Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Marmaris for Calls and Client Sessions

Photo by  Ahmed Emre Özdemir

18 min read · Marmaris, Turkey · meeting friendly cafes ·

Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Marmaris for Calls and Client Sessions

EK

Words by

Elif Kaya

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When I first started freelancing from Marmaris three years ago, I spent an embarrassing number of hours wandering between cafes with my laptop bag, hunting for the best cafes for meetings in Marmaris that could handle a Zoom call without the espresso machine screaming in the background. What I found was a surprisingly solid network of spots, some obvious, some tucked into side streets you would walk right past if you did not know to look. This guide is everything I wish someone had handed me on day one.

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1. Cafe Marmara, Siteler Mahallesi

Cafe Marmara sits on a quieter stretch of Siteler Mahallesi, just far enough from the main boulevard that you do not get the constant hum of tour buses. I have held at least a dozen client calls here, and the Wi-Fi has only dropped once, during a thunderstorm that knocked out half the neighborhood. The interior is split into two levels, and the upper floor is where you want to be. It is quieter, has more natural light, and the staff never rushes you even if you nurse a single Turkish tea for two hours.

The Vibe? Calm, almost library-like upstairs, with soft Turkish jazz playing at a volume that does not compete with your microphone.
The Bill? A Turkish coffee runs about 45 to 60 lira, and a full breakfast plate is around 250 to 300 lira as of early 2025.
The Standout? The upper floor corner table near the window, which gets direct morning light and has a power outlet right behind the wall-mounted shelf.
The Catch? The downstairs area gets loud after 11 AM when the lunch crowd rolls in, so book upstairs or arrive before 10.

A detail most tourists miss is that the owner, Mehmet, used to run a printing shop in this same space in the early 2000s. You can still see the old tile pattern near the entrance, a remnant from when this block was all small tradespeople before the tourism boom reshaped the street. If you mention you are working, Mehmet will sometimes bring you a small plate of simit on the house, a gesture that feels genuinely Marmaris, not performative.

Local tip: The side street behind Cafe Marmara has free parking until noon, which is almost unheard of in central Marmaris. If you are driving in for a morning meeting, arrive by 9:30 and you will almost certainly find a spot.

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2. Keyf Cafe, Ataturk Bulvari

Keyf Cafe is right on Ataturk Bulvari, which sounds like it would be chaos, but the interior is surprisingly well-insulated from street noise. I discovered it during a week when my usual spot was closed for renovation, and it became my backup for three straight client video calls. The connection speed tests I ran averaged around 35 to 45 Mbps download on their dedicated guest network, which is more than enough for HD video. They have a small back room with four tables that functions almost like a private booth cafe Marmaris freelancers dream about, though it is not officially reserved.

The Vibe? Modern Turkish cafe aesthetic, clean lines, lots of wood and white walls, the kind of place that photographs well if you need a tidy background for calls.
The Bill? Espresso-based drinks range from 70 to 110 lira, and their avocado toast, yes, they have it, sits around 180 lira.
The Standout? The back room, which you can request if it is free. Ask for the table nearest the router for the strongest signal.
The Catch? The front-facing tables get direct afternoon sun and it can get uncomfortably warm from June through August, even with the blinds drawn.

What most people do not realize is that Keyf Cafe shares a building with a small co-working space on the second floor that opened in late 2023. You can buy a day pass for around 400 lira, which includes unlimited coffee. I have used it twice when I needed absolute silence for a recording session. The co-working space is not advertised on the street, so you have to ask inside.

Local tip: On Tuesdays, Keyf Cafe runs a quiet hours policy from 9 AM to 12 PM where they keep music off entirely. This is not widely publicized, but the staff will confirm it if you ask. It is the single best window for important calls.

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3. The London Bar and Cafe, İçmeler Road (near the Marmaris border)

Technically just past the Marmaris town line on the road to İçmeler, The London Bar and Cafe has a semi-private booth section in the back that I have used for in-person client meetings more times than I can count. The booths are separated by frosted glass panels, which gives you enough privacy that the person across from you does not have to hear the table next door arguing about football. The food menu is more substantial than your average cafe, leaning into British-Turkish fusion, which reflects the large expat community that has shaped this corridor for decades.

