Lima, Peru

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Lima Region (Región Lima) covers 34,802 km² along Peru's central Pacific coast and extends inland through the Andes to the continental divide, encompassing Lima city (population ~10 million), the port of Callao, the Caral-Supe UNESCO World Heritage Site (the oldest complex civilization in the Americas, 3000–1800 BCE), Pachacamac oracle complex (31 km south of Lima city), and a 200-km Pacific beach corridor from Ancón in the north to Cañete in the south. The region divides into three functional zones: the Lima–Callao metropolitan conurbation (the vast majority of population and all international-gateway infrastructure), the coastal strip of small beach towns and surf points south of the capital (Punta Hermosa at 40 km, Asia at 98 km), and the Norte Chico archaeological corridor following the Pan-American Norte highway through Chancay, Huaral, Huacho, and Barranca to the Supe Valley where Caral is located (200 km north of Lima). The Carretera Central running east from Lima toward Huancayo (highlands, Junín region) begins in Lima Region and passes through Chosica and the Andes foothills before leaving the department.

Discover Lima

The Lima–Callao conurbation concentrates the region's services, transport infrastructure, and the majority of cultural attractions. The UNESCO-listed historic center (declared 1988) covers Plaza Mayor, the Cathedral, Convento de San Francisco with its 17th-century catacombs, and the major colonial institutions. Miraflores (12 km southwest of the center, Pacific cliffside) and Barranco (2 km south of Miraflores) are the main visitor base for hotels and restaurant-concentrated evenings. Museo Larco (Pueblo Libre, Av. Bolívar 1515, PEN 45, daily 09:00–22:00) holds 45,000 pre-Columbian objects from coastal cultures. Cross-city travel time is the primary planning variable — the center-to-airport corridor (Callao) can range from 20 to 60 min depending on traffic hour.

Travel Types

Pre-Columbian Heritage and Archaeology

Caral-Supe (3000–1800 BCE, UNESCO, 200 km north) and Pachacamac oracle complex (31 km south) — two of Peru's most significant pre-Columbian sites outside Cusco Region, accessible as day or overnight trips from Lima city.

Pacific Beach Corridor

Punta Hermosa surf breaks (40 km, year-round), San Bartolo, and the Asia resort cluster (98 km, December–March peak) along the Panamericana Sur coastal strip south of Lima.

Lima Metropolitan Culture

UNESCO historic center, Museo Larco, Miraflores Malecón, Barranco arts quarter, and Lima's food ecosystem from cevicherias to Central and Maido — all within the metropolitan Lima–Callao core.

Norte Chico Archaeological Corridor

The Supe Valley and Norte Chico valleys north of Lima — Caral, Chancay culture textiles, Reserva Nacional Lachay fog-oasis, and Fortaleza de Paramonga — along the Panamericana Norte.

Highland and Valley Excursions

Chosica and Chaclacayo above the coastal fog layer, Canta Province highland lakes, and the Carretera Central approach to the Reserva Paisajística Nor Yauyos-Cochas.

Important Lima Region Travel Notes
  • Pachacamac is closed Mondays — plan the visit on Tuesday–Sunday; the on-site 2016 museum is included in the PEN 15 admission and is the best reason to visit rather than just the ruins.
  • Caral (200 km north) requires a 4–5 h drive each way — best done as an overnight trip staying in Barranca; day trips from Lima are exhausting; the site is open Tue–Sun 09:00–17:00.
  • Lima winter (May–October): persistent garúa coastal sea fog at sea level; the Chosica and Chaclacayo valleys (40–50 km east, 800–1,000 m altitude) are reliably sunny and 5–10°C warmer than the coastal fog layer — useful for a weather escape within the region.
  • Panamericana Sur (southern beach corridor) is severely congested Friday afternoons (Lima outbound) and Sunday evenings (Lima inbound) December–March; allow 3 h for the 100-km Asia run at those times.
  • Jorge Chávez Airport is in Callao — allow 45–60 min from Miraflores in peak morning and evening traffic; 30 min in off-peak. The Airport Express Lima bus (PEN 8) runs to Miraflores but takes 70 min; taxi or ride-app is recommended for tight connections.
  • Caral-Supe civilization context: the site predates Machu Picchu by 4,000 years; the platform mounds are unexcavated earthwork rather than cut-stone Inca construction — the visual experience differs fundamentally from Cusco Region sites; the on-site museum provides necessary context for appreciating what the mounds represent.
  • Fortaleza del Real Felipe in Callao (colonial sea fortress, PEN 5, Tue–Sun) is typically combined with Callao Monumental arts district in a half-day loop; parking near the fortress is easier than in the monumental district.
  • Reserva Nacional Lachay (105 km north on Panamericana Norte): open weekends and public holidays; free entry; the huarango forest is a rare coastal fog ecosystem; bring water as there are no facilities on site.
  • Punta Hermosa surf: Pico Alto break is for experienced surfers only — it is one of the largest waves in South America; beginner-friendly breaks are further south toward San Bartolo.
  • Callao Monumental arts district is best visited with an organized tour or local guide — the street art is remarkable, but independent navigation in the broader Callao port area requires local knowledge about which streets are safe.
  • Nor Yauyos-Cochas Reserve (3–4 h from Lima via Cañete or Carretera Central): the highland lagoon and canyon system is best visited April–November dry season; flash flooding risk in wet season (December–March).
Cities in Lima

1 city with detailed travel information