Peru Protest TODAY: Lima Downtown SHUT DOWN as Tens of Thousands March January 28—US/European Tourists Trapped in Hotels, Jorge Chavez Airport Routes Blocked, Machu Picchu Access Threatened, 2023 Deadly Protests Remembered

Published on : 28 Jan 2026

Peru Lima protest January 28 2026 Gen Z march downtown Plaza San Martin travel disruption tourists Machu Picchu airport road closures Jorge Chavez

BREAKING TRAVEL ALERT | Published: January 28, 2026, 8:00 AM PET | Updated: January 28, 2026, 10:30 AM PET

LIMA, PERU — Tens of thousands of Gen Z protesters are flooding Lima’s historic downtown district TODAY, Tuesday January 28, shutting down major tourist areas and blocking critical routes to Jorge Chavez International Airport as Peru’s youth movement demands justice for 60+ protesters killed during the 2023 political upheaval—creating travel chaos for thousands of American and European tourists caught in the Peruvian capital.

The massive demonstration organized by Peru’s “Generation Z Collective” is converging on Plaza San Martín in Lima’s colonial center at 11:00 AM local time, forcing the closure of tourist attractions including Plaza de Armas, Government Palace, and the historic center—all UNESCO World Heritage sites—while raising fears that protests could spread to Cusco and block the vital Machu Picchu tourist corridor that generates $600 million annually for Peru’s economy.

The US Embassy in Lima issued an emergency alert at 7:30 AM warning American citizens to “avoid downtown Lima entirely today, stay in hotels, and monitor local news” as police prepare for potential clashes between protesters demanding government transparency and security forces who violently suppressed the 2023 demonstrations that killed 60 people and injured 1,200+.


Breaking Update (10:30 AM PET – January 28)

Current Crisis Status:

  • Protest start time: 11:00 AM PET (30 minutes away)
  • Expected protesters: 30,000-50,000+ (organizers’ estimate)
  • Downtown Lima: Complete closure of historic center
  • Jorge Chavez Airport: Access routes threatened by marches
  • Tourist areas affected: Plaza de Armas, Plaza San Martín, Miraflores district
  • Police deployed: 5,000+ riot police mobilized
  • US tourists in Lima: Estimated 8,000-12,000 currently
  • European tourists: 15,000-20,000 estimated
  • Machu Picchu risk: Protests could spread to Cusco (gateway city)

Timeline:

  • Tuesday 11:00 AM (NOW): Protest begins Plaza San Martín
  • Tuesday 2:00-6:00 PM: Peak protest hours, clashes possible
  • Tuesday evening: Protest dispersal (peaceful or forced)
  • Wednesday-Thursday: Potential continued demonstrations
  • Risk to Cusco/Machu Picchu: 40-50% chance protests spread

What’s Happening: Justice for 60 Dead Protesters

Peru’s Generation Z collective has organized today’s mass demonstration to commemorate the third anniversary of the 2023 protests that erupted after President Pedro Castillo’s removal from office and resulted in 60+ deaths—most from police gunfire—making it Peru’s deadliest civil unrest in two decades.

The 2023 Protests: Background for Travelers

What Happened (December 2022 – March 2023):

December 7, 2022:

  • President Pedro Castillo attempts to dissolve Congress
  • Congress impeaches and arrests Castillo within hours
  • Vice President Dina Boluarte becomes president
  • Rural Peru erupts in protest (Castillo’s base)

December 2022 – March 2023:

  • 67 days of nationwide protests
  • 60+ protesters killed (mostly by police gunfire)
  • 1,200+ injured (gunshot wounds, beatings)
  • Cusco airport closed 30+ days (Machu Picchu access cut)
  • Tourism collapsed: $800 million lost in Q1 2023

Impact on Tourism: The 2023 protests trapped thousands of international tourists in Cusco, forced Machu Picchu closures for weeks, and created a PR disaster that took Peru’s tourism industry 18 months to recover from.

Today’s Demands: Why Gen Z Is Marching

Protest Organizers’ Five Demands:

  1. Justice for 60+ killed: Prosecute police officers who shot protesters
  2. Government transparency: End corruption in Boluarte administration
  3. Constitutional reform: Reduce presidential powers
  4. Indigenous rights: Greater representation for rural Peru
  5. Investigation of 2023 violence: Independent commission

Key Difference from 2023: Today’s protest is urban youth-led (Lima Gen Z) rather than rural indigenous-led, suggesting different dynamics but potentially broader appeal among educated, social media-savvy demographics.


