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Humantay Lake Trek: Best Day Trip From Cusco, Peru

Humantay Lake Trek: Best Day Trip From Cusco, Peru

If you are in the historic town of Cusco in Peru and looking for a day-trip adventure like I was, you need to check out the Humantay Lake hike (also known as Laguna Humantay). The steep but short 1-hour hike leads you to an unbelievably blue lake at the bottom of an enormous glacier. At 4000 meters altitude, it is literally breathtaking!

HUMANTAY LAKE TREK: DAY TRIP FROM CUSCO

In this guide, I will share with you everything you need to know about the Humantay Lake hike such as entry costs, booking a guide, the best time to visit, and my tips from my experience at the lake.

HOW TO GET TO HUMANTAY LAKE IN CUSCO, PERU

It’s a very easy task organizing your Humantay Lake hike. The expedition is a common tourist attraction with daily tours operating, which you can book via several options.

  • The first option is to book a tour at one of the agency offices in the town of Cusco. You literally can’t walk more than a hundred yards without passing a tour office. Most of these tours will be relatively cheap, including pick-up/drop-off to your Cusco hotel, and possibly include a lunch. it’s hard to guarantee any quality with these tours as you will likely be part of a big group, which means a slow process picking everyone up from all the different hotels. This can be annoying when it’s a 3 AM start.
  • The second option is to book online with the top-rated tour on GetYourGuide. For this one, you can book your tour in advance and guarantee you are on a high-quality tour with current reviews. This tour currently runs for $40 per person and includes pick-up/drop-off, snacks, and lunch. You can check the reviews, and see all the details to book your tour by clicking here.
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Humantay Lake Hike

  • Great value tour
  • Hotel pick-up/drop-off
  • Full-day tour

HIRING A TAXI TO HUMANTAY LAKE FROM CUSCO, PERU

I don’t think you need a taxi as the group was fine. However, if you do it will cost about $75-100 from Cusco and back but you will need to find a driver willing to take a full day out there. It is a pretty wild road but you will find a driver in Cusco. If there are a couple of you it may be okay price-wise. The hike itself doesn’t really need a guide as the route up is pretty straightforward. The main benefit of a taxi might be leaving much later than 3 am like the group tours and being up at the lake in the late afternoon. You would get home later but you would be up there by yourself just before the golden hour. That could be a good play.

HUMANTAY LAKE ENTRY FEE

If you do go it solo/DIY from Cusco with a taxi or a car you will still need to pay the $10 entry fee for the hike. All of a sudden the tour with transfer and lunch is starting to look pretty good!

HUMANTAY LAKE HIKE DIFFICULTY AND ALTITUDE

The Humantay Lake hike is short. It actually took me only an hour to reach the lake.  However, I will throw some caution to the wind. It is steep.  Very steep in fact and you are starting at around 3,800 meters above sea level and finishing at 4,200 meters above sea level. This matters because you may encounter altitude sickness or at the very least become light-headed or short of breath very easily.

I struggled a little bit for breath but overall I was okay and took several breaks on the way up to ease through it. Locals wait about halfway up with horses for those who have hit a wall. It’s actually pretty funny (not for the horses). It’s a moment of realization for many that they have made a grave mistake and are in need of a miracle to make it to the top. That miracle is, unfortunately, a horse that has to haul them up. 

If you have walked your way around Machu Picchu, you will be fine on this hike. I’m not saying it will be easy but you WILL make it to the lake.

 MY EXPERIENCE HIKING TO HUMANTAY LAKE

This is my experience from pick-up to the drop-off of the Humantay Lake day trip from Cusco in Peru.

At 3 am I was picked up from my hotel lobby. With only 2.5 hours of sleep under my belt,  I was a little blurred, to say the least. I jumped into the spacious van and was passed a fresh blanket and immediately tried to fall asleep. I was more or less unsuccessful like always in cars. There were four girls in our group, myself and the guide. The girls seemed to have no issues sleeping in the car on the drive despite the bumpy winding rounds as we navigated our way up the steep mountains. The drive is incredibly scenic as we would find out on the drive home in the light.

The drive took three hours and we were the first van in the parking lot. At that stage, I actually thought we may be the only ones doing the hike. Here we had breakfast, which was a ham and cheese sandwich and a coffee. The hot drink helped warm us up as we waited it out in the chilly morning. You can buy snacks there if you need it but the guide gave us all a paper bag with lots of chocolates, fruit, a juice box, and other bites to eat for the hike.

