The best hotels in Turkmenistan
Turkmenistan requires a visa, a tour guide, and serious planning. The hotels that make it worth the effort are these 10.
Our Top Picks in Turkmenistan
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Hotel Serdar
City Center, Balkanabat
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Dayhan
Central District, Dashoguz
Free cancellation & Pay later
Grand Turkmen Hotel
Bitarap Turkmenistan Avenue, Ashgabat
Free cancellation & Pay later
Avaza Resort Hotel
Avaza National Tourist Zone, Turkmenbashi
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Merv
Near Historical Museum, Mary
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Turkmenistan
Magtymguly Avenue, Ashgabat
Free cancellation & Pay later
Oguzkent Hotel
Olympic Village, Ashgabat
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hotel Margush | City Center, Mary | $45–75/night | 6.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Hotel Zerafshan | Downtown, Turkmenabat | $55–85/night | 7.1/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Hotel Nusay | Near Nusay Ruins, Anau | $100–140/night | 7.6/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 4 | Hotel Serdar | City Center, Balkanabat | $110–160/night | 7.4/10 | Business Pick |
| 5 | Hotel Dayhan | Central District, Dashoguz | $120–165/night | 7.8/10 | Most Popular |
| 6 | Grand Turkmen Hotel | Bitarap Turkmenistan Avenue, Ashgabat | $160–220/night | 8.2/10 | Most Popular |
| 7 | Avaza Resort Hotel | Avaza National Tourist Zone, Turkmenbashi | $290–420/night | 8.7/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 8 | Hotel Merv | Near Historical Museum, Mary | $135–185/night | 8/10 | Best Location |
| 9 | Hotel Turkmenistan | Magtymguly Avenue, Ashgabat | $180–230/night | 8.3/10 | Business Pick |
| 10 | Oguzkent Hotel | Olympic Village, Ashgabat | $260–380/night | 9/10 | Luxury Pick |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Hotel Margush
This is a straightforward Soviet-era hotel that has been partially renovated near the central bazaar in Mary. Rooms are basic but functional, with clean bedding and reliable hot water. The staff speak limited English but are genuinely helpful with directions to Merv ruins nearby. Breakfast is included and surprisingly filling. Good enough for a one-night stopover before visiting the ancient city.
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Hotel Zerafshan
Located on Bitarap Turkmenistan Street in the center of Turkmenabat, this hotel offers decent value for the price. Rooms are simple and a bit dated but kept reasonably clean. The location puts you within walking distance of the Amu Darya riverfront, which is the main reason to be here. Air conditioning works well, which matters a lot in summer. A solid budget choice for exploring eastern Turkmenistan.
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Hotel Nusay
This small hotel sits close to the ancient Parthian ruins of Nusay, just outside Ashgabat. It is a quieter alternative to staying in the capital and the staff are more attentive than you would expect for this price range. Rooms are clean and modern with good air conditioning. The on-site restaurant serves solid Turkmen dishes including chorba soup and shashlik. A good base for day trips into Ashgabat or exploring the ruins on foot.
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Hotel Serdar
Hotel Serdar is the main business hotel in Balkanabat, catering largely to workers in the Caspian oil sector. Rooms are clean and well-sized with reliable wifi, which is harder to find than you would think in Turkmenistan. The lobby restaurant serves decent food and the bar stays open late by local standards. It sits near the regional government buildings on the main boulevard. Not exciting, but professional and functional.
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Hotel Dayhan
This is the best hotel option in Dashoguz, the gateway city to the Konye-Urgench UNESCO heritage site. The rooms are spacious for the price and the air conditioning is powerful, a genuine necessity in the northern desert heat. Staff can arrange transport to the mausoleums and minaret at Konye-Urgench about 100 kilometers away. The breakfast buffet includes local flatbread and dairy that is worth waking up early for. It fills up fast during the limited tourist season.
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Grand Turkmen Hotel
The Grand Turkmen is a large state-run hotel on Bitarap Turkmenistan Avenue, one of Ashgabat's main marble-lined boulevards. It is centrally located and within walking distance of the Earthquake Monument and the Neutrality Arch. Rooms are large and well-maintained with good air conditioning and functioning elevators. The hotel has multiple restaurants, a pool, and a business center that works reasonably well. It is the most established mid-range option in the capital and a reliable choice for first-time visitors.
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Avaza Resort Hotel
The Avaza Resort sits inside Turkmenistan's purpose-built Caspian Sea resort zone near Turkmenbashi, one of the most unusual tourism projects in Central Asia. The hotel has direct Caspian beach access, multiple pools, and rooms with sea-facing balconies. Everything is polished and modern, built within the last fifteen years and kept in excellent condition. The beach area is quiet and genuinely relaxing, far removed from the busy capital. It is a surreal and memorable stay that few international travelers have experienced.
