Category: Santiago Itinerary Guides

Santiago and Chile itinerary guides by trip length — 2-day, 1-week, and 2-week plans from a frequent Chile traveler.

  • 2 Week Itinerary in Santiago: Make the Most of Your Stay

    Let me be straight with you about something before we get into the days. Two weeks in Santiago, meaning 14 full days in the city itself without leaving, is not something I’d recommend. Not because Santiago isn’t worth your time, but because at that point you’re staying too long in one place when some of the most astonishing landscapes on the planet are a short flight away.

    Start with our is Chile safe for tourists? guide for country-level context before your 2-week trip.

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    What I would recommend, and what this itinerary is built around, is using Santiago as your base and your anchor. You’ll come back to it. You’ll leave from it. You’ll use its airport as the gateway to other parts of Chile. And between those flights, you’ll genuinely explore the city, the coast, the wine valleys, and the Andes rather than rushing through them.

    That’s what two weeks in Santiago actually looks like in practice, and it’s a brilliant way to spend a fortnight.

    Here’s exactly how I’d plan it.

    The structure: why Santiago as a base makes sense

    Chile is a strange country geographically. It’s nearly 4,300 kilometers long, roughly the same as the distance from London to the middle of Russia, but in many places just a few hundred kilometers wide. Everything is connected through Santiago’s airport, which means that even when you’re flying to Patagonia in the far south or the Atacama Desert in the north, you’ll almost certainly be routing through the capital.

    Rather than fighting that, this itinerary leans into it. Santiago becomes your home for two weeks. You leave your main luggage at your hotel, pack a smaller bag for multi-night excursions, and come back each time with a completely different landscape still fresh in your mind.

    It also means you get the unusual pleasure of actually knowing a city well by the end of your trip. Most travelers rush through Santiago in two or three days and barely scratch the surface. By the time you leave after two weeks, you’ll know which café makes the best coffee in Barrio Italia, which restaurant in Lastarria is worth the wait, and which viewpoint of the Andes you prefer at different times of day. That kind of familiarity with a place is rare on a two-week trip, and it’s something to appreciate.

    Days 1 to 4: getting to know Santiago properly

    Spend your first four days exploring the city at a pace that actually lets things sink in.

    Day one is for settling in. Land, check in, walk around your neighborhood, find somewhere for a long lunch with a menú del día, and get your bearings without pressure. If you have the energy late afternoon, Cerro Santa Lucía in the center gives you a quick visual map of how the city is laid out without much effort.

    Day two is the historic core. Start at Palacio de La Moneda and the underground Centro Cultural La Moneda, wander through the Paris-Londres neighborhood, reach Plaza de Armas by mid-morning, and spend time at the Museo Histórico Nacional if Chilean history interests you. After lunch in Barrio Lastarria, cross the Mapocho River into Bellavista for the afternoon and head up Cerro San Cristóbal by funicular before dinner.

    Day three is markets and neighborhoods. Begin at Mercado Central and La Vega Central in the morning, the two very different faces of how Santiago feeds itself, and then take the metro to Barrio Italia for coffee, browsing, and a slow mid-morning before lunch in Providencia. The afternoon belongs to the Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos, the most important museum in the city for understanding what Chile went through under the Pinochet dictatorship. It demands your full attention and some emotional preparation, but it’s essential.

    Day four is for what you missed. Every visitor has a gap by day four: a neighborhood they didn’t get to, a museum that ran out of time, a market they only walked through without stopping. Use today to fill those gaps and to eat properly. Try a restaurant you’ve walked past twice and been curious about. Have a long dinner in Bellavista with wine from the Colchagua Valley. Go to bed knowing the city.

    Days 5 and 6: Valparaíso and the Casablanca Valley

    On day five, leave Santiago early for the coast. The drive to Valparaíso takes around 90 minutes and goes directly through the Casablanca Valley, one of Chile’s most important white wine regions. Stop at a winery on the way, something worth building into the logistics rather than treating as an afterthought. The Casablanca Valley produces outstanding Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay in a cool coastal climate, and it would be mildly criminal to drive through without stopping.

    Spend the afternoon and evening in Valparaíso itself. This city deserves more than a quick look. The neighborhoods of Cerro Alegre and Cerro Concepción are where the famous murals, funiculars, and sweeping Pacific views are concentrated, and the best way to experience them is slowly, on foot, with no particular plan. Pablo Neruda’s Valparaíso home, La Sebastiana, is worth visiting as a museum if you have the time.

    Stay overnight in Valparaíso rather than rushing back to Santiago. Cerro Alegre has some excellent small hotels and the city has a very different atmosphere after dark, more relaxed, more creative, with good restaurants tucked into side streets that you’d never find on a day trip.

    On day six, spend the morning exploring the parts of Valparaíso you didn’t reach the day before, then head 15 minutes up the coast to Viña del Mar for the afternoon. Where Valparaíso is raw and bohemian, Viña del Mar is polished and beach-fronted. It’s a good contrast, pleasant for a seaside lunch and a walk along the promenade before driving back to Santiago in the evening.

    Days 7 to 10: fly to the Atacama Desert

    This is the section of the trip that people talk about for years afterward. Book flights from Santiago to Calama airport, which is the gateway to San Pedro de Atacama, the desert town that serves as the base for exploring one of the most extraordinary landscapes on the planet.

