Göbeklitepe was first noted as an archaeological site during a field survey undertaken in the region in the 1960s by the Universities of İstanbul and Chicago. Remarkable amounts of flint-artefacts spread across the surface of the mound indicated that this was the location of a significant site from the Neolithic period. However, the prehistoric architecture, including the special buildings with their magnificent T-shaped limestone pillars, was not discovered until first excavations led by Harald Hauptmann and Klaus Schmidt of the German Archaeological Institute, in close cooperation with the Şanlıurfa Archaeology Museum. These excavations These excavations, started in 1995, were continued by Schmidt until 2014.
In 2014, the excavation directorship passed to the Şanlıurfa Archaeology Museum, and in 2019 to Prof. Dr. Necmi Karul from Istanbul University Department of Prehistoric Archaeology. Since autumn 2014, Dr. Lee Clare has held the position of field and research director for the German Archaeological Institute. After the completion of the two permanent protective shelters at Göbeklitepe in 2017, the site was inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 2018. In 2019, Göbeklitepe saw a massive increase in public interest during the official “Göbeklitepe Year” of the Turkish Ministry of Culture, and in 2020, together with Karahantepe, it became one of the focal points of the new Taş Tepeler project.