Solo Female Travel in Peru: A Practical 2026 Guide to Trekking, Safety and the Best Routes
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Solo Female Travel in Peru: A Practical 2026 Guide to Trekking, Safety and the Best Routes
Solo female travel is having a moment, and it is not slowing down. Search interest in women travelling alone has climbed year after year, and for 2026 Peru sits near the top of the list. It is easy to see why. You can wake up in a colonial courtyard in Cusco, spend the afternoon walking terraces the Incas built by hand, and watch the sun set behind a 6,000-metre glacier the next morning, all in a country where the trekking infrastructure is genuinely world-class.
Still, travelling alone as a woman comes with questions that a group brochure rarely answers. Is it safe? Which routes are best on your own? How do you meet people without giving up your independence? Here is an honest, practical guide, written from the perspective of a local operator that hosts solo women on the trail every single week.
Is Peru safe for solo female travellers?
The short answer is yes, with the same street-smart habits you would use in any major destination. Cusco, the Sacred Valley and the classic trekking regions are used to international visitors and are among the most traveller-friendly areas in South America. Petty theft in crowded markets and bus terminals is the most common issue, not violent crime.
A few habits go a long way: keep your day bag in front of you in busy plazas, use registered taxis or your hotel’s driver at night, keep a copy of your passport separate from the original, and share your trekking itinerary with someone back home. On any multi-day trek you will be with a licensed guide and a support team the entire time, which is exactly why so many solo women choose an organised route over going fully independent.
The best treks to do on your own
The beauty of joining a small group departure is that you arrive solo but never actually hike alone. You get the freedom of a solo trip with the safety and camaraderie of a team. These are the routes we most often recommend to women travelling by themselves.
The Classic Inca Trail — the icon, with a built-in community
The Classic Inca Trail 4-Day trek is the most social route in Peru. Permits are capped, groups are small, and by day two you will know everyone’s name. Because the trail is permit-controlled and fully supported by porters and a guide, it is one of the most reassuring first treks for a solo traveller. If four days feels like a lot, the Short Inca Trail 2-Day option delivers the Sun Gate arrival with a single night away.
The Salkantay Trek — for the confident adventurer
The Salkantay Trek is wilder, higher and more dramatic, crossing a 4,650-metre pass beneath a snow-capped Apu before dropping into cloud forest. It attracts an active, international crowd and is a favourite for solo women who want a physical challenge and a real sense of accomplishment. You will finish it with a group of new friends and a camera roll you will not stop scrolling through.
Day hikes if you are short on time
Not every solo trip needs a multi-day commitment. A full-day trip to Humantay Lake gives you a glacial, turquoise payoff in a single day, and it is one of the easiest ways to meet other travellers before you have even unpacked.
Where to base yourself
Make Cusco your home base. It is walkable, full of women-run cafés and craft shops, and central to almost every trek and day tour. Spend your first two days acclimatising here before any high-altitude hiking; it helps your body adjust and gives you time to settle in at your own pace.
How to meet people (without losing your independence)
Group departures are the obvious answer, but you can layer in more connection: choose a hostel with a communal kitchen, join a free walking tour on your first morning, or take a cooking or weaving workshop in the Sacred Valley. The trick to solo travel is designing a trip where company is available when you want it and solitude is there when you don’t.
Final thoughts
Peru rewards independent travellers with some of the most memorable landscapes on Earth and a culture that welcomes visitors warmly. Plan sensibly, acclimatise properly, and pick a supported route, and you will find that travelling solo here feels less like a leap and more like joining a community already on the move. When you are ready, our team is happy to help you match a route to your experience level — just get in touch.