    The Atacama is the driest non-polar desert on Earth. In parts of it, no rainfall has ever been recorded. The landscape is so alien that NASA has used it for Mars rover research and testing. It sits at high altitude, the air is thin and clean, and at night the sky is darker than almost anywhere else in the world.

    Day seven is the travel day and arrival. Settle into San Pedro de Atacama, walk the quiet adobe streets of the town, have dinner somewhere local, and go to bed early because the next few days start before sunrise.

    Day eight: the Tatio Geysers. This is one of the highest geyser fields in the world, at around 4,300 meters above sea level, and the tour there departs in the dark to catch the geysers at their most active as the cold night air meets the rising steam at dawn. It is genuinely spectacular and nothing like anything you’ve seen before. Pack layers, bring coca leaf tea if you can get it, and take the altitude seriously.

    Day nine: Valle de la Luna and the salt flats. The Valley of the Moon is a landscape of eroded salt and clay formations that looks exactly like what its name suggests. Visit in the late afternoon and stay for sunset, when the light turns the entire valley to copper and gold. The Salar de Atacama, the enormous salt flat nearby, is home to large colonies of flamingos feeding in the brackish lagoons, including the striking Laguna Chaxa. The combination of salt, flamingos, and volcano backdrops is the kind of scene that feels almost too dramatic to be real.

    Day ten: a slower morning in San Pedro, some time for the town itself, which has good small restaurants and craft markets, and an afternoon flight back to Santiago.

    One practical note: the altitude in the Atacama catches many people off guard. San Pedro sits at around 2,400 meters and many excursions go significantly higher. Drink plenty of water, take it slow on the first day, and don’t push yourself if you feel the effects. The headaches and fatigue that come with altitude are real, and they pass faster if you respect them rather than ignore them.

    Days 11 to 13: Cajón del Maipo and wine country

    Back in Santiago with a few days remaining, these are the ones I’d use for the mountain canyon and the wine valleys.

    Day eleven belongs to Cajón del Maipo, the narrow Andean canyon that cuts southeast from Santiago and becomes more dramatic the further in you go. The destination most worth reaching is Embalse El Yeso, a glacial reservoir at altitude with a color so vivid, a deep turquoise against white peaks, that it looks like someone turned the saturation up. The canyon also has natural hot springs, and a soak in thermal pools with the Andes directly above you is an experience worth organizing around. Rent a car for this day or book a tour that goes all the way into the upper canyon.

    Day twelve is for Maipo Valley wine country. The valley begins almost immediately outside Santiago and produces some of Chile’s most celebrated red wines, particularly Cabernet Sauvignon that has been grown here long enough to develop a genuine regional character. My wife grew up hearing the major Maipo producers mentioned the way Europeans name classic châteaux, and spending a day out there with that context made the wines taste different. In a good way. Concha y Toro is the most famous winery in the valley and does well-organized tours with good tastings. Cousiño Macul and Santa Rita offer more intimate alternatives if you want something smaller.

    Day thirteen: use this as a flexible day. Either a second day in Maipo or Casablanca wine country, a return visit to a neighborhood in Santiago you want to spend more time in, or the Sky Costanera observation deck if you haven’t done it yet. The views from the top of South America’s tallest building are exceptional on a clear day and give you a completely different perspective on the city than any of the hill viewpoints.

    Day 14: a proper final day

    Don’t waste your last day on logistics. If your flight is in the evening, you have a full day left.

    Go back to the neighborhood you liked most. Eat lunch slowly. Walk through Parque Bicentenario in Vitacura if the weather is good, a large, well-kept urban park with flamingo ponds and the kind of unhurried Saturday afternoon atmosphere that makes you want to live somewhere. If you haven’t been to the Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombinoyet, this is the morning for it. One of the finest pre-Columbian collections in South America, just off Plaza de Armas, and the kind of museum that repays the time you give it.

    For your last dinner in Santiago, go somewhere that deserves a proper evening. The restaurant scene in Lastarria and Barrio Italia has matured considerably in recent years, with chefs using Chilean ingredients in genuinely creative ways. Book a table. Order the wine. End the fortnight well.

    What this itinerary covers

    To summarize what two weeks looks like with this approach: four days exploring Santiago itself, two days on the coast in Valparaíso and Viña del Mar, four days in the Atacama Desert, and four days split between Cajón del Maipo, the wine valleys, and a relaxed final day in the city.

    It’s a genuinely varied two weeks. You’ll have walked the streets of a UNESCO world heritage port city, watched dawn break over the world’s highest geyser field, swum in Andean hot springs, tasted some of the best red wines in South America, and still had enough time to get to know Santiago the way few short-term visitors do.

    That’s the case for two weeks with Chile’s capital at the center of everything.

    Practical notes for a two-week trip

    Flights: Book your Santiago to Calama flights as early as possible. LATAM is the main domestic carrier and connects Santiago to most Chilean cities. Fares go up quickly during high season and the flight fills out, so sorting this before you sort the rest of your trip is a smart move.

    Packing strategy: If you’re doing the Atacama, pack accordingly. The desert days are hot and dry, the mornings before sunrise are very cold, and the altitude means sunscreen and hydration matter more than usual. The rest of the trip is mild enough for standard warm-weather travel clothes.

    Getting around Santiago: A Bip! metro card covers almost everything within the city. For day trips, Uber and rental cars both work well. Organized tours with transport included are worth considering for Cajón del Maipo and the wine valleys if you’d rather not drive unfamiliar mountain roads.