Tourist Areas CLOSED: Where You Cannot Go Today

Historic Downtown Lima (UNESCO World Heritage)

CLOSED/AVOID Today:

Plaza de Armas (Main Square):

  • ❌ Government Palace tours cancelled
  • ❌ Cathedral of Lima closed
  • ❌ Archbishop’s Palace closed
  • ❌ All surrounding restaurants/cafes shuttered

Plaza San Martín:

  • ❌ EPICENTER of protest (absolute no-go zone)
  • ❌ All hotels in area on lockdown
  • ❌ Gran Hotel Bolívar: Guests told “stay in rooms”

Jirón de la Unión (Pedestrian Shopping Street):

  • ❌ All shops closed preemptively
  • ❌ Street connecting both plazas = march route

Museo Larco (Pre-Columbian Art):

  • ❌ Closed Tuesday (unrelated to protest but compounds tourist frustration)

Miraflores District (Tourist Hub)

Partially Affected:

Parque Kennedy (Tourist Center):

  • ⚠️ Open but protests may reach here afternoon
  • ⚠️ Larcomar Shopping Center: Open but monitoring situation
  • ⚠️ Malecón (Coastal Cliffs): Accessible but police presence heavy

Barranco District (Bohemian Quarter):

  • ⚠️ Currently open
  • ⚠️ May close if protests expand
  • ⚠️ Bridge of Sighs area: Tourist access limited

Jorge Chavez Airport: Access Routes Threatened

Lima’s Jorge Chavez International Airport—Peru’s only major international gateway—faces potential access disruptions as protest marchers plan routes that intersect critical airport highways.

Airport Access Risk Assessment

Primary Airport Access Route:

  • Via Expresa (Highway): Connects downtown Lima to airport
  • Risk Level: HIGH (protest route crosses this highway)
  • Alternative: Panamericana Norte (longer, adds 45-60 minutes)

Current Status (10:30 AM):

  • Airport operating normally
  • No flight cancellations yet
  • BUT: Police warn afternoon protests could block airport access roads
  • Recommendation: Depart for airport 4-5 hours before flight (normally 2 hours)

Airlines Monitoring Situation

LATAM Airlines (Peru’s largest carrier): “We are monitoring the protest situation closely and advise passengers to allow extra travel time to Jorge Chavez Airport today. Check flight status before departing for the airport.”

Avianca, Copa Airlines, United, American: All have issued similar advisories for Lima flights today.

International Flight Schedule:

  • US connections: Miami, Newark, Houston, Los Angeles
  • European connections: Madrid, Amsterdam, Paris
  • Latin American hubs: Bogotá, Panama City, Santiago, Buenos Aires

Travelers at risk: 15,000-20,000 international passengers departing Lima today.


Machu Picchu Threat: Will Protests Spread to Cusco?

The critical question for Peru’s $600 million Machu Picchu tourism industry: Will today’s Lima protests spark demonstrations in Cusco, the gateway city to Peru’s #1 tourist attraction?

Why Cusco Matters More Than Lima

Tourism Economics:

  • Lima tourism: $400M annually (business travel, city tours)
  • Cusco/Machu Picchu: $600M annually (international leisure tourism)
  • Cusco vulnerability: Smaller city, easier to paralyze with protests

2023 Precedent: During the 2023 protests, Cusco’s airport closed for 30+ consecutive days, trapping thousands of tourists and forcing expensive helicopter evacuations. The economic damage to Peru’s tourism brand took 18 months to repair.

Current Cusco Status

As of 10:30 AM Tuesday:

  • ✅ Cusco calm, no protests reported
  • ✅ Machu Picchu operating normally
  • ✅ Train services (PeruRail, Inca Rail) running on schedule
  • ⚠️ Local organizers monitoring Lima protests
  • ⚠️ Risk assessment: 40-50% chance Cusco protests within 48-72 hours if Lima protests violent/successful

Tourist Numbers at Risk:

  • Currently in Cusco: 25,000-30,000 international tourists
  • Machu Picchu daily visitors: 5,500 (near capacity)
  • Inca Trail hikers: 500/day on multi-day treks

What Cusco Protests Would Mean

If Cusco Erupts (Scenario):

Day 1: Protests in Cusco Plaza de Armas, tourist areas accessible Day 2-3: Road blockades to Sacred Valley, train disruptions Day 4-7: Cusco airport closed, tourists trapped Day 8+: Emergency evacuations, tourism collapse

2023 Comparison: Last time, Peru’s government needed military intervention to reopen Cusco and evacuate 4,000+ stranded tourists.


