Lima, Peru

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

Overview

Lima is Peru's Pacific capital of ten million — a vice-regal UNESCO historic core surrounded by a vast coastal metropolis of clifftop neighborhoods, pre-Columbian huacas embedded in modern districts, and one of Latin America's most serious food scenes, from market ceviche stalls to globally ranked tasting menus.

Colonial Heritage and Museums

UNESCO-listed Plaza Mayor, San Francisco catacombs (70,000 remains), Museo Larco (45,000 pre-Columbian objects), and Huaca Pucllana pyramid within Miraflores.

Pacific Clifftop Coast

Miraflores Malecón (4 km cliffside promenade), Parque del Amor, Larcomar, and Costa Verde beach access — all within the Miraflores and Barranco districts.

World-Class Food Scene

Ceviche at La Mar, anticuchos at Grimanesa, tasting menus at Central and Maido, and Mercado de Surquillo — Lima's food ecosystem operates across every price level.

Barranco Arts and Nightlife

MATE museum, Puente de los Suspiros, Callao Monumental murals, and a dense independent restaurant and music venue strip between Barranco and Miraflores.

Peru Gateway and Day-Trip Base

Paracas–Ballestas coast (3.5 h south), Nazca Lines (6 h), and domestic flights to Cusco, Arequipa, Trujillo, and Iquitos — all coordinated from Lima's airport and bus terminals.

History

Francisco Pizarro founded Lima on January 18, 1535 as La Ciudad de los Reyes (City of Kings) on the banks of the Rímac River, selecting the Pacific coastal site for its proximity to the port of Callao and the flat terrain that would ease supply logistics for the Spanish colonial administration. Lima became the capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru in 1542 — the most powerful administrative unit in Spanish South America, controlling silver shipments from Potosí, judicial oversight of the continent, and church authority from the Archbishop. The historic center retains this institutional density: the Cathedral, Archbishop's Palace, Government Palace, major convents, and the Universidad de San Marcos (founded 1551, the oldest continuously operating university in the Americas) are all concentrated within a few blocks of the Plaza Mayor. The 1746 earthquake destroyed much of the colonial city, producing the rebuilt 18th-century ensemble visible today. In the 20th century, massive Andean rural-to-urban migration transformed Lima from a city of roughly 500,000 in 1940 to a metropolis of over 10 million, with the peripheral conos and pueblos jóvenes growing faster than any formal city planning could address. The historic center was declared UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988.

Culture

Lima's food hierarchy runs from street stalls to globally ranked tasting menus, and value exists across the full range. Ceviche is the standard lunch dish — mixed seafood, firm white fish, or clams marinated in ají amarillo leche de tigre with corn and sweet potato. La Mar (Av. La Mar 770, Miraflores, lunch only, PEN 80–150 pp) is the benchmark ceviche restaurant. Anticuchos de la Grimanesa (Av. Ignacio Merino 466, Miraflores, evenings only) is the city's most celebrated anticucho address — beef heart skewers, PEN 15–25. Chifa (Peruvian-Chinese fusion, from the large 19th-century Chinese immigration) is the everyman cuisine: Barrio Chino on Jr. Capon near the historic center concentrates the oldest chifas. For markets: Mercado de Surquillo No. 1 (Av. Paseo de la República, Miraflores edge) for fresh ingredients and lunch plates; Mercado Central (historic center) for Andean produce and chicharrón. Central (Av. Pedro de Osma 301, Barranco) and Maido (Calle San Martín 399, Miraflores) require advance reservations of several weeks. Festivals: Señor de los Milagros processions (October 18, 28, November 1) — world's largest Catholic street procession after Rome, with hundreds of thousands walking through the historic center in purple robes behind the 17th-century painted canvas, Anniversary of Lima (January 18) — city foundation celebrations with civic parades, concerts, and free museum entry in the historic center, Fiestas Patrias (July 28–29) — Peru's independence days, with military parade on Av. Brasil and traditional food and music events at the Campo de Marte, Mistura (September, Parque de la Exposición) — Latin America's largest food fair, showcasing Peru's regional cuisines, artisan producers, and top restaurant chefs. Museums: Museo Larco (Av. Bolívar 1515, Pueblo Libre) — 45,000+ pre-Columbian objects from coastal Peru, open daily including evenings, PEN 45, MALI — Museo de Arte de Lima (Av. Paseo Colón 125, Parque de la Exposición) — Peruvian art from 3,000 years of history through contemporary, closed Mondays, PEN 30, Museo de Sitio Huaca Pucllana (Calle General Borgoño, Miraflores) — active excavations at a Lima culture pyramid, evening visits Wed–Sun, PEN 15, MATE — Museo Mario Testino (Av. Pedro de Osma 409, Barranco) — fashion and portrait photography, rotating contemporary exhibitions, PEN 25, Museo Nacional de Arqueología, Antropología e Historia del Perú (Plazuela Bolívar, Pueblo Libre) — national pre-Columbian and republican collection, PEN 15, Museo del Banco Central de Reserva (Jirón de la Unión 291, historic center) — free, colonial gold and silver objects from the national reserve collection.

