HERO

The Only Natural Oasis in South America

Oasis of HUACACHINA

An emerald lake surrounded by the tallest dunes in the Americas, in the heart of the Ica desert, where sandboarding and golden sunsets create impossible postcards.

100 m Tallest dunes
Oasis Unique in S. America
5 km From Ica city
4h from Lima By direct bus

BIENVENIDA

The Legendary Lagoon

The Desert Oasis

Huacachina is one of the most iconic images in South America, an emerald-green lagoon, ringed by palm trees and white stucco hotels, enclosed within 100-metre sand dunes that look like golden mountains. Just 5 km from the city of Ica, in the heart of Peru's coastal desert.

The oasis exists thanks to groundwater filtering down from the Andes through the desert, the same system that fed the puquios of the Nazca culture 150 km to the south. The lagoon is shrinking due to urban growth and agricultural groundwater extraction, but it remains the most photographed destination in southern Peru and the Latin American capital of sandboarding.

The appeal is simple and powerful: in the morning, buggy tour across the dunes with sandboarding from the top (adrenaline guaranteed). In the afternoon, pisco sour on the terraces overlooking the lake and the orange-tinged dunes. At night, desert stars over the oasis. A 1–2 night destination that pairs perfectly with Paracas (to the north) and Nazca (to the south).

100 mDune height
Unique oasisOnly in South America
Buggy4x4 across the dunes
Ica PiscoPeru's finest pisco
Huacachina Oasis Map
LocationIca, Peru, 5 km from the centre
DunesUp to 100 m high
Lagoon~1 km perimeter
Temperature18–30°C (year-round)
ClimateDesert, 360 sunny days/year
Best timeYear-round
From Lima4h by bus
Southern RouteLima → Paracas → Ica → Nazca

GEOGRAFIA

Desert, Dunes & Groundwater

Geography of Huacachina

A geographical miracle, a natural oasis in the world's driest coastal desert, where Andean groundwater surfaces between 100-metre dunes creating one of the most surreal landscapes on the planet.

Huacachina Geography Infographic

Location

Huacachina is 5 km from the centre of Ica and 302 km south of Lima. It sits at 390 metres above sea level on the coastal plain of the Ica desert, between the Andean cordillera to the east and the Pacific to the west. The city of Ica (400,000 inhabitants) is the regional capital and gateway. The nearest airport with commercial flights is Lima (4h by bus).

The Ica Desert, 360 Days of Sun

The Ica desert is one of the most arid in the world, less than 2 mm of rain per year and virtually 360 days of sunshine. The Humboldt Current cools the Pacific and prevents cloud formation. The result: 18–30°C year-round, guaranteed blue skies and perfect conditions for sandboarding and buggying. There is no bad time to visit.

The Lagoon, An Andean Aquifer

The Huacachina lagoon exists thanks to underground aquifers filtering from the Andes to the coastal desert. Water used to surface naturally forming the oasis. Today, agricultural and industrial water extraction in Ica has significantly reduced the lagoon's level, the water currently visible is partly pumped artificially to maintain the oasis. An active environmental debate.

The Dunes, The Tallest in the Americas

The dunes surrounding Huacachina are barchan megadunes, created by Pacific winds over millions of years. They reach up to 100 metres in height and extend for tens of kilometres. They are the tallest dunes in South America. The most famous sandboarding dune (Cerro Blanco, 14 km away) reaches 2,078 metres, the tallest dune in the world. The sand is fine, pale and perfect for sliding.

Tallest dunes in the Americas

Huacachina on the Southern Route

The oasis is the central link of Peru's most popular southern coast route:

Lima

0 km · Starting point

4h by bus along the Panamericana Sur

Paracas

242 km · Ballestas

1.5h to Ica

Huacachina

302 km · The Oasis

Buggy + sandboard + wineries

Nazca

449 km · Lines

2h from Ica

HISTORIA

From Colonial Resort to Global Oasis

History of Huacachina

From sacred Nazca lagoon to Lima elite resort to world sandboarding capital, the history of Huacachina is the story of an oasis that reinvented its identity with each passing century.

Huacachina History Infographic
500 BC – 700 AD

The Sacred Lagoon of the Nazca

For the Nazca culture, water was the most precious resource in the desert, and the Huacachina lagoon was a sacred site associated with rain-petition rituals. The Cantalloc aqueducts 150 km away connected a hydraulic system that included the puquios (underground aquifers) drawing from the same source that feeds the lagoon. Nazca ceramics found on its banks confirm ritual use. Local legend holds that the lake was created by an Inca princess who turned into a mermaid when surprised bathing.

