Thirty-four kilometers from Puno, on a peninsula surrounded by the still waters of Lake Umayo, nearly 90 stone towers have stood watch over the altiplano for more than 700 years. The Sillustani ruins are the most remarkable pre-Inca archaeological site in southern Peru — and the most overlooked by travelers who visit only Lake Titicaca. The Sillustani tour with Turismo Liberty starts at $20 per person, runs half a day, and departs at 2:00 PM from Puno — the perfect complement to a morning on the lake.
If you’ve already booked the Uros Islands or Amantaní, Sillustani is the ideal afternoon add-on: the lake shows you living Andean culture; Sillustani shows you what came before. And the sunset over Lake Umayo — according to countless travelers — is the single most photogenic moment in all of Puno.
🏛️ Sillustani Tour with Turismo Liberty: price and what’s included
Turismo Liberty operates the Sillustani tour from Puno with a daily departure at 2:00 PM. The price starts from $20 USD per person on a shared group basis. Here’s exactly what’s included — and what isn’t:
| ✅ Included | ❌ Not included |
|---|---|
| Hotel pickup in central Puno | Guide gratuity (optional) |
| Round-trip tourist transport | Meals and drinks |
| Certified bilingual guide (Spanish–English) | Personal travel insurance |
| Entrance to Sillustani Archaeological Complex | Handicrafts at Atuncolla community (optional purchase) |
| Guided visit to the Lake Umayo viewpoint | |
| Stop at Atuncolla community |
🗿 What exactly are the Sillustani chullpas?
The chullpas are funerary towers built by the Colla (Kolla) culture, an Aymara-speaking people who dominated the Peruvian-Bolivian altiplano before the Inca Empire. Construction at Sillustani began around the 13th century, though the Incas later expanded and refined several towers.
What makes the chullpas extraordinary is their engineering. The towers are shaped like inverted truncated cones — wider at the top than at the base — and assembled from stone blocks fitted without mortar, with a precision rivaling Cusco’s Inca stonework. Inside each tower, the mummified body of a nobleman or priest was placed in a fetal position alongside personal belongings: ceramics, food, jewelry, and in the most important cases, gold and silver objects. An 1895 excavation uncovered more than 500 gold pieces inside a single chullpa — now on display at the Carlos Dreyer Museum in Puno.
🕑 Sillustani tour itinerary: hour by hour from Puno
This is the exact route Turismo Liberty follows on every Sillustani departure:
👁️ What to see at Sillustani: the highlights you can’t miss
The archaeological complex has several key points of interest that the Turismo Liberty guide covers in detail. These are the must-sees:
- Lizard Chullpa (Chullpa del Lagarto): The site’s most iconic tower at 12 meters tall, named for the lizard figure carved into one of its blocks — a symbol of life and regeneration in Andean cosmology. Its stonework is Inca-quality, fitted without mortar.
- Twin Chullpas: Two towers built side by side, likely representing a nobleman and his wife buried in the same space. The scale and state of preservation are exceptional.
- Intihuatana (solar circles): Ritual observation areas used for solar ceremonies. The guide explains how the Colla and later the Incas used these points to mark the agricultural and ceremonial calendar.
- The quarries: A short distance from the complex you can see where the stone blocks were extracted. The mystery of how they were transported uphill — with no wheel and no crane — is part of the site’s enduring fascination.
- Lake Umayo viewpoint: The site’s most photographed spot. From here you see Hatun Isla — a volcanic mesa rising from the water — and on clear days, a glimpse of Lake Titicaca in the distance.
⚖️ Guided tour vs. independent visit: which is better for Sillustani?
Sillustani can be visited independently or on an organized tour. Here’s a practical comparison:
| Aspect | Turismo Liberty Tour | Independent Visit |
|---|---|---|
| Total cost | From $20 (all inclusive) | ~S/25–35 (taxi + entrance) |
| Transport | Tourist bus with A/C, hotel pickup | Shared taxi, no guaranteed schedule |
| Historical context | Bilingual guide explains each tower | Basic information panels only |
| Time on site | ~2 hours with guided stops | Variable — no reference for what to see |
| Atuncolla community | Included in the route | Not usually part of the independent route |
| Safety | Guide always present, first aid kit | No on-site assistance |
The price difference between going solo and booking a tour is minimal — a shared taxi costs S/10–15 before entrance. What changes is the experience: without a guide, Sillustani is a collection of stone towers; with one, it becomes a real necropolis where you understand exactly why the Colla chose that precise peninsula above the lake to bury their dead.