    Where to stay: Lastarria or Providencia are the neighborhoods I’d choose as a base. Both are safe, central, walkable to a great deal, and well-connected by metro to everything else. Barrio Italia is worth considering if you want a more local, less tourist-facing experience.

    Budget: Two weeks in Chile is not cheap once you factor in the domestic flights, accommodation, and organized excursions. The Atacama tours in particular add up. That said, daily costs within Santiago itself are very reasonable by European or North American standards. Food is inexpensive, the metro is cheap, and museums are often free or close to it. The budget gets stretched by the experiences outside the city, not by the city itself.

    For a deeper look at any individual part of this itinerary, check out the dedicated guides elsewhere on the site: the 2-day Santiago itinerary for the city in detail, the 1-week Santiago guide for the regional day trips, and the how-many-days-in-Santiago post for help deciding on the right duration for your own trip. The team at Worldly Adventurer also have a solid two-week Chile framework worth reading alongside this one.

    Two weeks in Chile, done this way, is one of the best trips you can take. I say that from experience, and I’d go back tomorrow if I could.

  • 1 week in Santiago: The Itinerary I Recommend To Family

    A week in Santiago is a genuinely great amount of time. Not because you’ll run out of things to do in the city itself, but because seven days gives you the chance to do something that shorter visits rarely allow: you can actually slow down, explore beyond the obvious, and make a few day trips into the surrounding region without feeling like you’re rushing everything.

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    I want to be upfront about something before we get into the days. This itinerary treats Santiago as a base rather than splitting your nights between multiple places. That’s a deliberate choice. It keeps logistics simple, you don’t have to pack and unpack every couple of days, and the city has more than enough depth to justify coming back to it each evening. If you want to spend a night in Valparaíso, that’s completely valid and I’ll mention it, but the plan below keeps you in one place and works outward from there.

    Here’s how I’d spend seven days.

    Day 1: Arrive and get your bearings

    Don’t try to do too much on your first day. Flights into Santiago often arrive tired, and the city is big enough that diving straight into sightseeing without any sense of orientation tends to feel overwhelming rather than exciting.

    Check into your accommodation and head out for a walk. If you’re staying in Lastarria, Providencia, or the historic center, you’re already in a good position. Walk around the immediate neighborhood, figure out where things are, and find somewhere for a long, unhurried lunch. The menú del día is your friend here: a fixed-price lunch of starter, main, and sometimes a drink, eaten slowly the way Chileans do it. It’s usually between 4,000 and 7,000 Chilean pesos and almost always excellent value.

    In the afternoon, if you have the energy, walk up Cerro Santa Lucía, a small hill right in the center of the city. It takes maybe 20 minutes to reach the top, the views are good, and it gives you a useful spatial overview of how the city is laid out. It’s a low-effort introduction that pays off later when you’re navigating between neighborhoods.

    In the evening, have a pisco sour somewhere in Lastarria or Bellavista and call it an early night. The week ahead will need you at full capacity.

    Day 2: The historic center and Bellavista

    This is your classic Santiago day, and there’s a reason every itinerary starts here. The historic center is where the city’s bones are, and understanding it makes everything else make more sense.

    Start at Palacio de La Moneda, Chile’s presidential palace. If you time it right, the Changing of the Guard takes place every other day at 10am on the Plaza de la Constitución, running for about half an hour. Go underneath the palace to the Centro Cultural La Moneda, which has rotating exhibitions and one of the better craft and design shops in the city.

    From there, wander through the Paris-Londres neighborhood, a quiet, cobblestoned pocket that looks like it was lifted from a European city and dropped into the middle of Santiago. Then continue to Plaza de Armas, the historic heart of the city, always full of life regardless of the time of day. The Museo Histórico Nacional on the square is worth an hour if Chilean history interests you at all.

    Have lunch in Barrio Lastarria, then cross the Mapocho River into Bellavista in the afternoon. This is the neighborhood for street art, independent galleries, and La Chascona, Pablo Neruda’s Santiago home. The guided tours of La Chascona are genuinely enjoyable and not very long. Book ahead if you’re going on a weekend.

    End the day by heading up to Cerro San Cristóbal by funicular. The views at the top are spectacular, particularly in the late afternoon when the light hits the Andes to the east. Come back down via the cable car on the other side if you want a different descent. Dinner back in Bellavista.

    Day 3: Markets, Barrio Italia, and a slower pace

    Day three is about getting under the skin of the city rather than ticking sights.

    Start at Mercado Central by the Mapocho River in the morning. The 19th-century cast-iron structure is beautiful and the seafood on display is extraordinary. Then cross the river to La Vega Central, the wholesale produce market that is bigger, grittier, and far more local. La Vega is where Santiago actually feeds itself, piled floor to ceiling with fruit, vegetables, dried goods, and everything in between. The contrast between the two markets tells you a lot about the city.

    From the markets, take the metro to Barrio Italia for the rest of the morning. This neighborhood has transformed over the past decade into one of the most interesting creative districts in Santiago, full of vintage shops, specialty coffee roasters, independent bookshops, and design stores. It’s a good place to pick up original souvenirs and to spend an hour in a genuinely good café.

