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Which countries to visit in Latin America

Revolution monument in Mexico City

Revolution monument in Mexico City

The first question I always get when I tell people about my travels in Latin America, is ‘how dangerous it is there’. But a close second place is for the more positive question: which part of Latin America would you recommend for me? Here is my personal guide to that.

I always ask questions back before giving an answer. Because the choice of travel is a very personal one, depending on the amount of time you have, in which things you are interested, your fitness levels, your previous travel experience, and more. So here are some of the possible questions and answers!

I only have two to three weeks, what would you recommend?

Well, Ecuador is a favorite of mine, as you can do a nice round trip around the country and still see all the highlights. From the Andes mountains and the stunning Quilotoa volcanic lake to the great beaches and bustling Guayaquil. But it is not a great start for unexperiences travellers: some of the travel will be done in local buses, which might be hard to navigate. A rental car is obviously a good solution to that.
An entry-level solution is Costa Rica. Excellent flight connections, very good infrastructure, and a varied wildlife. The nature (pristine beaches, great national parks including volcanoes) is the main reason to go. But the luxury has its price: Costa Rica is one of the more expensive countries in Latin America. And it is so well organized in lots of areas that the beautiful chaos of Latin America has been lost to a great extent.

I have two to three months, where should I go?

Now this opens up the opportunity to really explore a region or the bigger countries. Mexico is an obvious choice: it is too big and there is too much to do to cover it in three weeks. When you have much more time, you can work your way through the country, region by region.
Where Mexico is very tourist-friendly and with lots of good infrastructure, Central America is the opposite. This makes it a choice for more adventurous travellers. Countries like Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua don’t really do luxury holidays. That is part of their charm, but that also makes it tiring. And the capitals are no fun at all, chaotic metropolises where you have to be alert all the time. The nature though is absolutely phenomenal.
If you just want to explore one country, there are more obvious choices in South America. Colombia is becoming more and more popular, is affordable and relatively safe. The people are loud and wild, which you have to be prepared for. And Medellin is probably my favourite city of Latin America, the city of eternal spring in the Aburra valley.
But yes, Colombia can be intimidating for the first-time traveller. Peru is in the same vein, though at he moment even more politically unstable. Chile is probably the safest option. You go there for the phenomenal nature: from the Atacama desert in the north to mighty Patagonia with its lakes and glaciers and mountains, it is simply breathtaking. Infrastructure is very good. Which, like Costa Rica, comes at a cost: Chile has European prices, and the Latin flavor gets lost a bit as well because it is so well-organized.

What is your favourite country?

Nicaragua. Sorry for the clear answer, but I just really enjoyed it there. For me it is the much cheaper, less-crowded and better version of Costa Rica. The tobacco country in the north, Granada at the border of the magnificent lake with Ometepe island and its two (!!!) volcanoes, the crazy beautiful beaches, great food, low costs. But it comes with disadvantages as well: because of the semi-dictatorship of former Sandinista Daniel Ortega the country is politically instable. And it is poor, which translates into poor infrastructure. Only the international buses are luxurious, the local transport is breathtakingly adventurous. Nothing for inexperienced travellers (although I went to Nicaragua on my first long Latin American trip).
It is though difficult to say which country is the best, as I had a great time almost everywhere. And I haven’t been everywhere of course. So here is a list of the visited countries and the pros and cons.

Mexico

Guatemala

El Salvador

Nicaragua

Costa Rica

Colombia

Ecuador

Chile

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