Votre séjour — Visa
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 — Visa
The Hotel Visa is a practical, no-fuss three-star in Lima's Miraflores district, a block from the main square. The lobby is small, clean and functional, with a front desk that handles check-in efficiently in Spanish and English. It suits budget-conscious travellers who want a safe, central base near restaurants and the coast, not atmosphere or luxury.
Chroniques de Lima
Lima was founded in 1535 by Francisco Pizarro as the City of Kings, becoming the capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru. Its colonial core features ornate balconies and plazas, while the 20th century brought modernist and neocolonial buildings, especially in Miraflores and San Isidro. Contemporary Lima is a sprawling, food-focused metropolis where pre-Columbian ruins sit beside shopping malls and cevicherías.
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Guide complet de Lima →Meilleurs mois
January and February: warmest and sunniest, with highs around 27°C and low chance of the winter garúa. December is also good, with festive nightlife and less rain than January.
Peak / Festival surge
July is peak tourist season: Peruvian winter holidays coincide with dry, sunny days in the highlands but Lima itself is cloudy, cool and damp. Hotel prices rise 20–30% from June. Major events include Fiestas Patrias (28–29 July) parades and the Mistura food festival in September.
La saison des épaules
March and April offer the best balance: still warm from summer but fewer visitors, lower rates and lighter crowds at Miraflores attractions. Weather is a bit less stable but still fine for outdoor plans.
Météo & Emballage
Lima is famously overcast from May to October, with a persistent coastal mist (garúa) that feels like a damp chill even when it's not raining. Pack a light waterproof jacket and long trousers; leave shorts and sandals at home unless you are here in January or February.
Briefing de la ville — Lima
- The new Metropolitano bus express line (Corredor Azul) now directly connects Miraflores with the historic centre, running every 5–10 minutes from Parque Kennedy.
- Lima's Jorge Chávez International Airport recently opened a new domestic terminal, reducing check-in times for flights to Cusco and Arequipa.
- Several streets in Miraflores are undergoing pedestrianisation work through mid-2026, so expect some detours on Avenida Larco near the hotel.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Visa, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a high floor (4th or 5th) facing the interior courtyard or the quieter side street off the main avenue, to get more light and less traffic noise. Upper floors also have better air and slightly less street rumble.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor near the reception area or the lift bank — morning movement and check-in chatter carry. Also avoid rooms directly overlooking the front street; even with double glazing, early bus and taxi horns are common on Avenida Arequipa or similar main roads.
Best views
Corner rooms on the 5th floor facing the interior courtyard offer a slice of sky and a bit of greenery from potted plants or the hotel's small garden. Avoid rooms looking directly onto the road — views are of shop fronts and passing buses.
Quietest floors
Floors 4 and 5 are the quietest, set back from the street and well above ground-level noise from the restaurant and lobby.
🔊 Noise notes
Lima's main avenues (like Avenida Arequipa or Avenida Javier Prado) carry heavy traffic from around 6am to 10pm. Buses honk frequently at intersections, and mototaxis add a buzzing drone at lower floors. The hotel's own restaurant and bar turn up music in the evenings on the ground floor — audible in rooms directly above.
Insider tips
Request room 408 or 508 — these are at the end of the corridor away from the lift, quieter, and with a small balcony if available. For a later checkout, ask at reception before 9am; they're often flexible if the hotel isn't full. The continental breakfast is basic, but you can request a fresh-squeezed orange juice without extra charge.
- 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 — Visa
Free 10 Mbps (down/up) per device; login via voucher from front desk; no paid upgrade
Yes, serves all 6 floors; no stairs-only sections
Digital copies of El Comercio and La República available on request at reception; no newsstand app
Check-in from 14:00; early bag-drop allowed from 10:00; late check-out until 16:00 costs 70 PEN if available
Free storage for day-of-arrival or departure
Step-free from street to lobby via ramp at side entrance; no lift buttons in Braille; some corridors narrow for wheelchairs
No on-site parking. Nearest public garage: Estacionamiento Arequipa (half a block) – 40 PEN per night (24h). No EV charging.