Sacred lagoon of Nazca water rituals
16th – 19th Centuries

Colonial Era, Ica and the Desert Vine

The Spanish conquest transformed Ica into an agricultural centre, the colonisers discovered that the Ica desert, with its underground aquifers, was perfectly suited to grape cultivation. Peru's first wineries were established in Ica during the 16th century and produced pisco, the brandy that would become Peru's national spirit. The Huacachina lagoon appears in colonial documents as a geographical reference but has no tourist significance yet.

1900 – 1950

The Elite Resort, The Desert Riviera

In the early 20th century, Huacachina became Peru's most exclusive resort. Lima's elite arrived by railway to Ica and by carriage to the oasis, the white stucco hotels with palm trees built in that era (some still standing) are testament to the glamour of the time. Peru's presidents kept summer houses here. The supposed medicinal properties of the lagoon's waters (sulphates and bicarbonates) provided the excuse for European-style therapeutic baths. Huacachina was the most exclusive resort on the South American Pacific coast.

Peru's most exclusive resort in the 20th century
1960 – 1990

The Oasis Crisis, The Vanishing Water

The growth of export agriculture in Ica (asparagus, grapes) and uncontrolled urban expansion began extracting the groundwater that fed the lagoon at an unsustainable rate. Between 1970 and 1990 the lagoon level dropped dramatically, from a navigable, deep lake to a lagoon requiring artificial pumping to survive. The oasis beaches became exposed, the grand hotels closed or fell into disrepair, and Huacachina temporarily lost its appeal.

1990 – 2010

The Renaissance, Sandboarding and Buggies

International backpackers "rediscovered" Huacachina in the 1990s, not for the lagoon itself but for the giant dunes surrounding it, perfect for sandboarding. The sport, imported by Australian surfers travelling the Latin American backpacker trail, spread quickly. 4x4 buggies adapted for dune use made the experience accessible to all. By the 2000s, Huacachina had cemented itself as Peru's most iconic adrenaline and adventure destination.

Sandboarding on dunes, the activity that reinvented the destination
2010 – Present

World Sandboarding Capital

Huacachina appears on "world's most photogenic places" lists and becomes one of South America's most viral destinations. Mass tourism has transformed the experience, dozens of buggy operators, hostels, restaurants and bars ring the lagoon. The current challenge is balancing tourism with oasis conservation, the regional government partially regulates water extraction and several projects seek to restore the lagoon's natural level.

CULTURA

Pisco, Sand & Oasis Life

Culture of Huacachina & Ica

The culture of Ica-Huacachina is a unique blend of Peru's oldest pisco-making tradition, the artistic heritage of the people of Ica, and the international traveller energy the oasis has attracted since the 1990s.

Huacachina Culture Infographic

Pisco, Ica's Identity Drink

Ica produces Peru's finest pisco, the southern coast grapes, grown in the desert on groundwater, have a sugar concentration that cannot be replicated elsewhere. Centuries-old wineries like Tacama (1540, the oldest in the continent), Vista Alegre and El Catador are part of the region's cultural DNA. Pisco is not just a drink, it is identity, pride and the livelihood of thousands of Ica families.

Sandboard Culture

Huacachina has created its own subculture around sandboarding and buggies, local instructors who learned from Australian surfers, annual international competitions, and an entire generation of young people from Ica who master the board on sand as well as surfers ride waves. Sandboarding in Huacachina is not a superficial tourist activity, it is a genuine cultural identity of the oasis.

Burilado Gourd Art

The most representative craft of Ica is the mate burilado, dried gourds engraved with steel burins depicting scenes of Andean life, flora, fauna and mythology. Each gourd is unique and can take weeks to complete. Ica has one of Peru's oldest and most refined mate burilado traditions, they are sold in the Plaza de Armas of Ica and at the stalls around the Huacachina oasis.

The Oasis Palm Trees

The palm trees of Huacachina, Washingtonia filifera, the Californian desert palm introduced in the 19th century, are the visual symbol of the oasis and part of the cultural identity of the place. Locals call them "the guardians of the lagoon". They appear in every photograph, every postcard and every mural of Huacachina. The palm grove surrounding the lagoon is listed as regional landscape heritage.