The Vibe? Pub-meets-cafe energy, relaxed but not sloppy, the kind of place where a business lunch feels natural.
The Bill? Mains run from 200 to 450 lira, and a pot of English breakfast tea is around 80 lira.
The Standout? The booth by the far wall, which has its own small lamp and a USB charging port built into the partition.
The Catch? The Wi-Fi is decent but not exceptional, around 20 to 25 Mbps in my tests, so if your call requires screen sharing on a large file, give yourself extra buffer time.

This stretch of road between Marmaris and İçmeler has been a hub for British expats since the 1980s, and The London Bar carries that history in its DNA. The owner's father ran a guesthouse nearby in the 90s, and the cafe still has a small noticeboard where expats post local services, a charming analog touch in 2025.

Local tip: If you are meeting a client who is staying in one of the İçmeler resorts, suggest this spot as a midpoint. It is a 10-minute drive from most İçmeler hotels and avoids the parking nightmare of Marmaris center.

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4. Cafe Giova, Armutalan

Armutalan is the residential backbone of Marmaris, where actual locals live and work, and Cafe Giova is the kind of place you only find if someone who lives here tells you about it. I was pointed to it by a graphic designer I met at a local meetup, and it has been a reliable spot ever since. The space is small, maybe eight tables, but the acoustics are excellent because the owner installed sound-dampening panels on the ceiling, something I have not seen in any other Marmaris cafe. For a quiet professional cafe Marmaris workers need for focused calls, this is hard to beat.

The Vibe? Minimalist, almost Scandinavian, with a single shelf of Turkish design books and a small succulent on each table.
The Bill? Filter coffee is around 65 lira, fresh juice blends are 90 to 120 lira, and their homemade cake slices run about 100 to 130 lira.
The Standout? The sound-dampening ceiling, which genuinely makes a difference. I recorded a podcast episode here once and the audio was clean enough to publish without noise reduction.
The Catch? There are only two power outlets in the entire place, both near the counter. If those tables are taken, you are running on battery.

Cafe Giova opened in 2021, right after the pandemic, and the owner, a young woman named Zeynep who studied interior design in Izmir, built the space specifically with remote workers in mind. That intentionality shows. Even the chair heights are slightly higher than a typical Turkish cafe, better suited for laptop work.

Local tip: Armutalan has a small weekly market on Thursdays, and the streets around Cafe Giova get busy with foot traffic. If you are visiting on a Thursday, park on the side street near the mosque, not on the main road, or you will be blocked in for an hour.

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5. Ney Cafe and Bistro, Siteler Mahallesi

Ney Cafe and Bistro is another Siteler Mahallesi gem, and it earns its place on this list because of the garden seating area, which is covered by a wooden pergola and surrounded by enough greenery to muffle street noise. I have taken outdoor client meetings here in April and October when the Marmaris weather is perfect, around 22 to 26 degrees, and the experience felt more like a retreat than a work session. The Wi-Fi reaches the garden, though the signal is about 15 to 20 percent weaker than indoors.

The Vibe? Garden bistro with a Mediterranean feel, terracotta pots, climbing jasmine, and a small water feature that provides gentle background sound.
The Bill? Lunch mains are 220 to 380 lira, specialty coffee is 80 to 120 lira, and their fresh pomegranate juice is 95 lira.
The Standout? The garden corner table, which is partially shaded all morning and has a power outlet on the pergola post.
The Catch? In July and August, the garden becomes genuinely hot by midday. If you are meeting in summer, book the 8 to 10 AM window or move inside.

The name "Ney" refers to the traditional Turkish reed flute, and the owner is a music teacher who gives lessons in a small studio attached to the cafe. On Wednesday evenings, there are sometimes live ney performances, which are beautiful but not ideal for calls. Check the schedule before you book a Wednesday afternoon slot.

Local tip: Ney Cafe is a two-minute walk from the Siteler Friday market, which is smaller and less touristy than the central Marmaris bazaar. If your meeting wraps by noon on a Friday, you can pick up fresh olives, local cheese, and hand-rolled pasta on your way back to the car.