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Hotel Merv
Hotel Merv is the most comfortable option in the city of Mary and sits close to the regional history museum and main square. Rooms are modern with good beds and solid air conditioning. The hotel is the preferred stop for tour groups visiting the ancient Merv UNESCO site, located about 30 kilometers east of the city. The restaurant menu includes both Turkmen and Russian dishes with reasonable prices. Book in advance during spring as it gets busy with archaeological tour groups.
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Hotel Turkmenistan
This long-standing hotel on Magtymguly Avenue is close to the Palace of Knowledge and several government ministries. It is a common choice for diplomats and business travelers who need a central location in the capital. Rooms are comfortable and regularly updated, with better wifi than most hotels in the country. The ground floor cafe serves good coffee, a rarity in Ashgabat. The front desk staff are experienced at helping foreign visitors navigate local registration requirements.
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Oguzkent Hotel
The Oguzkent is the tallest and most prestigious hotel in Ashgabat, located in the Olympic complex area built for the 2017 Asian Indoor Games. The building is stunning from the outside and the interior matches with marble finishes, a large pool, and well-trained staff. Rooms on upper floors have clear views across the white marble cityscape, which is genuinely unlike anywhere else in the world. The international restaurant is the best in the country by a considerable margin. This is the top choice for luxury travelers and official delegations visiting Turkmenistan.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Turkmenistan
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
Ashgabat: the marble city that bewilders visitors
Ashgabat's center is walkable if the heat allows. Magtymguly Avenue runs through the heart of the city and connects major government buildings and monuments. The Palace of Knowledge, the Neutrality Arch, and the Earthquake Monument are all within a few kilometers of each other and represent the country's peculiar blend of Soviet legacy and post-independence grandiosity.
The National Museum on Bitarap Turkmenistan Avenue is one of the best museums in Central Asia for the region's pre-Islamic history, covering the Parthian empire at Nusay, the Silk Road, and Turkmen tribal cultures. Entry costs 2 TMT. Spend 2 hours minimum. The Altyn Asyr market on the outskirts of the city is the largest market in the country and worth an afternoon visit with your guide.
Ancient Merv: Central Asia's once-great Silk Road capital
Merv was one of the largest cities in the medieval Islamic world and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site covering the ruins of five successive cities. The Great Kyz Kala fortress, the mausoleum of Sultan Sanjar, and the remnants of the Seljuk-era city center are the highlights. Allow a full day with a licensed guide who knows which areas are accessible versus restricted.
Hotel Merv in Mary city at $135 to $185 per night is your base. Taxis to the ruins cost about 20 TMT each way. The archaeological museum inside the site is small but focused with good labeling. Morning light on the mud-brick structures is best for photography between 8 and 10 AM.
Konye-Urgench: medieval mausoleums in the northern desert
Konye-Urgench preserves the remains of the Khwarezm Empire's 12th-century capital, including the 61-meter Kutlug-Timur Minaret (the tallest in Central Asia), the Torebeg-Hanym Mausoleum with its stunning tilework, and several other medieval structures. The site takes 3 to 4 hours to cover properly.
Dashoguz is the nearest city with decent accommodation, about 100 kilometers from the ruins. Hotel Dayhan handles most foreign visitor registration efficiently. Day trips are best organized through your Ashgabat-based guide before departure. There is no public transport from Dashoguz to Konye-Urgench so a car is essential.
The Darvaza Crater: overnight camping in the Karakum
The Darvaza Gas Crater has been burning continuously since a Soviet drilling accident in 1971. It is located 260 kilometers north of Ashgabat on the edge of the Karakum Desert. Getting there requires a 4x4 and typically 4 to 5 hours from the capital on the main northbound highway, followed by 10 kilometers on sand tracks.
Most organized tours include a camping night near the crater with a basic tent and meals provided. The crater is approximately 70 meters wide and 20 meters deep. Evenings around the crater with no light pollution are extraordinary. Book this as part of your tour itinerary from Ashgabat since independent access is technically restricted.
Avaza: the Caspian Sea resort few outsiders visit
Avaza is a purpose-built resort zone on the Caspian coast about 15 kilometers from Turkmenbashi port. Built from scratch in the 2000s, it has 20-plus hotels, a waterpark, a yacht club, and several kilometers of developed beach. It is primarily used by domestic tourists and regional visitors from Kazakhstan and Iran.
