
Bariloche
San Carlos de Bariloche sits on a huge lake surrounded by Andean peaks, with an oddly Swiss-alpine look thanks to early 20th-century European settlers — and a genuinely excellent chocolate scene to match. Plan 3–4 days for the Seven Lakes Route, a lake crossing to Chile, or hiking (November–April) and skiing at Cerro Catedral (June–September, South America's largest ski resort). It's a direct 2-hour flight from Buenos Aires, or a scenic but long 20+ hour bus.
Bariloche gets described as 'the Switzerland of Argentina' so often it's become a cliché — chalet-style architecture, alpine lakes, and chocolate shops on every block — but the setting genuinely earns the comparison, and it works both as a summer hiking base and a winter ski town, which most alpine destinations can't pull off.
How many days do you need in Bariloche?
Three to four days covers the highlights: a day on the Circuito Chico (a short loop with lake and mountain viewpoints, doable by car, bike, or bus), a day trip along the Seven Lakes Route toward San Martín de los Andes, and a day for either hiking (summer) or skiing (winter) at Cerro Catedral.
Summer or winter — which season?
| Season | Months | What it's for |
|---|---|---|
| Summer | November–March | Hiking, lake activities, the Seven Lakes Route, warmer weather |
| Ski season | June–September (peak July–August) | Skiing and snowboarding at Cerro Catedral, South America's largest resort |
| Shoulder | April–May, October | Fewer crowds, lower prices, unpredictable weather |
July and August are Argentine and Brazilian winter-holiday season, so Cerro Catedral gets genuinely busy and lift lines get long — book lift tickets and lodging well ahead if you're skiing during those two months specifically.
What to do
- Circuito Chico — a roughly 40-mile loop past Lake Nahuel Huapi's best viewpoints, including Punto Panorámico and Llao Llao. Doable self-drive, by bus, or by bike.
- Cerro Catedral — South America's largest ski resort in winter; a chairlift ride and short hike for panoramic views in summer.
- Chocolate tasting — Bariloche's chocolate industry dates to Swiss and German immigrants; Mamuschka and Rapa Nui are two of the most established shops worth seeking out.
- A lake crossing to Chile — a scenic multi-day boat-and-bus route (the 'Cruce de Lagos') connecting Bariloche to Puerto Varas, Chile, through a chain of Andean lakes.
Getting there
Bariloche has its own airport with direct flights from Buenos Aires (about 2 hours) and seasonal connections to El Calafate. The bus from Buenos Aires runs 20+ hours — scenic if you have the time and patience, but most visitors fly.
What it costs
| Item | Approx. cost |
|---|---|
| Mid-range hotel, per night | $60–130 |
| Ski day pass at Cerro Catedral | $45–70 |
| Ski or snowboard rental, per day | $20–35 |
| Casual restaurant meal | $10–18 |
Renting a car for a day or two is genuinely worth it in Bariloche if the Circuito Chico and the Seven Lakes Route are on your list — public transport covers the basics, but a car lets you stop at viewpoints on your own schedule, which is most of the point of both drives.
Where to stay in Bariloche — hotels
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