Destinations in Peru — where to go
Cusco, the Sacred Valley, Lima, and Lake Titicaca — four completely different Perus.
Peru splits into distinct worlds: Lima (the food-obsessed coastal capital, 2-3 days), Cusco and the Sacred Valley (the Andean heartland and Machu Picchu's gateway, 5-7 days including acclimatization), and Lake Titicaca (the high-altitude altiplano, 2-3 days). The classic first-timer route flies into Lima, then Cusco, spends a few days acclimatizing and touring the Sacred Valley before Machu Picchu, and adds Titicaca or the Amazon if time allows. 12-16 days covers it comfortably.
Here's the thing nobody tells you before a first Peru trip: it's not really one destination, it's three or four stacked on top of each other, and the order you visit them in actually matters — mostly because of altitude, which we'll get into a lot on this site because it genuinely changes how you should plan. Here's every major region, with an honest read on how long it needs and what it's actually for.

Cusco
3-4 days, take the altitude seriously, and let the city itself surprise you.

The Sacred Valley
Lower and warmer than Cusco — a smart first stop, not just a day trip.

Lima
2-3 days, stay in Miraflores or Barranco, and come hungry.

Lake Titicaca
The world's highest navigable lake — plan an extra acclimatization day.












































