
Buenos Aires

Santiago
South America · Multi-city itinerary
Southern Cone itinerary — February 2027
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
February 2027 is an off-season time for the Southern Cone trip (Buenos Aires & Santiago). Daytime highs run from about 29°C / 84°F to 30°C / 86°F across the stops. Plan around 7–9 days for the full Buenos Aires & Santiago loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 7–9 days · 2 cities
Two southern capitals across the Andes: tango-and-steak Buenos Aires on the River Plate, and Santiago beneath the snow-capped Andes, the gateway to Chilean wine country and the coast at Valparaíso. A two-hour flight links them.
Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires in February
Temperature
84°F / 67°F
28.9°C / 19.4°C
Precipitation
7d
5.1in · 129mm
Daylight
13.2h
Sea
80.1°F
26.7°C
February remains hot, with evening storms possible around Palermo terraces and Puerto Madero docks.
February remains hot, with evening storms possible around Palermo terraces and Puerto Madero docks.
City overview
Buenos Aires is a Rio de la Plata port city whose identity comes from immigrant theatres, political plazas, tango halls, and apartment-lined barrios rather than one monumental old core. Recoleta and Palermo carry the leafy cafe-and-gallery stay, San Telmo and La Boca keep the tango and port history visible, and Puerto Madero adds the glass-and-dockland skyline beside the Costanera Sur reserve.
Food & drink
Buenos Aires eating revolves around asado, bife de chorizo, choripán, empanadas, milanesa, fugazzeta pizza, dulce de leche, and late-night helado. Mercado de San Telmo, Don Julio in Palermo, Güerrin on Avenida Corrientes, and neighborhood parrillas around Recoleta and Palermo show the range without leaving the city.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Teatro Colón
- 2El Ateneo Grand Splendid
- 3Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes
- 4MALBA
- 5Caminito
- 6La Bombonera
- 7Puente de la Mujer
- 8Plaza de Mayo and Casa Rosada
- 9Palacio Barolo
- 10Recoleta Cemetery
1Teatro Colón
4.8★ · 87,706indoorThe opera house opened in 1908 after work by architects Francesco Tamburini, Vittorio Meano, and Jules Dormal, and its horseshoe auditorium is famous for acoustic clarity. It stands beside Plaza Lavalle, a few blocks from the Obelisco and Avenida 9 de Julio.
WikipediaBook an official guided tour or performance ticket; the foyer and auditorium are not always open for casual walk-ins.
2El Ateneo Grand Splendid
4.8★ · 99,061indoorOpen dailyThe Grand Splendid theatre opened in 1919, hosted tango and cinema, and became a bookshop in 2000 without losing the frescoed ceiling, balconies, or stage cafe. It stands on Avenida Santa Fe in Recoleta.
Wikipedia
3Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes
4.8★ · 39,371indoorClosed MonThe national fine-arts museum moved in 1933 into a former Recoleta pumping station adapted by architect Alejandro Bustillo. Its rooms hold Argentine painting, European masters, and sculpture beside Plaza Francia.
Show 7 more sights
- 4MALBA
- 5Caminito
- 6La Bombonera
- 7Puente de la Mujer
- 8Plaza de Mayo and Casa Rosada
- 9Palacio Barolo
- 10Recoleta Cemetery
Neighborhoods
1Recoleta
Recoleta feels Parisian and polished, with Avenida Alvear mansions, Recoleta Cemetery, Plaza Francia, El Ateneo, and museum lawns close together.
2Palermo Soho and Palermo Hollywood
Palermo is the long cafe-and-nightlife district, with Plaza Serrano, Armenia, Gorriti, Humboldt, design shops, parrillas, and late bars under plane trees.
3San Telmo
San Telmo is cobblestone Buenos Aires, anchored by Defensa Street, Plaza Dorrego, Mercado de San Telmo, antique stalls, and Sunday tango crowds.
4La Boca
La Boca is vivid but bounded, with Caminito, La Bombonera, Quinquela Martín murals, and tourist restaurants safest in daylight and on the main lanes.
5Puerto Madero
Puerto Madero is the clean dockland reset, with brick warehouses, Puente de la Mujer, upscale steakhouses, hotels, and Costanera Sur reserve paths.
6Belgrano
Belgrano feels residential and affluent, with Barrancas de Belgrano, Chinatown on Arribeños, Avenida Cabildo shops, and old houses near the Mitre train.
Getting around
Use a SUBE card for Subte lines, colectivos, commuter trains, and airport buses; Line D is useful for Palermo and Recoleta, while Line A follows Avenida de Mayo. Taxis and rideshares are practical after late dinners, and La Boca is better reached by bus or taxi than by a long walk from San Telmo.
