Peru Practical Travel Info
Visa rules by nationality, altitude sickness (a genuinely real concern here), money, and safety.
Most Western nationalities (US, UK, EU, Australia, Canada) enter Peru visa-free for 90-183 days depending on passport — check your exact entry stamp, since the number granted is at the immigration officer's discretion. Currency is the Peruvian sol (PEN, S/). The single most underrated practical issue in Peru is altitude sickness (soroche) in Cusco, Lake Titicaca, and on treks — genuinely worth planning acclimatization days around, not an afterthought.
This is the unglamorous section that quietly makes or breaks a Peru trip — and here, more than almost anywhere else on this site, altitude deserves its own serious conversation, not a footnote. Also covered: whether you actually need a visa (depends on your passport, as always), what soles and centimos actually look like, safety with real nuance, and getting online.

Peru Visa and Entry Requirements (2026)
The real answer, broken down by passport — not one generic rule.

Altitude, Money, Safety and eSIM in Peru
Altitude is the practical issue most guides underrate — here's the honest playbook.












































