Torres del Paine in 2026: the honest guide for travelers who don't want to come back frustrated — cover image
Slow Travel🇨🇱 Punta Arenas

Torres del Paine in 2026: the honest guide for travelers who don't want to come back frustrated

It's not the Rockies with a glacier. It's a 1,810 km² park at the end of the world, with 100 km/h winds, a booking system that collapses in June, and three treks that don't blend together.

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Curadoria VoysparkbyCuradoria Voyspark May 06, 2026 11 min Updated on June 03, 2026

Torres del Paine doesn't forgive improvisation. Travelers arrive expecting a "park visit" and discover that the W demands 5 days with a pack on your back, the O Circuit demands 8, and the Las Torres lookout on a day-trip from Puerto Natales is one-third of the experience for two-thirds of the effort. This guide breaks down what no one tells you about logistics, refugios, CONAF and the real visitation window in 2026.

11 min read

There's a sentence repeated in every Puerto Natales hostel: "I came to see the towers, but I only saw the base of the clouds." Torres del Paine is the most photographed park in South America and the most underestimated in planning. Travelers arrive thinking it's a mountain town with a glacier. It isn't.

It's a 1,810 km² park in Chilean Patagonia, 2,500 km south of Santiago, where the wind hits 100 km/h on a normal January day, where refugios close out bookings six months in advance, and where three totally different experiences are sold under the same name.

This guide is for people going in 2026 who don't want to figure all this out at the Punta Arenas airport.


Getting there: the route no one details

There's no direct flight from North America or Europe to Torres del Paine. You fly to Santiago (SCL) and connect to Punta Arenas (PUQ) — 3h20 flight, usually LATAM or Sky Airline, CLP 90,000-180,000 round-trip domestic.

From PUQ, it's three legs:

  • Punta Arenas → Puerto Natales: 250 km, 3h by bus. Companies: Bus Sur, Buses Fernández, Buses Pacheco. Fare CLP 12,000-18,000. Hourly departures in summer from the PUQ bus terminal.
  • Puerto Natales (mandatory stopover): small town, 22,000 inhabitants, the logistics base for the park. Hostels (Yagan House, Erratic Rock, Vinn Hotel) from CLP 25,000 to 150,000/night. Here you rent gear, check in for refugios, and adjust your pack.
  • Puerto Natales → Park gate (Laguna Amarga or Pudeto): 112 km, 2h by bus. Buses Gomez, Buses JBA, Buses María José. Departures at 7am, 7:30am and 2:30pm. Fare CLP 15,000 one-way or CLP 25,000 round-trip with open return.

Total: PUQ → Torres del Paine = 5h of transfers, plus the mandatory night in Puerto Natales to organize logistics.


W Trek vs O Circuit vs Day-trip: the three experiences

This is where 80% of travelers get confused.

Option Duration Distance Difficulty Booking needed
Las Torres day-trip 1 day 22 km Moderate-hard No (only CONAF entry)
W Trek 4-5 days 80 km Moderate Yes, all refugios/campings
O Circuit 8-10 days 130 km Hard Yes, counterclockwise only
Grey Glacier (catamaran) 1 day Easy Catamaran via Hielos Patagónicos

Las Torres day-trip: leave Puerto Natales at 7am, enter through Laguna Amarga, hike the Mirador Base Torres trail (9-10h, 22 km, 800 m elevation gain), back to Puerto Natales by 10pm. You see one of the three iconic landscapes. It's not "having been to Torres del Paine". It's having been to the towers' lookout.

W Trek: the classic. Four to five days crossing the three valleys that form the "W" on the map — French Valley (with the Británico lookout), Ascencio Valley (ending at the Las Torres lookout), and Grey Glacier (a 30 km navigable glacier). You sleep in refugios or camping. It's the full Paine massif experience from the south face.

O Circuit: the W + the full loop around the north face, going through John Gardner pass (1,200 m, crossing the ice field) and the Dickson and Los Perros refugios. Only runs October to March and counterclockwise only — CONAF rule, no exceptions. Doing the O in 8-10 days teaches you what Patagonia really means.


Refugios and campings: the booking system that collapses

Inside the park there are two private operators and CONAF (state):

Vertice Patagonia operates:

  • Refugio Grey
  • Refugio and Camping Paine Grande
  • Refugio and Camping Dickson
  • Camping Los Perros

Las Torres Patagonia operates:

  • Refugio Central
  • Refugio Chileno
  • Refugio El Frances
  • Refugio Los Cuernos
  • Camping Serón
  • Camping Frances

CONAF (free or token fee):

  • Camping Paso (on the O Circuit)
  • Camping Italiano (W)
  • Camping Torres (W)

Prices in 2026 (estimate, rates adjusted in October):

  • Shared refugio bed: CLP 95,000-180,000/night (USD 105-200)
  • Camping with your own tent: CLP 8,000-15,000/night
  • Camping with rented tent set up: CLP 35,000-55,000/night
  • Half-board (dinner + breakfast): CLP 65,000-85,000/day
  • Full board: CLP 100,000-130,000/day

The rule no one tells you: bookings for the October 2026 to April 2027 season open in July 2025. By June 2026, January and February refugios are 90% sold out. Anyone waiting until September only finds Dickson and Paso available — and Paso is a CONAF campsite with no shower.

Book across three separate sites:

  • verticepatagonia.com (Grey, Paine Grande, Dickson)
  • lastorres.com (Chileno, Frances, Cuernos, Central)
  • pasesparques.cl (CONAF entry + CONAF campings)

Yes, three systems. Yes, three payments. Yes, three confirmations you need to print and carry.


When to go: the real window

The park operates year-round, but serious trekking only makes sense between October and April.