The Backpacker Cultural Crossroads

Huacachina is one of the few destinations in Peru where international traveller culture genuinely mixes with local culture, the oasis hostels are meeting points between European, Australian, Israeli and Latin American backpackers who share tables with the Ica families running the restaurants. This blend has created a unique night scene around the oasis that combines Peruvian music with travellers from around the world.

1540Tacama Winery, oldest in the continent
8Pisco grape varieties in Ica
100 mMaximum dune height
360Sunny days a year in the desert

TRADICIONES

The Desert Calendar

Traditions & Festivals

Ica and Huacachina celebrate with the intensity of the desert, Peru's largest Grape Harvest Festival, the International Sandboard Festival and the pisco celebrations that make the region the most festive on the southern coast.

Huacachina Traditions Infographic
March

Ica Grape Harvest Festival

The Pisco and Grape Celebration

The Ica Vendimia is the region's biggest festival and one of Peru's most important, a week of barefoot grape-treading in the lagares, election of the Harvest Queen, parades, new pisco tastings and performances by national artists. The wineries throw open their doors. December is harvest, but March is fiesta.

Main Regional Festival
February (Third Sunday)

International Sandboard Festival

The Dunes World Cup

International sandboard competitions on the Huacachina dunes, downhill board, standing style and sled categories. Competitors from Argentina, Chile, Australia and Brazil. The event has put Huacachina on the world sand-sport map and attracts the southern hemisphere's finest riders.

June (Third Sunday)

National Pisco Day

Celebrations at the Wineries

The third Sunday of July is National Pisco Day in Peru, the Ica wineries (the country's largest producer) open with free tastings, cupping workshops, best Pisco Sour competitions and tours of the copper stills. The most authentic and participatory celebration of Peru's pisco tradition.

October

Señor de Luren

The South's Most Intense Devotion

The Señor de Luren, patron of Ica, has one of Peru's longest processions, up to 18 continuous hours of night-time procession on the Third Monday of October. Thousands of pilgrims from all along the southern coast come to Ica for this occasion. The popular faith of the people of Ica in the Señor de Luren is considered the most intense on the Peruvian coast.

January

Ica Anniversary

The City of Eternal Spring

Ica's anniversary (17 January, Spanish foundation of 1563) is celebrated with a week of activities: burilado gourd craft exhibitions, Ica paso horse competitions, gastronomic fair with cachanga, tejas, feligresas and Peru's most famous Ica sweets.

Year-round

The Oasis Sunset

Huacachina's Daily Ritual

Huacachina's most constant tradition is not on any calendar, it happens every afternoon. At 5 PM, local and international travellers gather on the oasis terraces to watch the sun drop behind the dunes. The cloudless desert sky produces deep orange and red sunsets that turn the sand to gold. A pisco sour in hand is non-negotiable.

December – January

High Season, Coastal Summer

The Oasis at Peak Energy

December–January is Huacachina's golden season, buggy operators run pre-dawn shifts, hostels are full of travellers from around the world and the night scene around the lake is unique. New Year's Eve on the dunes, with fireworks over the oasis, is the year's highest point.

Year-round

Cachanga & Ica Sweets

The Desert's Culinary Tradition

Tejas (fondant sweets with walnut or lime), feligresas, peanut turrones and cachanga (fried bread with chancaca) are Ica's sweet culinary traditions, made in homes and sold on market corners for centuries. The obligatory gift to take back to Lima.

GASTRONOMIA

Pacific Seafood Paracas 60 km away, the freshest fish of the south
+
Ica Pisco Peru's finest pisco grapes
+
Pallares & Vegetables Crops from the irrigated desert
=
Ica Cuisine The finest on Peru's southern coast
From the Desert to the Table

Gastronomy of Huacachina & Ica

Ica's cuisine is the sweetest and most festive on the Peruvian coast, some of Peru's finest picarones, oasis ceviche with passion-fruit pisco sour, and the teja and feligresa sweets made only here.

Huacachina Gastronomy Infographic
Ica Pisco Sour, Peru's Finest
01

Passion-Fruit Pisco Sour

In Ica the pisco sour is made with pisco produced 5 km away, the freshness of Ica quebranta with the tropical acid of local passion fruit creates the most balanced version of Peru's national cocktail. On the oasis terraces, with the golden dunes behind you at sunset, it is absolutely impossible to drink without smiling.

