Buenos Aires.
Passionate, chaotic, unforgettable.
The city that invented tango and perfected the steak. Grand Haussmann boulevards, colourful port neighbourhoods, an opera house that rivals Paris, and a melancholy that produced some of the most beautiful music on earth.
A European city that ended up in South America. And became something neither could have produced alone.
Buenos Aires was built by European immigrants — Italian, Spanish, Jewish, German — who arrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and recreated the boulevards of Paris and Madrid in the pampas. The result is a city that looks vaguely familiar from a European reference point and then surprises you at every turn with something distinctly its own: the melancholy of tango, the ritual of the asado, the passion of football that borders on religion, and a collective character that combines enormous warmth with a theatrical instability that has produced both extraordinary culture and economic crises.
The city is currently extraordinary value for visitors paying in USD or euros, due to Argentina's well-documented currency situation. A world-class steak dinner with a bottle of Malbec costs $20–30 USD. A night at a boutique hotel in Palermo costs $60–90 USD. Tango shows that would cost $150 in a tourist venue cost $5 at a real milonga. This situation changes — always check current rates before travelling.
Buenos Aires rewards slow travel. The grand architecture of Recoleta, the faded port colours of La Boca, the Sunday antiques market of San Telmo, the parks and restaurants of Palermo — each neighbourhood has its own identity and pace. The city operates on a schedule that runs several hours later than most of Europe: dinner starts at 9pm at the earliest, milongas start at midnight, and nobody leaves a party before 4am.
Palermo for the restaurants. San Telmo for the soul.
Buenos Aires' barrios (neighbourhoods) each have a distinct identity that portenos take seriously. The choice of where to base yourself shapes everything from the restaurant on your corner to the noise level at 3am.
The largest and most tourist-friendly barrio, divided into Palermo Soho (boutiques, cafes, restaurants) and Palermo Hollywood (media companies, bars, restaurants). The best concentration of excellent restaurants in the city, the largest parks, and a nightlife scene that runs until dawn. Where most first-time visitors and expats stay. Safe, walkable, and endlessly entertaining.
The oldest barrio in Buenos Aires — cobblestone streets, colonial architecture, the famous Sunday market, tango on every corner, and a genuinely bohemian atmosphere. Slightly rougher than Palermo but deeply atmospheric. The San Telmo Market hall is one of the best in South America. Best for tango lovers and those who want the most historic neighbourhood experience.
The most European barrio — wide avenues, French-style mansions, the famous Recoleta Cemetery where Evita is buried, and the MALBA contemporary art museum. More expensive than Palermo but beautiful. Good for luxury hotels and a quieter atmosphere. The Sunday artisans' market around the cemetery is one of the best in the city.
The downtown core around Plaza de Mayo, the Casa Rosada, and the Teatro Colón opera house. Puerto Madero is the redeveloped port area with upmarket restaurants and the ecological reserve. Good base for historic sights and business travellers but quieter and less interesting for nightlife than Palermo or San Telmo.
The colourful tin-clad port neighbourhood where tango was born, famous for the Caminito street and the La Bombonera stadium of Boca Juniors. Genuinely spectacular to photograph during the day. Do not wander beyond the tourist Caminito area and do not visit after dark — this is consistent local advice, not excessive caution.
Exceptional value by any standard. Boutique hotels for the price of budget hotels elsewhere.
Buenos Aires offers extraordinary accommodation value due to Argentina's currency situation. A genuinely beautiful boutique hotel with a pool in Palermo costs $60–100 USD. Luxury hotels with concierge and spa cost $150–250 USD. Always pay in USD if you can and check current exchange dynamics before booking — the prices in ARS change frequently.
Philippe Starck-designed luxury hotel in a converted red brick mill in Puerto Madero. The most theatrical hotel in Buenos Aires — red velvet, white horses in the lobby art, a spa, and a cabaret restaurant. Genuinely extraordinary and one of the most distinctive hotels in South America.