Month Wind Temperature Crowds Refugios
October Strong 2-10°C Low Opening gradually
November Strong 5-15°C Medium All open
December Strong 7-18°C High All open
January Max 8-20°C Absolute peak Fully booked
February Max 7-19°C High Fully booked
March Moderate 4-14°C Medium Some closing
April Moderate 0-10°C Low Most closed

The sweet spot: November/early December and second half of March. Fewer tourists, refugios available, wind still rough but not absurd.

January has 18 hours of daylight — you can hike until 10pm without a headlamp. But it's expensive, packed and windy. October has 12h days, snow on the high passes, and worse visibility on the towers.

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Gear: what to rent in Puerto Natales

Don't bring everything from home. Rent in Puerto Natales at Erratic Rock (Baquedano 719), Yagan Equipment or Rental Natales.

Average 2026 daily rates:

  • 65L backpack: CLP 5,000/day
  • 2-person tent: CLP 8,000/day
  • -10°C sleeping bag: CLP 6,000/day
  • Sleeping pad: CLP 2,500/day
  • Trekking poles: CLP 3,000/day
  • Stove + gas: CLP 4,000/day

Full W package (5 days): CLP 90,000-130,000. Better value than buying and flying with gear.

What you should bring: broken-in trekking boots, a quality windbreaker (Patagonia, North Face, Columbia), thermal layers (merino wool), gloves, beanie, and category 4 sunglasses.


The Argentine side: combine or not?

5h by bus from Puerto Natales is El Calafate (FTE), gateway to Argentina's Los Glaciares National Park. From there, another 3h to El Chaltén, base for Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre.

Practical differences:

  • Argentina: free parks, treks without booking, wild camping allowed, food and lodging 30-40% cheaper than Chile.
  • Chile: paid park, mandatory booking, structured refugios, better infrastructure, more regulated.

Combining both sides over 14-18 days is the full Patagonian itinerary. Ideal order: Punta Arenas → Puerto Natales → W Trek (5 days) → bus to El Calafate → Perito Moreno (1 day) → bus to El Chaltén → Laguna de los Tres at Fitz Roy (3-4 days) → exit via El Calafate (FTE) or Bariloche.

If you only have 7-10 days: pick one side. If you have 18+ days: do both.


Common mistakes that cost dearly

1. Thinking you can "swing by the park" without trekking. You can't. The structure is built entirely around hikers. People who don't walk see the park through the bus window and the Grey Glacier catamaran.

2. Booking refugios from only one operator. The W passes through both Vertice AND Las Torres refugios. Book with only one operator and you can't complete the trek — you'll have a one-night gap in the middle.

3. Underestimating the wind. "Patagonia wind" isn't a figure of speech. In January, at John Gardner pass, the wind knocks people to the ground. Trekking poles aren't optional.

4. Carrying heavy food. Refugios sell meals. Camping the W means cooking. Pack pasta, tuna, dried fruit, energy bars. Don't carry canned food.

5. Doing the Las Torres day-trip and saying "I went to Torres del Paine". You went to a lookout. You saw one of the three landscapes. It's like flying to Paris, seeing the Eiffel Tower from the street, returning to the airport, and saying you know Paris.


Real budget for a 5-day W Trek in 2026

International traveler, low season (November or March), from a major North American or European hub:

  • Flight home → PUQ (with SCL connection): USD 1,400-2,200
  • Bus PUQ ↔ Puerto Natales: CLP 30,000 (USD 33)
  • Bus Puerto Natales ↔ park: CLP 30,000 (USD 33)
  • 2 nights hostel in Puerto Natales: CLP 80,000 (USD 90)
  • CONAF entry (3 days): CLP 32,000 (USD 35)
  • 4 nights shared refugio + half-board: CLP 600,000-800,000 (USD 660-880)
  • Gear rental: CLP 100,000 (USD 110)
  • Extra food + snacks: CLP 80,000 (USD 90)
  • Travel insurance: USD 60

Total per person: USD 2,500-3,500. Couple: USD 5,000-7,000.

Budget version (own tent, no half-board, cooking): USD 1,700-2,200/person.


Practical appendix

Reliable bus companies (PUQ ↔ Puerto Natales): Bus Sur (bus-sur.cl), Buses Fernández, Buses Pacheco.

Bus Puerto Natales → Park: Buses Gomez, Buses JBA, Buses María José — all leave from the Puerto Natales Rodoviário Terminal (Av. España).

Refugio bookings:

  • verticepatagonia.com
  • lastorres.com
  • pasesparques.cl (CONAF)

Gear rental: Erratic Rock (Baquedano 719, Puerto Natales) — also runs a free daily briefing at 3pm for people doing the W.

Official map: download Patagonia Maps (Android/iOS) — works offline.

In-park emergency: CONAF +56 61 2691931. No cell signal on most trails.

Don't forget: Chile uses Chilean pesos (CLP). Withdraw in Punta Arenas or Puerto Natales — no ATMs inside the park. Cards work at the big refugios, not at campsites.

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Key points

The park sits 5 hours from Punta Arenas (PUQ) — 3h by Bus Sur to Puerto Natales (CLP 12,000-18,000) and another 2h to the Laguna Amarga gate (CLP 15,000).

Classic W Trek: 4-5 days, 80 km, three valleys (Grey, Francés, Ascencio). O Circuit: 8-10 days, 130 km, full loop around the massif — October to March only, counterclockwise direction mandatory.

Vertice refugios (Grey, Paine Grande, Dickson) and Las Torres (Central, Chileno, Frances, Cuernos): CLP 60,000-180,000/night per person in shared dorms. Camping: CLP 8,000-25,000/night.

Frequently asked questions

Book in July 2026, when the season opens. By October 2026, January refugios will be 95% sold out. Anyone waiting until November is left with only Dickson, Paso, and CONAF campings.

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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.

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