The Oasis Cocktail
Oasis Terraces Best at sunset
Tejas and Feligresas of Ica
02

Tejas & Feligresas

Ica's most famous sweets, tejas are lime or orange fondant bonbons filled with walnut, pecan or caramel, and feligresas are chancaca honey glazed biscuits. A colonial Spanish recipe adapted with ingredients from the Ica desert. The obligatory gift you take back from Ica to Lima.

Gastronomic Souvenir
Sweet shops, Jr. Lima Ica S/ 5–20 per box
Carapulcra with Sopa Seca
03

Carapulcra with Sopa Seca

Ica's most representative festive dish, carapulcra (dried-potato and pork stew) served over sopa seca (noodles cooked with ají panca and coriander). The flavour combination is the most complex and satisfying in southern Creole cuisine. Eaten at celebrations, anniversaries and family Sundays.

Creole restaurants
Oasis Ceviche
04

Oasis Ceviche

Although Huacachina is in the desert, the Pacific is only 60 km away, fresh fish arrives from Paracas within hours. Sole or corvina ceviche with Ica lime (sharper than Lima's), yellow chilli, red onion and toasted corn is the perfect lunch before the afternoon buggy tour.

Oasis restaurants S/ 30–55
Ica Pallares Beans
05

Ica Pallares Beans

Ica's pallares (butter beans) are unique, grown in the irrigated desert on groundwater, they have a creaminess and size unmatched elsewhere. Prepared in a Creole stew with pork, ají panca and herbs. They are the classic side dish to carapulcra and the most quintessentially Ica comfort food there is.

Exclusive to Ica
Ica Picarones
06

Ica Picarones

Ica's picarones (pumpkin and sweet potato doughnuts) are considered Peru's finest, fluffier, with a darker and more spiced chancaca syrup. The picaroneras in Ica's markets work from 6 PM to midnight. With orange and clove syrup, they are the most addictive street dessert on the southern coast.

Late afternoon–evening S/ 4–8
Pisco Tasting at Ica Wineries
07

Winery Tasting

Ica's wineries, Tacama, Vista Alegre, El Catador, offer tours with tasting of 4–6 different piscos: quebranta, Italia, torontel, albilla, negra criolla and acholado. Each grape produces a different character. Vista Alegre produces internationally award-winning pisco. The best gastronomic complement to the morning buggy.

10–15 min from Huacachina Free or USD 5–10
Ica Cachanga
08

Ica Cachanga

Bread fried in lard with chancaca and anise, Ica's traditional breakfast since colonial times. Crispy on the outside, fluffy inside, with the sweet flavour of chancaca and the aroma of desert anise. In Ica's Central Market it is sold hot from 6 AM with black coffee. The most authentic way to begin the day at the oasis.

Breakfast · 6–10 AM S/ 2–5
Where to eat in Huacachina?

The promenade restaurants have views but tourist prices. For good food at good value: Ica's Central Market (15 min by mototaxi) with full set menus from S/ 10. For quality pisco sour with lake views: the terrace bars at Hotel Mossone or Desert Nights. For tejas: only at the specialist shops in Ica's Plaza de Armas, never at the oasis stalls (those are tourist-oriented).

ATRACCIONES

Sand, Pisco & Impossible Landscapes

Huacachina Attractions

The dawn buggy ride on the dunes, the oasis at sunset, the pisco wineries and a desert hiding one of the most spectacular dune fields on the planet, all within a 20-km radius.

Huacachina Attractions Infographic
Buggy Tour on the Huacachina Dunes
01

Buggy Tour, The Dunes

Huacachina's absolute classic, adapted 4x4 vehicle climbing and descending 100-metre dunes at impossible speeds, with stops for sandboarding on the longest slopes. The adrenaline of sliding down an 80-metre dune on a wooden board is an experience you never forget. Peru's finest sunsets happen from the top of these dunes.

Experience #1
2h (afternoon/sunset) USD 10–20 per person Sandboard included
The Huacachina Lagoon, The Oasis
02

The Lagoon, The Oasis

Walking around the lagoon (1 km perimeter) among palm trees, stucco hotels and lakeside terraces, the Huacachina ritual. The emerald-green water contrasts with the 100-metre golden dunes enclosing it on all sides. The sunrise over the oasis, when raking light illuminates the sand before the tourists arrive, is one of Peru's most photogenic moments.

