Five days lets Baku breathe and adds the country's most rewarding overnight. Days 1-2 cover the city core (Old City, Flame Towers, Heydar Aliyev Center, Boulevard); Day 3 is the Gobustan and fire-sites day trip; Days 4-5 are an overnight to Sheki (about 4-5 hours northwest), a historic Silk Road town famous for the UNESCO-listed Khan's Palace and its caravanserais, returning to Baku. Sheki is too far for a comfortable day trip — one night does it justice. Apply for the e-visa before you fly and book the Sheki trip ahead.
Five days hits the sweet spot for Baku — three days for the major districts, plus two days for nearby destinations that show a different side of the country. The pace stays relaxed, you get more variety in your photo album, and the day trips break up the urban intensity nicely.
5-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$285
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$565
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$1,300
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
Old City (Icherisheher) + Flame Towers + Highland Park
Maiden Tower - Palace of the Shirvanshahs - Old City lanes - Highland Park funicular - Flame Towers light showActivities
- 09:30 Old City (Icherisheher) — Maiden Tower & walls 2h
Start in Baku's walled medieval core, a UNESCO site and the only fortified old city in the Caucasus. Climb the mysterious 12th-century Maiden Tower (the symbol of Baku) for rooftop views, then wander the cobbled lanes of caravanserais, mosques, and stone houses.
Cost: Combined Old City ticket ~30 AZN ($18) TIP: Go early before tour groups arrive — the lanes are quietest and coolest in the morning. The combined ticket covers the Maiden Tower and the Palace; buy it once. Wear shoes for cobbles. Look for the 'Ali and Nino' sculpture and film locations nearby. - 11:30 Palace of the Shirvanshahs 1h30
The 15th-century royal complex of the Shirvanshah dynasty — palace rooms, a mosque, a mausoleum, and a bathhouse in honey-colored stone, the centerpiece of the Old City's UNESCO listing.
Cost: Included in the combined ticket TIP: It's a short walk uphill within the walls from the Maiden Tower. The small museum displays explain the Shirvanshah dynasty. Allow time for the courtyards and the views over the Old City rooftops. - 13:30 Lunch — traditional Azerbaijani (Firuze or Qaynana) 1h30
Lunch on Azerbaijani classics in the Old City — kebabs and plov at Firuze (with a rooftop terrace) or home-style cooking and fresh tendir bread at Qaynana.
Cost: $10-20 per person TIP: Old City spots run a touch higher on price for the location, but it's convenient. Order plov or dolma to taste the national dishes, and finish with tea and pakhlava. Cards accepted at sit-down places. - 16:00 Highland Park & funicular — skyline views 1h30
Ride the short funicular (or walk) up to Highland Park (Dağüstü Park) for the best panorama of the Old City, the Caspian, and the Flame Towers, with the Martyrs' Lane memorial alongside.
Cost: Funicular ~1 AZN; park free TIP: This is the classic vantage point for photographing the Flame Towers. Be respectful at Martyrs' Lane (Şəhidlər Xiyabanı), a war memorial. The wind up here can be strong — keep a layer handy. Time it for late afternoon into golden hour. - 20:00 Flame Towers light show + dinner 2h30
After dark, the three Flame Towers run their LED flame-and-flag light show across the skyline. Watch from Highland Park or the Boulevard, then dine on a traditional Azerbaijani spread.
Cost: Free show + $15-35 dinner TIP: The light show runs through the evening — any clear vantage works, with Highland Park and the Boulevard the best. For dinner, the Shirvanshah Museum Restaurant adds live mugham music for a memorable first night. Reserve ahead.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel or Old City café
Icherisheher / center · $4-10
Tea with fresh tendir bread, cheese, honey, and eggs — a traditional Azerbaijani breakfast.
Lunch
Firuze or Qaynana
Old City · $10-20
Kebabs, plov, or home-style dishes in the walled Old City.
Dinner
Shirvanshah Museum Restaurant
Near the Boulevard · $20-45
Shah plov and dolma with live mugham music in a museum-like setting.
