This chapter describes four different rock-cut cliff settlements located in the Koramaz Valley that we explored and surveyed, following a brief introduction on rock-cut cliff settlements. The concept of rock-cut cliff settlement will be displayed comprehensively in the introduction, giving prominent examples from the Cappadocia and the examples that shaped under the different cultural practices and the historical backgrounds from the near distant lands of Anatolia such as Greece, Italy, Spain, France. Subsequently, the four rock-cut cliff settlements of Koramaz Valley will be presented: Küçük Bürüngüz Cliff Settlements, Vekse Cliff Settlements, Ağırnas Cliff Settlements, and Dimitre Cliff Settlements. Küçük Bürüngüz Cliff Settlements, a small settlement with only eight structures, and Vekse Cliff Settlements, located on both walls of the valley with few rock-cut structures, are too small to be a village on their own. These relevant structures, together with the dwellings on the surface, probably had been used as storage rooms, feed-lots, or dovecotes. In the other two rock-cut villages, Ağırnas and Dimitre Cliff Settlements, which are located in the same valley only three kilometers apart, there are 476 rock-cut structures. These two complexes, with all their structures from churches to defense structures and dwellings, are probably the biggest two rock-cut villages of Turkey that have been explored until now. The significance of the Koramaz Valley Settlements, as a part of this cosmopolitan culture of Anatolia, will be discussed in the final chapter compared with the other remarkable examples of Cappadocian rock-cut settlements. The similarities and differences between the rock-cut architectural practices of the Koramaz valley dwellers and the nearby communities will be investigated.