New Airport Near Machu Picchu Could Bring Surge in Visitors for Peru

Image: The ancient Incan city of Machu Picchu, Peru. (Photo Credit: Adobe Stock/SCStock)
Image: The ancient Incan city of Machu Picchu, Peru. (Photo Credit: Adobe Stock/SCStock)
Laurie Baratti
by Laurie Baratti
Last updated: 5:05 PM ET, Mon February 9, 2026

Travel to world-famous Machu Picchu in Peru’s Sacred Valley has always been a long and somewhat arduous trek. According to BBC’s report, that’s intentional, as the ancient Inca civilization selected its high location in the Andes mountains in order to keep it clandestine. 

But soon, the trip to Machu Picchu could get much easier—and busier—because of a long-planned airport now that’s under construction near the historic city of Chinchero. Proponents say the project could boost tourism and jobs, but critics warn it may put undue pressure on the region’s environment and cultural heritage.

The new Chinchero International Airport is designed to give travelers a more direct route to Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley. Instead of flying into Lima and then connecting to Cusco, visitors could eventually land much closer to the area’s top attractions.

After years of delays, the airport is now expected to open in late 2027. The project is estimated to have cost about 2.3 trillion Peruvian soles (roughly $683 million) so far.

According to Peru’s Ministry of Transport and Communications, the construction phase has already created more than 5,000 jobs. Once the airport is fully operational, officials say it could benefit around one million people working in tourism and related industries across the region.

The airport is designed to handle up to eight million passengers a year. That could increase visitor numbers to the Sacred Valley by as much as 200 percent, representing a huge jump for an area that already sees thousands of people each day wending their way to the ancient citadel during peak travel seasons.

Supporters say easier access will help spread tourism dollars beyond Cusco and into more rural communities. But many local operators, Indigenous residents, archaeologists and conservation groups are protesting the project, arguing that it could have serious ecological and cultural impacts.

The Sacred Valley, carved by the Urubamba River and surrounded by the Andes, extends from Cusco (once the capital of the Inca Empire) to the cloud forests Machu Picchu calls home. Many roads, structures and irrigation systems have stood here for centuries, and some are still in use today. Opponents of the airport say construction could threaten watersheds, wildlife habitats and important archaeological sites.

The region’s residents note that local infrastructure is insufficient to handle a larger influx of tourists. Some communities are already dealing with water shortages, waste systems are stretched thin, and roads in and out of the area are already heavily congested on busy weekends. A heritage impact assessment on the airport project was still incomplete as of 2025.

UNESCO has also been monitoring the situation and has warned that if visitor numbers rise without adequate management, Machu Picchu could risk losing its World Heritage status. Peru’s Ministry of Culture currently limits daily visitors to the site to between 4,500 and 5,600 people, depending on the season.

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Laurie Baratti

Laurie Baratti

Assistant Editor

Laurie Baratti is an Assistant Editor for TravelPulse. She is a San Diego-based journalist whose work has previously appeared in publications like TravelAge West, SPACE, Modern Home + Living, Montage, and Sandals Life magazines. Travel writing has long been her passion, and she is always looking for excuses to explore the world outside of her native California. Laurie is also a lifelong equestrian, a proud pet-parent, and an underground advocate of the Oxford comma.

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