Arequipa, Peru

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Arequipa Region (Región Arequipa) covers 63,345 km² in southern Peru, extending from the Pacific coast at sea level through the high-Andean plateau at 4,000–5,000 m to the snow-capped volcanic summits above 6,000 m. The regional capital, Arequipa city (altitude 2,335 m, population ~1 million), sits in a fertile valley flanked by three volcanoes — Misti (5,822 m), Chachani (6,075 m), and Pichu Pichu (5,664 m) — and holds a UNESCO-listed historic center built almost entirely in white sillar volcanic stone. The region divides into four travel zones: Arequipa city and its immediate ring of volcanic landscapes; the Colca Canyon corridor (3.5–4 h northwest, reaching one of the world's deepest canyons and the most reliable condor viewpoint in Peru); the Cotahuasi Canyon (5–6 h west, deeper than Colca and far less visited); and the Pacific coast strip centered on Mollendo (117 km west), which includes the Lagunas de Mejía Ramsar wetland. The region also holds the Toro Muerto petroglyph field (171 km northwest, near Aplao) — the largest known petroglyph concentration in the world by area.

Discover Arequipa

Arequipa's Plaza de Armas is framed by the Cathedral (1544, rebuilt after the 2001 Mw 8.4 earthquake), La Compañía church (Jesuit, 1698, ornate plateresque façade), and arcaded civic buildings — all in sillar, the creamy-white volcanic tuff quarried from the Misti and Chachani deposits that gives the city its character and its nickname. The UNESCO listing (Historic Centre of Arequipa, 2000) covers the dense grid of convents, mansions, and churches around the plaza. Santa Catalina Monastery (Calle Santa Catalina 301, PEN 45, Mon–Sat 10:00–17:00) is the anchor attraction — a 20,000-sqm autonomous city-within-the-city that operated sealed for three centuries; evening illuminated tours run Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. The Yanahuara mirador (2 km northwest, free) frames Misti through colonial arched portals for the city's most-photographed view.

Travel Types

Colca Canyon and Andean Condor Watching

Cruz del Cóndor viewpoint (3,200 m, 160 km from Arequipa), best 09:00–11:00 dry season; Colca Tourist Ticket ~PEN 70; overnight in Chivay for relaxed condor morning and La Calera thermal baths.

White City Colonial Heritage

UNESCO Historic Centre of Arequipa: Santa Catalina Monastery (20,000 sqm, PEN 45), sillar-stone cathedral and churches, Yanahuara mirador, and Museo Santuarios Andinos (Juanita Ice Maiden).

Volcanic Climbing and High-Altitude Trekking

Misti (5,822 m, 2-day guided ascent), Chachani (6,075 m, non-technical), and the high-altitude Reserva Nacional Salinas y Aguada Blanca (4,800 m plateau with vicuñas and flamingos).

Remote Canyon and Petroglyph Exploration

Cotahuasi Canyon (deeper than Colca, 5–6 h, 3-day minimum), Toro Muerto petroglyph field (5,000+ carved rocks, 171 km), and Valle de los Volcanes geological landscape.

Pacific Coast and Wetland Birding

Lagunas de Mejía Ramsar wetland (12 km south of Mollendo, 200+ species, flamingos year-round, peak migration August–November) and Mollendo beach town on the Arequipa Pacific coast.

Southern Peru Transit Hub

Bus and flight connections to Lima (15 h / 1.5 h), Cusco (5–6 h), Puno (5 h), Tacna and Chile border (6 h) — Arequipa Terrapuerto and Rodríguez Ballón Airport.

Important Arequipa Region Travel Notes
  • Colca Tourist Ticket (~PEN 70): purchased at the control point between Reserva Nacional Salinas y Aguada Blanca and Chivay — not before; covers canyon access and several valley sites including Cruz del Cóndor viewpoint.
  • Cruz del Cóndor condor activity: condors ride thermals most reliably 09:00–11:00; afternoon visits frequently see no birds; standard day-tour timing (departing Arequipa at 03:00) arrives at the viewpoint around 11:00–12:00 at peak; overnight in Chivay allows a dedicated 09:00 morning session.
  • Colca road altitude: the road crosses the reserve plateau at 4,800 m — significantly higher than Arequipa city (2,335 m); even travelers who felt comfortable in the city may feel altitude effects at this point; allow 3+ acclimatization days in Arequipa before the Colca excursion if you are arriving from sea level.
  • La Calera thermal baths (4 km from Chivay): open daily, admission ~PEN 15; a practical recovery stop after the Cruz del Cóndor visit before returning to Arequipa.
  • Misti climb: guided ascent is mandatory (required by the Arequipa regional climbing authority); dry season May–October is optimal; avoid December–March wet season; summit attempts require camp at ~4,600 m and 2 days minimum.
  • Sabancaya volcano (5,976 m, in the Colca corridor): is episodically active with ash emission; check INGEMMET (Instituto Geológico Minero y Metalúrgico) volcanic activity reports before the Colca trip — eruptions affect road conditions and air quality in the canyon.
  • Toro Muerto: visit before 11:00 — the carved boulders on south-facing desert slopes reflect intense heat after mid-morning; bring at least 2 liters of water per person; the 5-km² boulder field requires 2–3 h to see the main concentration areas.
  • Cotahuasi Canyon: road is mostly asphalted but narrow with mountain-edge sections; the 5–6 h drive from Arequipa is at night on many bus services; the main town Cotahuasi (2,680 m) has hostal-grade accommodation only; minimum 3 days to visit the Sipia waterfall, Maukallaqta terraces, and canyon viewpoints.
  • Lagunas de Mejía: the unpaved access road from Mollendo is passable in dry season (April–November) in normal cars; wet season (December–March) may require 4WD; no facilities at the lagoon — bring food and water.
  • Arequipa picanterías (traditional lunch restaurants): La Nueva Palomino (Calle Palomino, Yanahuara) and La Cecilia (Sachaca) operate Tue–Sun 12:00–16:00 only — closed evenings; full lunch PEN 35–55 including chicha.
  • Rodríguez Ballón Airport (AQP): 9 km northwest of center, taxi only (20–25 min, PEN 20–35); no bus link; the Terrapuerto (bus terminal) is 5 km southeast.
Cities in Arequipa

1 city with detailed travel information