Almost everything today is on foot within and around the Old City. The Highland Park funicular is a short ride or a steep walk up. Use Bolt ($3-9) for longer hops or if the wind is fierce.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Heydar Aliyev Center + Carpet Museum + Caspian Boulevard + Fountains Square
Heydar Aliyev Center (Zaha Hadid) - Azerbaijan Carpet Museum - Caspian Boulevard (Bulvar) - Little Venice - Fountains SquareActivities
- 10:00 Heydar Aliyev Center (Zaha Hadid) 2h
Zaha Hadid's flowing, column-free white masterpiece (2012) — an icon of modern architecture. Tour the exhibition halls and the museum of Azerbaijan's history, and photograph the sweeping curves from the plaza.
Cost: ~25 AZN ($15) TIP: It's a Bolt ride out of the center (about 10-15 min). Check opening days before going, as it closes on some days. Allow time for both the building's exterior and the interior exhibitions. The undulating façade is the signature photo. - 13:00 Lunch + Azerbaijan Carpet Museum 2h30
Back toward the seafront, lunch on Azerbaijani food, then visit the Carpet Museum — housed in a building shaped like a rolled-up carpet on the Boulevard, showcasing the country's renowned weaving tradition (a UNESCO craft).
Cost: Museum ~15 AZN ($9) + lunch $10-20 TIP: The carpet-shaped building is a landmark in its own right. The displays explain regional weaving styles and motifs. It pairs naturally with a Boulevard walk afterward. Cards accepted at the museum and most restaurants. - 16:00 Caspian Boulevard (Bulvar) & Little Venice 2h
Stroll the 16km seafront promenade along the Caspian — the heart of Baku life — past gardens, the Little Venice canal network (gondola rides), the Baku Eye Ferris wheel, and views back to the Flame Towers.
Cost: Free walk; Little Venice gondola ~5-10 AZN TIP: The Boulevard is best in late afternoon as the heat eases and the light softens. A Little Venice gondola ride is a fun, low-cost extra. Keep a windproof layer — the seafront is exposed. Pause for tea and pakhlava at a Boulevard café. - 19:30 Fountains Square + dinner 2h30
Finish in Fountains Square, the lively pedestrian heart of downtown, ringed by cafés, shops, and the Nizami Street shopping avenue. Dine nearby on kebabs at Mangal Steak House or traditional fare at Sumakh.
Cost: $12-35 dinner TIP: Fountains Square and Nizami Street are great for an evening wander and people-watching. For dinner, Mangal Steak House does excellent grilled meats; Sumakh covers the full traditional range. Reserve at peak times. Cheap döner stalls are nearby for a budget option.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel or central café
City center · $4-10
Coffee or tea with pastries before heading to the Heydar Aliyev Center.
Lunch
Traditional restaurant near the Boulevard
Seafront / center · $10-20
Plov, dolma, or qutab before the Carpet Museum.
Dinner
Mangal Steak House or Sumakh
City center / Fountains Square · $15-35
Charcoal kebabs or a full traditional spread downtown.
Bolt to the Heydar Aliyev Center (10-15 min, $3-9), then walking for the Carpet Museum, Boulevard, and Fountains Square, which form a walkable seafront-and-center loop. The metro (İçərişəhər, Sahil, Nizami stations) is a cheap backup.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Gobustan + mud volcanoes + Yanar Dag + Ateshgah day trip
Gobustan petroglyphs (UNESCO) - mud volcanoes - Ateshgah fire temple - Yanar Dag burning hillside - return to BakuActivities
- 09:00 Gobustan petroglyphs (UNESCO) 2h30
Drive about 60km south to the Gobustan reserve, a UNESCO site preserving thousands of prehistoric rock carvings of people, animals, and boats across a stark, windswept landscape, with a modern interpretive museum.
Cost: Tour ~$40-60 (covers all sites) / entry ~10 AZN TIP: An organized day tour is the easiest way and usually bundles all four sites. Start the museum first for context, then walk among the carved rocks. It's exposed and windy — bring a layer, water, and sun protection. Wear sturdy shoes. - 11:30 Mud volcanoes 1h30
Near Gobustan, walk among bubbling cold-mud volcanoes — Azerbaijan has one of the world's highest concentrations of these grey, gurgling cones. A surreal, otherworldly landscape.
