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Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires

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Gate8 Global Team

Buenos Aires deserves 3–4 nights, whether it's your whole trip or the bookend to a longer Patagonia-and-wine-country route. Base yourself in Palermo (leafy, trendy, best restaurants) or Recoleta (elegant, closer to the classic sights). Spend one day on Recoleta Cemetery and the center, one on La Boca and San Telmo, and at least one evening on a genuinely good steak dinner — a full parrilla meal with wine runs $25–45 per person. Budget roughly $60–100/day per person before accommodation for a comfortable mid-range trip.

Argentines call Buenos Aires 'the Paris of South America,' and for once the tourism-board nickname isn't lying — wide boulevards, ornate early-1900s architecture, and a genuine café culture, layered over a Latin American energy that Paris doesn't have. Here's how to actually spend your time here.

How many days do you need in Buenos Aires?

Three to four nights is the sweet spot. One day for Recoleta and the historic center (Plaza de Mayo, Casa Rosada), one for La Boca and San Telmo's Sunday antiques market, and a spare day or evening for Palermo's parks, restaurants, and nightlife. As a bookend city before or after Patagonia or Mendoza, three nights covers the essentials comfortably.

Which neighborhood should you stay in?

NeighborhoodBest forVibe
PalermoFirst-timers, foodies, nightlifeLeafy, trendy, the best restaurant density in the city
RecoletaClassic sights, a more elegant baseUpscale, close to the cemetery and museums
San TelmoHistory and atmosphere on a budgetCobblestone streets, tango bars, the Sunday market
Puerto MaderoModern comfort, waterfrontGlossy high-rises, safe, a bit sterile
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Book a hotel in Palermo or Recoleta rather than right in the historic center — both are safer at night, have far better restaurants within walking distance, and are still a short taxi or subte (subway) ride from everything downtown.

What's actually worth seeing

  1. Recoleta Cemetery — genuinely one of the most striking cemeteries in the world, and Eva Perón's grave draws its own steady line of visitors. Free entry.
  2. La Boca and Caminito — the colorful, corrugated-metal houses that show up on every postcard. Go during the day only, stay on the main pedestrian strip, and treat it as a 1–2 hour photo stop, not a whole neighborhood to wander.
  3. A tango show, or better, a milonga — a touristy dinner-tango show runs $60–100 with dinner included; a milonga (a real, local social tango dance hall) is free or cheap to just watch, and far more authentic if you're comfortable being the outsider in the room.
  4. San Telmo's Sunday antiques fair — street performers, antiques stalls, and some of the city's best people-watching, running the length of Defensa street.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Wandering La Boca beyond the main Caminito strip after dark, or at all outside daylight hours — it's a working-class port neighborhood with real safety issues a few blocks off the tourist strip.
  • Skipping a reservation at a popular parrilla — the best ones fill up, especially on weekends, and Argentines eat dinner late (9–10pm), so an 8pm walk-in at a top spot can mean a long wait.
  • Assuming you need cash for everything — cards are now widely accepted at fair rates since currency controls lifted in 2025, though small cafés and taxis still often prefer cash.

When to visit Buenos Aires

Spring (September–November) and fall (March–May) are the most comfortable seasons — mild temperatures, jacaranda trees blooming purple across the city in October and November. Summer (December–February) gets genuinely hot and humid, and a lot of well-off locals leave the city for the coast, so some restaurants close for part of January. Winter (June–August) is mild by most standards, rarely dropping below freezing, but grayer and less lively.

Palermo or Recoleta are the easiest bases for a first visit

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Where to stay in Buenos Aires — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Buenos Aires?
Three to four nights is ideal — one day for Recoleta and the historic center, one for La Boca and San Telmo, and a spare day or evening for Palermo's restaurants and nightlife. It also works well as a shorter 2-night bookend before or after Patagonia or Mendoza.
What's the best way to get around Buenos Aires?
The subte (subway) is fast and cheap for crossing the city; taxis and Uber/Cabify are affordable and easy for late nights or when carrying luggage. Buenos Aires is also very walkable within neighborhoods like Palermo and Recoleta.
Is Buenos Aires safe for tourists?
Yes, generally — it's considered one of the safer big cities in South America. The main real risk is petty theft (pickpocketing, phone-snatching) in crowded tourist areas and on public transport, not violent crime. Keep bags zipped and in front of you, and don't leave phones on café tables.

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