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Santiago de Chile Arturo Merino Benítez Airport (SCL) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Star Alliance LATAM Hub · Patagonia & Atacama Gateway · T2 Live Since 2022, Fully Ramped 2024

Santiago de Chile Arturo Merino Benítez Airport (SCL) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Latin America’s busiest single-runway airport, hub for the largest airline in the region (LATAM), and the only viable jumping-off point for Easter Island. Terminal 2 opened in 2022 and was fully ramped in 2024, taking all international flights and leaving T1 to handle domestic. The reciprocity fee for US/CA/AU travellers ended in 2014; visa-free 90 days for most western passports. Smog still hits the city in winter.

✈️ IATA: SCL📍 17 km NW of city centre🚚 Centropuerto CLP 2,000 · 30–50 min🛂 Visa-free 90 days · no reciprocity fee

⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance

Terminal 2 (international)
Live since 2022, fully ramped 2024 · 14 contact gates · 200,000 m²
Terminal 1 (domestic)
Now domestic-only · LATAM/Sky/JetSmart Chile-internal · connected airside
Currency
Chilean Peso (CLP, $) · ~950 per USD · cards everywhere airside
Centropuerto bus to city
CLP 1,900–2,500 · every 5–15 min · Pajaritos Metro 25 min
Turbus Aeropuerto
CLP 2,000–2,500 · goes to Estación Central + Universidad de Santiago
Uber / Cabify / DiDi
CLP 12,000–25,000 · Las Condes 30–45 min · pickup at T2 Level 1
Reciprocity fee
Abolished March 2014 · US/CA/AU pay nothing on entry
Tap water
Safe in Santiago · high mineral content, many use bottled

🏢 1. T1 + T2: The 2022 International Expansion

SCL doubled its capacity in 2022 with the opening of Terminal 2 — a new dedicated international terminal of 200,000 m² with 14 contact gates and 8 remote stands. The original 1994 terminal, retrofitted as Terminal 1, was repurposed for domestic operations only. The two are connected by a covered airside corridor; no shuttle needed once you’re past security. By 2024 the new building was fully ramped; international passengers now experience a quieter, more modern operation than the chronically congested 2010s SCL.

🛫 Terminal 2 — All International

Airlines: LATAM Airlines (oneworld member, Latin America’s largest carrier, hub here), Sky Airline, JetSmart international, Copa, American, Delta, United, Iberia, Air Europa, Air France (seasonal), KLM (seasonal), Lufthansa (seasonal), Qatar Airways, Aeroméxico, Avianca, plus regional ops.

Layout: Single-storey concourse with 14 contact gates arranged in a Y-pier configuration. Walk time check-in to furthest gate: 10–15 minutes. Modern 2022 finishes; better Wi-Fi than T1; cleaner air conditioning; bigger duty-free area.

The international concourse is calm. The 2010s congestion is gone. Allow 2.5–3 hours for international departures including transit; longhaul to Europe usually requires the morning bank (08:00–11:00) for connections via MAD/LIS/AMS.

📥 Terminal 1 — Domestic Only Since 2022

Airlines: LATAM Chile (domestic), Sky Airline, JetSmart Chile, plus a small DAP/Aerocardal regional fleet (charters to Patagonia, Atacama mining sites). All Santiago-internal Chilean flights — Concepción, Calama, Iquique, Antofagasta, Puerto Montt, Punta Arenas, Easter Island.

Layout: The pre-2022 main terminal, now reduced to domestic ops. Less crowded than the international era. Walk time within T1: 5–8 minutes. Connects to T2 by an airside corridor for transferring international-to-domestic passengers.

Domestic-to-international connection: takes 30–45 minutes including the airside corridor walk and immigration entry. International-to-domestic: exit international, clear immigration, walk to T1, re-check bag, security — allow 90 minutes.
🌍 The Single Runway — Why SCL Stays Busy

SCL operates a single 3,800-metre runway (17R/35L), making it one of LATAM’s busiest single-runway airports. A second runway has been on the master plan for two decades; the latest target is 2028–2030 for the second runway plus a Metro Line 7 extension. Until that lands, SCL is busy but reliable: weather diversions are rare in Mediterranean Santiago (no fog, no monsoons); winter morning smog briefly affects visibility but rarely cancels.

🛂 2. Visa, Peso & the End of the Reciprocity Fee

Chile is one of South America’s most painless entry stamps. EU, UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and most western passports get up to 90 days visa-free on arrival — just a passport stamp and a paper Tarjeta de Turismo (PDI form). The famous “reciprocity fee” that Chile used to charge US/CA/AU passport holders on entry was abolished in March 2014 — this is no longer a thing despite many old guidebooks still mentioning it. The EU’s EES and ETIAS schemes do not apply.

