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tour monasterio de santa catalina 2026

Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa 2026: Tickets, Hours & Tips

Planning a trip to Arequipa in 2026 and wondering about Santa Catalina Monastery tickets? You’re in the right place. This guide covers everything you need before you arrive: current admission prices, opening hours, what to see first, and why visiting with a certified guide is worth every penny. Santa Catalina Monastery tickets in 2026 cost S/50 per person (approximately $13 USD), and the complex opens daily from 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM — with a special evening extension on Tuesdays and Thursdays until 8:00 PM. For a seamless experience, Turismo Liberty’s Arequipa City Tour includes hotel pickup, a bilingual guide, and full transport from just $27 per person.

For over 440 years, the Monastery of Santa Catalina was a closed city within a city — a Dominican convent where nuns entered and never left. Its 20,000 m² of colonial cloisters, sillar volcanic stone alleyways, and vividly painted courtyards in red and blue represent one of the most unique heritage sites in all of South America. The White City earned its Arequipa UNESCO heritage status in 2000, and this monastery is its crown jewel. What you take away from a visit depends entirely on how well you understand what you’re looking at.

⚡ Santa Catalina Monastery tickets and opening hours 2026

Visitor typeTicket price 2026Notes
General admission (nationals and foreigners)S/50 (~$13 USD)Standard daily rate
Peruvian seniors (60+)S/25Valid national ID required
Students with valid cardS/25Current student ID required
Major holidays (Easter, Independence Day, Christmas)+25%Peak season surcharge
DayOpening hoursNotes
Monday9:00 AM – 6:00 PMStandard hours
Tuesday9:00 AM – 8:00 PM✨ Evening visit available
Wednesday9:00 AM – 6:00 PMStandard hours
Thursday9:00 AM – 8:00 PM✨ Evening visit available
Friday9:00 AM – 6:00 PMStandard hours
Saturday9:00 AM – 6:00 PMBusiest day
Sunday9:00 AM – 6:00 PMBusiest day
⚠️ Important: Hours may change on religious and national holidays. Always verify at the ticket office or with your agency before visiting. During peak season (July–August), the monastery is most crowded between 10:00 AM and noon — arrive early or visit in the afternoon for a quieter experience.

🗺️ Arequipa city tour with guide: what’s included, duration & pickup

Visiting Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa without context means missing roughly 70% of the experience. The story of Sor Ana de los Angeles Monteagudo, the symbolism of each cloister, why the walls of the Silence Quarter were painted that specific shade of ochre red, what sillar volcanic stone actually is and where it comes from — none of that is written on the panels. A certified guide turns a scenic walk into an unforgettable experience.

Turismo Liberty’s Arequipa City Tour departs daily from your hotel in the historic center. The full tour lasts approximately 4 hours and includes:

  • Shared or private tourist transport with hotel pickup in the historic center
  • Certified bilingual guide (Spanish-English) throughout the entire tour
  • Plaza de Armas de Arequipa and Basilica Cathedral façade
  • Jesuit Cloisters of La Compañía (mestizo Baroque architecture)
  • Guided tour inside the Monastery of Santa Catalina de Siena
  • Yanahuara Viewpoint with panoramic view of El Misti Volcano
  • Sabandía Mill (17th-century colonial watermill)

Not included: The monastery entrance fee (S/50 per person) is paid directly at the ticket office, though your guide accompanies the group inside throughout. Lunches and personal expenses are also not included.

Price: from $27 per person on a group tour. Contact Turismo Liberty: +51 959 175 901 via WhatsApp for availability and current pricing — response in under 5 minutes.

🏛️ What is Santa Catalina Monastery — and why does it matter?

The Monastery of Santa Catalina was founded in 1579 on the order of doña María de Guzmán, widow of a Spanish conquistador. For nearly three centuries, this Dominican convent remained hermetically sealed from the outside world: nuns who entered never left. It was only in 1970 that the gates opened to the public, revealing an intact colonial citadel that time had preserved almost unchanged.

Covering 20,000 m² of built space, the monastery occupies an entire city block in the heart of Arequipa’s historic center. Its architecture is entirely constructed from sillar volcanic stone — the white volcanic rock quarried from the slopes of Chachani volcano that gives the White City Peru its name and its identity. UNESCO designated Arequipa’s historic center a World Heritage Site in 2000, and the monastery is its most celebrated landmark.

