The destination
A village that exists
entirely for the mountains
El Chaltén was founded in 1985 — not to serve a mine, not to anchor a trade route, but as an act of territorial assertion. Argentina planted a village in the wilderness to reinforce its claim to the land. What grew there, almost by accident, was one of the finest trekking destinations on earth.
The village sits at 400 metres above sea level, on the banks of the Río de las Vueltas, where the Patagonian steppe meets the eastern face of the Andes. To the west, the granite towers of the Fitz Roy massif rise abruptly from the treeline. To the east, the steppe stretches for hundreds of kilometres — flat, windswept, vast.
Every trail in El Chaltén begins at the village edge. You walk out of your accommodation and into the park. There are no entrance fees, no shuttle buses, no booking systems. This is an unusual and precious thing in 2026, and it is central to what makes El Chaltén different from every other mountain destination.
"The trails here leave directly from the village. No buses, no park fees, no permits."
The Fitz Roy massif — known to the Tehuelche people as Chaltén, meaning "the smoking mountain" for the clouds that perpetually crown its summit — rises to 3,405 metres and was first summited in 1952 by Lionel Terray and Guido Magnone. Today it is one of the most photographed peaks in the world, visible from the main street of the village on clear days.
The season runs from October to April. In winter, the hotel closes and the village quiets down to a few hundred permanent residents. But from late spring through autumn, El Chaltén becomes what it was always meant to be: a base camp for the mountains.