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6. Starbucks Marmaris Marina, Milta Marina Area

I know, I know. A Starbucks guide entry feels like a cop-out, but hear me out. The Marmaris Marina location of Starbucks has something that almost no other cafe in the area can match: a dedicated quiet zone on the upper mezzanine level that overlooks the marina. I have used it for early morning calls with clients in European time zones, and the combination of reliable Wi-Fi, consistent power outlets at every table, and professional atmosphere makes it functionally one of the best zoom call cafes Marmaris has for people who need zero surprises. The marina setting also gives your video call background a polished look.

The Vibe? Standard Starbucks consistency, but the mezzanine feels like a different space entirely, quieter and more focused.
The Bill? A tall latte is around 120 to 150 lira, and a sandwich or wrap is 180 to 260 lira.
The Standout? The mezzanine, full stop. It seats maybe 15 people and is almost empty before 10 AM on weekdays.
The Catch? After 11 AM on weekends, the mezzanine fills up with families and the noise level climbs significantly. Weekday mornings are your window.

The Milta Marina area has been Marmaris's upscale waterfront development since the early 2000s, and the Starbucks there reflects the international character of the marina, which hosts yachts from all over the Mediterranean. It is a reminder that Marmaris has been a crossroads for centuries, from ancient Physcarus to the Ottoman naval base that gave the town its name.

Local tip: Parking at the marina is free for the first two hours if you validate your ticket at any shop or cafe. Just ask the barista to stamp it. This saves you the 50 to 80 lira hourly parking fee that catches many visitors off guard.

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7. Hayal Cafe, Sogut Mahallesi

Sogut Mahallesi is a neighborhood most tourists never enter, sitting on the hillside above the old town, and Hayal Cafe is the reason I started exploring this part of Marmaris. A journalist friend who covers the Turkish Riviera told me about it, and I have been going back ever since. The cafe is on a narrow street with almost no foot traffic, which means ambient noise is virtually nonexistent. The owner plays soft Turkish classical music at a low volume, and the seating is arranged so that each table feels like its own small room. For a quiet professional cafe Marmaris creatives can use for deep work or sensitive calls, this is the one.

The Vibe? Intimate, almost like someone's well-curated living room, with mismatched vintage furniture and local art on the walls.
The Bill? Turkish tea is 30 to 40 lira, cappuccino is 75 to 95 lira, and their homemade borek is around 110 lira.
The Standout? The back patio, which is open-air but walled in on three sides, giving you privacy and fresh air without street noise.
The Catch? The Wi-Fi password changes weekly and is written on a chalkboard near the register. If the staff is busy, you might wait a few minutes to get connected.

Sogut Mahallesi has a history that predates modern Marmaris. The neighborhood sits near the route of the ancient Carian road system, and some of the stone walls in the area incorporate blocks that locals believe are from Ottoman-era structures. Hayal Cafe itself is in a converted ground-floor apartment of a 1960s building, and the thick stone walls are part of why the acoustics are so good.

Local tip: The walk from central Marmaris to Sogut takes about 20 minutes uphill. Take a dolmus (shared minibus) from the main road instead. They run every 15 minutes and cost around 15 lira. Your knees will thank you in the summer heat.

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8. Elite Business Cafe and Lounge, Marmaris Adakoy Road (toward the airport corridor)

Out on the road toward Adakoy and the Dalaman airport corridor, Elite Business Cafe and Lounge is the most purpose-built meeting space on this list. It opened in late 2022 and was clearly designed with business travelers and remote workers as the primary audience. There are four enclosed glass-walled booths, each seating four people, with their own lighting controls and power strips. I booked one for a three-person client pitch and the experience was closer to a small conference room than a cafe. This is the closest thing to a private booth cafe Marmaris offers in a formal sense, and it fills a gap that the rest of the local cafe scene does not address.

The Vibe? Corporate lounge meets Turkish hospitality, clean and functional without feeling sterile.
The Bill? Booth rental is 300 to 500 lira per hour depending on the time of day, which includes complimentary tea and coffee for the group. Individual menu items range from 80 to 350 lira.
The Standout? The enclosed booths, which have actual doors and enough sound insulation that I could not hear the conversation in the next booth during my session.
The Catch? It is a 15 to 20 minute drive from central Marmaris, and there is no dolmus service on this road. You need your own car or a taxi, which will cost around 150 to 250 lira from the center.