    Lunch in Barrio Italia or nearby Providencia, then spend the afternoon at the Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos in Barrio Yungay. This museum documents the human rights abuses of the Pinochet dictatorship with unflinching honesty and considerable architectural ambition. It is not an easy visit emotionally, but it is an essential one for understanding the Chile of today. Many visitors say it’s the most important place they went in Santiago. I agree with that.

    Evening in Providencia, which has some of the best restaurant options in the city without the tourist crowd of the more central neighborhoods.

    Day 4: Day trip to Valparaíso and Viña del Mar

    Today you leave the city. Valparaíso is about 90 minutes from Santiago by bus or car and is, in my honest opinion, one of the most visually arresting cities in South America.

    It’s built on a series of steep hills tumbling down toward the Pacific, the streets are covered in murals and street art, and the whole place has a slightly anarchic, salt-bleached energy that is completely different from Santiago’s polished neighborhoods. The UNESCO-listed historic quarter sits in the hills around Cerro Alegre and Cerro Concepción, and these are the neighborhoods to focus your time on: funiculars (called ascensores) carry you up between levels, the views from the top are excellent, and the wandering is the point more than any specific sight.

    If Neruda interests you, his Valparaíso home La Sebastiana is open as a museum, and like La Chascona, it’s eccentric and worth the time.

    After Valparaíso, head 15 minutes up the coast to Viña del Mar. The contrast with its neighbor is stark: where Valparaíso is raw and bohemian, Viña del Mar is polished, beach-fronted, and considerably more resort-like. The famous flower clock is touristy but charming, the seafront promenade is pleasant for a walk, and the overall vibe is relaxed in a way that makes it a good place to decompress after Valparaíso’s sensory intensity.

    The travel writers at Hey Traveler make the smart point that if you want to combine both cities, a hired driver or organized tour makes far more logistical sense than navigating public transport between three places in a single day. It’s worth the cost.

    If you want to stay overnight in Valparaíso rather than returning to Santiago, the Cerro Alegre neighborhood has good accommodation options and the city has a completely different character after dark. But for this itinerary we’re coming back to Santiago for dinner.

    Day 5: Wine country, Maipo Valley or Casablanca Valley

    Two wine valleys sit within easy reach of Santiago, and they produce very different things.

    Maipo Valley is the closer of the two, less than an hour from the city center, and it is one of Chile’s most important red wine regions. Cabernet Sauvignon from Maipo is what put Chilean wine on the international map, and producers like Concha y Toro, Cousiño Macul, and Santa Rita have been doing it here for well over a century. A morning or full day in Maipo combines well with a winery tour and lunch. Concha y Toro is the largest and most visited, with theatrical cellar tours and a famous story about the devil guarding the wine to deter thieves. It’s a good time regardless of whether you take the legend seriously.

    Casablanca Valley is further out, roughly an hour and a half toward the coast, and it specializes in whites and lighter reds: Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, and Pinot Noir grown in a cooler coastal climate. If you’re planning to visit Valparaíso anyway, stopping in Casablanca on the way there or back makes obvious geographic sense. The writers at LiAnn and Theo Travel describe their Casablanca day as one of the highlights of their entire Santiago trip, and based on the wineries they visited, I understand why.

    My personal preference, if I’m choosing one, is Maipo for the history and the Cabernet. My wife’s family has been drinking Maipo wines for generations, and spending a day out there with that context made it feel like more than just a tasting. But if you love whites or are combining with a Valparaíso visit, Casablanca is the obvious call.

    Either way, book transport in advance. You don’t want to be navigating winery-to-winery logistics while also trying to actually enjoy the wine.

    Day 6: Cajón del Maipo

    This one is for the mountains, and it’s the day I’d be most excited about in any week-long Santiago visit.

    Cajón del Maipo is a narrow Andean canyon that cuts southeast from Santiago into the Andes proper. The drive in is dramatic from the first few kilometers: the valley walls close in, the Maipo River runs turquoise and fast alongside the road, and the mountains get bigger and bigger as you go. The main town in the canyon is San José de Maipo, which is small and pleasant, but most people push further in toward El Morado Natural Monument or all the way to Embalse El Yeso, a glacial reservoir at high altitude surrounded by snow-capped peaks whose color is almost unnaturally vivid.

    The road into the deeper canyon can be rough and the altitude at El Yeso is significant, around 2,500 meters, so take it easy if you’re not acclimatized. But the landscape out there is genuinely extraordinary, the kind of Andean scenery that makes you understand why Chileans are so matter-of-fact about living next to mountains of this scale.

    There are also hot springs (termas) in the canyon, and a soak in natural thermal pools with mountain views is an extremely good way to end a day in the Andes. Planet Patrick has a solid overview of the best day trips from Santiago including Cajón del Maipo if you want more detail on logistics before booking.

    A rental car is the most flexible option for Cajón del Maipo, but organized tours with transport are widely available from Santiago and remove the stress of driving unfamiliar roads in the mountains.

    Day 7: A final day in the city

    Save your last day for the parts of Santiago you haven’t got to yet, or for going back to the places you liked most.

    If you missed the Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino earlier in the week, today is the day. It’s one of the finest collections of pre-Columbian art and artifacts in South America, sitting just off Plaza de Armas, and it’s the kind of museum that rewards slow attention rather than a quick walkthrough.

    Costanera Center is worth adding if you haven’t done it: the Sky Costanera observation deck at the top of South America’s tallest building gives you a completely different perspective on the city than Cerro San Cristóbal, and on a clear day the views are exceptional.