Practical Info

Safety: Miraflores and Barranco are generally safe for walking during the day and evening. The historic center is safe during daylight hours in the main tourist circuit but requires more care at night; use taxis or ride-apps rather than walking between center and Miraflores after dark. Callao Monumental should be visited only with a guide or organized tour. Use registered transport (Uber, InDriver, hotel taxis) for airport transfers and night movements. Keep phones out of sight in crowded public spaces — the Mercado Central and Gamarra areas require particular attention. Language: Spanish is dominant throughout. English is available at Miraflores and Barranco hotels, upscale restaurants, and most tour agencies; limited in the historic center's street-level commerce, local markets, and Callao. Currency: Peruvian sol (PEN). Cards widely accepted in Miraflores and Barranco hotels, restaurants, and supermarkets. Cash is expected at Mercado de Surquillo, street-food stalls, and local taxis. ATMs are dense in Miraflores (Av. Larco, Av. Diagonal) and on Jirón de la Unión in the historic center. Dollars are accepted at some hotels and tour operators but at worse rates than soles.
Travel Overview

Lima occupies a 30-km coastal strip on the Pacific at sea level, with the city rising inland through concrete and colonial layers. The UNESCO-listed historic center — declared a World Heritage Site in 1988 — concentrates the colonial cathedral, vice-regal palaces, San Francisco convent with its 17th-century catacombs, and the main museums of republican governance. For most international visitors, however, the practical base is Miraflores or Barranco: both districts sit on Pacific cliffs 10–12 km southwest of the center, offer the strongest concentration of hotels, walkable restaurants, and evening options, and present easier street-level safety conditions. Lima's most internationally recognized draw is its food ecosystem — from the Mercado de Surquillo fish stalls to the multi-course tasting menus at Central (repeatedly ranked Latin America's best restaurant) and Maido — but depth of value runs through cevicherias, anticucho stalls, chifa canteens, and neighborhood lunchtime menus at PEN 15–20. The city's seasonality surprises first-time visitors: winters (May–October) are cool, humid, and often overcast under coastal garúa sea mist; summers (December–March) are sunnier and warmer. Lima is also the practical springboard for Andean circuits — Cusco, Arequipa, and the north coast are all accessible by 1.5-h domestic flight — and for coastal day trips to Paracas (3.5 h south) and the Ballestas Islands.

Discover Lima

Lima's Plaza Mayor is flanked by the Cathedral (begun 1535, rebuilt after the 1746 earthquake, containing the tomb of Francisco Pizarro), the Government Palace, the Archbishop's Palace, and the Municipal Building — a coherent colonial ensemble of similar scale to Lima's vice-regal ambition. The Convento de San Francisco (Jr. Ancash 471, PEN 20, daily 09:30–17:30) includes access to the catacombs beneath the church — a multi-chamber ossuary holding the remains of approximately 70,000 colonial-era Limeños, stacked in bone-pattern arrangements visible from walkways. The nearby Municipalidad, Palacio Torre Tagle (foreign ministry, exterior only), and Casa de la Gastronomía Peruana (free, Jr. Conde de Superunda 170) complete a half-day circuit manageable on foot from the plaza within a 4-block radius.

Diplomatic missions in Lima

8 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.