Áncash, Peru

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Áncash Region (Región Áncash) covers 35,915 km² of west-central Peru, from the Pacific coast through the Cordillera Negra (the dry western range) and the deep Santa River canyon to the Cordillera Blanca — a 180-km glaciated wall containing 27 peaks above 6,000 m, including Huascarán (6,768 m), the highest mountain in Peru and the second highest point in the Western Hemisphere after Aconcagua. The regional capital, Huaraz (altitude 3,052 m, population ~120,000), is the main gateway for trekking and climbing in the Cordillera Blanca and Huayhuash ranges. The region divides into three principal travel zones: Huaraz and the Cordillera Blanca high-altitude circuit (Laguna 69 day hike, Santa Cruz Trek, Llanganuco Lakes, climbing programs); the Chavín de Huántar archaeological corridor 110 km southeast of Huaraz (a UNESCO World Heritage ceremonial center of the Chavín culture, 900–200 BCE); and the coastal zone centered on Chimbote (Peru's main fishing port, 180 km west), with the Moche ruins at Pañamarca and the Tortugas and Besiques beach towns. The 1970 earthquake (Mw 7.9, May 31) that killed approximately 70,000 people and destroyed Yungay via a secondary ice-rock avalanche from Huascarán is commemorated at the Yungay Campo Santo memorial.

Discover Áncash

Huaraz city was rebuilt after the 1970 earthquake that destroyed approximately 70% of the original structures; the current grid is functional rather than architecturally distinctive, with the Jirón Luzuriaga pedestrian street serving as the central services corridor for tour agencies, gear rental (ice axes, crampons, boots, sleeping bags available for hire at multiple shops, PEN 20–40/day), and restaurants. The Casa de Guías (Parque Ginebra, Plaza de Armas area) is the registry for certified mountain guides — mandatory for technical climbs and useful for organized trekking groups. The Ancash Regional Museum (Jr. Luzuriaga, PEN 5, Mon–Sat 09:00–17:00) holds the region's best collection of Chavín and Recuay culture stone sculpture, including several monolithic figures from the Huaraz culture (200 BCE–700 CE). The daily market (Mercado Central, two blocks from Plaza de Armas) is the best place for breakfast, fresh produce, and budget meals before or after treks.

Travel Types

Multi-Day High-Altitude Trekking

Santa Cruz Trek (4 days, 50 km, 4,750 m pass), Huayhuash Circuit (8–10 days, 130 km, seven passes above 4,500 m), and Alpamayo base-camp approach — the most technically demanding and scenically rewarding long-distance treks in Peru.

Huascarán National Park Day Excursions

Laguna 69 (4,604 m, most popular day hike in the Andes north of Cusco), Llanganuco Lakes (3,850 m, rowboat hire), and Laguna Parón (4,185 m, largest glacial lake in the Cordillera Blanca) — all within a day of Huaraz.

Technical Climbing

Pisco (5,752 m, beginner technical), Chopicalqui (6,354 m, intermediate), and Huascarán Sur (6,768 m, expedition-level) — the broadest range of guided high-altitude climbing accessible from a single base in the Americas.

Pre-Inca Archaeology

Chavín de Huántar (UNESCO 1985, 900–200 BCE) — the Lanzón monolith, underground gallery network, and the ceramic/sculpture collection at the adjacent national museum; 110 km from Huaraz.

Earthquake Memorial and High Andes History

Yungay Campo Santo (1970 avalanche memorial, 58 km north of Huaraz) and the Ancash Regional Museum in Huaraz (Recuay and Huaraz culture sculpture collection, PEN 5).

Important Áncash Region Travel Notes
  • Altitude acclimatization is essential: Huaraz at 3,052 m is higher than Cusco city; arriving by overnight bus from Lima places you at 3,052 m at dawn — rest completely on arrival day, avoid alcohol, drink coca tea; attempt Laguna 69 (4,604 m) only from day three minimum.
  • Huascarán National Park entry fee: USD 30 (approximately PEN 65–70) per foreign visitor, valid for multiple days within the same visit window; purchased at the SERNANP office on Av. Luzuriaga or at the park checkpoint; keep the ticket — rangers check at each site.
  • Santa Cruz Trek permit: trekkers must register with SERNANP and carry the park entry ticket; guides are mandatory for the sector above the main pass for groups booking through agencies; the Llamac and Cashapampa trailheads both require registration.
  • Laguna 69 tours depart Huaraz at 05:00 from Jirón Luzuriaga — arrive at the agency the evening before to confirm departure point and time; the road to Cebollapampa trailhead is 2.5 h; total excursion time is approximately 10 h round trip.
  • Weather window: May–September is the dry season (clear mornings, cold nights); June–August offers the most stable conditions for high-altitude trekking and climbing; October–April brings daily afternoon thunderstorms and significant snow above 4,500 m.
  • Gear rental: Huaraz's Luzuriaga street has multiple reliable gear-rental shops with modern equipment (boots, crampons, ice axes, sleeping bags, trekking poles); day rates PEN 15–40 per item; inspect all rental gear carefully, particularly crampon bindings.
  • Bus from Lima: overnight buses (Cruz del Sur, Movil, Linea) depart Lima's Norte terminal ~21:00–23:00 and arrive Huaraz ~05:00–07:00; PEN 60–120; the Anta Airport (ATA) has limited and unreliable scheduled service — the bus is generally more dependable.
  • Chavín de Huántar closed Mondays: plan the 3-h drive from Huaraz on Tuesday–Sunday; the underground gallery circuit requires a hard hat (provided at entry); the Lanzón chamber is accessed from a separate entry point with a small additional fee (~PEN 5).
  • Yungay Campo Santo: no admission fee; open daily during daylight; the original palm-tree tips emerging from the debris are the most visually striking marker of the pre-1970 town; the adjacent Memorial Museum (PEN 5) has photographic documentation of the disaster.
  • Huayhuash Circuit logistics: the classic 8–10 day circuit starts from Chiquián (3 h bus from Huaraz, PEN 15–20) or Llamac; camping equipment and food must be carried or packed with donkeys; no resupply on route; the Quebrada Sarapococha and Jurau passes exceed 5,000 m.