Peru Travel Guide: Lima, Cusco, Machu Picchu in 2026
Explore Peru with our travel guide to top sights, must-visit places, and local experiences. Explore where to go, what to see, and how to enjoy this magical country.
Peru is the country where Machu Picchu is just the headline — the rest of Peru rewards travelers willing to look beyond Cusco. Lima is the coastal capital with the world's most decorated food scene: Central (World's 50 Best #1 in 2023), Maido (Latin America's 50 Best #1 multiple years), the casual ceviche institutions in Miraflores. The Sacred Valley is where you acclimatize to altitude before Machu Picchu (Belmond and Inkaterra and Explora have the luxury lodges). Beyond the gringo trail: the Amazon at Iquitos and Puerto Maldonado, Arequipa's white-volcanic-stone colonial city, the desert oasis of Huacachina, Lake Titicaca's Uros floating islands.
Our Peru coverage focuses on Lima's restaurant scene (still the world's most exciting), the Sacred Valley itinerary that makes Machu Picchu work, and the Belmond and Inkaterra lodges defining Peruvian luxury.
The travel personality: The Andean Explorer
Quick facts
Live right now
Best time to visit
| Season | Why go |
|---|---|
| May–September (dry, cool in Andes) | Coastal Lima is famously grey for 9 months — opposite of mountain season |
| April, October | Shoulder season — fewer tourists, often cheaper, weather still good |
| November–March (rainy season, Inca Trail closes in February) | Off-season — quiet, best deals, plan around weather |
Top cities to visit
Experiences you'll probably love
- Machu Picchu at sunrise (Inca Trail or train)
- Tasting menu at Central, Maido or Astrid y Gastón in Lima
- Floating Uros islands on Lake Titicaca
- Rainbow Mountain (Vinicunca) day trip from Cusco
- Amazon jungle lodge near Puerto Maldonado
Not many tourists know about…
- Choquequirao — Machu Picchu's larger sister, 4-day trek
- Huacachina desert oasis
- Chachapoyas and Kuelap fortress (northern Peru)
- Mancora beach town for surf and seafood
- Colca Canyon condor watching
- Caral — oldest civilization in the Americas (north of Lima)
If you visit only once, make it this
The 15th-century Inca citadel sitting at 2,430 meters on a ridge between two peaks — the Sun Gate sunrise view is the headline. Hike the 4-day Inca Trail or take the Belmond Hiram Bingham luxury train from Cusco. Permits and tickets must be booked months ahead.
Inca Trail permits sell out 6+ months ahead. Train tickets 2-3 months. Best May-September.
Where to walk & breathe
The Urubamba Valley between Cusco and Machu Picchu — Inca agricultural terraces still cultivated, traditional Quechua villages, the Maras salt mines (3,000+ pre-Inca salt ponds cascading down a hillside). The Moray circular agricultural laboratories.
Base in Sacred Valley to acclimatize to altitude (2,800m) before Machu Picchu. Multiple Belmond/Inkaterra/Tambo del Inka hotels here.
Museums worth your time
Peru's flagship art museum — pre-Columbian textiles and ceramics through Spanish colonial through contemporary. The neoclassical 1872 Palacio de la Exposición building itself worth the visit.
Visit website →Rafael Larco Herrera's pre-Columbian collection — Moche, Chimú, Nazca pottery. The famous (and surprising) erotic ceramics gallery. White-walled garden setting in Pueblo Libre.
Visit website →More hands-on workshop than museum — bean-to-bar chocolate from Peruvian Amazon cacao. Tasting flights include the famous chocolate with rocoto chili and salt.
Visit website →The Insider's Edit
A few additions for travelers planning Peru at the highest end:
The Peruvian photographer's foundation in Barranco — rotating contemporary photography shows alongside Testino's portrait work.
Pre-Columbian gold, silver, and famously the erotic ceramics gallery — one of South America's great private collections.
Cusco to Machu Picchu — the most stylish way to reach Machu Picchu. Brunch, observation car, live music.
Inkaterra Machu Picchu Pueblo runs a serious orchid collection and Andean bear conservation program — guests can join.
Where to eat
Chef Virgilio Martínez's tasting menu through Peru's ecosystems (sea level to 4,200m altitude) — World's 50 Best #1 in 2023. Pico, the bar, plus Mater Iniciativa (research lab on the same compound).
Mitsuharu 'Micha' Tsumura's Nikkei (Japanese-Peruvian) tasting menu — Latin America's 50 Best #1 multiple years. The 50-Best lineage with its own intensity.
Gastón Acurio's flagship — the restaurant that ignited Peruvian fine dining in the 1990s. Refreshed under chef Diego Muñoz. Casa Hacienda Moreyra setting.
Gastón Acurio's casual ceviche specialist — lunchtime institution. The classic cebiche, leche de tigre shots, the tiradito sashimi-style. Multiple international outposts.
Where to stay
16th-century monastery converted to a hotel — original colonial paintings throughout, oxygen-enriched rooms (Cusco sits at 3,400m). The most atmospheric Cusco stay.
