Turks Cross Border to Shop in Greece as Prices Soar at Home

ALEXANDROUPOLIS, Greece — Every month, Istanbul businessman Cihan Çıtak makes the four-hour drive to this northern Greek city — not for vacation, but to stock up on groceries.

“Olive oil here is €10 per liter. In Turkey? Double,” the 48-year-old told Bloomberg. “I fill my car with cheese, wine, meat — everything costs up to two-thirds less.”

He’s far from alone.

6% of Turkish Visitors to Greece in 2025 Came Only to Shop

Highest rate since 2012
Turkish Statistics Agency

The New Normal: Cross-Border Bargain Hunts

  • Supermarket aisles packed with Turkish shoppers
  • Carts overflowing with pasta, yogurt, chocolates, sausages
  • Local restaurants buzzing with Turkish conversations
  • Social media flooded with price-comparison videos

Economic Policy Shift Fuels Trend

Turkey’s pivot under Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek (2023) ended President Erdoğan’s unorthodox low-interest policies. The lira strengthened, inflation cooled — but grocery prices remain sky-high.

“The rich invest in stocks. The rest of us live month to month.”
— Local Turkish shopper

Shopping Tours Now a Business

Travel agencies offer €50 day trips from Istanbul, Bursa, and Çanakkale.
Itinerary:

  1. Cross border
  2. Shop at major Greek supermarkets
  3. Lunch: affordable seafood in Alexandroupolis
  4. Return with full trunks and bags

“Everyone leaves loaded,” a tour operator said.

Only Catch: The Border Wait

Return lines now stretch up to 3 hours at passport control.

“Worth it,” Çıtak says. He’s already planning his next trip.

Alexandroupolis: From Port City to Turkish Shopping Haven

Once a quiet transit point, the city on the Thracian coast has become a symbol of economic disparity — and a lifeline for Turkish consumers seeking affordable, quality food.

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