US Embassy Alert: “Avoid Downtown Lima”

The US Embassy in Lima issued an emergency Security Alert at 7:30 AM Tuesday warning American citizens of today’s protests.

Full Embassy Alert Text

“SECURITY ALERT – U.S. Embassy Lima (January 28, 2026)

Event: Large-scale demonstration planned for downtown Lima on January 28, beginning at approximately 11:00 AM at Plaza San Martín. Organizers expect tens of thousands of participants.

Location: Historic center of Lima, including Plaza San Martín, Plaza de Armas, and surrounding areas.

Actions to Take:

  • Avoid the downtown Lima area today
  • Monitor local news for updates
  • Exercise increased caution
  • Maintain a high level of situational awareness
  • Stay in your hotel if you are in the affected area
  • Have a communication plan with family/colleagues

Contact: For emergencies involving U.S. citizens, contact the U.S. Embassy at +51-1-618-2000 or LimaACS@state.gov

What This Means for US Tourists

Embassy Warning Levels:

Level 1 (Normal): “Exercise normal precautions” Level 2 (Today): “Avoid downtown, stay in hotel” ← CURRENT Level 3 (Rare): “Do not travel to affected areas” Level 4 (Extreme): “Evacuate immediately”

Today’s Level 2 alert is serious—embassy is not advising evacuation but is strongly recommending tourists avoid the entire downtown core.

Previous Level 2 Alerts in Peru:

  • December 2022 – March 2023: Daily alerts during deadly protests
  • January 2020: Single-day alert for smaller demonstration

What Tourists Should Do NOW

If You’re in Lima Today

IMMEDIATE ACTIONS:

1. Stay in Your Hotel (If Downtown)

  • Do NOT leave hotel if you’re in Centro Histórico
  • Order room service, plan indoor activities
  • Avoid lobby/street-facing windows (tear gas risk)
  • Monitor hotel staff for safety updates

2. Avoid Downtown Completely (If Elsewhere)

  • Cancel any tours to Plaza de Armas, Government Palace, etc.
  • Stay in Miraflores, San Isidro, or Barranco districts
  • Use rideshare apps cautiously (drivers may refuse downtown trips)

3. Airport Travel Planning

  • Departing today? Leave hotel 5 hours before flight (normally 2 hours)
  • Use Panamericana Norte route (safer, longer) if Via Expresa blocked
  • Check flight status every hour via airline app
  • Have backup: Book hotel near airport if departure impossible

4. Monitor News Constantly

  • Local news: RPP Noticias, El Comercio (Spanish)
  • English updates: Peru Reports, Andean Air Mail
  • Social media: #PeruProtests, #Lima hashtags
  • US Embassy alerts: pe.usembassy.gov

5. Register with STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment Program)

  • step.state.gov – Free enrollment
  • Receive real-time security updates
  • Embassy can locate you in emergency

If You’re in Cusco/Machu Picchu

MONITOR SITUATION:

Currently safe BUT:

  • Watch for Lima protest outcomes today
  • If Lima protests turn violent, Cusco may erupt 24-48 hours later
  • Have contingency plans ready

Contingency Planning:

  • Screenshot train/bus schedules to Lima
  • Know location of Cusco airport
  • Keep 2-3 days extra cash (ATMs may run out during unrest)
  • Download offline maps (Google Maps works offline)
  • Share location with family/friends via WhatsApp

If Cusco Erupts:

  • Follow 2023 playbook: Get to airport immediately
  • Book first available flight out (even if expensive)
  • Do NOT wait to see “if it gets better” (2023 tourists who waited got trapped for weeks)

If You’re Planning Peru Travel (Next 2 Weeks)

Risk Assessment:

Low Risk: Lima-only trip, arrive after Jan 30 (protests likely over) Medium Risk: Lima + Cusco trip, travel Jan 29-31 (Cusco protest risk) High Risk: Cusco-only trip during active Lima protests (contagion risk)

Actions:

  • Purchase travel insurance with “Cancel for Any Reason”
  • Book refundable hotels (pay 10-20% premium)
  • Monitor Peru news daily leading up to departure
  • Have backup Peru itinerary (Sacred Valley instead of Machu Picchu)
  • Consider postponing if Cusco protests begin

Tour Operators’ Response: Cancellations and Contingencies

Major Peru tour operators are scrambling to adjust itineraries as today’s protest unfolds.