Cost: Included in the tour (4x4 transfer) TIP: The rough access track needs a rugged/4x4 vehicle, which tours arrange (sometimes via local drivers at extra cost). The mud is cold, not hot. It's windy and shadeless — protect your camera from blowing dust. Don't get too close to the rims. - 14:30 Lunch + Ateshgah fire temple 2h
After lunch, head toward Surakhani (about 30km east of Baku) for the Ateshgah, a 17th-18th-century pentagonal fire temple once used by Zoroastrian and Hindu fire-worshippers, with a central flame fed by natural gas.
Cost: Entry ~9-15 AZN + lunch $10-20 TIP: The temple reflects Azerbaijan's 'Land of Fire' identity and Silk Road history. The cell rooms around the courtyard display the worshippers' history. It's partly enclosed, so it works even in wind or light rain. Most tours include it in the loop. - 17:00 Yanar Dag — the burning hillside 1h
Finish at Yanar Dag ('burning mountain,' about 25km north), a hillside where natural gas keeps a wall of flame burning continuously — most dramatic in the late-afternoon and dusk light.
Cost: Entry ~9-15 AZN (included in most tours) TIP: Time it for dusk if your tour allows — the flames look best against a darkening sky. It's a quick stop. Keep back from the fire, especially on windy days. From here it's a short drive back into Baku. - 19:30 Return to Baku + farewell dinner 2h
Back in the city, round off the trip with a final Azerbaijani dinner and tea — traditional fare at Dolma or Nakhchivan, or a relaxed Old City evening.
Cost: $15-35 dinner TIP: After a long, windy day on the steppe, a sit-down dinner and a glass of tea is the perfect wind-down. Try shah plov if you haven't yet. The Old City is beautiful and quiet in the evening once day-trippers leave.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Early hotel breakfast
City center · $4-10
Eat before the tour pickup — day trips start early.
Lunch
Roadside or Surakhani restaurant
En route / Ateshgah area · $10-20
A simple plov or kebab lunch on the day-trip route (tours often include a stop).
Dinner
Dolma or Nakhchivan Restaurant
City center · $15-35
A farewell spread of dolma, plov, and grills back in Baku.
Best done as an organized day tour (~$40-60 per person) or a hired private driver (~$60-100), which bundle Gobustan, the mud volcanoes, Ateshgah, and Yanar Dag. The mud-volcano track needs a rugged vehicle, so DIY is awkward.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Baku → Sheki + the Khan's Palace
Drive/train to Sheki - Khan's Palace (UNESCO) - caravanserai - Old Sheki lanes - halva tastingActivities
- 08:30 Baku → Sheki (drive, tour, or train) 5h
Travel northwest to Sheki (about 300km / 4-5 hours), through the Caucasus foothills and changing landscape. Check into a hotel — staying in a restored caravanserai is a memorable option — before exploring.
Cost: Tour/driver ~$80-150; train/bus cheaper TIP: A guided tour or hired driver is the easiest, often stopping at sights en route. The train and intercity bus are cheaper but slower. Sheki is too far for a day trip — the overnight is what makes it worthwhile. Pack a small bag and leave heavier luggage in Baku. - 15:00 Khan's Palace (Sheki Khan Sarayı, UNESCO) 1h30
Sheki's masterpiece — the 18th-century summer palace of the Sheki khans, famous for its intricate frescoes and the shebeke: stained-glass lattice windows assembled from thousands of pieces of colored glass and wood without nails or glue.
Cost: Entry ~10 AZN + guided visit TIP: Photography inside may be restricted — check on arrival. The shebeke windows are the highlight; a guide explains the symbolism of the frescoes. The palace and the surrounding historic center are part of the UNESCO listing. - 17:00 Caravanserai + Old Sheki + halva 2h
Wander Sheki's historic core — the restored Silk Road caravanserai, cobbled lanes, and craft workshops — and taste the town's famous Sheki halva, a distinctive layered sweet found nowhere else quite the same.