Check availability →A converted house in Palermo Soho with a rooftop pool, excellent breakfast, and thoughtfully designed rooms. The best mid-range boutique hotel in Palermo and outstanding value for the quality. Book the rooms with the private terrace.
Check availability →A small wellness-focused boutique hotel in Recoleta with a tranquil courtyard, good breakfast, and genuinely helpful staff. The Recoleta location is excellent for walking the cemetery, MALBA, and the Sunday market. One of the most characterful options in the neighbourhood.
Check availability →A tango-themed boutique hotel in a 1903 mansion in San Telmo with its own milonga events, tango lessons, and a rooftop pool. The most atmospheric hotel in Buenos Aires for tango enthusiasts. The San Telmo location is perfect for the Sunday market and the tango bar scene.
Check availability →Consistently one of the best-rated hostels in Buenos Aires, in the heart of Palermo. Pool, social events, good communal kitchen, and the best neighbourhood location for restaurants and nightlife. Private rooms available from $35/night.
Check availability →A modernist design hotel in Palermo with a rooftop pool, excellent restaurant, and the most contemporary aesthetic in the neighbourhood. Good for design-conscious travellers who want Palermo's food scene on the doorstep.
Check availability →Find and compare hotels across Buenos Aires' barrios.
The world's best steak. This is not an exaggeration and portenos will not accept any argument to the contrary.
Buenos Aires' food identity rests on three pillars: the asado (Argentine barbecue), the empanada (stuffed pastry), and the dulce de leche (caramel spread eaten with everything). The wine — Malbec from Mendoza, Torrontés from Salta — is world-class and priced at what feels like a misprint by international standards. Eating and drinking well in Buenos Aires is the most affordable luxury on the trip.
Argentine beef is genuinely different — grass-fed, aged, with a flavour that grain-fed cattle cannot replicate. The bife de chorizo (sirloin) and ojo de bife (ribeye) are the classic cuts. Ordered a punto (medium — Argentines consider medium rare underdone) unless you know your preference. Don Julio in Palermo is regularly cited as the best parrilla in the city. La Brigada in San Telmo is the most old-school. Both require reservations.
Baked or fried pastry parcels filled with beef (humita — corn and cheese), chicken, spinach and cheese, or ham and mozzarella. Regional variations are significant — Salta empanadas are smaller and spicier, Tucumán ones are made with egg and pork. In Buenos Aires, the correct order is six empanadas between two people while waiting for the main course. El Federal in San Telmo does outstanding versions.
Argentina's signature red wine, made from the Malbec grape transplanted from Bordeaux in the 19th century and transformed by the high-altitude Mendoza terroir into something deeper and more powerful. The best expressions come from Luján de Cuyo and the Uco Valley. Achával Ferrer, Zuccardi, and Catena Zapata are the three producers most likely to change how you think about wine.
Argentina's version of the croissant — smaller, sweeter, and glazed with a honey syrup. Eaten at breakfast with a café con leche. The correct Buenos Aires breakfast is two or three medialunas and a coffee, standing at a bar counter at 8am. The Confitería Ideal in the Microcentro and La Prédica in Palermo are two of the most praised establishments for them.
Slow-cooked caramelised milk — thicker, richer, and more complex than caramel sauce. Spread on medialunas, eaten with alfajores (sandwich cookies), spooned into facturas (pastries), drizzled on ice cream (helado), and applied to anything that does not actively resist it. Argentina consumes more dulce de leche per capita than any other country and regards this as a point of national pride.
Find a real milonga. Everything else will follow.
Buenos Aires has enough to fill a month. The tango culture — not the tourist shows but the real milongas where portenos dance — is the single most distinctive experience in the city. Beyond that, the combination of world-class architecture, museums, football, and neighbourhood life makes the city genuinely inexhaustible.