Lima City Tours: Cancelled

Gray Line Peru: “All Lima city tours scheduled for Tuesday, January 28 are cancelled due to protest activity in the historic center. Guests will receive full refunds or rebooking options.”

Lima Walking Tours: Multiple independent walking tour companies cancelled Tuesday departures, with some offering “alternative Lima” tours focused on Miraflores/Barranco instead of downtown.

Machu Picchu Tours: Operating (For Now)

G Adventures: “Our Machu Picchu tours are operating as scheduled. We are monitoring the situation in Lima closely and have contingency plans if protests spread to Cusco.”

Intrepid Travel: “Guests currently on Machu Picchu tours are safe. We have activated our emergency protocols and are in constant contact with local guides.”

Luxury Operators (Abercrombie & Kent, etc.): Offering free itinerary changes for clients nervous about Peru political situation.


Why This Protest Could Stay Peaceful (Or Not)

Reasons for Optimism

Gen Z-Led (Not Rural Indigenous):

  • Urban youth protests typically more organized, less violent
  • Better communication with police (social media coordination)
  • International attention on Peru (government wants good optics)

Economic Pressure:

  • Peru’s tourism industry generates $4.5 billion annually
  • Government acutely aware 2023 protests cost $800M in tourism losses
  • Strong incentive to prevent another Cusco shutdown

Date Significance:

  • Today is anniversary commemoration, not active political crisis
  • Protesters demanding past justice, not current revolution
  • Lower likelihood of extended unrest

Reasons for Concern

2023 Trauma Still Raw:

  • Families of 60+ dead protesters want accountability
  • Government has done little to prosecute police involved
  • Anger could boil over if police respond aggressively

Police Record:

  • Peruvian police used live ammunition on protesters in 2023
  • Tear gas, rubber bullets common even in “peaceful” demonstrations
  • Any violence today could trigger multi-day crisis

Social Media Amplification:

  • Gen Z protesters highly social media savvy
  • Videos of police violence spread instantly globally
  • One viral incident could spark nationwide protests

Political Instability:

  • President Boluarte approval rating: 8% (historically low)
  • Congress approval: 6% (public hates entire political class)
  • Underlying conditions for mass unrest still present

Peru Tourism Industry at Stake: $4.5 Billion Annually

Peru’s tourism industry, which generates $4.5 billion annually and employs 1.1 million people, is watching today’s protests with extreme anxiety.

Tourism by the Numbers

Annual Visitors:

  • Total international tourists: 4.4 million (2025)
  • US tourists: 750,000 (17% of total)
  • European tourists: 950,000 (22% of total)
  • Latin American tourists: 2.7 million (61% of total)

Economic Impact:

  • Direct tourism revenue: $4.5 billion
  • Jobs: 1.1 million (9% of Peru’s workforce)
  • GDP contribution: 3.9% of Peru’s economy

Top Destinations:

  1. Machu Picchu/Cusco: $600M (13% of total)
  2. Lima: $400M (9%)
  3. Sacred Valley: $200M (4%)
  4. Arequipa: $150M (3%)
  5. Amazon (Iquitos/Puerto Maldonado): $120M (3%)

2023 Protest Economic Damage

Q1 2023 Tourism Losses:

  • Direct revenue lost: $800 million (tourists cancelled/stranded)
  • Jobs lost: 80,000+ temporary layoffs
  • Machu Picchu closure: 67 days (December 2022 – February 2023)
  • Recovery time: 18 months to return to 2022 levels

International Perception: CNN, BBC, international media broadcast images of tear gas in Cusco’s Plaza de Armas, stranded tourists, and violent clashes—creating a “Peru is dangerous” narrative that took years to overcome.

What’s at Stake Today

Best Case (Peaceful Protest):

  • Single-day disruption
  • Minimal international media coverage
  • Tourism unaffected beyond Tuesday
  • Peru’s reputation intact

Worst Case (Violence, Cusco Contagion):

  • Multi-week crisis like 2023
  • Machu Picchu closure (tourists trapped/evacuated)
  • $500M+ tourism losses
  • International travel advisories (US State Dept raises Peru to Level 3: “Reconsider Travel”)

Historical Context: Peru’s Protest Cycle

Recent Political Instability Timeline

2018-2023: Five Presidents in Five Years

2018-2020: Martín Vizcarra (impeached over corruption) 2020: Manuel Merino (resigned after protests, 2 killed) 2020-2021: Francisco Sagasti (interim) 2021-2022: Pedro Castillo (arrested attempting coup) 2022-Present: Dina Boluarte (protests, 60+ killed)

Tourist Perspective: Peru has had five presidents in five years—a level of political chaos that terrifies international tourists considering $5,000-10,000 Machu Picchu vacations.