The Avaza Resort Hotel at $290 to $420 per night is the highest-rated option and has direct Caspian beach access. The sea here has no salt taste as the Caspian is a lake, and the water is flat and warm in summer. Turkmenbashi itself has a small historic port area worth a morning walk. Domestic flights from Ashgabat to Turkmenbashi take under 1 hour.
Practical travel in Turkmenistan: what you need to know
Hotel registration is mandatory for all foreign visitors within 24 hours of arrival. Any hotel on your approved tour list will handle this automatically. Keep copies of your registration slips as police may ask to see them at checkpoints, particularly when traveling between cities. Your guide will typically hold these for you.
Photography restrictions are widespread but inconsistently enforced. Avoid photographing government buildings, police, military vehicles, and airports. Museums and historical sites generally allow photography for a small fee. The internet is heavily restricted and VPN usage is technically illegal but quietly tolerated. Download offline maps and key documents before arriving.
Explore Turkmenistan by city
We cover 2 destinations across Turkmenistan. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Turkmenistan's best hotel regions
Turkmenistan spans from the white marble capital Ashgabat in the center-south, east through the ancient Merv ruins to Turkmenabat on the Uzbek border, north to the desert at Dashoguz and Konye-Urgench, and west to the Caspian Sea resort at Turkmenbashi.
Ashgabat and Central Region 10 vetted hotels The marble capital unlike any other city on Earth
The marble capital unlike any other city on Earth
Ashgabat holds the best accommodation in Turkmenistan by a significant margin. The Oguzkent and Hotel Turkmenistan are the top choices. The city's white marble architecture, gold statues, and near-empty boulevards make it one of the most visually bizarre capitals in the world. Two to three days is the right amount of time.
The Nusay Parthian ruins just outside the city at Anau are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a half-day trip from any central hotel. The Kopetdag Mountains south of the city offer hiking and cooler temperatures.
Browse all Ashgabat and Central Region hotels → Mary and Ancient Merv 5 vetted hotels Gateway to the ancient Islamic world's great Silk Road city
Gateway to the ancient Islamic world's great Silk Road city
Mary is the jumping-off point for Merv, one of the most important archaeological sites in Central Asia. Hotel Merv near the central museum is the most comfortable base at $135 to $185. Most tour itineraries spend one night in Mary before a full day at the Merv ruins.
The Mary region also connects east to Turkmenabat and the Uzbek border at Farab, which is a common crossing for trans-Central-Asia travelers. Hotel Zerafshan in Turkmenabat at $55 to $85 handles registration well for transit travelers.
Browse all Mary and Ancient Merv hotels → Dashoguz and the North 4 vetted hotels Desert north with medieval treasures at Konye-Urgench
Desert north with medieval treasures at Konye-Urgench
Dashoguz is the gateway to Konye-Urgench, Turkmenistan's second UNESCO World Heritage Site. Hotel Dayhan at $120 to $165 is the best option in the city. The northern region is notably hotter and drier than the capital, with summer temperatures often exceeding 40 degrees C.
The crossing into Uzbekistan at Shavat just north of Dashoguz is a common overland route for travelers heading to Khiva in Uzbekistan's Khorezm region, itself a UNESCO city.
Browse all Dashoguz and the North hotels → Turkmenbashi and the Caspian Coast 3 vetted hotels The surreal purpose-built Caspian resort zone
The surreal purpose-built Caspian resort zone
Avaza is the most unusual resort area in Central Asia: a purpose-built city of hotels on the Caspian coast that primarily serves domestic tourists. The Avaza Resort Hotel at $290 to $420 has the best facilities and direct beach access. The Caspian water is warm and calm in summer.
Turkmenbashi itself is a small port city with some colonial-era architecture in its older quarters. The domestic airport connects to Ashgabat in under 1 hour, making this a feasible add-on to an Ashgabat-based tour.
Browse all Turkmenbashi and the Caspian Coast hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Turkmenistan.
Soviet Surrealism
Ashgabat's white marble boulevards, golden rotating statues, and near-empty streets are unlike any capital city on Earth. The Oguzkent Hotel in the Olympic Village gives you front-row access to the city's most grandiose architecture zone.
Budget Backpacker
Hotel Margush in Mary at $45 to $75 and Hotel Zerafshan in Turkmenabat at $55 to $85 are solid budget options for transit travelers crossing Central Asia. Both handle foreign guest registration correctly, which is the key requirement.
Caspian Escape
The Avaza Resort Hotel on the Caspian coast at $290 to $420 per night offers beachfront rooms, a private Caspian sea strip, and multiple pools in a setting that almost no international tourists have ever experienced.
