Destination & Travel Theme
Destination: Peru — Cusco, Sacred Valley, and Machu Picchu
Theme: Inca civilization, high-altitude trekking, and one of the world's greatest archaeological sites
Recommended Duration: 7–10 days
Best Season: May–September (dry season; best visibility; cooler nights)
Budget Range: $60–150 USD per person/day
Visa: Most nationalities receive 90-day tourist visa on arrival at Lima's Jorge Chávez Airport
Machu Picchu is simultaneously the world's most famous archaeological site and, somehow, still worth the hype. Set on a ridge at 2,430m above sea level, hidden from Spanish conquistadors for 400 years, and rediscovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911 — the Inca citadel reveals itself from the Sun Gate or Inca Bridge trail to travelers who earn the view by foot. The Sacred Valley surrounding it contains Inca terraces, salt pans, living indigenous markets, and ancient ritual sites that collectively tell a more complete story of Inca civilization than Machu Picchu alone. This guide covers the complete circuit from Cusco to the classic Inca Trail and alternatives.
Getting to Peru & Cusco
International Entry: Lima's Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) is the primary hub. From Lima, fly to Cusco (1h15m, $80–150 one-way; LAN Peru, Avianca, Sky Airline).
Altitude Awareness: Cusco sits at 3,400m — arriving from sea level, virtually everyone feels the effects of altitude (soroche): headache, breathlessness, nausea, poor sleep. Essential protocol:
- Arrive at least 2 days before strenuous trekking
- Drink coca tea (traditional Andean remedy; widely available and mildly effective)
- Avoid alcohol for first 48 hours
- Sleep early; take it easy
- Diamox (acetazolamide) is a prescription medication effective for prevention; consult a doctor before travel
Cusco: The Inca Capital
What to See
Cusco City Center (Plaza de Armas)
The main square of the former Inca capital — the Spanish built their Cathedral (1559–1654) and Church of La Compañía de Jesús directly on top of Inca palace foundations. Look at the lower courses of any colonial building in Cusco — those are original Inca stones, perfectly fitted without mortar, that have survived more earthquakes than the Spanish walls above them.
Sacsayhuamán (SAK-sy-wah-MAN)
The massive military/ceremonial complex on the hillside above Cusco — enormous limestone blocks weighing up to 125 tonnes fitted together with extraordinary precision. Nobody has explained definitively how the Inca moved and placed these stones. The panoramic view of Cusco from Sacsayhuamán is excellent. Entry covered by Boleto Turístico (tourist pass, $46 USD for full circuit).
Qorikancha (Temple of the Sun)
The most sacred site in the Inca Empire — a temple to Inti (the Sun God) with walls originally covered in gold leaf. After the Spanish conquest, they built the Church of Santo Domingo directly on its foundations. You can still see the extraordinarily precise Inca stonework in the curved temple walls beneath the colonial church. Entry: 20 soles.
San Pedro Market
The daily market where Cusco's residents actually shop — produce, grains, street food (juices, soups, roasted guinea pig), and tourist crafts. Eat the chicken soup (caldo de gallina) at the market stalls for a cheap, authentic lunch. Very different energy from the San Blas tourist market.
Cusco Cuisine
- Cuy (Guinea Pig): Peru's most notorious dish — a whole roasted or fried guinea pig, crispy skin, tender meat. Traditionally eaten on special occasions; now a tourist attraction. Try at Pachapapa in San Blas or Ciccolina.
- Lomo Saltado: Stir-fried beef with tomatoes, onions, and fried potatoes over rice — Chinese-Peruvian (chifa) fusion that's become a national staple. Excellent and cheap everywhere.
- Alpaca: Grilled alpaca steak — gamier than beef, tender, very lean. Often served with quinoa risotto at mid-range restaurants.
- Chicha Morada: Purple corn juice — sweet, spiced, non-alcoholic. Essential local drink.
