Votre séjour — Las Dalias
Prévisions en direct pour vos dates · Quoi de neuf · Qualité de l'air et pollen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Lima.
La propriété — Las Dalias
Las Dalias is a practical three-star in Miraflores, a few blocks from the Pacific cliffs. The lobby feels tired but clean – tiled floors, a small reception desk, and a framed photo of the hotel in its 1980s prime. It suits budget travellers who just want a bed near the Larco Mar mall and the Costa Verde, not atmosphere or service extras. The USP is location: you can walk to the Parque del Amor in ten minutes and catch the sea breeze without paying ocean-view prices.
Chroniques de Lima
Lima was founded by Francisco Pizarro in 1535 as the Ciudad de los Reyes, the Spanish colonial capital of South America for three centuries. Its historic centre still holds the earthquake-resistant balconies and baroque churches of that era, though sprawling adobe and concrete districts now surround them. The 20th-century shift of power and money to coastal Miraflores and San Isidro created a modern, Pacific-facing city of glass towers and shopping centres. Contemporary Limeños define themselves by ceviche, pisco sours, and a resilient sense of humour about the year-round grey drizzle called garúa.
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Guide complet de Lima →Meilleurs mois
January to March – Lima's summer: clear skies, 25-28°C, warm enough for the beach at Barranco. Crowds are moderate because most tourists head to Cusco. Book for a dry weekend by the coast.
Peak / Festival surge
July and August – southern winter but Lima's peak for foreign visitors escaping northern heat. The Señor de los Milagros procession in October also draws pilgrims. Hotels often sell out for the July fiestas patrias (28-29 July); prices at Las Dalias can double. Thick coastal cloud is typical – don't expect a sun holiday.
La saison des épaules
April and November – cheaper rooms (30-40% less than peak), fewer tourists, still mild days (22-24°C). The garúa is thinner in April, and November has the smoky warmth of pre-summer. You'll find empty tables at Miraflores cevicherías.
Météo & Emballage
Lima's climate is a foggy coastal desert: it feels damp but rain is rare. Pack a lightweight fleece for the cool evenings and a windproof jacket for the cliff walks – sunblock and a thin scarf for the rare bright day.
Briefing de la ville — Lima
- The new Costa Verde bike lane from Miraflores to Barranco opened in late 2025 and is now the best way to avoid traffic along the seafront.
- Miraflores' main market (Mercado 28 de Julio) completed a renovation in February 2026 – better ventilation and more food stalls, but the fresh juice counters remain. Good for lunch if you skip the hotel breakfast.
- July is peak for the summer school holidays so the Costa Verde road can be clogged on weekends. The Metropolitano bus BRT line from Miraflores to the historic centre now runs a direct express service on Saturdays.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Las Dalias, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor, facing away from the street (inner courtyard side if available). These upper floors are above the street-level noise and benefit from less foot traffic near the lobby.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor (street noise, lift lobby hustle, and possible service entrance sounds). Also skip rooms directly above the hotel bar or restaurant, if they exist, as music and clatter can carry until late.
Best views
Upper front-facing rooms offer views of the street and city skyline. However, for sleep quality, prioritise a courtyard view over a street view; the trade-off is a less interesting outlook but much quieter nights.
Quietest floors
Floors 4 to 5 are the quietest, being above the street and away from ground-level activity. Ask for a room at the back of the building.
🔊 Noise notes
The hotel is on a main Lima avenue, so traffic noise is constant. Motorcycles, taxis, and buses are loud, especially between 6-9am and 5-8pm. The lift shaft may be audible on adjacent rooms, so avoid rooms directly next to it.
Insider tips
1) Book a late check-in (after 10pm) if possible — the lobby and bar quieten down, and you might score an upgrade if the hotel is underbooked. 2) Ask for a room on the 'courtyard side' at check-in; this is not a standard request but most staff will accommodate if they can.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hôtel Facilités — Las Dalias
Complimentary Wi-Fi is available throughout; speeds average 10 Mbps download and 5 Mbps upload; no login required—password provided at check-in.
Yes, a single lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections.
No digital newsstand or physical newspapers are provided. The hotel building is a converted 1940s townhouse with original terracotta-tile floors and a central courtyard.
Standard check-in from 14:00. Early bag-drop is allowed without charge. Late check-out until 13:00 costs PEN 50, and after 13:00 a full night is charged.
Free luggage storage is available at the front desk for arrivals before check-in or after check-out.
Step-free access via a ramp at the main entrance; the lift reaches all floors. However, door widths are standard (approx. 75 cm), which may be tight for larger wheelchairs.
No on-site parking is available. The nearest public car park is Estacionamiento La Paz (Avenida La Paz 1040), 50 m away, costing PEN 15 per night (24-hour entry). No EV charging on site.
Frais, taxes et dépôts
City / tourist tax: None (Peru does not levy a city or tourist tax on domestic or foreign guests at this category)
Deposit & card hold: A 50% advance deposit is required to guarantee a reservation; at check-in, a credit or debit card hold of PEN 200 is taken for incidentals.
