Peru’s Machu Picchu reopens: What you should know

Peru and Machu Picchu’s busy tourist season kicks off in March and spikes through the summer. Picture: Pexels/ Chelsea Cook

Peru and Machu Picchu’s busy tourist season kicks off in March and spikes through the summer. Picture: Pexels/ Chelsea Cook

Published Mar 4, 2023

Share

By Lebawit Lily Girma

When anti-government protests erupted and turned violent in Lima and Cusco in January, Peru’s tourism industry had just begun recovering from nearly two years of pandemic shutdowns, after suffering one of the highest death tolls in the world.

News of tourists stranded at Machu Picchu spread – they were either helicoptered out or had to walk for seven hours along the train tracks down to Aguas Calientes, the small city in the valley below. A wave of trip cancellations to the country followed.

A month later, Peru is trying to bring visitors back. Machu Picchu, which was indefinitely closed on January 21, reopened to visitors on February 15, the national government confirmed.

Ticket sales have resumed, and the few tourists who waited it out were able to visit, according to local news.

The reopening of the popular Unesco World Heritage site came days before a congressional deadline to decide whether to hold early elections this year, in response to continued protests.

"“bout three or four weeks ago, things looked really bad, and it was difficult for us, because tourism is a very sensitive industry,” says Raul Ccolque, a guide and the founder of Alpaca Expeditions, a trekking company in Cusco and owned by Indigenous Peruvians that focuses on treks to Machu Picchu, including the popular four-day Inca Trail, which limits the number of daily hikers to 500, among others.

“These days, things are getting better here in Peru. Everything is open in Cusco – shops, hotels. Everything has calmed down.”

Government officials said the reopening of the Inca citadel to tourism was conditional on no further protests threatening tourist activity, transportation and Machu Picchu staff.

“The significance of this reopening cannot be overstated – tourism industry losses are expected to exceed $400 million according to the latest government data, with Lima, Cusco, Puno and Arequipa among the most impacted regions,” says Fernando Rodriguez, thegeneral manager for global adventure outfit Intrepid Travel, which is in Australia but has offices in Lima and Cusco.

It offers 44 tours countrywide in Peru and has 40 full-time office staff in the country, plus 60 tour leaders, and more than 250 seasonal team members and contractors.

Intrepid confirmed to Bloomberg that it would restart its Peru tours on March 1, with 25 trips booked and scheduled, such as the 15-day Premium Peru departing out of Lima on March 19.

Peru and Machu Picchu's busy tourist season kicks off in March and spikes through the summer. Picture: Pexels/ Cristobal Escobar

This comes after it had to cancel 140 departures. Interruptions and cancellations began in December 2022; the company later cancelled all Peru trips from February 6 to 28.

Ccolque confirms having seen tourists out in Cusco again and at Machu Picchu. Some strikes might happen, he says, but, in general, even when people were striking the protesters never attacked people.

“I think Peru is a safe country to come to in general,” he says. “Especially the Cusco region.”

The train company serving Machu Picchu, PeruRail, is running again, with service expected to increase as demand picks up, tour operators confirmed.

But the train to Lake Titicaca, in the Puno region south-east of Cusco, remains suspended, Ccolque says.

The Inca Trail is also closed, but that’s normal for this time of year; trail and campsite maintenance takes place every February. (January and February, Peru’s rainy season, see fewer tourists.) The trail is expected to reopen on March 1.

The year 2022 was a good year for Alpaca Expeditions. About 50% of tourists who were confirmed to hike in Peru in 2020 had to cancel because of Covid-19, and the other 50% rebooked for 2022, so as soon as the borders reopened, tourism started back up fairly quickly.

Peru and Machu Picchu’s busy tourist season kicks off in March and spikes through the summer. Ccolque recommends travellers always book trips in advance, including all logistics.

Timed entry tickets to Machu Picchu for 2023 are limited to 4 500 a day, so advance purchases are essential.

The country’s official tourism website has remained silent about the January protests and disruptions to the tourism industry, but the Peru National Chamber of Tourism and the US Embassy in Peru share regular updates.

For Americans, the State Department's travel advisory for Peru, issued on December 22, remains at Level 3: Reconsider Travel, advising increased caution due to crime and civil unrest.

It also advises tourists not to travel to certain areas, including Cusco, but there are no specific references to Machu Picchu. The latest update also shows that the Peruvian government has extended the state of emergency in Lima and a handful of other provinces by 30 days as a precautionary measure.

Aside from Cusco, tourist attractions in the north and east of Peru, including the Lambayeque beach circuit, are running as normal.

Peru and Machu Picchu's busy tourist season kicks off in March and spikes through the summer. Picture: Pexels/ Max Parada Valdivia

The Ica region’s national reserves and attractions are also open, according to the tourism board’s updates. Cruises in the Amazon are operating as normal, they noted, including in tourist areas such as Iquitos.

Peru has also established a Tourist Protection Network, whereby tour operators, travel agencies and other services are able to communicate quickly with the tourist division of the national police of Peru to assist visitors in case of disruptions.

Peru’s tourism board recommends travellers download the Tourist Police Peru app on their smartphone and keep emergency numbers handy.

In 2019, 1.5 million people visited Machu Picchu. Alpaca’s Ccolque says he’s positive the worst of the protests has passed, as Cusco depends on tourism.

“Bookings are coming back little by little,” he says. “Since Machu Picchu is opened, we’ve started receiving requests for treks for May, June, July and August.”

Ccolque says most days in May and April are sold out for the Inca Trail.

“Those are from bookings that weren’t cancelled, as well as new ones coming in now. That’s a good sign.”

Read the latest issue of IOL Travel digital magazine here.