- Pisco Sour: Peru's national cocktail — pisco brandy, lime, egg white, and angostura bitters. Excellent at the bars around Plaza de Armas.
The Sacred Valley
Pisac (Market & Ruins)
Pisac Market (Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday): The most colorful indigenous market in Peru — Quechua-speaking communities from surrounding mountains descend wearing traditional dress to sell textiles, ceramics, and produce. Arrive early (before 9am) when locals predominate; afternoons are more tourist-oriented. Check the Pisac Intihuatana (solar calendar) ruins above the market for spectacular mountain-framed terracing.
Pisac Archaeological Site: A large Inca complex above the town — terraced agricultural platforms, irrigation systems, ceremonial baths, and military structures spread across multiple mountain ridges. Less crowded than Machu Picchu; guided tours illuminate the site's complexity. Take the dirt road taxi up and walk back down.
Ollantaytambo
One of the best-preserved Inca towns in Peru — still inhabited on original Inca street grid. The main ruins (Temple of the Sun on the hillside) feature some of the Inca world's finest stone masonry. The enormous pink granite ceremonial stones were quarried 6km away and transported across a river and up a cliff face — a feat the Inca never completed (Spanish arrived first; the half-finished quarry is visible on the opposite mountainside).
Ollantaytambo is where most trekkers begin the Inca Trail (the trailhead is at km 82 on the train line from Cusco). Also the rail departure point for the Machu Picchu Pueblo/Aguas Calientes train.
Moray & Salineras de Maras
Moray: 40km from Cusco — three giant circular terracing systems, possibly an Inca agricultural laboratory where different crops were tested at different temperature microclimates. The geometric precision is striking. Very few tourists make the detour; go early.
Salineras de Maras (Salt Pans): An extraordinary sight — 3,000 individual salt pools cascading down a hillside, still actively producing salt as they have for centuries. Saline spring water fills the pools; evaporation leaves a crystalline white crust. Accessible by minibus from Maras village or on foot from Moray.
Machu Picchu: Everything You Need to Know
Getting There
Option 1: Classic Inca Trail (4 days)
The most famous short trek in South America — 43km through cloud forest, high mountain passes (Dead Woman's Pass at 4,215m), Inca ruins, and subtropical jungle, arriving at the Sun Gate (Intipunku) overlooking Machu Picchu at dawn on Day 4.
- Permit required: Limited to 500 trekkers/day (including guides and porters). Book 5–6 months in advance at machupicchu.gob.pe
- Guides: Mandatory — licensed guides are required by law
- Cost: $700–1,100 USD with guide, camping equipment, and meals (operator packages)
- Condition: Moderate-challenging — high altitude, 4,215m pass, daily 12–16km walking
Option 2: Salkantay Trek (5 days)
Longer, more spectacular alternative — passes beneath Salkantay Glacier (6,271m) at a 4,600m pass, then descends through cloud forest to Machu Picchu. No permit required. Easier to book with 2–4 weeks notice. Cost: $400–700 USD.
Option 3: Inca Jungle Trek (4 days)
Via Santa Teresa — biking on mountain roads, zip-lining, hot springs at Cocalmayo, then short hike to Aguas Calientes and Machu Picchu. Most leisurely option. $200–350 USD.
Option 4: Train + Bus (No Trek)
Cusco → Ollantaytambo by tourist transfer (2 hours) → PeruRail or Inca Rail to Aguas Calientes (1h45m, $60–120 one-way) → bus to Machu Picchu (30 min, $12). Book train tickets weeks ahead in peak season.
Machu Picchu Entry
Tickets must be booked online in advance: machupicchu.gob.pe
Entry $52–65 USD (price varies by circuit). Limited daily entry (4,500 visitors/day). Book 2–4 weeks ahead; peak months (June–August) require earlier booking.
