..::.. INCA TRAIL > The Inca Trail is closed in February for maintenance; so this month no Inca Trail Permits are available ..::..
"...During the high season of July and August from 1996 to 2001 as many as 1600 people were starting the Inca Trail trek everyday (about 1000 tourists and 600 porters).
There were no Inca Trail regulations and many trekkers camped wherever they wanted, using the ruins as latrines and disposing rubbish along the trail.
The Inca Trail was starting to get a lot of negative press and UNESCO threatened to remove its status as a World Heritage Site. Inca Trail Regulations were introduced in 2002 by the Peruvian government in order to protect monumnet. These regulations restrict the number of trekkers and prevent trekkers from doing the trail independently..."
Inca trail permit availability shown herein is directly provided by the Peruvian Government. Inca Trail Reservations tries to provide information that is true and accurate, however, we give no assurance or warranty regarding the accuracy of information provided by a third party. Inca Trail Reservations accepts no responsibility for and excludes all liability for errors or inaccuracies. Inca Trail Reservations makes its best effort to secure permits for our customers, however, permits are sold by the Government on a first come, first serve basis.
You will receive assistance at your arrival in Lima, then heading to Cusco will allow you to experience and take part in our world famous Inca Trail to Machu Picchu.
This 15 Days Adventure takes you to remote places of interest in Peru, such us the amazing Colca Canyon and the enigmatic Nazca Lines. Finish your adventure on top of Machu Picchu after following the Inca Trail.
The stunning combination of Inca ruins, magnificent mountains, exotic vegetation and extraordinary ecological variety makes the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu the most immpressive trekking route in the world.
The Inca city of Machu Picchu, spectacularly poised on a rock among vertiginous green peaks, was not rediscovered until 1911. Book the 2 days Inca Trail now.
The Lares Trek goes through some local villages so there’s the opportunity to interact with Indigenous Quechuan people living how they do every day of the week, and how they have for the last few hundred years.
The scenery changes daily on the Salkantay Trek. You'll be hiking for four days, climbing from a flattish valley floor, through bare mountain peaks, small villages, cloud forests and grasslands and touring Machu Picchu on the fifth.