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Cusco
Cusco was the capital of the Inca Empire and the most important city in pre-Columbian South America. Its historic centre is genuinely remarkable: Spanish baroque churches built on top of Inca stonework, producing something that belongs to neither tradition entirely. The real problem is the pilgrimage economy that has built up around Machu Picchu. Machu Picchu itself is capped at around 4,500 visitors per day, which still means sharing it with thousands of other people during a timed slot. It remains one of the most extraordinary places on earth. The crowds are real and manageable with planning.
Crowd pressure
Machu Picchu entrance is capped and requires advance booking months ahead. The Inca Trail books out a year in advance in peak season.
Why visit
Machu Picchu is legitimately one of the great built environments in human history. Cusco itself has extraordinary Inca stonework beneath Spanish colonial architecture.
Best window
May to September (dry season) — April and October are underrated shoulder months
Getting there
Flights from Lima (1.5hrs). Train from Puno. Train or bus from Aguas Calientes required for Machu Picchu.
The honest version
Altitude sickness is real — most people need 1-2 days to acclimatise. Booking Machu Picchu requires significant advance planning. Aguas Calientes is a joyless gateway town.
Instead of Cusco
Instead of
Cusco
Peru
Try
Choquequirao
Peru
Choquequirao is a Machu Picchu-scale Inca site that you reach by multi-day trek and will almost certainly have largely to yourself. The trade is effort for solitude.
Instead of
Cusco
Peru
Try
Huaraz
Peru
Huaraz offers world-class Andean adventure — glaciers, high passes, lake basins — without the Machu Picchu booking complexity. A different Peru entirely.
Layers
Region
At a glance
- Country
- Peru
- Region
- Cusco Region
- Heat Score
- 88/100
- Cost level
- $$
- Alternatives
- 2