| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 September 2026, Tuesday | 5:52 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 51m |
| 2 September 2026, Wednesday | 5:51 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 52m |
| 3 September 2026, Thursday | 5:50 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 52m |
| 4 September 2026, Friday | 5:50 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 53m |
| 5 September 2026, Saturday | 5:49 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 54m |
| 6 September 2026, Sunday | 5:48 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 54m |
| 7 September 2026, Monday | 5:47 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 55m |
| 8 September 2026, Tuesday | 5:47 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 56m |
| 9 September 2026, Wednesday | 5:46 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 57m |
| 10 September 2026, Thursday | 5:45 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 57m |
| 11 September 2026, Friday | 5:45 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 58m |
| 12 September 2026, Saturday | 5:44 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 59m |
| 13 September 2026, Sunday | 5:43 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 00m |
| 14 September 2026, Monday | 5:42 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 00m |
| 15 September 2026, Tuesday | 5:42 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 01m |
| 16 September 2026, Wednesday | 5:41 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 02m |
| 17 September 2026, Thursday | 5:40 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 03m |
| 18 September 2026, Friday | 5:40 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 03m |
| 19 September 2026, Saturday | 5:39 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 04m |
| 20 September 2026, Sunday | 5:38 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 05m |
| 21 September 2026, Monday | 5:37 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 06m |
| 22 September 2026, Tuesday | 5:37 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 06m |
| 23 September 2026, Wednesday | 5:36 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 07m |
| 24 September 2026, Thursday | 5:35 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 08m |
| 25 September 2026, Friday | 5:34 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 09m |
| 26 September 2026, Saturday | 5:34 AM | 5:43 PM | 12h 09m |
| 27 September 2026, Sunday | 5:33 AM | 5:44 PM | 12h 10m |
| 28 September 2026, Monday | 5:32 AM | 5:44 PM | 12h 11m |
| 29 September 2026, Tuesday | 5:32 AM | 5:44 PM | 12h 12m |
| 30 September 2026, Wednesday | 5:31 AM | 5:44 PM | 12h 12m |
Cusco sits at 3,400 metres in a high-Andean valley, with dry-season mornings (May to October) offering clear skies and minimal haze. The Inca ruins on the surrounding hills give direct sight lines to both the eastern and western horizon.
The large Inca terraces face east over the entire Cusco valley; the outer esplanade is free to enter, while the main ruins require the Boleto Turístico (130 PEN). Arrive before 6 a.m. to have the site to yourself before tour groups.
Free-access hilltop at 3,700 m directly above Sacsayhuamán, reachable by taxi from the centre in about 10 minutes (15-20 PEN) or on foot uphill from San Blas. The eastern face of the statue looks straight down the valley toward the sunrise.
This Inca ceremonial bath site is 8 km north of Cusco on the Pisac road, at roughly 3,765 m on open plateau with an unobstructed eastern horizon. Included in the Boleto Turístico; traffic is almost nonexistent at sunrise.
Inca rock shrine 3 km northeast of the city centre on open ground with a clear eastern horizon; included in the Boleto Turístico. Considerably fewer visitors than Sacsayhuamán at this hour.
Facing southwest, the viewpoint gives a clear line to the mountains that ring the city and catches the last light of the day. The area is lit after dark so there is no need to rush down.
The terrace in front of the Iglesia San Cristóbal faces west and northwest over the colonial rooftops of the historic centre and the Plaza de Armas. Free, about 10 minutes on foot from the Plaza via Calle Pumacurco.
Small open terrace in the San Blas artisan quarter, west-facing and free of charge, about 10 minutes uphill from the Plaza de Armas through steep cobbled lanes.