Located in the south-east of the village of Dogala, the inn is located in the village cemetery just south of the paved road connecting Derinkuyu and Dogala. Although the coverings have been completely removed in the courtyard section of the Doğala Inn, which is in ruins today, the body walls have partially survived to the present day. The supports available in the courtyard and the closed section give us information about the support system of the structure. We can say that the pointed vault is used in the covering system of the structure, the walls of which are seen to remain under the ground from place to place, according to the available data. The building, which was built as rubble stone mesh and smooth cut stone coating, has a rectangular plan in the north-south direction. It consists of two parts, the closed courtyard in the north and the courtyard in the south. The courtyard section, the portal of which has not survived, is surrounded in a “U” shape from three directions with a portico system formed by pointed arches thrown on sequins placed Decently in the east-west and south. As in the courtyard section, there is a closed section whose door has not reached today, as can be seen from the data; four rows of four payes and wall payes were divided into 5 areas latitudinally by arches thrown in the east-west direction, and these sides were interrupted by a longitudinal pitch formed by arches thrown in the opposite direction on the axis. Large-sized inns with this plan scheme have a dome in the center of the closed section. However, when we compare the dimensions of our structure with the location and the current plan diagram, in which it bears great similarity to the Dolay Han, the possibility of being domeless will be a more accurate inference. It would be useful to restore the structure in a state of ruin immediately.