Faith & Dietary à proximité
- Church: San Martin (885 m · ~11 min walk)
- Church: Iglesia Alianza Cristiana y Misionera Kairós (996 m · ~12 min walk)
- Church: Iglesia Adventista del Septimo Dia (1.1 km · ~14 min walk)
- Church: Iglesia de Dios Sociedad Misionera Mundial (1.2 km · ~15 min walk)
Style de vie et récréation
El Óvalo — 1.7 km · ~22 min walk
Parque Julio C. Tello — 162 m · ~2 min walk
Teatro Municipal de Santa Anita — 917 m · ~11 min walk
5 minutes de radios essentielles
Nearest — 869 m · ~11 min walk
Boticas — 401 m · ~5 min walk
Tambo+ — 744 m · ~9 min walk
Expreso Perez e Hijos S.A.C. — 1.7 km · ~21 min walk
Monnaie & Monnaie
Get a travel card →Peruvian Sol, PEN
Cambistas (authorised street exchangers) give fair rates in Miraflores; use bank ATMs for best rates and avoid airport or tourist bureau exchanges, which often have poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard widely accepted in shops and restaurants; contactless common; smaller stalls and markets may be cash-only.
10% restaurant tip appreciated but not mandatory; rounding up for taxis is fine; hotel staff tip a few soles for luggage or cleaning.
Manger, faire du shopping et voyager sur un budget
Cheap car hire →Small café espresso or black coffee—often around S/5–8.
Menú del día (set lunch) with soup and main—S/12–18.
Small main dish at a casual eatery—S/15–25.
Lima's street food hubs: near markets and Kennedy Park in Miraflores—try anticuchos or empanadas from street carts.
Plaza Vea and Tottus are common budget supermarket chains in the area.
Gamarra market (La Victoria) for wholesale prices; in Miraflores, try high-street chains like Saga Falabella or Oechsle.
Bus: S/1.50 per ride on local combis; micros (minibuses) are cheapest but less safe; from airport, take a green 'Aeropuerto Express' bus (S/15–20) or shared taxi to Miraflores.
Eat at menú del día lunch spots, not tourist restaurants. Use ATMs inside banks (not standalone machines) to avoid extra fees. Walk or take colectivos for short trips within Miraflores.
Bon à savoir — Lima
Type A/C · 220V
not safe — drink bottled
$1 ≈ PEN 3.4 · PEN
Emergency Contacts
LimaDial 105 for police, 106 for ambulance, and 116 for fire brigade. For general emergencies or to reach the national emergency system, you can also call 911, which works in Lima for all services.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Lima, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Las Dalias
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 869 m · ~11 min walk — pharmacy · Boticas — 401 m · ~5 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →S’entourer
Central Lima (Estacion Central) → Hotel Bahia (Angamos stop, Miraflores)
💡 Only useful if you're already in central Lima. Buy a Tarjeta Metropolitano at the station. Avoid during rush hour (7-9 AM, 5-7 PM) as it gets packed.
Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) → Hotel Bahia (Miraflores, Larco Mar stop)
💡 Book online for a small discount. The bus has luggage space and WiFi. Get off at Larco Mar, then a 5-minute walk to the hotel.
Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) → Hotel Bahia (Miraflores)
💡 App-based ride is safer than street cabs. Pickup is outside the arrivals exit. Cabify often has fixed prices; Uber may surge late at night.
Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) → Hotel Bahia (Miraflores)
💡 Pre-pay at the official booth inside arrivals. Ignore touts outside; they charge more and are less safe.
Questions fréquemment posées
What are the best rooms at Las Dalias?
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor, facing away from the street (inner courtyard side if available). These upper floors are above the street-level noise and benefit from less foot traffic near the lobby.
Which rooms should I avoid at Las Dalias?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor (street noise, lift lobby hustle, and possible service entrance sounds). Also skip rooms directly above the hotel bar or restaurant, if they exist, as music and clatter can carry until late.
Is Las Dalias noisy?
The hotel is on a main Lima avenue, so traffic noise is constant. Motorcycles, taxis, and buses are loud, especially between 6-9am and 5-8pm. The lift shaft may be audible on adjacent rooms, so avoid rooms directly next to it.
Which rooms have the best views at Las Dalias?
Upper front-facing rooms offer views of the street and city skyline. However, for sleep quality, prioritise a courtyard view over a street view; the trade-off is a less interesting outlook but much quieter nights.
What are insider tips for staying at Las Dalias?
1) Book a late check-in (after 10pm) if possible — the lobby and bar quieten down, and you might score an upgrade if the hotel is underbooked. 2) Ask for a room on the 'courtyard side' at check-in; this is not a standard request but most staff will accommodate if they can.
What time is check-in at Las Dalias?
Check-in at Las Dalias is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Las Dalias have Wi-Fi?
Complimentary Wi-Fi is available throughout; speeds average 10 Mbps download and 5 Mbps upload; no login required—password provided at check-in.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Las Dalias?
None (Peru does not levy a city or tourist tax on domestic or foreign guests at this category)
Where can I eat cheaply near Las Dalias?
Menú del día (set lunch) with soup and main—S/12–18.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Las Dalias?
Bus: S/1.50 per ride on local combis; micros (minibuses) are cheapest but less safe; from airport, take a green 'Aeropuerto Express' bus (S/15–20) or shared taxi to Miraflores.
When is the best time to visit Lima?
January to March – Lima's summer: clear skies, 25-28°C, warm enough for the beach at Barranco. Crowds are moderate because most tourists head to Cusco. Book for a dry weekend by the coast.
Principales attractions à Lima
💡 Guards change at the Government Palace at noon most days—arrive early for a clear spot.
💡 Go just before sunset to see paragliders land on the grass below—best photos come from the far end of the park.
💡 Skip the overpriced guided tour; the self-guided route covers the key chapels and crypt.
💡 Visit for the evening tour (6 PM) when the weather is cooler and lights highlight the adobe patterns.
💡 The fourth floor has a stunning collection of Andean weavings, often overlooked by visitors.