Cajamarca, Peru

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Cajamarca Region (Región Cajamarca) covers 33,318 km² of the northern Peruvian highlands, stretching from the Andean crest at over 4,000 m down through fertile inter-Andean valleys to the western slopes above the Pacific-draining rivers. The regional capital, Cajamarca city (altitude 2,750 m, population ~250,000), sits in a broad highland basin crossed by the Cajamarca River — the site where Francisco Pizarro captured the Inca Emperor Atahualpa on November 16, 1532, the encounter that triggered the collapse of the Inca Empire. The region divides into three travel zones: Cajamarca city and its immediate circuit (Baños del Inca thermal complex 6 km east, the Cuarto del Rescate ransom room in the city center, and Ventanillas de Otuzco rock-carved niches 8 km north); the highland archaeological corridor to the southwest (Cumbe Mayo pre-Inca aqueduct 20 km, Ventanillas de Combayo 30 km northeast); and the northern agricultural highlands toward the Ecuador border (Chota, Cutervo National Park at 2,500 m — Peru's first national park, 1961 — and the highland lakes district around Cajabamba and San Marcos).

Discover Cajamarca

The Cuarto del Rescate (Ransom Room, Plaza de Armas, admission PEN 10, Mon–Sat 09:00–13:00 and 15:00–17:30) is the only surviving Inca structure in Cajamarca — a trapezoidal stone room 6 m × 5 m, with a line marked at approximately 2.5 m from the floor indicating the height to which Atahualpa agreed to fill the room with gold (once) and silver (twice) in exchange for his freedom. Despite the ransom being paid, Pizarro executed Atahualpa in July 1533. The adjacent Complejo Belén (same compound, PEN 10) includes two colonial churches and the early 18th-century Hospital de Varones with carved stone façades. The Plaza de Armas is one of the largest colonial plazas in Peru; the surrounding buildings retain a consistent colonial character more intact than many north-coast cities.

Travel Types

Inca Conquest History

The Cuarto del Rescate ransom room (only surviving Inca building in the city), the Plaza de Armas where Atahualpa was captured on November 16, 1532, and the Baños del Inca where Atahualpa bathed the evening before — the most historically concentrated single-city Inca narrative in Peru.

Thermal Bathing and Highland Wellness

Baños del Inca (70°C spring water, 6 km from city, daily 05:00–18:00) — private tubs, public pools, and steam rooms in the thermal complex Atahualpa used as his personal bathing site.

Pre-Inca Engineering and Archaeology

Cumbe Mayo aqueduct (600 BCE, precision-cut stone channel 9 km through volcanic rock formations), Ventanillas de Otuzco and Combayo (pre-Inca cliff burial niches), and petroglyph fields in the surrounding highlands.

Carnival and Festival Culture

Cajamarca Carnival (February, 300,000+ visitors, yunza tree-dance tradition, water battles, corso de carnaval parade) — Peru's largest and most communal carnival, significantly different in character from coastal beach carnivals.

Dairy, Food, and Community Tourism

Cajamarca dairy market (manjar blanco, queso mantecoso, requesón), Granja Porcón cooperative farm (12,000 hectares, camelids, cheese production, 30 km north), and traditional guinea-pig and highland cuisine.

Important Cajamarca Region Travel Notes
  • Carnival (February): Cajamarca fills to 300,000+ visitors in a city of 250,000 — book accommodation 3–5 months ahead for the main festival week; all hotels within a 60-km radius book out; water-fighting is citywide and unavoidable — waterproof phone cases and bags are essential.
  • Baños del Inca early morning: the 05:00 opening allows steam-bath visits before the thermal pools fill; private-tub sessions cost PEN 12–20/hr; arrive before 09:00 on weekends to avoid queues for the better tub rooms.
  • Cuarto del Rescate opening hours: Monday–Saturday 09:00–13:00 and 15:00–17:30; closed Sunday mornings; combined with the Complejo Belén churches on the same admission ticket (PEN 10); the site is small (30 min visit) but historically essential.
  • Cumbe Mayo altitude: the aqueduct site is at 3,400 m — 650 m higher than Cajamarca city; visitors arriving directly from the coast may feel the altitude more acutely here than in the city; bring warm layers as the wind can be sharp even in the dry season.
  • Ventanillas de Combayo vs Otuzco: Combayo (30 km, 45 min) is significantly more impressive than Otuzco but requires dedicated transport; Otuzco (8 km) is the easy choice for half a day; combining Baños del Inca + Otuzco in the same eastward circuit saves travel time.
  • Granja Porcón hours: Monday–Saturday 08:00–17:00; closed Sundays (the community observes the Sabbath); the cooperative operates strictly on its own religious schedule — verify hours before traveling the 30 km.
  • Altitude acclimatization: Cajamarca city at 2,750 m is accessible for most travelers from sea level without severe soroche; occasional headache and fatigue are normal; avoid exertion on arrival day, hydrate well, and skip alcohol for the first 24 h.
  • MFT Airport taxi: PEN 10–15 to the city center, 10 min; no metered taxis; negotiate at the airport rank or use hotel pickup; the airport is small with no duty-free or significant services.
  • Water during Carnival: any person or object on a Cajamarca street during the main festival weekend will get wet; this is culturally accepted (even encouraged); schedule museum visits for mornings or after the main parade days.
  • Cutervo National Park (180 km north): the road from Cajamarca to Cutervo is mostly unpaved and requires a minimum of 2 days for the round trip; the guácharo cave visit requires SERNANP ranger escort arranged in Cutervo town; the experience is exceptional but logistically demanding.