Day trips
Day trips from Cusco
Cusco is the gateway to the entire Sacred Valley of the Incas. Within 90 minutes by van or train, you reach the most concentrated ancient-civilization landscape in South America — with Machu Picchu as the iconic anchor.
Pisac
45 minutes by colectivo from Cusco
- Why go
- Sacred Valley village with one of South America’s best traditional markets (Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday) and the dramatic Pisac ruins on the hillside above — arguably more impressive than Machu Picchu in scale and views.
- How to get there
- Colectivo van from Calle Puputi (~45 min, ~10 soles). Or organized half-day tour.
- How long to spend
- Half to full day depending on whether you hike up to the ruins.
- Honest note
- Sunday market is the most photographed but most touristy. Tuesday and Thursday markets feel more authentic.
Ollantaytambo
1h 30m by colectivo from Cusco
- Why go
- Living Inca village with the original grid layout still functioning. The fortress ruins above town are spectacular; the village below is a working community with restaurants and lodgings. This is also where you board the train to Machu Picchu.
- How to get there
- Colectivo (~1h 30m, ~15 soles) or organized Sacred Valley tour.
- How long to spend
- Full day, or overnight as your Machu Picchu staging point.
- Honest note
- Overnighting here means you catch the earliest trains to Machu Picchu (4:30am) and can be at the citadel as it opens.
Machu Picchu
4h via Ollantaytambo + train + bus from Cusco
- Why go
- The reason most travelers come to Peru. The Lost City of the Incas, abandoned in the 16th century and unknown to outsiders until 1911. The early-morning approach with mist clearing over the citadel is unmatched.
- How to get there
- Colectivo to Ollantaytambo (~1h 30m) + train to Aguas Calientes (~1h 45m) + bus up (~30 min). Tickets sell out weeks ahead in high season.
- How long to spend
- Long day trip is possible but exhausting; an overnight in Aguas Calientes is significantly better.
- Honest note
- Book entry tickets 2-4 weeks ahead, especially May-August. Bring passport for entry.
Maras Salt Pans + Moray
1h by car from Cusco
- Why go
- Pre-Inca salt pans (3,000+ shallow pools fed by a salt spring) and the circular terrace ruins of Moray — an agricultural laboratory where each terrace has a distinct microclimate.
- How to get there
- Half-day organized tour from Cusco, or hire a taxi for the day.
- How long to spend
- Half day, often combined with Chinchero or Ollantaytambo for a full day.
- Honest note
- Salt pans are most striking in dry season (May-September) when the white crystals are visible. Rainy season turns them muddy brown.
Rainbow Mountain (Vinicunca)
3h+ by van each way from Cusco
- Why go
- Mineral-striped peak at 5,200m elevation. Iconic Instagram photo, but a hard high-altitude hike (3-5 hours round trip from the trailhead) at altitude that’s punishing if you haven’t acclimatized.
- How to get there
- Organized day tour from Cusco (4am pickup, return ~8pm).
- How long to spend
- Full long day — this is your most demanding day-trip option.
- Honest note
- Acclimatize in Cusco for 3+ days before attempting. Bring rain shell — weather is fast-changing at altitude. May-September is the dry window.