Eco-lodge in 12 acres of cloud forest at the base of Machu Picchu mountain — bungalows hidden in vegetation, the bird sanctuary, the explora-style guide system.
The only hotel directly at the Machu Picchu entrance — you can be at the Sun Gate before the trains arrive. Just 31 rooms, the most exclusive access in Peru.
All-inclusive lodge in the Sacred Valley — Inca-meets-modern architecture, expert guides for daily excursions to Maras, Moray, the ruins. The Patagonia-explora template applied to the Andes.
Realistic daily budget
Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.
Travel safety & inclusivity
Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.
Major festivals
Need a visa for Peru?
Many travelers can enter Peru visa-free, but it depends on your passport. Check your specific requirements:
Powered by evisas.com · We'll open your nationality-specific requirements page in a new tab.
Partner link — Locals Insider may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. Always confirm the latest requirements with the official embassy.
Not sure if Peru is right for your next trip? We'll compare 53 destinations against your travel style. Take our country matcher quiz →
Frequently asked questions about Peru
Do I need a visa to visit Peru?
Citizens of the EU/Nordic countries, UK, US, Canada, Australia, Japan, and most of Latin America can enter Peru visa-free for up to 183 days as tourists — one of the most generous policies in the region. Russian citizens also enter visa-free for up to 90 days. The 183-day stamp is granted in single or multiple chunks within a 365-day period — immigration sometimes gives 90 or 120 days as a default; ask for 183 if you need it. Passport must be valid for at least 6 months from entry. Andean Migration Card (TAM) is now digital — you'll fill it out electronically on arrival or via the official Migraciones portal. Keep proof of onward travel and accommodation ready; immigration spot-checks both.
How do I plan a Machu Picchu trip?
Plan early — Machu Picchu requires timed-entry tickets and the Inca Trail requires permits booked 5–7 months ahead in peak season (May–September). The standard route: fly into Cusco (3,400m), spend 2 days acclimatizing (essential — altitude sickness ruins trips), drop down to the Sacred Valley (2,800m — gentler altitude, base in Urubamba or Ollantaytambo for 1–2 nights), take the train from Ollantaytambo to Aguas Calientes (PeruRail or IncaRail, ~2 hours), then bus up to Machu Picchu (2,430m). For the Classic Inca Trail (4 days, 42km, closed all February for maintenance), book through a licensed operator — independent trekking isn't allowed. Alternatives if Inca Trail permits are gone: Salkantay (5 days, no permit needed) or Lares trek.
When is the best time to visit Peru?
May to September is the dry season in the Cusco region and the Andes — clearer skies at Machu Picchu, best conditions for the Inca Trail (the trail closes entirely in February for maintenance). July is the busiest month; May, June, and September are the sweet spots — same dry weather, fewer crowds. October to April is wetter but lush — manageable if you're flexible, and shoulder months April and October offer the best balance. Lima and the coast follow a different pattern: December to April is the only window with reliable sun (the rest of the year sits under a coastal fog called garúa). For the Amazon (Iquitos, Manú), dry season runs May–October, but wildlife viewing is excellent year-round. Inti Raymi festival (24 June in Cusco) is spectacular but books out fast.
How do I handle altitude in Cusco?
Cusco sits at 3,400m — high enough to give most visitors mild altitude sickness if they don't prepare. Three rules. Drop down to the Sacred Valley first (2,800m, Urubamba or Ollantaytambo) for 1–2 nights before going up to Cusco — this is the single best preventive move, recommended by every reputable Peru operator. Move slowly on day one — no alcohol, light meals, plenty of water (3+ liters), early bed. Drink coca tea (legal, locally traditional, helps) and consider Soroche pills from any Peruvian pharmacy — about $5, taken preventively. Symptoms to watch: headache, dizziness, shortness of breath, nausea. If they worsen, descend. Bring a copy of any altitude medication prescriptions if you're sensitive — Diamox (acetazolamide) is the standard preventive. Machu Picchu itself is lower at 2,430m and most people feel fine there.
Beyond Machu Picchu, what should I add?
Peru's food and landscapes deserve at least 10–14 days, not just the standard 5-day Cusco loop. Lima (2–3 days) — South America's culinary capital, with Central, Maido, and Kjolle all in the World's 50 Best, plus the Larcomar cliffs and the Barranco district. The Sacred Valley (Ollantaytambo, Pisac, Chinchero — the ruins are arguably more atmospheric than Machu Picchu without the crowds). Rainbow Mountain (Vinicunca) for the photo-famous striped peak, a punishing 5,200m day-hike from Cusco. Humantay Lake for an easier alternative. Arequipa for white-stone colonial architecture and access to the Colca Canyon (deeper than the Grand Canyon, condors). Lake Titicaca (Puno) for Uros floating islands and Taquile. For the wild: Manú or Tambopata for serious Amazon rainforest.
Locals Insider's Articles About Peru
Articles in this section are written by Locals Insider editorial team. Want to share your experience about Peru? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com.