One of the five greatest opera houses in the world, with acoustics ranked alongside La Scala and the Vienna State Opera. Built in 1908, seating 2,500, with seven levels of gilt and red velvet. A guided tour shows you the extraordinary building. A performance in it — opera, ballet, symphony — costs a fraction of equivalent performances in Europe. Book at teatrocolon.org.ar.
Book a tour or show →The real tango experience — not a dinner show but a milonga where portenos go to dance. La Catedral in Almagro (an anarchist cultural centre in a former grain warehouse) and Salón Canning in Palermo are the two most cited for authenticity. Milongas start late (10pm or midnight) and run until 4–6am. Tango lessons beforehand are strongly recommended if you want to participate.
Book tango lessons →The most famous cemetery in South America — a city of ornate marble mausoleums housing the Argentine elite, with Eva Perón (Evita) among the most visited. A genuinely extraordinary architectural experience, with neoclassical, Art Deco, and Baroque tombs of extraordinary quality. Walk it on a quiet weekday morning to appreciate the scale. The guided tours are excellent for context.
Guided cemetery tours →Every Sunday, the Plaza Dorrego and the surrounding streets of San Telmo fill with antique dealers, street performers, tango dancers, food vendors, and the entire city. The San Telmo Market hall (open daily) has excellent food stalls. The Sunday street market around it is one of the great Buenos Aires experiences — arrive by 11am and stay for lunch.
Walking tours →Buenos Aires has five top-division football clubs and the most passionate football culture in the world. A Boca Juniors match at La Bombonera or a River Plate match at El Monumental is one of the most intense live sport experiences on earth. Foreign visitors should book through reputable agencies rather than buying at the gate — the logistics and safety requirements are specific.
Book football tickets →The Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires — the finest collection of Latin American modern and contemporary art in the world. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Xul Solar, Antonio Berni, and the full breadth of 20th-century Latin American art. The building is as impressive as the collection. Free on Wednesdays after 6pm.
Book tickets →The SUBE card covers metro, bus, and train. Uber and Radio Taxi for everything else.
Buenos Aires has an extensive public transport network using the SUBE card (rechargeable, available at kiosks). The subte (metro) covers the main barrios. The bus network covers everything else. For nights out, Uber or a Radio Taxi are the safe options — never hail an unmarked cab.
Six lines (A through H) covering the city centre, Palermo, San Telmo, Recoleta, and the Microcentro. Buy a SUBE card at any metro station or kiosk. Runs until midnight on weekdays, 1am on weekends. Packed during rush hour.
~35 ARS per journey (very cheap)Over 200 bus routes covering the entire city. Same SUBE card. The Moovit and Google Maps apps show routes and real-time arrivals accurately. Buses run 24 hours. Essential for reaching La Boca, Mataderos, and outer barrios not served by the subte.
~35 ARS per journeyBoth work well in Buenos Aires. More expensive than the subte but safe and transparent pricing. Essential for late nights after the metro closes. Uber requires you to pay with card through the app — drivers cannot accept cash.
$2–8 USD most journeysLicensed metered taxis called by phone or app (BA Taxi, Pidiendo). Always use Radio Taxis called through apps rather than hailing on the street — street taxis in Buenos Aires have a history of short-changing tourists with counterfeit notes or taking roundabout routes.
$2–10 USD most journeysFrom Ezeiza (EZE, international): Manuel Tienda León bus to the city takes 45–60 minutes and costs ~$15 USD. Taxis cost $25–35 USD. From Aeroparque (AEP, domestic): 15 minutes by taxi ($8–12) or bus 45 to Palermo.
$15 USD (bus from EZE)An Airalo eSIM for Argentina works well. Local SIMs from Personal, Movistar, or Claro are available at the airport and throughout the city. Argentina has reasonable 4G coverage in Buenos Aires and the main cities.
SIM from 500 ARS / eSIM from $6One of the best-value major cities on earth. For those paying in USD or euros.