Archaeological Wonder
The ancient Merv UNESCO site east of Mary city is one of the best-preserved Silk Road archaeological landscapes anywhere. Full-day tours with a licensed guide cost $50 to $80 per person and cover 5 successive city layers from the Bronze Age to the Timurid period.
Central Asian Cuisine
Turkmen plov (rice pilaf with lamb and carrots) and chorba (meat and vegetable soup) are the dishes to order. Hotel Nusay near the Anau ruins has an on-site restaurant known for fresh shashlik. In Ashgabat, the Oguzkent Hotel restaurant serves the best international dining in the country.
Desert Adventure
The Darvaza Gas Crater, 260 kilometers north of Ashgabat in the Karakum Desert, burns day and night. Camping overnight near the crater and seeing it after dark is one of the most memorable experiences in Central Asia. Arrange through your tour operator in Ashgabat.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed accommodation across Turkmenistan's five main travel zones. Hotels were assessed on room quality, reliability, breakfast service, and how well they support visitors navigating the country's strict registration and tour guide requirements.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Turkmenistan: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Spring (March-May)
Spring is the best window for Turkmenistan. Temperatures are manageable across all regions, the Karakum desert is not yet brutal, and the Kopetdag Mountains south of Ashgabat are in bloom. March to May is also when tour operators most actively schedule departures. Book 2 to 3 months ahead.
Summer (June-August)
Summer in Turkmenistan is genuinely brutal, with Ashgabat regularly recording temperatures above 40 degrees C. The Avaza Caspian resort is the only comfortable option in peak summer. Interior sightseeing is feasible only with early morning starts and heavy air conditioning. Not recommended for most travelers.
Autumn (September-November)
October is the second-best month. Temperatures drop to comfortable levels, all regions are accessible, and tourist numbers (always low) are at their most manageable. Merv and Konye-Urgench are at their best in October light. November gets cold in the north but Ashgabat remains pleasant.
Winter (December-February)
Winter in Turkmenistan is cold, particularly in Dashoguz and the north. Ashgabat is manageable but many outdoor sites feel uninviting. Hotel rates are at their lowest. Only suitable for travelers with a specific reason to visit the capital in winter. Tour operators offer fewer scheduled departures.
How to Book Hotels in Turkmenistan
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Book your tour operator before applying for a visa
You cannot get a Turkmenistan tourist visa without a Letter of Invitation from a registered tour operator. The LOI process takes 10 to 20 business days. Start this process at least 6 weeks before your intended travel date. Recommended operators include Owadan Tourism and Turkmenistan Safaris, both registered with the Ministry of Tourism.
Register at every hotel without exception
All foreign visitors must be officially registered within 24 hours of arrival at each location. Any hotel in your approved tour itinerary handles this automatically and gives you a stamped registration slip. Keep these slips. Police checkpoints between cities regularly ask to see them. Hotels not on your approved visa letter cannot legally register you.
Exchange currency at state banks, not the street
The official Turkmen Manat rate is set by the state. Exchange at official bank counters inside hotels or at state banks and keep your receipts. Bring sufficient USD or euros to cover your entire trip as ATMs for international cards are unreliable even in Ashgabat. Budget $100 to $200 per day including guide fees, accommodation, and meals.
Photography: ask your guide before every shot
Photography restrictions are extensive and inconsistently enforced. Government buildings, police, military vehicles, airports, and some monuments are off-limits. Your guide will tell you what is acceptable in each location. Being caught photographing restricted areas can result in detention and film deletion. When in doubt, do not shoot.
Arrange the Darvaza Crater through your Ashgabat guide
The Darvaza overnight camp costs $40 to $80 per person including camping, transport, and meals. Book this with your tour operator before arriving in the country as it requires a 4x4, a local guide, and advance notice for camp setup. The crater is 260 kilometers north of Ashgabat on a route that requires an off-road final stretch.
Book Ashgabat hotels 4 to 6 weeks ahead
The Oguzkent and Hotel Turkmenistan both fill up with government delegations, diplomatic missions, and organized tour groups. Since independent travel is largely impossible, most hotel availability is pre-blocked by tour operators. Book your complete itinerary including hotels through your operator at least 6 weeks in advance.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Turkmenistan
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Turkmenistan.
How do I get a visa to visit Turkmenistan?
Most nationalities need a Letter of Invitation (LOI) from a registered Turkmen tour operator before applying for a tourist visa. The LOI process takes 10 to 20 business days. Transit visas for 5 days are available at the airport for some nationalities. Tourist visas require proof of a confirmed tour guide for the full duration of your stay. Apply through a licensed Turkmen travel agency like Owadan Tourism or Orient Silk Road.
Do I need a tour guide in Turkmenistan?