    Beyond that, spend your final day the way I think Santiago rewards most: walk, eat slowly, find a neighborhood café, go back to a restaurant you liked and order something different. The Parque Bicentenario in Vitacura is beautiful for a slow morning, with flamingo ponds and well-kept lawns. Barrio Italia always has something new if you wander beyond the main streets.

    For a final dinner, go somewhere that requires a reservation. Santiago’s better restaurants reward planning, and ending the week with a proper meal rather than whatever happens to be nearby is a fitting close to a city that takes food seriously.

    Practical notes for a week in Santiago

    Where to stay: Lastarria and Providencia are the two neighborhoods I’d always recommend as a base. Both are safe, well-connected by metro, and walkable to a lot of what matters. Barrio Italia is excellent if you want a more local feel, though hotel options are more limited.

    Getting around: The metro is clean, frequent, and covers most of the city efficiently. Get a Bip! card on arrival. For day trips, either rent a car for the days you’re heading out of the city or book organized tours with transport included. Uber works well within Santiago for the gaps.

    Budget: Santiago is not an expensive city by European standards. A good restaurant lunch costs very little, museum entry is often minimal or free, and the metro is cheap. Day trips and wine tours are where costs add up, but even those are reasonable compared to similar experiences in Europe or North America.

    Best time of year: Spring (September to November) and autumn (March to May) give the best combination of clear skies, comfortable temperatures, and good mountain visibility. Summer is hot and often smoggy. Winter is cold but can offer the sharpest Andes views of all.

    A note on days off: Don’t feel obligated to fill every hour of every day. Santiago is a city that opens up when you slow down, and a week is long enough to allow for at least one genuinely unplanned afternoon with nowhere to be. Those tend to be the days you remember most.

    Already know you’re going? Check out my detailed 2-day Santiago itinerary for a deep dive on the city itself, and the how many days in Santiago guide for help deciding how long to stay.

  • How many days in Santiago Chile? From My Personal Experience

    How many days do you need in Santiago? It’s one of the most common questions I get, and the honest answer is: it depends on what kind of traveler you are. But I also have an opinion, and I’m going to give it to you straight rather than hiding behind a list of options.

    I’ve spent a lot of time in Santiago across multiple visits. The first time I landed there, I had three days and thought that was probably too long for a capital city in South America. I was wrong about that. By the end of day two I was already recalculating whether I could extend. These days, whenever someone asks me how long to spend in Santiago, my answer is always the same: more than you think.

    Here’s how I break it down.

    The minimum: 2 days in Santiago

    Two days is the bare minimum, and I want to be clear that bare minimum doesn’t mean bad. You can have a genuinely good time in Santiago in 48 hours if you plan well and move efficiently.

    In two days you can cover the historic center around La Moneda and Plaza de Armas, spend an afternoon in Bellavista, get up to Cerro San Cristóbal for the views, wander through Barrio Italia or Lastarria, eat well, and drink a pisco sour or two. That’s a solid trip by any measure.

    The problem with two days is that Santiago doesn’t reward rushing. The city’s best moments tend to happen when you slow down: a long lunch that stretches into the afternoon, getting genuinely lost in a neighborhood, sitting in a park and watching how people here actually live. Two days doesn’t leave much room for that, and you’ll spend a fair amount of your time moving between spots rather than actually being in them.

    So if two days is all you have, go. It’s worth it. But if you can push it to three, do that instead.

    The sweet spot: 3 days in Santiago

    Three days is where Santiago really starts to make sense. This is the duration I’d recommend to almost anyone visiting for the first time, and it’s what I’d choose if I had to pick a single answer to the question.

    With three days you get everything from the two-day version, but you also have breathing room. You can spend a proper morning at Mercado Central and La Vega without feeling like you’re watching the clock. You can actually sit down in Barrio Italia and have a slow coffee rather than a grab-and-go. You can get up Cerro San Cristóbal and spend time at the top instead of rushing back down. You can try a restaurant for dinner that requires a reservation rather than just whatever is open and nearby.

    Three days also lets you dip into a few of Santiago’s excellent museums. The Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino, near Plaza de Armas, is one of the best pre-Columbian collections in South America and absolutely worth a couple of hours. The Museo de la Memoria y los Derechos Humanos in Barrio Yungay is harder to visit emotionally but essential for understanding modern Chile. It documents the human rights abuses of the Pinochet dictatorship with unflinching honesty, and it’s architecturally stunning on top of that. You won’t find this kind of depth in a two-day visit.

    Three days is also when the food starts to click. You’ll have had enough meals by then to understand the rhythm of how Chileans eat: long lunches, late dinners, wine taken seriously, and flavors that are quieter and more refined than other South American cuisines but deeply satisfying once you tune into them.

    If you have 4 or 5 days: add a day trip (or two)

    Four to five days in Santiago opens up the surrounding region, and the surrounding region is genuinely excellent.

    Valparaíso is the first thing most people add, and for good reason. It’s about 90 minutes from Santiago by bus or taxi and feels like a completely different world: steep hillsides covered in colourful houses, street art everywhere, a slower pace, and the Pacific Ocean in the background. You could spend a whole day there easily and still want more. Some people prefer Valparaíso to Santiago. I understand why, even if I don’t fully agree. For a good sense of what to expect, the team at Maps and Merlot have written well about fitting Valparaíso into a four-day Santiago trip.

