Arequipa, Peru

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Arequipa is southern Peru's main city at 2,335 meters — La Ciudad Blanca (The White City) for its volcanic-sillar stone architecture, a UNESCO-listed historic center flanked by three volcanoes, and one of Peru's most distinct regional cuisines.

Colonial Heritage — La Ciudad Blanca

UNESCO-listed sillar-stone historic center: Santa Catalina Monastery (20,000 sqm), the Cathedral, La Compañía church, and Casa del Moral Baroque mansion.

Archaeology — Juanita and the Inca Mountain Cult

Museo Santuarios Andinos and the frozen Inca mummies from Ampato, Pichu Pichu, and other volcanic summits — one of South America's most significant archaeological collections.

Colca Canyon and Condor Watching

Day-trip or overnight circuit to one of the world's deepest canyons, with near-guaranteed condor sightings at Cruz del Cóndor in the morning hours.

Picantería Food Culture

UNESCO-recognized regional cuisine: rocoto relleno, adobo arequipeño, chupe de camarones, and ocopa at family-run Yanahuara picanterías.

Volcanic Trekking

Misti (5,822 m) and Chachani (6,075 m) climbs, plus day hikes to lagoons at altitude — for travelers seeking high-altitude Andean terrain.

Southern Peru Transit Hub

Overland gateway connecting Puno (Titicaca), Cusco, Tacna (Chile border), Lima, and the Pacific coast via bus and domestic flights.

History

Arequipa was formally founded on August 15, 1540, by Spanish captain García Manuel de Carbajal in the valley of the Chili River, already occupied by Chimú and Inca communities. The name may derive from Quechua Ari Quepay (broadly 'yes, stay here'), reflecting the valley's long role as a fertile highland oasis between the Pacific coast and the high Andes. The volcanic sillar stone — quarried from the tuff deposits around Misti and Chachani — defined the architectural language of the colonial city and earned it the nickname La Ciudad Blanca. The historic center was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000. Arequipa has historically defined itself as politically distinct from Lima, producing a persistent 'federalist' or 'Arequipeño republic' sentiment and several Peruvian presidents, including Fernando Belaúnde Terry (1963–68, 1980–85). The 2001 Arequipa earthquake (magnitude 8.4) caused severe damage to the colonial center and triggered a large-scale international restoration effort for the sillar buildings.

Culture

Arequipa's picanterías operate on a fixed lunch rhythm — open from around 12:00, closed by 16:00, with a daily menu rotating through the week. The essential dishes: rocoto relleno (stuffed spicy red pepper, intensely hot — it is not mild); adobo arequipeño (slow-cooked pork in chicha de jora and dried chili, a Sunday tradition, available from 07:00); ocopa arequipeña (cold potatoes in huacatay-peanut sauce); chupe de camarones (river-prawn chowder, seasonal). La Nueva Palomino and La Cecilia in Yanahuara/Sachaca are the reference picanterías (PEN 35–55 for a full lunch). At Mercado San Camilo (center), queso helado — a coconut-and-cinnamon milky dessert frozen in clay cups, PEN 2–3 — is specific to Arequipa. Festivals: Virgen de Chapi (early May) — overnight desert pilgrimage to the Chapi Sanctuary, one of Arequipa's most important religious events, Aniversario de Arequipa (August 15) — city foundation 1540 anniversary, concerts, parades, and bullfights across a week of civic celebration, Semana Santa (Holy Week, moveable March/April) — one of Peru's most elaborate Easter processions, with the city decorated in flowers and the Cathedral illuminated nightly, Festival Internacional de la Música (August) — classical and Andean music concerts in the Patio del Sillar and city churches during Arequipa Week. Museums: Museo Santuarios Andinos — Juanita the Ice Maiden and Inca capacocha offerings from Ampato, Pichu Pichu, and other summits, Monasterio de Santa Catalina — the monastery complex itself functions as a walk-through museum of 400 years of cloistered life, Museo de la Catedral — colonial religious art and silver on Plaza de Armas, Casa del Moral — 18th-century Baroque colonial mansion with pre-Columbian archaeological display, Museo Histórico Municipal — city history from colonial foundation through the republican era.

Practical Info

Safety: The tourist center and market areas are generally safe during the day. Use registered taxis at night — the hotel desk or a verified app is more reliable than street hails near the bus terminal. The San Camilo Market area warrants pickpocket awareness in crowds. For Colca trips, confirm the operator has altitude-aware vehicles and a return time that doesn't leave you on high mountain roads after dark. Language: Spanish is dominant. Quechua is present in regional and market contexts. English is available in tourism-facing hotels, agencies, and established center restaurants; less common in picanterías and outer neighborhoods. Currency: Peruvian sol (PEN). Cards accepted in hotels and established restaurants; cash is expected at picanterías, markets, and smaller operators. ATMs cluster on Plaza de Armas and Av. La Marina. Casas de cambio near the plaza offer competitive rates for USD and EUR.
Travel Overview

Arequipa sits at 2,335 meters — lower than Cusco and generally manageable without significant altitude adjustment for most travelers, though some sensitivity is possible on first arrival. The UNESCO-listed historic center is compact and walkable, built almost entirely in sillar, the creamy-white volcanic stone quarried from the nearby Misti and Chachani volcanos that gives the city its visual identity. Santa Catalina Monastery (founded 1579, PEN 45) is the anchor attraction — a 20,000-square-meter autonomous urban complex that operated as a sealed city within the city for three centuries. The Museo Santuarios Andinos holds Juanita the Ice Maiden, a 500-year-old frozen Inca mummy found near the summit of Ampato volcano, one of the most significant archaeological finds in South American history. Colca Canyon (3.5 h by road) is the primary day-trip or overnight excursion — one of the world's deepest canyons and the best reliable location in Peru to observe Andean condors at close range. Arequipa's picanterías are among Peru's most serious regional food institutions, with dishes like rocoto relleno, adobo arequipeño, and chupe de camarones defining a highland-coastal food tradition UNESCO has recognized as part of Peruvian intangible cultural heritage.

Discover Arequipa

Arequipa's Plaza de Armas is one of Peru's finest, framed on three sides by arcaded colonial buildings in white sillar volcanic stone and dominated on the north by the Cathedral (1544–1656, rebuilt after the 2001 earthquake). The material is quarried from the volcanic ash tuff surrounding Misti and gives the center its luminous quality in afternoon light. Walking circuits from the plaza connect Santa Catalina (2 blocks), Casa del Moral (18th-century Baroque mansion, open to visitors), Calle Santa Catalina and its colonial street wall, and the church facades of La Compañía (Jesuit, 1698) and Santo Domingo. High UV at 2,335 m makes midday pausing in interior courtyards sensible.