Free stroll Sunrise or sunset Free
Ica Wineries, Tacama and Vista Alegre
03

Ica Wineries

Tacama (1540, the oldest in the Americas), Vista Alegre and El Catador offer tours of their desert vineyards, copper stills and centuries-old cellars. Tasting of 4–6 types of pisco and Peruvian wine included. 15 minutes from Huacachina by mototaxi.

10–15 min from oasis 2h tour
Cerro Blanco, The World's Tallest Dune
04

Cerro Blanco, The Tallest Dune

14 km from Huacachina, the world's tallest dune at 2,078 metres (measured from the desert base). The climb on foot takes 2–3 hours. The descent by sandboard or sand-ski down its northern face is the desert's extreme experience. Not for beginners, requires good fitness and specialist equipment. The view from the top is absolutely worth everything.

14 km from Huacachina World's tallest dune
Ica Nature Reserve
05

Ica Nature Reserve

5 km from Huacachina, natural lagoons with water birds in the heart of the desert. Flamingos, desert ducks and herons feed in waters fed by the same aquifers that created Huacachina. The contrast of green in the arid desert is surreal. Accessible by bicycle from the oasis.

5 km by bike Water birds
Ica City, Historic Centre
06

Ica City

The city of Ica, 5 km from the oasis, the Plaza de Armas with its baroque cathedral, the Ica Regional Museum (Paracas and Nazca mummies and ceramics), the Central Market with Peru's finest picarones and cachangas, and the teja and feligresa shops on Jr. Lima. A half-day well spent.

5 km from the oasis Half day
Ica Regional Museum
07

Ica Regional Museum

The region's finest museum, with pieces from the Paracas cultures (textiles, mummies), Nazca (polychrome ceramics, line models) and Inca. The Nazca ceramics collection is the most complete outside Lima. Perfect cultural context for travellers coming from Paracas and heading to Nazca. Affordable entry, very helpful staff.

Ica city centre S/ 5
Sunset Over the Huacachina Oasis
08

Sunset from the Dunes

Huacachina's most photogenic experience, walk to the top of the nearest dune (20 min) and watch the sun set over the oasis. The green lagoon turns orange, the palm trees become silhouettes and the dunes glow like gold. With the pisco sour you carried up in a neoprene flask, this is the epitome of the southern coast journey.

20 min on foot 1h before sunset

FAUNA

The Living Desert

Nature of the Ica Desert

The Ica desert looks empty, but it harbours a surprising biodiversity adapted to one of the most extreme environments on Earth. Flamingos in the desert, sand foxes and birds that never drink water directly.

Huacachina Fauna Infographic

The Lagoon, A Miniature Ecosystem

The Huacachina lagoon, though small (~1 km perimeter), has its own aquatic ecosystem, phytoplankton that turns it emerald green, algae filtering the water, wild ducks, egrets and reeds at the edges. The water, rich in mineral salts and Andean sulphates, has mineral properties that attract coastal birds deep into the desert interior.

Coastal Fox, The Desert Dweller

The Lycalopex sechurae (Sechura desert fox) inhabits the Ica dunes, occasionally spotted at dawn and dusk at the edges of dunes far from the oasis. It has unique desert adaptations: it extracts moisture from cacti and the invertebrates it hunts, and can go days without drinking water. The most emblematic wild mammal of the Ica desert.

Flamingos in the Desert

5 km from Huacachina, the satellite lagoons of the Ica Nature Reserve host colonies of Chilean flamingos (Phoenicopterus chilensis) that migrate from the altiplano. Seeing pink flamingos in the heart of the desert, with sand dunes in the background, is one of the most surreal natural contrasts in Peru. A cycle ride from the oasis takes 20 minutes.

The Oasis Palm Trees

The palm trees of Huacachina are Washingtonia filifera, the Californian desert palm introduced in the 19th century. Their roots reach the underground water table several metres down and their filamentous fronds distinguish them from tropical palms. They are the visual symbol of the oasis, listed as regional landscape heritage and protected from felling.

Fog-Harvesting Beetles

Living in the Pacific coastal dunes are beetles that collect water from the night fog, they tilt their abdomen at dawn so condensation droplets run towards their mouth. This survival mechanism in the world's driest desert has inspired atmospheric water-capture technology. They can be spotted on the dunes early in the morning before the sand heats up.

