Patagonia received 1.1 million visitors in 2025. The Torres del Paine trails are bleeding. El Calafate glaciers retreat two meters per year. This guide picks operators that pay local tax, routes that avoid over-tourism, and the months when your presence helps rather than harms.
14 min read
The first time I entered the W circuit trail in Torres del Paine, in January 2018, I encountered 4,300 people. No, I'm not exaggerating — that's the daily average at peak season. In 2024, the limit was finally imposed: 2,500 per day. A late but good decision.
Patagonia's problem isn't that it's famous. It's that fame triggered a kind of tourism that ignores the ecosystem's fragility. Lago Argentino receives 350 cruise ships per season. The trails turn to dust, then mud, then erosion channels. Pumas move away from areas they monitored for decades. Local baqueanos — people who knew how to read the steppe — became underpaid guides for Booking.com.
This guide isn't "Top 10 Patagonia destinations." It's a set of ethical decisions for those who want to go but don't want to be part of the collapse.
When to go (and when NOT to go)
TL;DRJanuary and February: DON'T go. It's austral summer. The trails are saturated. Hotel Las Torres charges US$900 per night. Refugio Paine Grande has reservations sold out 8 months in advance. January wind reaches 130 km/h in El Chaltén. You'll pay triple for an experience half the size.
January and February: DON'T go. It's austral summer. The trails are saturated. Hotel Las Torres charges US$900 per night. Refugio Paine Grande has reservations sold out 8 months in advance. January wind reaches 130 km/h in El Chaltén. You'll pay triple for an experience half the size.
March and April: ideal. Austral autumn. Colors change — lengas turn orange and yellow, low areas turn wine red. Temperatures 5-15°C. Wind still strong but predictable. 60% fewer people than January.
October and November: also ideal. Austral spring. Guanaco babies are born. Steppe blooms explode. Some trails are closed until mid-October — check first.
May to September: winter. Most lodging closes. You can only do Ushuaia-scientific-station or snow tourism in Bariloche. I don't recommend it for a first trip.
Month by month: what to expect from the weather
TL;DRPatagonia has four different Patagonias in a single year. Anyone who only knows "it's windy there" misses half the decision. January: High 72°F in El Calafate, low 46°F. Average wind 40 mph, gusts to 80 mph. Sun until 10:30 PM.
Patagonia has four different Patagonias in a single year. Anyone who only knows "it's windy there" misses half the decision.
January: High 72°F in El Calafate, low 46°F. Average wind 40 mph, gusts to 80 mph. Sun until 10:30 PM. Trails open, refugios full, mosquitoes near lagoons. 14 hours of daylight. Expensive.
February: Almost identical to January, 4°F cooler. Last week already shows autumn colors in higher lengas. Mosquitoes disappear.
March: High 63°F, low 37°F. Wind drops to 25 mph average. Colors explode: orange, wine, ochre. Refugios start emptying. Hotels cut 30% off. Best month for photography. 12 hours of daylight.
April: High 54°F, low 32°F. First high-altitude snow. Some Paine Grande trails start closing April 15. Torres-Britanico crossing still viable until end of month. Colors at their peak.
May to September: Winter. 28°F to 5°F depending on latitude. Ushuaia gets 7-hour days in June. Refugios closed. Estancias closed. Only Bariloche (Catedral ski resort opens June 15) and Ushuaia (polar tourism) operate. Skip for a first trip. Magic for photographers — but you need a technical guide and beefed-up insurance.
September: Last two weeks start the thaw. Pumas more active (post-winter hunting). Trails still officially closed. 9 hours of daylight.
October: High 55°F, low 32°F. Steppe in bloom (calafate, neneo, black brush). Guanaco and ñandú babies born. Trails reopen between the 10th and 20th. Book hotel 60 days out.
November: High 64°F, low 39°F. Everything open, still empty. Second-to-last good window before the January tsunami. 14 hours of daylight.
December: Already high season. Prices climb 40% between the 1st and 20th. Reserve refugio 6 months out or forget it.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
Expertise




