Overview
Colonial Heritage and Museums
Pacific Clifftop Coast
World-Class Food Scene
Barranco Arts and Nightlife
Peru Gateway and Day-Trip Base
History
Culture
Practical Info
Lima occupies a 30-km coastal strip on the Pacific at sea level, with the city rising inland through concrete and colonial layers. The UNESCO-listed historic center — declared a World Heritage Site in 1988 — concentrates the colonial cathedral, vice-regal palaces, San Francisco convent with its 17th-century catacombs, and the main museums of republican governance. For most international visitors, however, the practical base is Miraflores or Barranco: both districts sit on Pacific cliffs 10–12 km southwest of the center, offer the strongest concentration of hotels, walkable restaurants, and evening options, and present easier street-level safety conditions. Lima's most internationally recognized draw is its food ecosystem — from the Mercado de Surquillo fish stalls to the multi-course tasting menus at Central (repeatedly ranked Latin America's best restaurant) and Maido — but depth of value runs through cevicherias, anticucho stalls, chifa canteens, and neighborhood lunchtime menus at PEN 15–20. The city's seasonality surprises first-time visitors: winters (May–October) are cool, humid, and often overcast under coastal garúa sea mist; summers (December–March) are sunnier and warmer. Lima is also the practical springboard for Andean circuits — Cusco, Arequipa, and the north coast are all accessible by 1.5-h domestic flight — and for coastal day trips to Paracas (3.5 h south) and the Ballestas Islands.
Discover Lima
Travellers from the EU, UK, US, Canada, Australia and most Western countries do not need a visa to visit Peru for tourism — entry is granted for a stay set by the immigration officer (commonly up to 90 days, extendable within an annual limit). Carry a passport valid for your stay and ideally proof of onward travel. Keep the entry record you receive on arrival, as it is checked on departure.
Lima's seasons are the reverse of the Northern Hemisphere. Summer (December–March) is the sunniest and warmest, the best time for the coast and the Pacific cliffs. Winter (May–October) is cool, humid and often grey under the coastal garúa sea mist — atmospheric, but with little sun. If Lima is your gateway to the Andes (Cusco, Machu Picchu), the dry season there runs roughly May–September.
Two to three days cover the city well: the UNESCO historic centre (Plaza Mayor, San Francisco catacombs), the clifftop districts of Miraflores and Barranco, the Museo Larco, and at least one serious meal in Lima's renowned food scene. Most travellers use Lima as the gateway to the rest of Peru, flying on to Cusco, Arequipa or the north coast.
Transport & airports
Official airport information portal — terminal maps, arrivals and departures, ground transport options, and Airport Express Lima bus service details.
Urban transport authority for Metropolitan Lima — Metro Line 1 routes, bus corridor maps, and public transport updates for the Lima–Callao conurbation.
Tourism & destination guides
9 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.