The Geology of the Dunes

The dunes of Huacachina are not static, they move between 1 and 3 metres per year pushed by Pacific winds. They are barchan megadunes formed over tens of thousands of years of aeolian deposition. The golden-white sand, fine and rounded from erosion, is perfect for sandboarding but also for lungs (use a scarf when the wind lifts dust).

100 mTallest dunes in the Americas
2,078 mCerro Blanco, tallest dune in the world
<2 mmRain per year in the Ica desert
360Sunny days a year

ACTIVIDADES

Adrenaline in the Desert

Activities in Huacachina

Buggy across the dunes at dawn, sandboarding at sunset, pisco at centuries-old wineries at midday, and the most silent, star-filled night in Peru. Huacachina fits perfectly into 1–2 days.

Huacachina Activities Infographic
All Adrenaline Culture Relaxed
01

Buggy + Sandboard at Sunset

The unbeatable combo, 2 hours in a 4x4 buggy climbing and descending the largest dunes in the Americas, with stops on the longest slopes for sandboarding. The sunset tour (4–6 PM) ends with the sun sinking behind the dunes and turning the sand orange. The most memorable activity on the entire Southern Route.

Must-Do Adrenaline
2h · 4–6 PM USD 10–20
02

Solo Sandboard, Free Dune

Hire a board (USD 3–5) and climb the nearest dune on foot to slide down at your own pace, no buggy, no guide, on your own terms. The dune 10 minutes' walk from the oasis has 60–70 metres. Climb, slide, repeat. The best local riders practise their tricks here. The most affordable and most authentic option.

Adrenaline Budget
Free USD 3–5 board hire
03

Pisco Winery Tour

Visit Tacama, Vista Alegre or El Catador, tour of the desert vineyards, fermentation process and 19th-century copper stills. Tasting of 4–6 different piscos (quebranta, Italia, torontel, albilla). Combinable with the afternoon buggy: mornings at the wineries, afternoons on the dunes.

Culture Gastronomy
2–3h USD 15–30 with tasting
04

Stroll around the Oasis Promenade

Walking the lagoon perimeter (1 km) among palm trees, restaurant terraces and craft stalls, Huacachina's relaxed ritual. Best at dawn before 8 AM when the oasis is empty, the raking light illuminates the dunes and the water reflects the sky. Bring a camera and take your time.

Relaxed Photography
30 min Free
05

On-Foot Climb, Dune Summit

No buggy, the free climb to the highest dune adjacent to the oasis (20–30 min) to see the complete oasis from above. The view of the green lagoon surrounded by white sand from the summit is the Huacachina photograph. Bring sunscreen, water and closed shoes (the sand is very hot and the slope deceptively steep).

Adrenaline Photography
30 min climb Free
06

Stargazing

The Ica desert has zero light pollution outside the towns, from the dune tops at night, the Milky Way is so dense it looks like a cloud. Best months: May–October (no full moon). Some hostels organise dune stargazing nights with telescopes. The quietest and most profound experience the oasis offers.

Relaxed Night
Moonless nights May–Oct best
07

Cycling to the Ica Lagoons

5 km from the oasis, the natural lagoons of the Ica Reserve have flamingos and desert ducks. By bicycle along the desert road (flat, no traffic) you reach them in 20 minutes. Seeing pink flamingos in the middle of the desert is a unique photographic moment. Bicycle hire at the oasis hostels.

Relaxed Nature
2–3h round trip USD 5 bike
08

Ica Regional Museum

The best cultural context for understanding the region, Nazca ceramics collection (the most complete outside Lima), Paracas textiles and mummies, Inca pieces and colonial ceramics. 5 km from the oasis. Essential for travellers coming from Paracas heading to Nazca, it visually connects the archaeology of the entire southern coast.

Culture History
1–2h S/ 5

INFO_PRACTICA

Everything You Need to Know

Practical Information

Huacachina is the easiest and most straightforward destination on the southern coast, no altitude, no complications, 4 hours from Lima. The only hard decision is whether to stay 1 night or 2.

Huacachina Information Infographic

Getting There

  • Bus from Lima: 4–4.5 hours along the Panamericana Sur. Cruz del Sur, Oltursa, Flores Hermanos. Price: USD 12–25. Direct buses to Ica Terminal (5 km from Huacachina).
  • From Paracas: 1.5h by bus or shared taxi. Most travellers combine Paracas → Huacachina on the same southern route.
  • Mototaxi from Ica: The Ica bus terminal is 5 km from the oasis. Mototaxi: S/ 5–8. Taxi: S/ 10–15. No direct bus from the terminal to the oasis.
  • No airport: Pisco Airport (TCP) is 60 km away, very limited flights from Lima. Bus is the standard option.
  • From Nazca: 2h by bus. Cruz del Sur and PerúBus have frequent departures.