    The Maipo Valley is the other obvious add, and this one is directly up my alley. The valley sits right on the edge of Santiago, less than an hour from the center, and it produces some of Chile’s best Cabernet Sauvignon. Spending a day visiting wineries in Maipo is one of those experiences that feels almost absurdly good: you’re surrounded by the Andes, drinking serious wine, eating well, and it costs a fraction of what the same experience would in France or Napa. My wife grew up hearing about Maipo the way Europeans hear about Bordeaux, and spending a day out there with her local perspective on the wineries made it something I wouldn’t trade.

    Cajón del Maipo is the third option worth knowing. This narrow Andean canyon southeast of the city is spectacular, especially if you want mountains, rivers, and altitude rather than wine. It’s increasingly popular as a day trip from Santiago and deserves its reputation.

    With four or five days, pick one or two of these and build them in. You won’t regret it.

    What about a week or more in Santiago?

    A full week based in Santiago is genuinely viable, especially if you use the city as a hub and take day trips rather than trying to fill every hour with city sightseeing. Santiago rewards repeat visits to the same neighborhoods more than most cities. You’ll find a café you like in Lastarria and want to go back. You’ll discover a corner of Barrio Italia you missed the first time. You’ll figure out which restaurants are worth returning to and which were just convenient on the night.

    That said, if you have a week in Chile and you’re only planning to be in Santiago, I’d gently push back. Chile is a remarkable country, and Santiago is one part of it. A week gives you enough time to see the city properly and still spend a few days in Valparaíso or the wine regions or even push north toward the Atacama or south toward the Lake District. Using a full week only in Santiago is a bit like spending a week in Amsterdam and skipping the rest of the Netherlands entirely. Fine, but perhaps not the most adventurous choice.

    The honest answer based on my experience

    If I strip away all the caveats and qualifications, here’s what I actually think:

    Three days is the right amount for most first-time visitors. It gives you enough time to see the highlights without rushing, eat properly, and get a genuine feel for the city rather than just a snapshot of it. If you can only do two, do two. If you can do four and add Valparaíso or the Maipo Valley, do four.

    What I’d push back on is the idea that Santiago is just a stopover. I’ve heard that take more times than I can count, usually from people who gave it one day between a flight and a bus to Patagonia. That’s not a fair test of any city, let alone one with this much going on.

    Santiago has world-class museums, neighborhoods that reward wandering, a food scene that has genuinely evolved over the past decade, dramatic views of the Andes on clear days, and a character that takes a little time to reveal itself but is absolutely worth the patience. The local travel writer behind Go Ask a Local puts it well when she notes that over a third of all Chileans live in Greater Santiago, and the city reflects that density of culture, commerce, and daily life in ways that take time to absorb.

    Give it that time. You’ll leave with a completely different opinion of the place than you arrived with.

    A quick summary by trip type

    For first-time visitors with limited time, three days is the minimum I’d recommend for a satisfying visit. For those combining Santiago with Valparaíso or the wine valleys, four to five days hits the right balance. If you’re using Santiago as a base to explore the surrounding region, five to seven days works well depending on your pace. And for anyone who just has a transit stop or a very tight schedule, two days is still worth doing properly rather than skipping the city altogether.

    Practical note on timing

    One thing that affects how much you can pack in: the season. Santiago in summer (December to February) is hot, sometimes very smoggy, and the mountain views that make the city so visually dramatic can disappear entirely behind a haze. Spring and autumn, on the other hand, regularly deliver clear blue skies and the full Andes backdrop. If you have any flexibility on when to visit, September through November and March through May are the windows I’d aim for. Winter (June to August) is cold but often gives the sharpest, clearest mountain views of all, and the city is much less crowded.

    Whatever time of year you go, build in at least one more day than you think you need. Santiago has a habit of making you want to stay longer, and it’s much nicer to have a slow final morning than to be running for a bus with half the city still unexplored.

    Want a day-by-day plan? Check out my 2-day Santiago itinerary for a detailed breakdown of exactly where to go, eat, and spend your time in the city.

  • The Perfect 2-Day Santiago Itinerary (That Locals Actually Recommend)

    Santiago doesn’t get the credit it deserves. Most travelers land here, sleep one night, and bolt toward Patagonia or the Atacama without giving the city a real chance. That’s a mistake. Chile’s capital is one of the most layered, livable, and genuinely exciting cities in South America, and if you give it 48 hours and a good plan, it will absolutely win you over.

    Stay connected: Compare Chile eSIM providers (Airalo vs Holafly vs Nomad) before you fly — it takes five minutes and saves airport hassle.

    I’ve spent a lot of time in Santiago, and this itinerary reflects how I’d actually spend two days there, not a watered-down list of tourist boxes to tick. It covers the historic center, the neighborhoods worth wandering, where to eat like a local, and the viewpoints that remind you just how dramatically beautiful this city’s setting is.

    Let’s get into it.

    Before you start: a few things worth knowing

    Santiago is a big city of around seven million people, but the areas you’ll spend most of your time in as a visitor are surprisingly walkable and connected by a clean, efficient metro system. Get a Bip! card at any metro station when you arrive. It costs next to nothing and saves you the hassle of buying single tickets every time you move around.

    The city is generally safe in the neighborhoods covered in this itinerary. As with any major city, keep an eye on your phone and bags in crowded areas like markets and plazas, and you’ll be absolutely fine.

