Oppdag Puno
Reisetyper
Uros floating-reed islands (30 min, inhabited platforms), Taquile Island (2.5 h, UNESCO weaving tradition), and Amantaní overnight homestays (3–4 h) — the full two-day lake circuit from Puno port.
Sillustani chullpa towers (34 km northwest, 12 m stone funeral towers on Laguna Umayo) and Cutimbo (22 km, petroglyphs and earlier Qolla towers) — the most significant pre-Inca architecture on the Altiplano.
Chucuito Inca Uyo fertility compound, Juli's four colonial church complex ('Rome of the Americas'), and Lampa pink-sillar colonial town — the 100-km lakeside corridor south of Puno.
Candelaria Festival (February, UNESCO Intangible Heritage 2014): 40,000+ costumed dancers, 200+ groups, two weeks of Marian-Andean celebration — the largest Andean festival in Peru.
Yunguyo–Kasani crossing to Copacabana and Isla del Sol (Bolivia side of the lake), Desaguadero La Paz crossing, and the Andean Explorer train to Cusco (~10 h, PeruRail).
- •Altitude: Puno city at 3,830 m is higher than Cusco (3,399 m) — visitors arriving directly from Lima (sea level) often feel stronger altitude effects here than in Cusco; plan a full rest day on arrival, avoid alcohol, and hydrate consistently.
- •Night cold: even in the dry season (May–October), Puno temperatures drop below 0°C at night, often to -5°C or colder; the Altiplano has extreme diurnal temperature swings — bring proper cold-weather clothing including thermal layers, gloves, and a warm hat for boat trips and early morning starts.
- •Candelaria Festival accommodation: book 3–6 months ahead for dates around February 2; the city fills completely; online booking through Puno agencies or directly with hotels is essential; prices increase 3–4× during festival week.
- •Uros islands entry fee: PEN 10 per person (boat) from Muelle Turístico plus a community fee (~PEN 5) paid on arrival; the outer Uros islands away from the main cluster are less commercially developed and worth the extra 15 min boat ride.
- •Taquile and Uros day circuit: standard departure 07:30 from Muelle Turístico; allow the full 09:00–17:00 for Uros + Taquile in one day; the 30-min Taquile climb from the dock to the village is mandatory (no bypass) — altitude makes it slow.
- •Amantaní homestay: a two-day circuit (Uros day 1, Amantaní overnight, Taquile day 2) is the standard full-lake experience; agencies include all transport, meals, and accommodation; bring warm clothing for the island nights.
- •Sillustani: best visited on the return from a half-day Altiplano excursion; admission PEN 10; the site is open daily (no Monday closure like many sites); the lagoon setting is best in late afternoon light.
- •Bolivia border via Yunguyo–Kasani: passport stamp required on Peru side (Migraciones) and Bolivia side (Migración Bolivia) — two separate offices in the border zone; tourist card for Bolivia issued on arrival; no visa required for most Western passport holders.
- •Andean Explorer train to Cusco: PeruRail's premium service runs approximately 3 times per week; the 10–11 h journey crosses the Altiplano and La Raya pass (4,330 m); book at perurail.com weeks ahead in peak season; the bus alternative takes 5–6 h and departs more frequently.
- •Juli colonial churches: the four Juli churches are open irregular hours; the most reliably open is the main church on Plaza de Armas; arrive before noon to maximize the probability of open doors; a combined circuit from Puno (Chucuito + Juli) takes a full day.
- •Lake boat safety: all tourist boat operators from Muelle Turístico should have life jackets on board; the lake is exposed and can become choppy in afternoon winds — the return journey from Taquile in the afternoon often has stronger wind and wave conditions than the morning outbound.
Turisme og reisemålsguider
Kultur og festivaler
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage listing for the Traditional Dances of the Candelaria Festival of Puno (inscribed 2014) — the 40,000-dancer February Andean festival, the largest in Peru.
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage listing for the Textile Art of Taquile Islanders (inscribed 2008) — the knitting tradition where color patterns encode social status, practiced exclusively on Taquile Island at 3,950 m.