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How to Get to Machu Picchu (2026 Guide): All Routes Explained

April 14, 2026 4 min. read

There’s No Single Way to Reach Machu Picchu

Most travelers arrive in Peru with one assumption: there’s a standard way to get to Machu Picchu.

There isn’t.

What exists instead is a set of routes, each with different levels of effort, time, cost, and depth of experience. Some are direct and efficient. Others are built around progression and immersion. The destination is the same. The journey is not.

The Standard Route (Doing It Yourself)

This is the most common independent approach. It works, but it requires coordination.

Step 1: Cusco → Ollantaytambo

  • Travel by taxi, bus, or private transfer
  • Duration: 1.5 to 2 hours
  • Early departure recommended to align with train schedules

This is the access point to the railway system.

Step 2: Train to Aguas Calientes

  • Duration: 1 hour 45 minutes
  • Route follows the Urubamba River through the Sacred Valley into cloud forest

This is the only direct rail access to Machu Picchu.

Step 3: Aguas Calientes → Machu Picchu

From the town at the base, you have two options:

  • Shuttle bus: 25 minutes, the most common option
  • Hiking route: a physical alternative with no transport cost

At this stage, your Machu Picchu entry ticket, and its time slot, becomes critical.

The Budget Option: Hiking Up from Aguas Calientes

For travelers looking to reduce costs, hiking is a viable option.

  • Duration: 1.5 to 2 hours uphill
  • Terrain: continuous stone steps and steep incline
  • Start point: near the bridge at the edge of town

What this means in practice:

  • You trade cost savings for physical effort
  • You arrive at Machu Picchu already exerted

This option works best for:

  • Budget-conscious travelers
  • Those already acclimatized
  • Early risers willing to start before sunrise

Clarity:
This is not an easy walk. It’s a sustained ascent before your visit begins.

What Most Travelers Underestimate

The route itself is simple. The execution is where things break down.

  • Train schedules are fixed and limited
  • Machu Picchu entry times are strict
  • Transportation must align precisely with your ticket
  • Aguas Calientes logistics are often misunderstood

All the Ways to Reach Machu Picchu

RouteDurationEffortExperience DepthBest For
Train1–2 daysLowModerateEfficiency
Inca Trail (4D)4 daysHighHighClassic trekking
Short Inca Trail2 daysModerateMediumFirst-time hikers
Salkantay Trek4–5 daysModerate–HighVery highImmersion
Inca Jungle3–4 daysModerateHighMulti-activity
Car Route2–3 daysLow–ModerateLowBudget travelers

Route Breakdown: Choosing Your Way In

Machu Picchu by Train (Most Direct Option)

This is the fastest and most controlled route.

  • Minimal physical effort
  • Predictable logistics
  • Ideal for short itineraries

It delivers access efficiently, but limits the sense of progression.

train to machu picchu

Classic Inca Trail (4 Days)

The reference route.

  • Multi-day trek on original Inca paths
  • Entry through the Sun Gate
  • Strict permit system

This is a structured, shared experience built around history and progression.

inca trail

Short Inca Trail (2 Days)

A condensed version of the classic route.

  • One day of hiking
  • Still enters through the Sun Gate
  • Lower time and physical commitment

This is the minimum trekking experience that still feels complete.

inca trail, wiñaywayna ruins

Salkantay Trek (4–5 Days)

A different approach entirely.

  • No permit restrictions
  • Landscapes shift from high alpine to tropical valleys
  • Fewer crowds and more space

This route emphasizes environment and immersion over structure.

Inca Jungle Trail (3–4 Days)

A hybrid, activity-based route.

  • Combines biking, hiking, and optional activities
  • Less traditional, more dynamic

This is built for travelers who want movement and variation, not just hiking.

rafting tour in Cusco

Machu Picchu by Car (Budget Route)

The lowest-cost approach.

  • Travel by road to Hydroelectric
  • Continue on foot or by train to Aguas Calientes

It saves money, but increases travel time and reduces comfort.

train to machu picchu

Tours vs Doing It Yourself

At this point, the difference becomes clear.

Doing It Yourself

  • Full control over decisions
  • Requires careful coordination
  • Higher margin for logistical errors

Going with a Tour

  • Transport, tickets, and timing aligned מראש
  • Guided experience at Machu Picchu
  • Reduced friction across the entire process

Which Option Should You Choose?

Train if:

  • You want the fastest and simplest route
  • Time is limited

The Inca Trail if:

  • You want the classic, historic journey
  • Permits align with your schedule

The Short Inca Trail if:

  • You want a lighter trekking experience
  • You’re new to multi-day hikes

Salkantay Trek if:

  • You want fewer crowds and more landscape diversity
  • You value immersion over structure

The Jungle Route if:

  • You prefer a more dynamic, activity-driven experience

The Car Route if:

  • Budget is your priority
  • You’re flexible with time and comfort

Final Take: The Route Defines the Experience

Machu Picchu is the destination, but the experience is shaped long before you arrive.

  • A train gets you there efficiently
  • A trek builds the journey around the arrival
  • Alternative routes redefine what the experience feels like

A Clear Next Step

If you’re evaluating these routes, each one can also be experienced through structured itineraries that align transport, entry, and guiding into a single plan.

Not to change the route, but to make sure the experience unfolds without friction. Because in the end, getting to Machu Picchu is not the challenge.

skydomecamps

Travel writer & Andean adventure guide at SkyDome Camps.