Mowando

Region

Sacred Valley

The heart of the Inca empire with Cusco the historical capital (UNESCO 1983), the Sacred Valley of Ollantaytambo and Pisac, the Machu Picchu citadel (1450, New 7 Wonders 2007) and the mythical 4-day Inca Trail.

4.90

Cusco and Machu Picchu is Peru's major tourist region and one of the world's most powerful cultural destinations. Located in the south-eastern Andes at dizzying altitudes (Cusco 3,400 m, Sacred Valley 2,800 m, Machu Picchu 2,430 m), it concentrates the bulk of the Inca Empire (1438-1533) heritage — historical imperial capital, lost citadel rediscovered in 1911, major archaeological sites over 100 km around the former centre of Tahuantinsuyu.

The region subdivides into three complementary hubs. Cusco (the base city, 3,400 m, 450,000 inhabitants) is the former Inca capital that became baroque capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru (1533-1821). Its historic centre (UNESCO 1983) layers cyclopean Inca walls (Coricancha, Sacsayhuamán, Hatunrumiyoc) and Spanish colonial architecture (cathedral, monasteries, Plaza de Armas). It's the trip's logistical base and a fascinating site in its own right (minimum 2-3 nights). The Sacred Valley of the Incas (stretches 60 km along the Urubamba River, altitude 2,800-3,000 m) shelters the major sites of Pisac (market and agricultural terraces), Ollantaytambo (Inca fortress and still-inhabited Inca village, train departure point), Maras-Moray (millennial pink salt pans and circular agricultural amphitheatre), Chinchero (traditional textiles). 2-3 nights in the valley allow gentler altitude acclimatization than Cusco. Machu Picchu (2,430 m, 110 km from Cusco) is the experience's apex — Inca citadel built in 1450 by Emperor Pachacutec, abandoned after Spanish conquest, rediscovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911. Accessible only by train from Ollantaytambo + bus from Aguas Calientes, or by the mythical 4-day Inca Trail (limited to 500 trekkers/day, permits to book 6 months ahead).

The pitch is clear: it's Peru's absolute must-see, justifying on its own a 7-10 day trip. The region requires strict logistics (Machu Picchu booking, PeruRail train, Aguas Calientes or Sacred Valley hotels), altitude acclimatization (1-2 days at Cusco without effort before any trek) and a substantial budget (Machu Picchu entry USD 50-60, train €75-500/person, Inca Trail USD 600-900/person). But the experience is unmatched.

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Frequently asked questions

How many days for Cusco and Machu Picchu?+
Minimum 5 nights, ideally 6-7 nights to enjoy without rushing. Our recommended formula: 2 nights in Cusco (mandatory altitude acclimatization), 2-3 nights in the Sacred Valley (Ollantaytambo and surroundings, at 2,800 m less taxing than Cusco), 1-2 nights dedicated to Machu Picchu (Aguas Calientes or Sanctuary Lodge), return to Cusco for the flight. In just 3-4 days, the trip is too short and exhausting (altitude sickness + rushed Machu Picchu). If you do the 4-day Inca Trail trek, add 2 days acclimatization at Cusco before + 1 night at Aguas Calientes after = minimum 7 nights.
How to book Machu Picchu entry?+
Mandatory advance booking on the official site tuboleto.cultura.pe (French version available). Limit: 4,500 visitors/day split into 3 time slots (6am-12pm, 12pm-3pm, 2pm-5pm). Rates: PEN 152 (~€38) for circuit 1 or 2 classic, PEN 200 (~€50) with Huayna Picchu or Machu Picchu Mountain climb (complementary treks, panoramic views, to book 4-6 months ahead, very limited spots). For travellers with little anticipation: go through a local Cusco agency that can secure the last tickets, count +€20-30. The ticket only grants single entry — plan 3-4h on site. Mandatory local guide since 2017 (€35-50 per guide for 2-5 people).
Should you take PeruRail or IncaRail train?+
Both operate the same Ollantaytambo-Aguas Calientes line (1h30, spectacular Andean scenery) with similar quality. PeruRail (Belmond group, more trains, Expedition €75/one-way €100/return, Vistadome €130/one-way €200/return, Hiram Bingham luxury €500/one-way €800/return meals + champagne) is the historical operator. IncaRail (competitor since 2009, more economical Voyager classes €60-100 return, The First Class €200-300 return meals) is more flexible and cheaper on average. Departure from Ollantaytambo (2h drive from Cusco, transfers optional) rather than Cusco-Poroy (Cusco-Poroy trains suspended since 2022). Book 1-2 months ahead in high season (June-August), 2-3 weeks in low season.
The 4-day Inca Trail, how does it work?+
The classic Inca Trail (Camino Inka, 43 km, 4 days / 3 nights) is one of the world's most mythical treks. Departure from Piscacucho (km 82, accessible by train), crossing the Warmiwañusca passes (4,215 m, 'dead woman') and Phuyupatamarca, archaeological sites of Llactapata, Sayacmarca, Wiñay Wayna, arrival via the Sun Gate (Inti Punku) overlooking Machu Picchu at sunrise on day 4. Strict limit of 500 permits/day (300 trekkers + 200 porters and guides), to book 6 months ahead in high season via an authorized agency (SAS, Llama Path, Alpaca Expeditions). Closed in February for maintenance. Cost: USD 600-900/person all-inclusive (permit + guide + porters + tents + meals + return train + Machu Picchu entry). Alternatives if full: Salkantay trek 5 days (glacial landscapes, no permit), Lares 3 days (Quechua villages), short 2-day Inca Trail (km 104, more accessible).
Cusco or Sacred Valley to sleep?+
Both, ideally. Cusco offers urban life, restaurants, direct access to city sites (Coricancha, Sacsayhuamán) and the cultural experience (Andean music, San Pedro market, festivals). But at 3,400 m, altitude is more taxing — sleep sometimes difficult the first 2 nights. The Sacred Valley (Urubamba, Ollantaytambo, at 2,800 m i.e. 600 m lower) offers gentler acclimatization and a spectacular rural setting (green Andes, archaeological sites nearby). Our ideal formula: 2 nights in Cusco for acclimatization and urban visit, then 2-3 nights in the Sacred Valley (charm hotels in Urubamba, Ollantaytambo, Yucay, or Belmond Tambo del Inka), then 1 night at Aguas Calientes or back to Cusco depending on Machu Picchu schedule, then final night at Cusco before return flight.

Our verdict

Cusco and Machu Picchu is Peru's absolute must-see — one of the world's most powerful cultural destinations, justifying on its own a 7-10 day trip to South America. Our recommendation: minimum 5-6 nights for the region. Start with 2 nights in Cusco (altitude acclimatization, Plaza de Armas, Coricancha, Sacsayhuamán, San Pedro market visit), then 2-3 nights in the Sacred Valley (Ollantaytambo, Pisac, Maras-Moray, accommodation lower in altitude than Cusco), then 1-2 nights dedicated to Machu Picchu (Ollantaytambo-Aguas Calientes train, night at Aguas Calientes or Sanctuary Lodge, early-morning Machu Picchu visit). Book 3-6 months ahead Machu Picchu, PeruRail train and Inca Trail. Travel from May to September for optimal conditions, or April/October-November for best value.

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