44 Best Restaurants in Cusco and the Sacred Valley, Peru

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We've compiled the best of the best in Cusco and the Sacred Valley - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

La Bo'M

$ | San Blas

For a quick bite, it's hard to go wrong with the flavorful Franco-Peruvian crepes served on the ground floor of this backpacker hostel; with both savory and sweet to choose from, they're the perfect meal or pick-me-up any time of day. The prix-fixe lunch is a delicious deal, and there's a great tea selection for an afternoon break.

La Bodega 138

$$

The wide selection of pizzas, pastas, soups, and salads here, as well as a few great desserts, ensure that you will leave feeling satisfied. In particular, the unique blue cheese, bacon, and sauco (elderberry) pizza can't be beat. Be sure to accompany it with one of their reasonably priced wines or a selection from the extensive list of craft beers.

Herrajes 138, Cusco, Peru
933-982–111
Known For
  • Pizza and pasta dishes
  • Craft beers
  • Great salads

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La Bondiet

$

This is a great spot to regroup, caffeinate, and make use of the Wi-Fi after a hard morning's sightseeing. The coffee is quality, there's a huge range of mouthwatering cakes, and you can also grab breakfast, sandwiches, and slices.

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La Justina

$$

Pizza is the only thing on the menu here, and drinks are limited, but if it's pizza and wine you're craving, this is one of the best places to get them. The atmosphere is relaxed—starting from the moment you enter the courtyard—but the colonial building is cozy, with only a few tables, so get here early.

Cl. Palacio 110, Cusco, Peru
084-255–475
Known For
  • Great pizza
  • Reasonably priced wine
  • Cool atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch

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La Placita de Pisac

$$

With striking wooden blue balcony overlooking Plaza de Armas and brown adobe walls decorated with murals of flowers, this jolly restaurant-cum-café is inside a traditional casona and embodies Pisac's recent wave of places catering to both hippie digital nomads and more and more tourists. The menu offers a wide selection of mains like alpaca steaks, spaghetti with pesto, pork burgers, and juices, smoothies, and coffee. Wi-Fi is strong and the upstairs lounge is handy for getting some work done while sipping an espresso.

Latente Specialty Coffee

$

You'll smell the coffee brewing from this cozy, dimly lit spot set amid the stone lanes of Ollantaytambo's old Inca town. Besides offering up excellent local brews from Vilcabamba, Latente cooks up simple brunch options like galletas de palta (avocado croquettes) and is a perfect spot for sitting down with a laptop or a book and meeting other travelers.

Chaupi Cl., Ollantaytambo, Peru
980-714–856
Known For
  • Strong local brews
  • Coworking ambience
  • Hip vibe
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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MAP Café

$$$$

Museum eateries don't routinely warrant a mention, but this small, glass-enclosed, elegant café inside the courtyard of the Museo de Arte Precolombino is actually one of the city's top restaurants. It has top prices to boot, but it's still a bargain compared with what this quality meal would cost in New York or Los Angeles. Of its novel and exciting twists on traditional Peruvian cuisine, try the chicken estofado (stew) with goat cheese and raisins or the pork adobo on a bed of sweet potato mousseline à l'orange. The dessert presentation is so clever that you may not want to ruin it by eating it—but you'll be glad you did.  The menu is prix-fixe after 6 (S/225), and you can choose one each from any of the appetizers, main dishes, and desserts; between 3 and 6, only dessert and coffee are served.

Mawic

$

This riverside bar and grill on the way to the train station has a welcoming red wooden floor and serves a range of comfort classics, from burgers to lasagnas, plus a selection of craft beer. The well-stocked bar extends out onto the curb. Be sure to take advantage of the the three-for-two deal on pisco sours and cuba libres by showing proof of your Machu Picchu visit. 

Mayupata

$

Spacious and airy, furnished with large wooden tables and chairs, this restaurant has the unmistakable air of a tourist-friendly Andean establishment. The menu ranges from traditional Peruvian grilled meats and fish to slightly edgier dishes like Andean ravioli (filled with alpaca). You'll also find foreigner-friendly staples like wood-oven pizza and Asian-fusion plates.

Jr. Concepcíon s/n, Ollantaytambo, Peru
084-610–258
Known For
  • Peruvian grilled meats
  • Pizza and other visitor-friendly staples
  • View of the archaeological site

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Morena Peruvian Kitchen

$$
Bright, cheerful, and just off the Plaza de Armas, the Australian-Peruvian owned Morena serves its own delicious takes on Peruvian standards, with a variety of traditional appetizers and mains that are perfect for mixing and matching to make your own tasting menu. The soups, sandwiches, smoothies, and other light fare are ideal for when you're adjusting to altitude; tea, coffee, juices, heavenly desserts, craft beers, and creative cocktails round out the offerings.

Naupa Rumi Buffet Francés

$ | San Blas
Although not a buffet in the American sense of all-you-can-eat, this French-owned café tests your restraint with the best pastries in town, as well as reasonably priced sandwiches on homemade bread, quiches, cheese and meat plates, salads, French wine, and, every Friday night, a special French dish of the week. Prix-fixe lunch menus are also available.
Cl. Atoqsaycuchi 616, Cusco, Peru
979-715–854
Known For
  • Delicious pastries
  • Fresh homemade food
  • Great coffee
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Organika

$

Hip bakery and café on a corner of the Plaza Regocijo where travelers can find a taste of home comforts. Take a break from Andino food with sourdough bread, patisserie, healthy vegetarian breakfasts, coffee, and pastas. All ingredients are sourced from a farm in the Sacred Valley that employs local Indigenous people.

Uchu

$$$

You could easily just feast on tasty appetizers at this upscale, minimalist-design spot, but you'd be missing out on the real highlight—an entrée cooked at your table on a heated volcanic stone. Choice, fresh selections of beef, alpaca, fish, chicken, and shrimp are brought to your table seared on the outside, allowing you to complete cooking them to your personal preference. Unlike other table-side cooking techniques, there's no smoke or strong odor to follow you home.

Ulrike's Café

$

German transplant Ulrike Simic and company dish up food all day long, making this the perfect refueling stop during a day of market shopping and sightseeing. Breakfast gets underway before the market does, at 8. They've got good à la carte soups and pizzas, too, and yummy brownies, muffins, cheesecake, and chocolate chip cookies for dessert.

Cl. Pardo 613, Pisac, Peru
084-203–195
Known For
  • Familiar comfort food
  • Coffee and yummy desserts
  • Rooftop view

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