Cost: Free walk + halva $2-5 TIP: Sheki halva is a must-try local specialty — buy some to take home. The caravanserai courtyard is atmospheric, especially if you're staying in one. The town has a slower, mountain pace that's a nice contrast to Baku. - 20:00 Dinner in Sheki 1h30
Dine on regional Azerbaijani mountain cuisine — Sheki has its own specialties, including piti (a slow-cooked lamb-and-chickpea stew in a clay pot) — in a caravanserai or local restaurant.
Cost: $10-20 per person TIP: Sheki piti is the regional dish to order. Dining in the caravanserai is atmospheric. The evening is quiet — a relaxed end to the travel day. Carry cash, as smaller places may not take cards.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Baku hotel breakfast
Baku · $4-10
An early breakfast before the drive to Sheki.
Lunch
Roadside restaurant en route
On the road to Sheki · $8-15
A simple plov or kebab stop on the journey (tours often include one).
Dinner
Sheki caravanserai or local restaurant
Sheki · $10-20
Sheki piti and regional mountain cuisine.
Baku → Sheki about 300km / 4-5 hours by car, tour, train, or bus. A hired driver or guided tour ($80-150) is easiest and can stop at sights en route; walking within compact Sheki.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Sheki morning + return to Baku
Sheki morning - Albanian church (Kish) - return to Baku - final Old City eveningActivities
- 09:00 Kish & the Caucasian Albanian church 1h30
Visit the village of Kish just outside Sheki, home to a small, ancient round church linked to Caucasian Albania — one of the region's oldest Christian sites, set against the mountains.
Cost: Entry ~5 AZN + transport TIP: Kish is a short hop from Sheki; a taxi or your driver can take you. The church and its excavations show the layered religious history of the region. A quiet, scenic morning stop before the long drive back. - 11:30 Sheki → Baku 5h
Travel back to Baku (about 4-5 hours), arriving in the late afternoon or evening for a final night in the capital.
Cost: Round trip included TIP: Break the long drive with a stop or two if you have a private driver. Back in Baku, collect any luggage you left and freshen up before a last evening out. - 19:30 Final Old City evening + dinner 2h30
Spend the last evening in the beautifully lit Old City — quiet once the day crowds have gone — with a farewell Azerbaijani dinner and tea.
Cost: $15-35 dinner TIP: The Old City is at its best in the evening. Pick up any souvenirs — carpets, copperware, tea sets, pakhlava — in the Old City shops. A relaxed final dinner of plov and tea is the right send-off.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Sheki hotel breakfast
Sheki · $4-10
Local breakfast before the morning's sights.
Lunch
Roadside restaurant en route
On the road back · $8-15
A simple lunch stop on the return drive.
Dinner
Old City restaurant
Icherisheher, Baku · $15-35
A farewell plov-and-tea dinner in the lit Old City.
Sheki → Baku about 4-5 hours by car/tour/train/bus. Kish is a short taxi hop from Sheki. Walking within Baku's Old City in the evening.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
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Packing Checklist
- ✓ Apply for the ASAN e-visa online (evisa.gov.az) before you fly, if your nationality requires one — only through the official government site
- ✓ A windproof outer layer year-round — Baku is the 'city of winds'
- ✓ Comfortable walking shoes for the Old City's cobbled lanes
- ✓ Summer (Jun-Aug): light breathable clothing, hat, sunglasses, SPF 50+, and a refillable water bottle for the shadeless Gobustan steppe
- ✓ Spring/autumn: light layers plus a thin jacket for breezy evenings
- ✓ Winter (Dec-Feb): a warm windproof coat, sweater, scarf, and gloves — mild but windy and grey
- ✓ Manat (AZN) cash for tea houses, stalls, the metro, taxis, and tipping (cards work at hotels and larger restaurants)
- ✓ A scarf and modest layer for mosque visits; bottled water for drinking
- ✓ Sheki overnight: pack a small bag and leave heavier luggage at your Baku hotel if returning there
- ✓ Sheki sits higher and cooler than Baku — bring an extra layer
- ✓ Cash (AZN) is more important in Sheki and rural areas, where cards are less widely accepted
- ✓ Book the Sheki trip (driver, tour, or train) ahead, and a caravanserai stay if you want one
Baku 5-Day Itinerary FAQ
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Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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