Frais, taxes et dépôts
City / tourist tax: None (no municipal tourist tax for domestic stays; foreign visitors pay 18% IGV on the room rate, already included in most online rates)
Deposit & card hold: First night charged at booking; a 200 PEN incidental hold on a credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary à proximité
- Church: Capilla Señor De la Misericordia (335 m · ~4 min walk)
- Church: Iglesia Biblica Bautista Vida Nueva (581 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: Señora de las Naciones (684 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: Vírgen del Rosario (981 m · ~12 min walk)
Style de vie et récréation
Pacasmayo — 1.5 km · ~19 min walk
Señor de los Milagros — 609 m · ~8 min walk
5 minutes de radios essentielles
Nearest — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Mega Farma — 1.6 km · ~20 min walk
Sabrina II — 865 m · ~11 min walk
Empresa de Transportes El 10 — 1.6 km · ~19 min walk
Monnaie & Monnaie
Get a travel card →Peruvian Sol, PEN
Use ATMs for the best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at the airport and tourist offices, which charge poor rates.
Credit and debit cards are widely accepted in hotels, restaurants, and shops; contactless is common but always carry small bills for markets and taxis.
Restaurants: 10% if service charge not included. Taxis: round up the fare. Hotel porters: 2-3 soles per bag.
Manger, faire du shopping et voyager sur un budget
Cheap car hire →A basic coffee from a bakery or market stall: 3-5 soles.
A set lunch 'menú del día' in a simple eatery: 12-18 soles, including a starter, main, and drink.
A main course at a neighbourhood restaurant: 20-30 soles.
Street-food stalls and 'huariques' (backstreet eateries) in markets like Mercado Central or along Avenida Abancay offer cheap anticuchos and tamales.
Supermarkets: Plaza Vea, Metro, and Tottus are common in the area.
Affordable clothes can be found at Polvos Azules market or big chains like Saga Falabella and Ripley.
The cheapest way around is by bus combi (2-3 soles per ride) or the Metropolitano bus system (single journey 3-4 soles, no day pass). Budget from airport: take the Airport Express bus (8 soles) or a colectivo minibus (5-6 soles) into central Lima.
Eat at 'menú' lunch spots instead of tourist restaurants. Use shared 'colectivo' vans for short inter-district trips. Buy bottled water in bulk from supermarkets, not convenience stores.
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 Visa
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk — pharmacy · Mega Farma — 1.6 km · ~20 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 Visa?
Request a high floor (4th or 5th) facing the interior courtyard or the quieter side street off the main avenue, to get more light and less traffic noise. Upper floors also have better air and slightly less street rumble.
Which rooms should I avoid at Visa?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor near the reception area or the lift bank — morning movement and check-in chatter carry. Also avoid rooms directly overlooking the front street; even with double glazing, early bus and taxi horns are common on Avenida Arequipa or similar main roads.
Is Visa noisy?
Lima's main avenues (like Avenida Arequipa or Avenida Javier Prado) carry heavy traffic from around 6am to 10pm. Buses honk frequently at intersections, and mototaxis add a buzzing drone at lower floors. The hotel's own restaurant and bar turn up music in the evenings on the ground floor — audible in rooms directly above.
Which rooms have the best views at Visa?
Corner rooms on the 5th floor facing the interior courtyard offer a slice of sky and a bit of greenery from potted plants or the hotel's small garden. Avoid rooms looking directly onto the road — views are of shop fronts and passing buses.
What are insider tips for staying at Visa?
Request room 408 or 508 — these are at the end of the corridor away from the lift, quieter, and with a small balcony if available. For a later checkout, ask at reception before 9am; they're often flexible if the hotel isn't full. The continental breakfast is basic, but you can request a fresh-squeezed orange juice without extra charge.
What time is check-in at Visa?
Check-in at Visa is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Visa have Wi-Fi?
Free 10 Mbps (down/up) per device; login via voucher from front desk; no paid upgrade
Is there a city or tourist tax at Visa?
None (no municipal tourist tax for domestic stays; foreign visitors pay 18% IGV on the room rate, already included in most online rates)
Where can I eat cheaply near Visa?
A set lunch 'menú del día' in a simple eatery: 12-18 soles, including a starter, main, and drink.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Visa?
The cheapest way around is by bus combi (2-3 soles per ride) or the Metropolitano bus system (single journey 3-4 soles, no day pass). Budget from airport: take the Airport Express bus (8 soles) or a colectivo minibus (5-6 soles) into central Lima.
When is the best time to visit Lima?
January and February: warmest and sunniest, with highs around 27°C and low chance of the winter garúa. December is also good, with festive nightlife and less rain than January.
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.