Xuma Village
Yalıkavak
Twenty-eight-year-old Yalıkavak beach village — capped capacity, bohemian-mature, the anti-marina antidote.
The quiet fifteen-room Türkbükü alternative — small cove, slow service, no DJ.
Bük is the small Türkbükü cove that the second-house families book when Maçakızı's pontoon is full and the day-pass economy feels heavy — fifteen hotel rooms and a private beach about half the scale of Macakizi or Kuum, a calmer working pace, a kitchen that does competent fish-and-meze without claiming to be more. The position is the same protected Türkbükü bay, so the topography is the right one — calm shallow water, north-facing afternoon sun that drops behind the peninsula by five, a long-evening pattern that runs to midnight without after-party noise. Regulars are those who has cycled through Macakizi twenty times and wants the same shift at half the booking pressure. Walk-in on a weekday is realistic; weekend lunch in August needs a phone call three or four days out.
Day-pass economy is gentler than at Macakizi — last-minute calls workable most of the season. The small kitchen is best at midday meze; dinner runs simpler than at the larger rooms.
At a Glance
View Type
Aegean Sea Panoramic, Bay View
View Quality
Sunset
**** (4/5)
Quick answers about Bük Beach Club — reservations, hours, dress code, and price range.
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