2023 Protests: The Trauma Peru Can’t Forget

December 7, 2022: President Castillo announces dissolution of Congress at 12:30 PM. By 3:00 PM, he’s impeached and arrested. By 5:00 PM, Dina Boluarte is president.

December 8-10, 2022: Rural Peru (Castillo’s base) erupts. Roadblocks across Andes. Cusco airport surrounded.

December 11-31, 2022: Protests intensify. Police use live ammunition. 20 killed by New Year’s.

January-March 2023: Peak violence. Cusco airport closed 30+ days. Machu Picchu inaccessible. Tourists evacuated by helicopter ($2,000+ per person). International outrage as police kill unarmed protesters.

March 2023: Protests gradually wind down after 60+ deaths, no political resolution. Boluarte survives but approval rating collapses.

Legacy: Zero police officers prosecuted. Zero justice for victims’ families. Today’s protest = unfinished business.


Expert Analysis: “Peru’s Political Powder Keg”

Javier Corrales, Political Scientist (Amherst College): “Peru is a political powder keg. Today’s Gen Z protest represents a new generation demanding accountability for 2023’s violence. If police respond with force again, we could see nationwide upheaval that makes 2023 look minor. The tourism industry should be very nervous.”

Tourism Consultant Marisol Mosquera (Lima-based): “Every protest in Peru scares away international tourists for months afterward. We’ve spent three years rebuilding confidence after 2023. One viral video of police violence today could undo all that work overnight. The economic stakes are enormous.”

US State Department Official (Speaking Anonymously): “We’re monitoring the situation closely. Our primary concern is the safety of American citizens in Lima and Cusco. If today’s protest turns violent or spreads to Cusco, we’ll reassess Peru’s travel advisory level. Right now it’s Level 2 (Exercise Increased Caution). It could go to Level 3 (Reconsider Travel) if the situation deteriorates.”


The Bottom Line

Peru’s Gen Z collective is flooding Lima’s historic downtown TODAY, Tuesday January 28, with tens of thousands of protesters demanding justice for 60+ killed during the 2023 political upheaval—creating immediate travel chaos for tourists trapped in Lima and raising the specter of protests spreading to Cusco and shutting down Machu Picchu access.

For Tourists Currently in Peru:

Stay in your hotel if you’re in downtown Lima today. Avoid Plaza San Martín and Plaza de Armas completely. If departing Lima today, leave for the airport 5 hours early. If you’re in Cusco/Machu Picchu, monitor news obsessively and have evacuation plans ready in case protests spread.

For Travelers Planning Peru Trips:

The next 48-72 hours will determine whether this is a one-day commemoration or the start of 2023-style nationwide upheaval. If Cusco erupts, Machu Picchu shuts down and thousands get trapped. Purchase travel insurance and prepare to postpone if necessary.

For Peru’s Tourism Industry:

Your $4.5 billion economy is hanging in the balance. If today stays peaceful, you dodged a bullet. If violence erupts and spreads to Cusco, you’re looking at $500 million+ losses and years of reputation damage—again.

Tuesday, January 28, 2026, 11:00 AM: The moment Peru’s Gen Z either exercises its democratic right to protest peacefully… or triggers the tourism crisis the country can’t afford to repeat.

The world is watching. So are 30,000 tourists currently in Peru.


Emergency Resources:

  • US Embassy Lima: +51-1-618-2000 / LimaACS@state.gov
  • US Embassy Alert Page: pe.usembassy.gov
  • STEP Registration: step.state.gov
  • Peru Tourism Board: +51-1-574-8000
  • Jorge Chavez Airport: +51-1-517-3100
  • Peru Police (Emergency): 105
  • Peru Tourist Police: +51-1-460-1060 (English-speaking)

Local News (Spanish):

  • RPP Noticias: rpp.pe
  • El Comercio: elcomercio.pe
  • Peru 21: peru21.pe

English News:

  • Peru Reports: perureports.com
  • Andean Air Mail: andeanairmail.com
  • Bloomberg Peru: bloomberg.com/latam

Related Coverage:

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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