Cusco, Peru

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

Overview

Cusco is Peru's high-Andes heritage capital at around 3,400 meters — the former seat of the Inca Empire, where cyclopean stone walls underpin colonial churches and the rail gateway to Machu Picchu begins.

Inca and Colonial Heritage

Qorikancha, Sacsayhuamán, the Cathedral, and Museo Inca — the densest concentration of layered pre-Hispanic and colonial heritage in South America.

High-Andes Gateway

A base for altitude-aware itineraries where first-day pacing, Sacred Valley sequencing, and rail timing are the main planning levers.

Rail-Linked Machu Picchu Itineraries

PeruRail and Inca Rail routes from Ollantaytambo and Poroy to Aguas Calientes — multi-leg plans with advance ticket booking requirements.

Sacred Valley Circuits

Road-based loops connecting Pisac, Chinchero, Urubamba, Ollantaytambo, Moray, and Maras across the Inca heartland valley.

Highland Food and Market Culture

San Pedro Market morning stalls, cuy al horno, chicharrón de chancho, trout ceviche, and the Cusco picantería tradition.

Craft and Museum Culture

San Blas artisan workshops, MAP pre-Columbian collection, Museo Inca, and the colonial-era church circuit across the historic center.

History

Cusco — Qusqu in Quechua, meaning 'navel of the world' — was the capital of Tawantinsuyu, the Inca Empire, from the reign of Pachacútec (1438–1471) who expanded it into a domain of six million square kilometers across the western South American landmass. The city was laid out in the form of a puma, with Sacsayhuamán as the head and Qorikancha at the tail base, connected by four royal roads (ceques) radiating to the empire's four quarters. Spanish conquistadors under Francisco Pizarro captured Inca Atahualpa at Cajamarca in 1532 and reached Cusco in 1533, systematically dismantling Qorikancha's gold-plated walls and constructing churches over Inca foundations — the Cathedral over Inca Viracocha's palace, Santo Domingo over Qorikancha. The 1650 earthquake damaged much of the colonial fabric but left Inca stonework largely intact, revealing an engineering precision — polygonal stones fitted without mortar, absorbing seismic movement without collapsing — that Spanish masonry could not replicate. Cusco was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983.

Culture

Cusco's highland food identity is distinct from Lima's coastal ceviche culture. Cuy al horno (oven-baked guinea pig, shared, PEN 80–120) is the ceremonial protein — best at Pachapapa (San Blas) or La Chomba (Av. Tullumayo 339). Chicharrón de chancho (fried pork belly with mote corn and salsa criolla, PEN 10–20) is the San Pedro Market breakfast staple. Sopa de maní (peanut soup with vegetables and noodles) is specific to the Cusco highland tradition. Trucha (cold-river trout) replaces ocean fish in ceviche. Mercado San Pedro opens from 06:00 — the food stall section near the rear is the most practical for a local breakfast under PEN 15. Festivals: Inti Raymi (June 24) — Festival of the Sun at Sacsayhuamán, the largest Inca ceremonial re-enactment in South America, Señor de Qoyllur Riti (late May/early June, moveable) — glacier pilgrimage above Ocongate, UNESCO Intangible Heritage, Corpus Christi (June, moveable Thursday) — procession of 15 saints through Plaza de Armas, traditional Chiriucho dish served citywide, Cusco Week (June 24–July 7) — city holiday period with parades, markets, and reduced office operations, Virgen del Carmen (July 16) — Paucartambo village festival 5 h from Cusco, widely attended dance and costume celebration. Museums: Museo Inca (Admiral's Palace) — ceramics, gold, textiles, mummies, Museo de Arte Precolombino (MAP) — 450 pre-Columbian objects, Larco Museum foundation, Qorikancha Site Museum — artifacts from the Temple of the Sun excavations, Museo de Arte Popular de Cusco — regional folk art and crafts, Centro Bartolomé de las Casas — cultural research center, specialized library.

Practical Info

Safety: Cusco's tourist center is generally safe in daylight. Use registered taxis at night (hotel desk recommendations or verified apps) rather than street hails on poorly lit routes. Pickpocketing is reported at San Pedro Market and crowded festival days — use a front-body bag. Carry passport copies rather than originals for routine ID checks. Language: Spanish is the primary language. Quechua is widely spoken in regional and market contexts — basic Quechua greetings (Imaynallan kashanki for 'how are you') are appreciated. English is available in tourism-facing businesses, most hotels, and established restaurants in the historic center. Currency: Peruvian sol (PEN). Cards accepted in most hotels and established restaurants; cash is essential for San Pedro Market, small taxis, entry fees at minor sites, and the colectivo system. ATMs cluster around Plaza de Armas and Av. El Sol. Exchange rates at casas de cambio on Av. El Sol are generally better than airport exchanges.
Travel Overview

Cusco is both a destination and an operational hub. The city holds extraordinary historical depth — Qorikancha's curved Inca walls embedded inside a Dominican convent, the Cathedral built on Inca Viracocha's palace, and the fortress of Sacsayhuamán 2 km uphill — while simultaneously functioning as the main departure point for Sacred Valley circuits and the PeruRail line to Aguas Calientes and Machu Picchu. Altitude is the defining planning variable at 3,400 m: arrival day pacing, hydration, and route sequencing matter more than maximizing early coverage. The Boleto Turístico General (BTG, ~PEN 130, valid 10 days) covers 16 archaeological sites across the city and Sacred Valley; Qorikancha (PEN 15) and the Cathedral (PEN 25) are purchased separately. Seasonal weather divides into a drier high-season window (May–October) when trekking and rail conditions are most reliable, and a wet season (November–April) when trails can close and the Inca Trail permit quota books out far in advance. A strong Cusco itinerary builds in a low-intensity first day, then sequences heritage, valley circuits, and the Machu Picchu leg in a logical altitude and transport order.

Discover Cusco

Cusco's UNESCO World Heritage historic core is dense enough to cover in focused walking circuits from Plaza de Armas. The Cathedral (1550–1650, PEN 25) occupies the original site of Inca Viracocha's palace and contains 400-plus colonial paintings, including a famous local Last Supper in which the central dish is a roasted cuy (guinea pig). At Qorikancha (PEN 15), the Spanish-built Santo Domingo convent sits directly atop the original Temple of the Sun — the original curved Inca stonework is visible around the building's apse, one of the most striking architectural superimpositions in South America. Calle Loreto (a narrow lane running from Plaza de Armas toward the Qorikancha) preserves the best intact stretch of original Inca street wall. Hatunrumiyoc alley, one block north of the plaza, contains the famous twelve-angled stone, still precisely fitted into the original palace wall of Inca Roca.