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Recoleta Cemetery and Buenos Aires' Best Attractions

Recoleta Cemetery and Buenos Aires' Best Attractions

Homeโ€บ Argentinaโ€บ Attractionsโ€บRecoleta Cemetery and Buenos Aires' Best Attractions
Gate8 Global Team

Recoleta Cemetery, free to enter, is one of the most visited sites in Buenos Aires โ€” a dense grid of elaborate marble mausoleums built for the city's historically wealthiest families, including Eva Perรณn (Evita), whose modest-by-comparison grave draws a steady line of visitors. Pair it with La Boca's colorful Caminito street (a 1โ€“2 hour photo stop, daytime only) and a tango show or milonga for a full picture of the city's must-sees beyond the cemetery itself.

A cemetery topping a city's must-see list sounds strange until you actually walk into Recoleta โ€” it's less a graveyard than a miniature city of marble mausoleums, stacked with more architectural ambition per square foot than most actual neighborhoods.

Recoleta Cemetery

Free to enter, and easy to spend an hour or two wandering the narrow lanes between elaborate family mausoleums, many over a century old, some genuinely grand enough to look like small chapels. The main draw for most visitors is Eva Perรณn's grave, in the Duarte family tomb โ€” notably plain compared to its neighbors, and marked by a steady trickle of visitors and flowers rather than any signage pointing you there.

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Grab a free map at the entrance or hire one of the guides waiting near the gate โ€” the cemetery's layout is a genuine maze, and Evita's grave in particular is easy to walk past without a guide or map, since it's tucked into a side row rather than a main path.

La Boca and Caminito

The brightly painted, corrugated-metal houses of Caminito street are one of the most photographed spots in the country โ€” genuinely worth the visit, but treat it as a focused 1โ€“2 hour stop on the main pedestrian strip during the day, not an area to wander freely. La Boca beyond that strip has real safety concerns; most tour operators and taxi drivers will tell you the same.

A tango show or a milonga

OptionCostVibe
Touristy dinner-tango show$60โ€“100Polished, choreographed, dinner included, easy to book
A real milonga (social tango hall)Freeโ€“$10 to watchAuthentic, local, less polished, more atmosphere

San Telmo and the historic center

San Telmo's Sunday antiques fair along Defensa street is one of the city's best free things to do โ€” street performers, antiques stalls, and genuine neighborhood atmosphere. The historic center (Plaza de Mayo, Casa Rosada, the Metropolitan Cathedral) rounds out a solid half-day of Buenos Aires' political and colonial history.

What to skip

  • Overpriced 'combo' tango-show-plus-city-tour packages sold by street vendors near hotels โ€” book directly with an established venue instead for better prices and quality.
  • Wandering La Boca beyond the main tourist strip, at any time of day.
  • Visiting Recoleta Cemetery in the early afternoon on a weekend if you want photos without crowds โ€” mornings are noticeably quieter.

Questions people actually ask

Is Recoleta Cemetery free to enter?
Yes โ€” it's free and open to the public during daytime hours. Guides near the entrance charge a fee if you'd like a tour, but it's easy to wander independently with a map.
Where is Eva Perรณn buried?
In the Duarte family tomb inside Recoleta Cemetery โ€” it's relatively modest compared to many neighboring mausoleums and tucked into a side row, so a map or guide helps you find it.
Is La Boca safe to visit?
The main Caminito pedestrian strip during the day is safe and heavily visited by tourists. The surrounding neighborhood has real safety issues and is not recommended to explore beyond that strip, especially after dark.

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