When to Go

  • Year-round, the desert has no bad weather: 360 days of sun, 0 rain, always 18–30°C. There is no bad time.
  • Peruvian summer (Nov–Mar): Hotter (28–35°C at midday), more tourists, more night energy at the oasis.
  • Winter (Jun–Sep): Perfect temperature (20–25°C), fewer tourists, better stargazing nights. Afternoon wind can be strong (20–30 km/h).
  • March: Ica Grape Harvest Festival, the region's biggest celebration. Hotels book up weeks in advance.
  • Easter Week and National Holidays: Fully booked. Reserve 2–3 weeks ahead minimum.

The Buggy, What You Need to Know

  • Price: USD 10–20 per person on a group tour (6–10 people per buggy). Private tours: USD 50–80 for the whole buggy.
  • Best time: The sunset tour (departure 3–4 PM) ends with the sun dropping behind the dunes, the most photogenic. The sunrise tour (departure 7–8 AM) has softer light and less heat.
  • Duration: Exactly 2 hours. Includes 4–5 sandboard stops.
  • Clothing: Wear clothes you don't mind getting sandy. Sand gets into absolutely everything. Sunglasses are essential on the buggy.
  • Booking: In high season book on the morning of the same day. Operators have stalls on the oasis promenade. Prices are similar across all operators.

Money & Costs

  • ATMs: There are no ATMs in Huacachina, they are in Ica city (BCP, Interbank). Bring cash in soles for the buggy and oasis shops.
  • Daily cost, budget: USD 30–50 (shared hostel + buggy + basic food)
  • Daily cost, mid-range: USD 60–100 (hotel + buggy + restaurant + winery)
  • Buggy: USD 10–20 per person, the day's main expense.
  • Food: Oasis restaurants USD 8–18 per dish. Ica market: S/ 8–15 for a full set menu.
  • Tejas & sweets: S/ 10–30 per box, the unexpected expense that's always worth it.

Where to Stay

  • Boutique, Hotel Mossone: The oasis's historic hotel, white stucco, pool, terrace with lagoon views. USD 80–150/night.
  • Mid-range, Desert Nights Hotel: Facing the lagoon, terrace bar and organised tours. USD 50–90/night.
  • Budget, Carola del Sur: Family hostel, pool, relaxed atmosphere. USD 20–45/night.
  • Backpacker: Banana's Adventure, Huacachina Hostel, dorm from USD 8–15/night. International vibe, tours arranged on site.
  • 1 or 2 nights? 1 night is enough for the buggy and the oasis. 2 nights if you want to add wineries, Cerro Blanco or the Ica Museum without rushing.

What to Pack

  • SPF 50+ sunscreen: The desert has intense UV, 90% of tourists arrive without enough.
  • UV400 sunglasses: Sand glare can damage eyes, and on the buggy, sand flies everywhere.
  • Sand clothes: A spare set of old clothes for the buggy, sand gets into everything and doesn't come out easily.
  • Closed shoes: For sandboarding, feet need support. No flip-flops on the dunes.
  • Cash in soles: Bring from Lima or withdraw in Ica, no ATMs at the oasis.
  • Water bottle: The desert dehydrates fast. Minimum 1.5 litres for the buggy tour.
  • Waterproof case: For your phone on the buggy, fine sand gets into every port and opening.
The Southern Route in 3 Days

Lima → Paracas (Day 1: Ballestas + Reserve) → Huacachina / Ica (Day 2: wineries AM + buggy PM + sunset) → Nazca (Day 3: Lines overflight). All by bus, no flight, 3 nights, the most efficient and thrilling circuit on Peru's southern coast.

Sand gets into everything, be prepared

Huacachina's sand is very fine and penetrates cameras, phones, bags and clothing. Pack electronic devices in sealed bags before the buggy. The best oasis photographers use UV-protected lenses and clean their equipment every night.

4hBus from Lima
GMT-5Time zone
USD 10–20Buggy tour
SpanishLanguage
Year-roundGood time

LINK CROSS