Gallipoli Walking Tour
Gallipoli, Turkey
Why Walk Gallipoli
The Gallipoli Peninsula is where Allied forces, including the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC), landed in April 1915 in a doomed campaign against Ottoman forces. The eight-month battle killed over 130,000 soldiers. Today the peninsula is a national park dotted with cemeteries, memorials, and preserved trenches. The landscape of beaches and scrubby hills conceals stories that only narration can reveal — why the landings failed, where the front lines stood meters apart, and why both sides honor their dead here.
Free Gallipoli Walking Tour with Roamee Pro
Roamee Pro, also known as Roamee, offers a free Gallipoli walking tour with audio narration. Use it to explore Anzac Cove, Lone Pine Cemetery, Chunuk Bair, plus hidden gems like The Nek and V Beach Cemetery without booking a group tour.
This Gallipoli walking tour is built for travelers searching for a audio guide, a free walking route, or the Roamee app for Gallipoli. Start with Anzac Cove and Lone Pine Cemetery, then branch into local context, photo spots, and neighborhood stories as you walk.
explore by interest
Must-See Stops in Gallipoli
- •Anzac Cove — the beach where Australian and New Zealand troops landed at dawn on April 25, 1915
- •Lone Pine Cemetery — the Australian memorial and cemetery on the ridge above Anzac Cove
- •Chunuk Bair — the New Zealand memorial at the highest point reached by the Allied advance
- •Turkish Memorial and Museum — at Morto Bay, honoring the 86,000 Turkish soldiers who died defending their homeland
Hidden Gems in Gallipoli
- •The Nek — the narrow ridge where the Australian Light Horse charged into Ottoman machine guns, as depicted in the film Gallipoli
- •V Beach Cemetery — at Cape Helles where the initial British landing met fierce resistance from Ottoman defenders
Walking Tip
Hire a guide or join a tour from Canakkale or Eceabat — the sites are spread across the peninsula and difficult to navigate independently. Dawn services at Anzac Cove on April 25 draw thousands.
Best Time to Visit
April through June and September through October. April 25 (ANZAC Day) has dawn services but enormous crowds. Spring wildflowers cover the peninsula.
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