📅 Best time to visit Sillustani in 2026
The Sillustani complex is open year-round, but the experience varies significantly by season:
| Season | Months | Conditions at Sillustani | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry (ideal) | May – October | Clear skies, perfect light for photography, firm ground | ⭐⭐⭐ Best season |
| Shoulder | April / November | Some afternoon rain, dramatic skies with clouds | ⭐⭐ Very good |
| Rainy | December – March | Frequent afternoon showers, slippery path, higher lake level | ⭐ Possible with rain gear |
🎒 What to bring on the Sillustani tour: complete checklist
- Layered clothing: Sillustani is at 3,840 m and the wind off Lake Umayo can be sharp. A fleece or windproof jacket is essential even if it’s sunny when you leave Puno
- SPF 50+ sunscreen: UV radiation at this altitude is extreme. The entire site is open-air with no shade along the route
- UV-filter sunglasses: Glare off Lake Umayo’s surface intensifies sun exposure considerably
- Solid-soled shoes: The terrain is uneven with loose stones and slopes. Not technically difficult, but proper grip is important
- Water (at least 1 liter): There are no vendors inside the complex. Bring enough for the 2-hour visit
- Snack or light meal: The tour departs at 2 PM — eat lunch beforehand. There’s no food available inside Sillustani
- Camera or charged smartphone: The Lake Umayo viewpoint is one of the most spectacular photo spots in all of Puno
- Soles in cash (S/20–30): For handicrafts at the Atuncolla community. Families sell directly and don’t have card readers
- Altitude medication (optional): If you’ve been in Puno less than 24 hours and feel any discomfort, bring paracetamol or Sorojchi Pills. The guide carries a first aid kit
❓ FAQ — Sillustani Ruins Tour Puno 2026
The Turismo Liberty tour starts from $20 USD per person on a shared group departure. This covers hotel pickup in central Puno, a certified bilingual guide, and site entrance. For private groups or high-season dates, pricing may vary — message us on WhatsApp for the current rate.
The excursion runs 3 to 4 hours total: approximately 40 minutes by road from Puno, 2 hours of guided visiting at the archaeological complex, plus the stop at Atuncolla community. Pickup is at 2:00 PM and you’re back in Puno around 6:00 PM.
The chullpas are pre-Inca and Inca funerary towers up to 12 meters tall, built by the Colla culture from the 13th century onwards. They were used to bury nobles and priests, mummified in a fetal position with gold and ceramic offerings. The site holds around 90 chullpas on a peninsula surrounded by Lake Umayo, 34 km from Puno.
Sillustani is at 3,840 m — only slightly above Puno at 3,827 m. If you’ve spent a full day in Puno without issues, the tour is perfectly manageable. The walk is gentle with no strenuous climbing. The guide paces the group carefully and rest stops are built into the itinerary.
Absolutely — and it’s one of Turismo Liberty’s most popular combinations. Uros Island tours depart at 7:30 AM and return around 1:00 PM. The Sillustani tour departs at 2:00 PM, leaving comfortable time for lunch. The 3-day Puno package from Turismo Liberty includes Sillustani, Uros, Amantaní and Taquile in a single booking.
Yes — and arguably more so than a longer stay. In one day you can do the Uros Islands in the morning and Sillustani in the afternoon, experiencing both living Andean culture and ancient pre-Inca history. Many travelers say Sillustani is the highlight of their entire Peru trip, precisely because they weren’t expecting it.
The Sillustani ruins are the piece that completes the Puno puzzle. Lake Titicaca shows you the living culture of the altiplano — the Uros families, the weavings of Taquile, a night on Amantaní. Sillustani shows you what came before: a civilization that built 12-meter stone towers 700 years ago on a volcanic lake, without mortar, without wheels, without cranes. With local guides who know every stone block and its meaning, the complex comes alive in a way no information panel ever could.
Ready to book the Sillustani tour from Puno?
Daily departure 2:00 PM · From $20/person · Bilingual guide · Entrance included · Back ~6 PM