Inside its walls you will find streets named after Spanish cities — the famous Calle Sevilla Arequipa, Calle Granada, Calle Córdoba — three main cloisters, a colonial art gallery with over 400 pieces of religious art, the so-called Silence Quarter where nuns still reside, and a historical archive documenting four and a half centuries of convent life. The most venerated figure is Sor Ana de los Angeles Monteagudo, beatified by John Paul II in 1985, whose cell is preserved as a shrine.

💡 Turismo Liberty tip: If you book the afternoon city tour (2:00 PM departure) on a Tuesday or Thursday, you arrive at the monastery in time for the candlelight evening extension — giving you a chance to see the cloisters in both natural and artificial light. Two completely different experiences, one S/50 ticket.

🚶 Inside the monastery: main areas and what to see in each

The Monastery of Santa Catalina Arequipa follows a marked circuit through its main sectors. The official guided tour lasts 60 to 90 minutes; if you continue exploring freely afterward, allow at least 2 hours in total. These are the highlights you should not skip:

  1. Orange Courtyard (Claustro de los Naranjos) — The first stop after entering. A porticoed patio with centuries-old orange trees and a central fountain. The ochre red walls contrast sharply with the white sillar stone. This is where nuns’ families were received during the rare permitted visits.
  2. Calle Sevilla — The most photographed spot in the monastery. A narrow alleyway with brilliant red walls, flower pots, and polished sillar underfoot. Midday light casts dramatic shadows that make this one of the most iconic corners in all of Arequipa.
  3. Silence Quarter — The sector where the cloistered nuns still reside. Visitors can walk its streets but may not access private areas. The architecture here is more austere — pure white and bare sillar, without the vivid colors found elsewhere.
  4. Cell of Sor Ana de los Angeles — The Arequipa-born nun beatified in 1985. Her cell preserves personal objects, images, and documents. For many visitors this is the most emotionally powerful stop of the entire cloister tour.
  5. Colonial Art Gallery (Pinacoteca) — A room housing nearly 400 pieces of religious art from the 17th to 19th centuries: canvases from the Cusco school, polychrome wooden sculptures, and liturgical ornaments. One of the most important collections in southern Peru.
  6. Laundry area and convent kitchens — Where the everyday reality of convent life comes into focus: water jugs, stone washing boards, and smoke-blackened kitchens. The contrast with the opulence of the art gallery is deliberate and revealing.

🌙 Tuesday evening visit to Santa Catalina: open until 8 PM

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, the monastery extends its normal 6:00 PM closing time to 8:00 PM. The difference is not simply a matter of lighting: the atmospheric illumination selected for the evening visit fundamentally transforms the character of the space. The sillar volcanic stone walls take on warm amber tones, the cloisters feel more intimate, and Calle Sevilla Arequipa — packed with visitors during the day — is practically empty after 7:00 PM.

The evening ticket costs the same as the daytime admission: S/50. No advance reservation is required — simply arrive before 7:30 PM to allow enough time. Turismo Liberty can time the afternoon city tour (2:00 PM departure) to reach the monastery for the Tuesday evening extension. Contact us via WhatsApp to check availability.

📊 Self-guided visit vs. guided city tour: which is right for you?

FactorSelf-guided visitGuided city tour (Turismo Liberty)
Total costS/50 entry + own transport to monastery$27 (guide + transport) + S/50 entry
Historical contextOnly what the on-site panels explainBilingual guide covering 4 centuries in detail
Hotel pickupNoYes, included in the price
Other attractionsMonastery onlyPlaza de Armas, Yanahuara, Sabandía Mill
DurationVariable (1.5–3 h inside)~4 hours total
Best forRepeat visitors with prior knowledgeFirst-timers, families, groups, day trips

🎒 What to bring and what to know before visiting the monastery

  • Cash in Peruvian soles: S/50 per person for admission. Cards are accepted, but during peak season payment terminals can fail — carry cash as backup.
  • Passport or ID: Required for entry. Peruvian seniors (60+) need their national ID to access the reduced rate.
  • Layered clothing: The monastery interior is at 2,335 m (7,660 ft) above sea level. Mornings and evenings inside the cloisters can be noticeably cold.
  • Comfortable shoes: The floors are sillar stone and uneven cobblestone. Avoid heels or sandals without grip.
  • Camera: Flash-free photography is permitted throughout all public areas. The monastery is one of the most photogenic sites in Peru.
  • Water and snacks: There is no café in the main tour circuit. A small café is located at the end — bring water to carry with you.
  • Time: Allow a minimum of 2 hours for a self-guided visit; 4 hours if you join the full city tour with Turismo Liberty.
⚠️ Not permitted inside: Entering the cloistered nuns’ residential area, touching pieces in the colonial art gallery, and using camera flash inside the chapels are all prohibited. Drone use is completely forbidden within and immediately around the monastery.