    One more thing: Santiago sits in a valley surrounded by the Andes. On a clear day, particularly in winter or after rain, the mountain backdrop is jaw-dropping. On smoggy summer days you might see almost nothing. Either way, the city itself is worth every minute.

    Day 1: The historic heart and the bohemian side

    Morning: La Moneda and the historic center

    Start your day at Palacio de La Moneda, Chile’s seat of government. The building itself is a beautifully proportioned neoclassical structure, and if your timing is right, you can catch the Changing of the Guard ceremony that takes place every other day at 10am on the Plaza de la Constitución. It runs for about half an hour and is far more interesting than most ceremonial guards elsewhere.

    From La Moneda, head underground to the Centro Cultural La Moneda. It sits directly beneath the palace and hosts rotating art and history exhibitions, often free or very affordable. It’s the kind of place that rewards you if you slow down for a bit rather than rushing through.

    Walk a few blocks east and you’ll hit the Paris-Londres neighborhood. This small district looks nothing like the rest of Santiago. Cobblestoned streets, European-style architecture, and quiet courtyards make it feel like a small pocket of another continent. It’s a great place for a morning coffee and a slow wander with a camera.

    From there, continue to Plaza de Armas, the historic heart of the city. The Metropolitan Cathedral dominates one side, and the plaza itself is always full of life: street performers, chess players, pigeons, and locals taking a break from the day. The Museo Histórico Nacional, right on the square, is worth stepping into for at least an hour if Chilean history interests you at all. The collection traces the country from pre-Columbian times through independence and into the 20th century.

    Lunch: Barrio Lastarria

    A short walk from the historic center brings you to Barrio Lastarria, one of Santiago’s most pleasant neighborhoods for a midday break. Tree-lined streets, independent restaurants, and a relaxed, slightly arty atmosphere make it a good place to decompress after the busier morning.

    For lunch, look for a restaurant with a good menú del día, the set lunch common across Chilean restaurants. You typically get a starter, main course, and sometimes a drink for a very reasonable fixed price. It’s how locals eat at midday, and it’s usually excellent value for the quality.

    If you want something more casual, there are plenty of café options and small bistros in Lastarria. The Mercado Lastarria is also nearby, with food stalls and artisan products, good for a browse even if you don’t eat there.

    Afternoon: Bellavista and Cerro San Cristóbal

    After lunch, cross the Mapocho River into Bellavista, Santiago’s most famously bohemian neighborhood. It’s the kind of place where street art covers entire building facades, independent galleries sit next to small cocktail bars, and Pablo Neruda’s Santiago home, La Chascona, is tucked away on a narrow side street.

    La Chascona is one of three houses Neruda built across Chile, each bizarre and wonderful in its own way. This one was built for his partner Matilde Urrutia and named after her wild hair. The guided tours are genuinely enjoyable and give you a real sense of who Neruda was beyond the poetry. Book ahead, especially on weekends.

    From Bellavista, head up to Cerro San Cristóbal. You can take the funicular from the Pío Nono entrance, which is both practical and fun. At the summit sits a large white statue of the Virgin Mary, and the views from up here are the ones that appear in every Santiago travel photo for good reason. On a clear day, the Andes spread across the horizon in every direction, and the city stretches out below you in that distinctive valley shape. It’s genuinely one of the better urban viewpoints in South America. The folks at Travel Past 50 describe it well when they say the hill gives you “an overview of the city” unlike anywhere else, and they’re absolutely right.

    Come back down via the cable car on the other side if you want a different experience. It drops you near the Pedro de Valdivia metro station in Providencia.

    Evening: Dinner in Bellavista or Barrio Italia

    For dinner on your first night, Bellavista is the obvious choice since you’re already in the neighborhood. The streets around Patio Bellavista are dense with restaurants and bars catering to everything from traditional Chilean food to sushi and pizza. For something more authentically local, look for spots serving cazuela, a slow-cooked stew, or pastel de choclo, a baked corn and meat dish that is pure Chilean comfort food.

    A pisco sour before dinner is non-negotiable. Chilean pisco sours are made slightly differently to the Peruvian version, with a sharper, more citrus-forward flavor. Try one somewhere. Try two.

    Day 2: Modern Santiago, markets, and mountain views

    Morning: Mercado Central and La Vega

    Start day two at Mercado Central, Santiago’s famous covered market by the Mapocho River. The building itself is a beautiful cast-iron structure from the 19th century, and inside it’s a controlled chaos of fresh fish, shellfish, produce, and food stalls. The market gets busy and the vendors can be persistent, but the atmosphere is electric. This is a genuinely good place to eat a proper Chilean seafood lunch later, but in the morning it’s worth walking through just to take it all in.

    The market is also close to La Vega Central, the larger and grittier wholesale produce market across the river. La Vega is less polished and more local, piled high with every fruit, vegetable, and dried product imaginable. This is where Santiago actually feeds itself. The energy is different here to the touristy parts of the city, and I find it more interesting for that reason. Travel writer Tiffany Hsu, who has written extensively about Santiago’s neighborhoods, describes La Vega as one of the few places in the city where you still feel like a guest rather than a customer — and that’s exactly right. You can read her take on Santiago’s market scene over at Two Shoes One World.

    A Chilean colleague once told me that anyone who visits Mercado Central without checking out La Vega first is only seeing half the picture. She was right.