Santiago
Santiago in February
Temperature
87°F / 54°F
30.4°C / 12.3°C
Precipitation
0d
0in · 1mm
Daylight
13.2h
February stays hot and dry, with many locals away and vineyard or coast trips easier on weekdays.
February stays hot and dry, with many locals away and vineyard or coast trips easier on weekdays.
City overview
Santiago fills Chile central valley between the Andes and the coastal range, with the Mapocho River, hill parks, vineyards, and a long east-west metro spine shaping most visits. The useful first map is Santiago Centro for civic monuments, Lastarria and Bellavista for culture and nightlife, Providencia for transit and food, and Las Condes or Vitacura for the modern business edge.
Food & drink
Santiago food moves between completo hot dogs, pastel de choclo, cazuela, empanadas de pino, humitas, churrasco sandwiches, seafood, and Chilean wine. Mercado Central, La Vega, Fuente Alemana, Barrio Italia, Bellavista, and Providencia wine bars give the clearest first route.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Cerro San Cristobal
- 2Costanera Center and Sky Costanera
- 3Cerro Santa Lucia
- 4La Moneda Palace
- 5Mercado Central and La Vega
- 6Plaza de Armas
- 7Metropolitan Cathedral of Santiago
- 8Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino
- 9La Chascona
- 10Barrio Lastarria and GAM
1Cerro San Cristobal
4.7★ · 4,283outdoorThe hill rises above Bellavista and Providencia with a funicular, cable car, sanctuary, pools, and the largest views across the basin. Smog and winter haze can limit the Andes panorama.
Wikipedia
2Costanera Center and Sky Costanera
4.7★ · 25,558outdoorOpen dailyThe tower in Providencia is the tallest building in South America and has an observation deck above a large mall. It gives a practical weather check for Andes visibility.
3Cerro Santa Lucia
4.6★ · 3,616outdoorThe small central hill was remade in the 19th century with terraces, fountains, stairs, and viewpoints. It is a short walk from Lastarria and the Universidad Catolica metro stop.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4La Moneda Palace
- 5Mercado Central and La Vega
- 6Plaza de Armas
- 7Metropolitan Cathedral of Santiago
- 8Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino
- 9La Chascona
- 10Barrio Lastarria and GAM
Neighborhoods
1
Santiago Centro
The center is civic and busy, with Plaza de Armas, La Moneda, pedestrian streets, churches, museums, government offices, and strong weekday movement.
2Lastarria and Bellas Artes
Lastarria feels compact and cultural, with cafes, bookstalls, GAM, Santa Lucia, cinemas, restaurants, and easy metro access.
3Bellavista and Patronato
Bellavista is colorful and nightlife-focused below San Cristobal, while Patronato adds Korean, Middle Eastern, and bargain shopping streets nearby.
4Providencia
Providencia is the practical middle city, with hotels, metro stations, Costanera Center, parks, restaurants, and good links east or west.
5Las Condes and Vitacura
The eastern districts feel corporate and affluent, with offices, malls, hotels, parks, embassies, and clear Andes views from broad avenues.
6Barrio Italia and Nunoa
These residential-cultural areas add design shops, cafes, theaters, bars, old houses, and a slower local pace south of Providencia.
Getting around
Metro de Santiago and RED buses use the Bip! card, with Line 1 tying Centro, Providencia, and Las Condes together. Air quality and long distances make metro-first planning smarter than relying on taxis across the whole basin.
Best time to do the Southern Cone trip
In February, the Southern Cone trip runs daytime highs from 29°C / 84°F to 30°C / 86°F, with nights down to about 12°C / 54°F at the coolest stop. Expect only a few wet days — up to 7 at the rainiest stop. Weighed across both stops, February is an off-season time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Buenos Aires & Santiago are November, April and September, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. February 2027 is off-peak to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact February dates — across every city on the Southern Cone trip.
Plan this Southern Cone tripCommon questions about the Southern Cone trip
- When is the best time to do the Southern Cone trip?
- The most comfortable months across Buenos Aires, Santiago are November, April and September, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. February is an off-season time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in February 2027.
- How many days do you need for the Southern Cone trip?
- A comfortable Southern Cone trip runs about 7–9 days, allowing roughly Buenos Aires 4, Santiago 3 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Southern Cone trip?
- The classic order is Buenos Aires & Santiago. Each city below has its own February weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my February Southern Cone trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Southern Cone list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Buenos Aires, Santiago against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.