❓ Frequently asked questions — Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa 2026

How much are Santa Catalina Monastery tickets in 2026?

General admission to Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa in 2026 costs S/50 per person (roughly $13 USD) for both Peruvian nationals and foreign visitors. Peruvian seniors over 60 and students with a valid card pay S/25. During major holidays (Easter, Peruvian Independence Day, Christmas, New Year) prices increase by 25%.

What are the opening hours of Santa Catalina Monastery in 2026?

The monastery is open every day from 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM. On Tuesdays and Thursdays hours extend to 8:00 PM for the candlelight evening visit. Arrive by 7:30 PM on those evenings to have enough time to explore properly.

What does the Arequipa city tour with Turismo Liberty include?

The city tour includes hotel pickup in the historic center, a certified bilingual guide (Spanish-English), visits to the Plaza de Armas, Basilica Cathedral of Arequipa, Jesuit Cloisters, Santa Catalina Monastery (guided inside), Yanahuara Viewpoint, and Sabandía Mill. Price from $27 per person. The monastery entry fee (S/50) is paid separately at the ticket office.

Is there an evening or night visit to Santa Catalina Monastery?

Yes. On Tuesdays and Thursdays the monastery opens until 8:00 PM with special atmospheric lighting. The candlelight visit costs the same as standard admission (S/50) and requires no advance booking — just arrive before 7:30 PM. It is one of the most recommended experiences in Arequipa: the sillar cloisters lit at night feel completely different from a daytime visit.

Where does the Arequipa city tour depart from?

Turismo Liberty’s city tour includes pickup directly from your hotel in Arequipa’s historic center. Two daily departure times: 9:00 AM and 2:00 PM. Total tour duration is approximately 4 hours. To arrange your exact pickup point, message via WhatsApp at +51 959 175 901.

How long does it take to visit Santa Catalina Monastery?

The official guided tour runs 60 to 90 minutes. If you continue exploring freely after the guided portion, budget 2.5 to 3 hours in total to cover the Silence Quarter, Calle Sevilla, the colonial art gallery, and the historic cells. The monastery spans 20,000 m² — it is very easy to lose track of time.

Visiting Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa in 2026 ranks among the most rewarding experiences in southern Peru: accessible ticket prices, generous opening hours including the Tuesday evening extension, and the option of going with an expert guide who brings four centuries of history to life. With Turismo Liberty, the city tour departs daily from your hotel — small groups, bilingual guide, and pickup included from $27 per person.

Ready to visit Santa Catalina Monastery?

Check availability for your dates, get your questions answered, and book the city tour in under 5 minutes via WhatsApp.

📸 Arequipa and Santa Catalina Monastery in photos
Santa Catalina Monastery Arequipa 2026 — Turismo Liberty
Santa Catalina Monastery — A city within the city, built from sillar volcanic stone
Historic center Arequipa 2026 — Turismo Liberty
Arequipa Historic Center — UNESCO World Heritage Site
Plaza de Armas Arequipa 2026 — Turismo Liberty
Arequipa Plaza de Armas with El Misti Volcano in the background — essential city tour stop
White City Arequipa 2026 — Turismo Liberty
Arequipa — The White City of Peru, at 2,335 m above sea level
What travelers say about Turismo Liberty
Verified reviews · TripAdvisor
4.9
Excellent · Turismo Liberty Peru
The Santa Catalina Monastery alone would have been worth the trip to Arequipa, but doing it with Turismo Liberty’s city tour made it exceptional. Our guide explained the story of Sor Ana de los Angeles, the symbolism of each cloister, and the history of the sillar volcanic stone in a way no guidebook could. We went on a Tuesday and caught the evening visit — absolutely magical. Highly recommended for first-time visitors.
Booked the city tour two days before arriving in Arequipa via WhatsApp — they confirmed within minutes. Hotel pickup was on time, the guide spoke excellent English, and the pace was perfect. Calle Sevilla inside the monastery is straight out of a film set. At $27 this is one of the best value day trips in Peru. Already recommending Turismo Liberty to everyone in my travel group.
The S/50 monastery ticket is absolutely worth it, but going without a guide is a missed opportunity. Turismo Liberty’s guide brought the colonial convent to life — the stories of the cloistered nuns, the colonial art gallery, the Silence Quarter. Yanahuara viewpoint at sunset with El Misti Volcano in the background was the perfect ending. The White City exceeded every expectation I had.

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