    Mid-morning: Barrio Italia

    From the markets, take the metro toward Barrio Italia, a neighborhood that has transformed over the past decade from residential to one of the most interesting creative districts in the city. The streets around Avenida Italia and Avenida Condell are lined with vintage furniture shops, specialty coffee roasters, independent bookshops, tattoo studios, and design stores.

    It’s a good place to pick up genuinely original souvenirs rather than the standard alpaca scarves and fridge magnets. Chilean ceramics, local design objects, and artisan food products make far better gifts. There are several excellent coffee shops in the area as well, great if you need a proper caffeine hit before the afternoon.

    Lunch: Providencia

    Head to Providencia, Santiago’s main upscale residential neighborhood, for lunch. It has a very different feel to the historic center or Bellavista, more polished, quieter, tree-lined streets and proper restaurants rather than tourist spots.

    Providencia is where Santiago’s professional and expat community tends to eat, and the restaurant quality reflects that. You’ll find good Chilean cuisine alongside French bistros, Japanese restaurants, and modern South American cooking. The area around Manuel Montt metro station has a concentration of solid options at reasonable prices.

    Afternoon: Costanera Center and city views

    After lunch, head to Costanera Center in the Las Condes district. This is the tallest building in South America, and the Sky Costanera observation deck on the upper floors gives you a completely different perspective on the city than Cerro San Cristóbal. Where San Cristóbal gives you a natural, panoramic, wide-angle view, Sky Costanera puts you inside the glass towers of modern Santiago and looks down at the city and the mountains simultaneously. It’s worth doing both.

    The observation deck has an entry fee but the views are exceptional, particularly on clear afternoons when the Andes are fully visible to the east and you can trace the city all the way to the coast on the horizon.

    The mall below Costanera Center is the largest in South America if shopping is your thing, though it feels much like any modern mall. The observation deck is the real reason to come.

    Late afternoon: Parque Bicentenario and Barrio El Golf

    If the afternoon is still going strong, Parque Bicentenario in Vitacura is a genuinely pleasant place to wind down. It’s a large urban park with flamingo ponds, walking paths, and lawns full of Santiago families in the late afternoon. It’s relaxed, local, and a good antidote to a day of sightseeing.

    The nearby Barrio El Golf district is Santiago’s most upscale zone, worth a walk-through if you’re curious about the city’s wealthier side. It’s all glass towers, embassies, and boutique hotels, quite different from the neighborhoods you’ve spent the rest of the trip in.

    Evening: Dinner back in Lastarria or Barrio Italia

    For your last evening, return to either Lastarria or Barrio Italia for dinner. Both neighborhoods have evolved their dining scenes considerably, and you’ll find more adventurous modern Chilean cuisine here than in the tourist-heavy spots around the historic center.

    Look for restaurants using Chilean ingredients in contemporary ways: merkén spiced dishes, local fish like congrio or corvina, native potato varieties from the south, or dishes incorporating Chilean wine reductions. The wine list anywhere decent should include bottles from the Maipo Valley, the Casablanca Valley, or Colchagua, all within a few hours of the city and producing some seriously good red and white varietals. If you want a primer on Chilean wine before you go, the team at Wine Folly have a solid and accessible breakdown worth bookmarking.

    End the night with a terramoto if you want to understand Chilean nightlife. It’s a dangerously sweet and strong drink made from fermented grape wine, pineapple ice cream, and grenadine, and it is absolutely not as innocent as it sounds.

    Practical tips for your 2 days in Santiago

    Getting around: The metro covers almost everywhere in this itinerary. Santiago’s metro is clean, safe, and runs frequently. Ubers are also widely available and affordable for distances between neighborhoods.

    Best time to visit: Spring (September to November) and autumn (March to May) give you the best combination of clear skies, mild temperatures, and fewer tourists. Summer in Santiago (December to February) can be very hot and smoggy. Winter (June to August) is cold but often gives the clearest views of the Andes.

    Money: Most restaurants and shops in Santiago accept cards, but carry some Chilean pesos for markets and smaller street vendors. ATMs are widely available throughout the city.

    Safety: The neighborhoods in this itinerary are considered safe for tourists. As always, be aware of your surroundings in busy markets and plazas, and avoid walking with your phone out unnecessarily in less-frequented areas.

    Language: Spanish is the working language and English is not widely spoken outside hotels and major tourist sites. Having a translation app on your phone and knowing a few basic Spanish phrases goes a long way.

    Accommodation: For two days, staying in Lastarria, Providencia, or around the historic center puts you in walking or metro distance of everything in this itinerary. All three areas have good hotel and apartment rental options across different budgets.

    Is 2 days in Santiago enough?

    Honestly? No. But it’s absolutely enough to understand why the city deserves more time. Two days lets you hit the highlights, eat properly, and get a real feel for what Santiago is about. If you have the flexibility to extend to three or four days, you’ll be able to add a day trip to the wine valleys of Maipo or Casablanca, or head up to Valparaíso on the coast, which is a completely different world from Santiago but easily done as a day trip. Rebecca from Rebecca and the World sums it up well when she calls Santiago “a genuinely rewarding city break” that most visitors underestimate. That’s been exactly my experience too.

    For a first visit, this two-day plan gives you the foundation. The rest you’ll want to come back for.

    Planning a trip to Chile? Browse more destination guides, practical tips, and honest recommendations across the site to help you build a trip worth taking.