Argentina's currency situation makes Buenos Aires extraordinary value for foreign visitors. The exchange rate dynamic — where the informal "blue dollar" rate is significantly more favourable than the official bank rate — means your money goes considerably further than the price tags suggest. Always check current rates before travelling as the situation evolves constantly.
| Category | Budget ($25–50/day USD) | Mid-range ($80–150/day USD) | Comfortable ($200+/day USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | $12–25 Hostel dorm or guesthouse |
$60–100 Boutique hotel, Palermo |
$150+ Faena or luxury tier |
| Food | $8–15 Empanadas, parrilla almuerzo, wine |
$30–60 Don Julio dinner + Malbec |
$80+ Tasting menus + wine pairing |
| Transport | $1–3 Subte + bus SUBE card |
$5–15 SUBE + Uber for evenings |
$25+ Uber and Radio Taxi throughout |
| Activities | $5–15 Recoleta Cemetery, MALBA |
$20–50 Teatro Colón performance, milonga |
$80+ Football, private tango lesson, tasting |
Spring and autumn are perfect. Avoid January and February if you can.
Buenos Aires has a humid subtropical climate. Spring (September–November) and autumn (March–May) are ideal — mild temperatures, lower humidity, and the city's cultural life at full intensity. Summer (December–February) is hot and humid with portenos escaping to the coast. Winter (June–August) is mild but grey and rainy.
Safe in the right barrios. Specific rules make the difference.
Overall safety score — Medium Risk
Buenos Aires is safe in the main tourist barrios with specific precautions. Petty theft is the primary concern. Violent crime against tourists is uncommon in Palermo, Recoleta, and San Telmo.
The most common issue. Do not use your phone while walking on the street, especially in the Microcentro and San Telmo. Motorbike snatching (motochorros) occurs — be aware of motorbikes slowing near you. Keep bags across the body, never on a chair back in restaurants.
Never hail a taxi on the street in Buenos Aires. Use Uber, Cabify, or call a Radio Taxi through an app (BA Taxi). Street taxis have a history of short-changing with counterfeit notes ("La Quiniela" scam) and taking inflated routes. This is consistent advice from every safety source for the city.
La Boca is safe during the day on the Caminito tourist street. After dark, or if you wander beyond the tourist area, it becomes significantly less safe. This is consistent advice from portenos themselves — visit in the daytime, leave before it gets dark, stay on the Caminito.
Buenos Aires is manageable for solo female travellers with awareness. Verbal piropos (unsolicited compliments) are common and best ignored. Palermo and Recoleta are comfortable at night. Use Uber rather than walking alone after midnight in San Telmo and the Microcentro. The hostel and expat community in Palermo makes meeting other travellers easy.
What portenos never think to tell tourists.
Colonia del Sacramento is an hour away by ferry. The Pampas are right outside the city.
Buenos Aires' position on the Río de la Plata makes Uruguay an easy day trip — the ferry to Colonia del Sacramento takes just over an hour. The Argentine Pampas and the gaucho culture of Estancias are accessible within two hours by road.
A UNESCO-listed colonial town on the Uruguayan side of the Río de la Plata — cobblestone streets, Portuguese and Spanish colonial architecture, and a completely different pace from Buenos Aires. One of the most charming towns in South America and entirely feasible as a day trip. Bring your passport.
The Paraná Delta north of Buenos Aires — a labyrinth of river islands, wooden houses on stilts, and rowing clubs accessible only by boat. Take the Mitre train from Retiro station to Tigre, then a lancha colectiva into the delta. A completely different Argentina from the city.
A traditional Argentine cattle ranch with gaucho horsemanship, an asado lunch, folk music, and the vast flat horizon of the Pampas. La Cinacina and La Bamba de Areco are two of the best. Most operators include transport from Buenos Aires.
Uruguay's capital — laid-back, safe, with the remarkable Mercado del Puerto for grilled meats and an Art Deco waterfront rambla. Better as an overnight but possible as a long day trip. Bring your passport.
