (or “hamam” in Turkish spelling), I can’t recall a single friend, family member or acquaintance who has ever mentioned visiting one in my 40+ years of living here. So apparently, neither I, nor the hundreds of Turkish people I know, have ever “been to Turkey”.

      Also, there aren’t “tens of thousands of five-star independent hotels in Turkey”; according to Booking dot com, there are less than one thousand (including chains, resorts and all the rest) in the entire country.

      The less you know, the more confidently and rudely you appear to spew forth that knowledge. Bad effort. Must try harder.

      • JDB says:

        @Ahmet K – thank you for providing the strongly factual basis for what we all knew instinctively was rude nonsense.

      • louie says:

        The hamam might not be a central part of Turkish life nowadays – presumably since the advent of domestic plumbing and increasing wealth – but it must have been once upon a time otherwise there wouldn’t be so many of them, most of which have clearly been there many, many years, predating mass tourism.

        You should try one, see what you think! I’m not a rose petals and candles sort of spa girl, but I do enjoy the bit of a beating and the glowing skin feeling you get at a traditional hamam. It’s disappointing to me that the line seems to have blurred a bit in recent years though, there seem to be far fewer Saddam Hussein lookalike strongmen staff and more petite Far Eastern girls in the ones I’ve been in in recent years.

  • TimM says:

    A well-written review by clearly a very inexperienced traveller to Turkey. Practically everything positive mentioned is merely standard in the five-star hotels of Antalya province. And, avoiding the unbearable heat of the summer season, the going rates in the far more pleasant winter season are £50-70 per night, ‘ultra all inclusive’ for sole-occupancy of a double or twin (usually a queen and a single plus a convertible sofa).

    “Treatments such as Turkish bath rituals are available.” Outstanding ignorance. The hammam is a deep part of Turkish culture. If you have not been to a hammam, you have not been to Turkey.

    Global chain hotels exist in Turkey to make business and especially American travellers feel comfortable, as if they never left home. However, there are outstanding Turkish chain hotels that in every way surpass them and retain some Turkish culture, e.g. Nirvana, Barut and Crystal groups. Of course there are tens of thousands of five-star independent hotels in Turkey which are hit or miss which is why many of us rely upon and contribute to the Tripadvisor forums.

    Good first effort. Must try harder.

  • ed_fly says:

    Gha are also offering a paid for status match including my direct to titanium, I think it’s 150USD for titanium- so could be worthwhile depending on you upcoming stays etc. via statusmatch.com

  • JDB says:

    Thank you for this review – it looks a great place that I think we will try to visit. Kempinski is a very underrated chain that is on the up and, as noted in the review, has owners that really invest in the properties and offer far more individual experiences than e.g. the declining and increasingly corporatised Four Seasons.

  • Aliks says:

    Business Traveller have also offered me a Titanium upgrade until end 2025 if I take up a further magazine subscription costing £75.

    I’m still mulling that over . . .

  • Budva says:

    I’ve been there. Turkey is fantastic for older people. My elderly parents were spoilt rotten everywhere in Istanbul by local people. Just remember to say “Shirawan” and you’ll be ok getting back to the hotel.

    • louie says:

      As long as they are steady on their feet. I wouldn’t want to use a walking stick or wheelchair in most places given the state of the pavements and roads.

  • polly says:

    Thank you Conny, loved the report. Tim, a bit condescending don’t you think? It’s a simple personal review, not a Condé Nast Traveller review!
    We are going in March, and will definitely visit the hotel and palace when on an Asia side visit, love Istanbul. We usually stay in a locally owned place near the blue mosque etc. love the feel of the place.

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