Circuit options:
- Circuit 1 (Upper Terrace): Postcard views, Sun Gate, Inca Bridge
- Circuit 2 (Complete): Most comprehensive
- Circuit 3 (Lower): Agricultural terraces and Temple of the Sun
- Huayna Picchu hike ($20 extra, limited to 400/day): The mountain visible behind Machu Picchu in most photographs — vertiginous climb, extraordinary views
- Machu Picchu Mountain: Higher, less busy than Huayna Picchu, excellent panoramas
Best Time to Visit Machu Picchu:
- First entry (6am): Best light, least crowded
- Avoid 10am–2pm: Maximum crowd density
- Stay for afternoon light (3–5pm) which illuminates the site differently
Photography: Classic shot from the upper terraces, looking northeast. Arrive at opening time and walk immediately to the upper circuit terrace near the guard house.
8-Day Peru Itinerary
| Day | Location | Activities |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arrive Cusco | Acclimatize, city walk, coca tea |
| 2 | Cusco | Sacsayhuamán, Qorikancha, Plaza de Armas |
| 3 | Sacred Valley | Pisac ruins, Ollantaytambo, salt pans |
| 4–7 | Inca Trail / Salkantay | Trek to Machu Picchu |
| 7 | Machu Picchu | Full day at the citadel |
| 8 | Return Cusco → Lima | Depart |
Altitude & Health Management
At Cusco's altitude (3,400m) and on the Inca Trail (4,215m peak):
- Acclimatize properly: Don't fly from sea level and trek immediately
- Hydration: Drink 3–4 liters of water daily
- Diamox (acetazolamide): Prescription medication — 125mg twice daily starting 24 hours before ascent reduces altitude symptoms significantly. Discuss with your doctor.
- Symptoms to take seriously: Confusion, loss of coordination, or severe headache require descent immediately
Responsible Trekking in Peru
Porter Welfare: The Inca Trail regulation requires minimum wages and weight limits for porters. Choose trekking companies certified by the Porter Project. Tip generously — porters earn $20–30/day before tips.
Leave No Trace: The Inca Trail requires carrying out all waste; some operators supply pack-in/pack-out equipment. Never leave litter on the trail or at archaeological sites.
Photography Ethics: Always ask before photographing indigenous people and market vendors. A tip or small purchase is appropriate for portrait subjects. Never photograph against someone's wishes.
Buying Crafts: Buy directly from artisan communities (Pisac market, San Blas neighborhood workshops in Cusco) rather than tourist shops. Authentic alpaca wool vs. acrylic: rub a small amount — real alpaca is soft, warm, and doesn't pill; acrylic pills immediately and feels synthetic.
Peru is one of the world's most rewarding adventure travel destinations — extraordinary history, exceptional food (Lima has the world's best restaurant scene outside Europe and Japan), dramatic landscapes, and a living indigenous culture that predates the Inca by millennia. The journey from Lima's Pacific coast to Cusco's Inca heartland to Machu Picchu's cloud forest is one of the great travel itineraries on earth.
📸 Peru Photography Gallery
Experience Peru's most iconic landscapes, from the mystical Machu Picchu to the dramatic Sacred Valley through these stunning travel photographs.
Machu Picchu & Inca Heritage
The iconic Machu Picchu citadel nestled high in the Andes Mountains, Peru's most visited archaeological wonder.
Detailed views of Machu Picchu's precisely crafted Inca stone structures and terraces.
Sacred Valley Landscapes
Dramatic mountain landscapes and traditional Quechua agricultural terraces of the Sacred Valley.
Majestic Andean peaks and mountain scenery surrounding the Sacred Valley.
Indigenous Culture & Villages
Colorful traditional Quechua textiles and indigenous communities preserving Inca heritage.
Local craft markets showcasing traditional Peruvian textiles and handmade goods.
Inca Trails & Hiking
Historic Inca trails winding through mountain landscapes leading to ancient sites.
Adventure & Exploration
Cusco's historic colonial architecture blending with Inca heritage and traditions.
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