After a quick breakfast, we began the hike. The fog was still rolling off the sides of the mountains as we strolled towards the start of the hike. Along the way, you will pass many accommodations that offer dome/camping options. It would be an incredibly scenic spot to stay the night and do the hike and would eliminate the 6  hours of driving to and from Cusco. I am unsure of the pricing but my guide seemed to think more than $200 per night for the fancy dome homes.

After fifteen minutes we made it to the base of the hill. This is where the hike really begins and it hits quickly, waking you up with a wall of incline and thin oxygen. Every couple of minutes the girls would stop for a break and, to be honest, I wasn’t mad about it. I was breathing heavily also. The incline and the altitude combine to make it a slow ascent.

After a while though, I broke away and headed up the hill with a consistent pace. I stopped only to investigate flowers or to spin around and take in the view, although it was still quite a foggy morning. I wondered whether we would have a  view of the lake. I knew it didn’t matter too much because this trek was an adventure in itself. The view would be a bonus.

After about an hour, I made it to the lake. It surprised me a little as it appeared when I made my way over the lip of the hill. With my guide and group half an hour behind,  it was just myself and a herd of shaggy cows sitting on the edge of the lake. Every now and again the clouds would thin, and the huge glacier mountain would peek out, almost as if letting me know that it was indeed there.

When the group arrived half an hour later, it was still foggy but it was clearing up slowly. We all tucked into our snacks as our guide began to share with us the brief history and culture of the Incas and Humantay Lake. He had carried up laminated maps and images to help tell his story. This was something only our group did. We also did a coca tea-leaf ceremony as our guide led us. It was great to have that moment to slow down and connect with Humantay Lake before the other groups began to roll in.

Almost as if our coca ceremony was a prayer, the clouds dissipated and the landscape turned into an unbelievable scene. The sun had the lake glowing bright blue. The color of the lake comes from the minerals and algae within it. Swimming is forbidden to protect the algae and color of the lake. The huge glacier mountain towers over the lake with waterfalls streaming into the lake. It is beyond impressive and nothing like I had ever seen before.

With more tour groups arriving now, I headed up onto the ridges to explore and the views only got better. Most tourists stay at the base of the lake but several people joined me up on the ridge for a new perspective of the lake. As we were up on the ridge we heard several cracks in the ice followed by mini avalanches, which was an amazing sight to behold with the snow cascading down the steep mountain. The lake continued to get even more vibrant as the sun swung higher. 

I was truly amazed by this spot and told my group to head on down and I would catch them on the way. I sent the drone up for a quick look. I’m unsure of the rules with the drone here as some guides wanted me to bring it down although others had said it’s okay. You may want to ask although it seems that it depends on who you talk to as to whether you will be granted permission to fly. Either way, the scene didn’t get any less incredible from the air.

After my quick flight over Humantay Lake, I started the jog down the hill and caught my group halfway down. We made our way back to the van and then traveled 20-minutes to a small local home where they had prepared an epic spread of food for lunch. Guacamole, different meats, pasta, quinoa, fruits, vegetables,  coca tea, and more. It was exactly what we needed and the view from our lunch table was almost as good as the hike itself.

After lunch, it was the fun part. The three-hour drive home. Everyone slept but I struggled to get comfortable in the van as usual and just watched out of the window at the stunning views and local life as we neared back to Cusco. 

Barbare Rofsky

Sunday 21st of January 2024

Hello can you give us a link of which tour you took? Thanks

Michelle

Saturday 24th of June 2023

Would you suggest this for with children the ages 14,12, 11, and 7? I know you said it was a steep hike.

Andrea

Thursday 26th of November 2020

Jackson, you are pure magic!! Thank you for sharing and inspiring!!

Gracias!!

Jackson

Thursday 26th of November 2020

Thanks!!!

Pedro

Thursday 27th of February 2020

Any particular reason this is the only location you made a blog post about while in Peru. From your other post you went to other locations but never wrote about them.

Jackson

Friday 28th of February 2020

I was there for just four days in Peru on a video assignment with the tourism board so my focus was that rather than blogging, photography and writing as normal. I did this hike the day before i left and documented it as per I normally would. I will go back to Peru one day and hike more!

Maria

Tuesday 23rd of July 2019

Great post! What sort of shoes would you recommend for this hike?

Jackson

Friday 28th of February 2020

I just used sneakers and it was fine but trail shoes or hiking shoes would be best