The Adakoy corridor has been developing rapidly since the mid-2010s, driven by the expansion of Dalaman Airport and the growth of luxury villa tourism in the area. Elite Business Cafe is part of that newer commercial layer, and it signals a shift in what Marmaris is becoming, not just a party destination for British tourists but a place where people actually work and build businesses.

Local tip: If you are flying in or out of Dalaman and have a gap between meetings, Elite Business Cafe is about 25 minutes from the airport. I have used it as a landing pad on departure days, getting two hours of focused work done before heading to the terminal.

When to Go and What to Know

Marmaris runs on a seasonal rhythm that directly affects cafe availability and noise levels. From November through March, the town is quiet, many cafes reduce their hours, and you will have your pick of tables almost anywhere. This is honestly the best time for serious work. From June through September, the population triples with tourists, and even the quietest spots get busy between 11 AM and 3 PM. Plan important calls for early morning, before 10 AM, or late afternoon, after 4 PM.

Power outages are rare in central Marmaris but do happen a few times a year, usually during summer storms. If you have a critical call, bring a fully charged power bank as backup. Most cafes have UPS units for their routers, but the wall outlets will go dead.

Turkish tea culture means that ordering just one glass and sitting for hours is completely normal and not frowned upon. However, if you are occupying a prime table during a busy period, ordering something every 90 minutes or so is considered good form. The staff will not say anything, but you will feel the difference in how warmly they treat you.

Dolmus routes cover most of central Marmaris and cost between 12 and 20 lira per ride as of 2025. They are the fastest way to move between neighborhoods without dealing with parking, which in July and August can add 20 minutes to any trip.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Marmaris expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier traveler in Marmaris should budget around 2,500 to 4,000 Turkish lira per day, covering a decent hotel or Airbnb (800 to 1,500 lira), two cafe or restaurant meals (600 to 1,200 lira), local transport (100 to 200 lira), and incidental costs like coffee, water, and tips (300 to 500 lira). Prices spike 30 to 50 percent during peak season, July and August, especially for accommodation. Eating at local lokantas rather than tourist-facing restaurants on the marina can cut food costs significantly.

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Marmaris's central cafes and workspaces?

Most central Marmaris cafes provide Wi-Fi speeds between 20 and 50 Mbps download and 5 to 15 Mbps upload, based on tests I have run across multiple venues over the past year. Dedicated co-working spaces and business-oriented cafes tend to offer faster and more stable connections, sometimes reaching 60 to 80 Mbps download. Fiber internet has been expanding in Marmaris since 2022, but older buildings in the old town and Armutalan may still be on slower ADSL lines.

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Marmaris?

True 24/7 co-working spaces are essentially nonexistent in Marmaris as of early 2025. A few cafes near the marina and in the Siteler area stay open until midnight or 1 AM, particularly in summer, but they are not designed for focused late-night work. The co-working space above Keyf Cafe on Ataturk Bulvari operates from 8 AM to 8 PM on weekdays and is closed on weekends. For late-night work, most remote workers in Marmaris simply use their accommodation.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Marmaris?

Charging sockets are common in newer and renovated cafes in Marmaris but far from universal. In my experience, about half of the cafes I have visited have outlets accessible from at least some tables, and only a handful, like Elite Business Cafe and Keyf Cafe, have outlets at every seat. Power backups are rare outside of business-oriented venues. Most cafes do not have UPS units, so during the occasional outage, both power and Wi-Fi go down simultaneously. Carrying a power bank is a practical necessity.

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Marmaris for digital nomads and remote workers?

Siteler Mahallesi is the most reliable neighborhood for digital nomads in Marmaris, based on the concentration of meeting-friendly cafes, reasonable rent for short-term apartments, decent Wi-Fi infrastructure, and proximity to both the town center and the dolmus network. Armutalan is a close second for those who prefer a more local, less touristy atmosphere, though transport options are more limited. The marina area offers the best internet speeds and most professional environments but comes with higher costs and seasonal crowding.

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