Yes, almost always. Tourist visas require an approved guide accompanying you throughout your stay. Transit visas allow some independent movement between border crossings. The guide requirement adds $80 to $150 per day to your trip cost but also genuinely helps navigate hotel registration requirements, checkpoints, and the limited English signage. Most guides are based in Ashgabat and travel with you to other regions.
What are the best hotels in Ashgabat?
The Oguzkent Hotel in the Olympic Village area is the top choice at $260 to $380 per night, with the city's best restaurant and pool. The Grand Turkmen Hotel on Bitarap Turkmenistan Avenue is the most established mid-range option at $160 to $220. Hotel Turkmenistan on Magtymguly Avenue is preferred by business travelers and diplomats at $180 to $230. Budget hotels are limited in the capital.
Is it safe to travel in Turkmenistan?
Crime against tourists is extremely rare. The main risks are bureaucratic: staying at unregistered guesthouses, failing to register at each overnight hotel, or straying from your approved itinerary. All hotels must register foreign guests with local police within 24 hours of arrival, which good hotels handle automatically. Follow your guide's advice at government buildings, military areas, and when photographing public spaces.
How do I visit the Darvaza Gas Crater?
The Darvaza Crater (also called the Door to Hell) is about 260 kilometers north of Ashgabat in the Karakum Desert. Most tours include an overnight camp near the crater, starting from Ashgabat in the afternoon and returning the following morning. Camping costs $40 to $80 per person. The crater burns day and night but is most dramatic after dark. A 4x4 vehicle is required for the last stretch of desert track.
What is the best time to visit Turkmenistan?
March to May and September to November are optimal. Spring brings wildflowers to the Kopetdag Mountains near Ashgabat and comfortable temperatures of 15 to 25 degrees C. Summer is brutal, with Ashgabat regularly hitting 45 degrees C making sightseeing difficult. Winter is cold and some northern areas like Dashoguz see heavy frost. October is particularly good for combining Ashgabat, Merv, and the Caspian coast.
Can I visit the Avaza resort zone independently?
Avaza near Turkmenbashi on the Caspian Sea is accessible as part of a tour itinerary. The resort zone was built primarily for domestic tourism and holds around 20 purpose-built hotels. The Avaza Resort Hotel charges $290 to $420 per night with direct Caspian beach access. Getting there from Ashgabat takes about 8 hours by road or 1 hour by domestic flight. Non-Turkmen visitors need their guide to assist with local hotel registration requirements.
How far is Merv from Ashgabat and Mary?
Merv is about 30 kilometers east of Mary city, which is roughly 380 kilometers east of Ashgabat. The drive from Ashgabat to Mary takes 5 to 6 hours. Most tours combine an overnight in Mary with a full day at the UNESCO-listed Merv ruins the following morning. Hotel Merv near the city center is the best base, at $135 to $185 per night. The ruins cover approximately 70 square kilometers and take a full day to explore properly.
What currency should I use in Turkmenistan?
The Turkmen Manat (TMT) is the only accepted currency. USD and euros cannot be used for most transactions. Officially, currency must be exchanged at state banks. The official rate and unofficial rates differ significantly, so exchange at a licensed bank and keep your receipts. ATMs exist only in Ashgabat and are not reliable for international cards. Bring sufficient USD to exchange on arrival and at each hotel.
Are there good hotels near the Konye-Urgench ruins?
Hotel Dayhan in Dashoguz is the best option for visiting Konye-Urgench, the 12th-century capital of the Khwarezm Empire and one of Central Asia's finest medieval sites. The hotel charges $120 to $165 per night and can arrange transport to the mausoleums 100 kilometers away. Konye-Urgench is a UNESCO World Heritage Site with the tallest minaret in Central Asia at 61 meters. Book ahead as Dashoguz has limited quality accommodation.
What is Ashgabat really like?
Ashgabat is genuinely unlike any other city on Earth. The government has rebuilt most of it in white marble since 1995, earning it a Guinness World Record for most white marble buildings. Broad boulevards are largely empty of traffic, enormous golden statues of former president Niyazov appear throughout the city, and the contrast between the grandiose architecture and everyday local life is striking. The Olympic Village built for the 2017 Asian Indoor Games alone covers several square kilometers.
What should I avoid when booking hotels in Turkmenistan?
Avoid booking any accommodation that is not on your visa letter or approved tour itinerary. Staying at an unregistered guesthouse can result in fines and deportation. Do not book hotels online independently without confirming they are on your guide's approved registration list. In Mary and Turkmenabat, stick to the main hotels in the city center where staff are experienced with foreign visitor registration. Avoid arriving late at night when registration offices may be closed.
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