Land border crossings of Turkey

.jpg)
The following is a list of land border crossings of Turkey (i.e. only for motor vehicles, not railways) as of 2013.[1]
| # | In province | Name of the crossing point | Open/Closed since | To country | Counterpart | To road | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ağrı | Gürbulak | 04.09.1953 | Bazargan | Open | ||
| 2 | Van | Kapıköy | 16.04.2011 | Razi | Open[2] | ||
| 3 | Hakkâri | Esendere | 15.09.1964 | Serow | Open | ||
| 4 | Ardahan | Posof-Türkgözü | 12.07.1995 | Vale | Open | ||
| 5 | Ardahan | Çıldır-Aktaş | 24.07.1995 | Kartsakhi | Open | ||
| 6 | Artvin | Sarp | 31.08.1988 | Sarpi | Open | ||
| 7 | Edirne | Pazarkule | 20.04.1952 | Kastanies | Open | ||
| 8 | Edirne | İpsala | 10.07.1961 | Kipoi | Open | ||
| 9 | Edirne | Kapıkule | 04.09.1953 | Kapitan Andreevo | Open | ||
| 10 | Edirne | Hamzabeyli | 22.11.2004 | Lesovo | 7 | Open | |
| 11 | Gaziantep | Karkamış | 04.09.1953 | Jarabulus | 216 | Open for only military | |
| 12 | Hakkari | Şemdinli-Derecik | 14.02.2011 | ? | ? | Closed | |
| 13 | Hakkari | Çukurca-Üzümlü | 07.05.2015 | ? | ? | Open[3] only to Iraq and Turkey passport holders only; open 8 am - 5 pm Sunday through Thursday | |
| 14 | Hatay | Yayladağı | 04.09.1953 | Kesab | 1 | Open | |
| 15 | Hatay | Cilvegözü | 04.09.1953 | Bab al-Hawa | M45 | Open | |
| Hatay | Zeytin Dali | Hemamê, Syria | |||||
| 16 | Iğdır | Dilucu | 20.05.1992 | Sederek | Open | ||
| 17 | Kilis | Öncüpınar | 04.09.1953 | Azaz | Route 214/Route 217 | Open | |
| 18 | Kilis | Al-Rai | 08.02.2013 | ? | ? | Temporarily open[4] | |
| 19 | Kırklareli | Dereköy | 18.07.1969 | Malko Tarnovo | Open | ||
| 20 | Mardin | Nusaybin | 04.09.1953 | Qamishli | M4 | Open | |
| 21 | Mardin | Şenyurt | 04.09.1953 | Al-Darbasiyah | No road | Closed | |
| 22 | Şanlıurfa | Akçakale | 16.10.1974 | Tell Abyad | Route 712 | Open | |
| 23 | Şanlıurfa | Ceylanpınar | 26.03.1999 | Ras al-Ayn | ? | Closed (Open only on Eids)[5] | |
| 24 | Şanlıurfa | Mürşitpınar | 08.09.2010 | Ayn al-Arab | ? | Closed (Open only on Eids)[5] | |
| 25 | Şırnak | Habur | 18.07.1969 | Zakho | Open | ||
| 26 | Şırnak | Gülyazı | 24.01.2012 | ? | ? | Closed | |
| 27 | Kars | Akyaka | 04.09.1953-11.07.1993 | Gyumri | M7 | Closed | |
| 28 | Iğdır | Alican | 1993 | Margara | M7 | Closed | |
| 29 | Iğdır | Borualan | 01.01.1985 | ? | M7 | Closed |
See also
- Railway border crossings of Turkey
- Ministry of Industry and Trade, 2012 Annual Report Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
References
- ^ "Sınır Kapıları Listesi HUDUT KAPILARI NEVİLERİN GÖRE-AÇIKLAMALI SINIR ÜLKELERİ" (PDF) (in Turkish). Turkish Interior Ministry. 2013-03-26. pp. 3–4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
- ^ Open only to small vehicles, e.g. cars, pickups
- ^ "Çukurca'daki Üzümlü sınır kapısı pasaportlu geçişe açıldı".
- ^ in order to deliver aid to Turkmens in Syria because of the ongoing Syrian Civil War
- ^ a b see: Eid al-Adha & Eid al-Fitr