💾

90-Day Visa-Free Stamp + Tarjeta de Turismo

EU/UK/US/CA/AU/NZ get up to 90 days visa-free. Officer issues both a passport stamp and a small paper Tarjeta de Turismo (Tourist Card) — keep this card; you need to surrender it on exit and it’s your record of legal stay. Lost cards can be replaced at any PDI office for ~CLP 5,000. Stays can be extended once for another 90 days at the Departamento de Extranjería in Santiago for ~CLP 100,000.

💵

Reciprocity Fee — Abolished 2014

Until March 2014, Chile charged a “reciprocity fee” at entry for US (~US$160), Canadian (~US$132) and Australian (~US$117) passport holders, mirroring the visa fees those countries charged Chileans. This was abolished in March 2014. Many guidebooks (and outdated airline emails) still mention it; it is no longer collected. EU/UK/NZ never had this fee. Mexican passports continue to face a different ID-on-entry process.

💰

Peso vs USD — Cards Win

Chilean Peso (CLP) only at most retail. USD is rarely accepted; convert to CLP at a Cambio Money Exchange in arrivals (avoid the airport ATM kiosks — their FX rate is poor). Cards work nearly everywhere airside and city-side. Withdraw CLP 200,000–400,000 at a BCI, Banco de Chile or Santander ATM in arrivals. ATM fees: ~CLP 4,000–6,000 plus your home bank’s.

📍 The 19% IVA — And the Hotel Refund

Chile charges a 19% IVA (VAT) on most goods and services. One unique benefit for foreign tourists: hotel stays paid in USD by foreign nationals are IVA-exempt — that’s a 19% reduction. Bring your passport at check-in and ask if the hotel applies the exemption (most do automatically when you pay foreign card or USD). For other goods, IVA is included in retail prices and there’s no airport refund. Pisco, wine and merch are duty-free standouts; we cover them in Section 5.

🚚 3. Transport: Centropuerto, Turbus & the Metro Line 7 Future

SCL still has no rail link to the city — Metro Line 7 was approved in 2022 but is not opening before 2028–2030. Until then, every transfer is a road journey 17 km southeast on the Costanera Norte expressway. Off-peak that’s 25–40 minutes. Rush hour (07:30–09:30 and 17:30–20:00) stretches it to 50–75 minutes, and Friday evening rain plus rush hour can hit 90+. The two airport buses (Centropuerto and Turbus Aeropuerto) are the budget default; Uber is the convenience pick.

⭐ Centropuerto Bus — The Default Budget Pick

Centropuerto is the white-and-blue dedicated airport bus running every 5–15 minutes from 06:00 to 23:30, connecting SCL to Pajaritos Metro station (Santiago Metro Line 1 hub) in 25–35 minutes for CLP 1,900–2,500 one way. From Pajaritos, the Metro takes you to Las Condes, Providencia, Bellas Artes, etc. for an additional CLP 770–900. This is the cheapest viable airport-to-city option with luggage.

Single fare:
CLP 1,900–2,500
Frequency:
Every 5–15 min
Hours:
06:00–23:30
Pajaritos Metro:
25–35 min
Pajaritos > central city by Metro — from Pajaritos take Metro Line 1 (~25 min to Universidad de Chile, ~35 min to Tobalaba in Las Condes). Total airport-to-Las Condes via Centropuerto + Metro: ~70 minutes for CLP 2,800–3,400 (~US$3–4) total.

🚌 Turbus Aeropuerto — The Alternative Bus

Turbus Aeropuerto is the alternative airport bus, also operating from outside Arrivals every 15–30 minutes. CLP 2,000–2,500 one way. Goes to Estación Central / Universidad de Santiago Metro (vs Centropuerto’s Pajaritos), useful if your hotel is in the western half of the city. Same fare class, same comfort level. Choose Centropuerto for Las Condes/Providencia (Line 1 east); Turbus for Estación Central / Maipo neighbourhoods (Line 1 west).

📱 Uber, DiDi & Cabify — Fully Legal in Chile

Uber and DiDi are fully legal in Chile as of 2023’s ride-app legalisation; Cabify also operates. Pickups happen at a T2 Level 1 designated app zone (and a separate T1 zone for domestic-departing passengers), signposted “Aplicaciones”. Apps are typically 30–50% cheaper than the official taxi for the same trip. The Las Condes hotel district is the most common drop; CLP 12,000–25,000 (~US$13–26).

Uber to Las Condes: CLP 12,000–22,000
DiDi: CLP 11,000–20,000
Cabify Lite: CLP 13,000–24,000
Surge: +30–100% peak
📍 Default-pick rule: Three+ travellers, working data SIM — Uber or DiDi. Solo budget — Centropuerto + Metro. Late night, no SIM, peace of mind — official taxi at the desk past Customs (CLP 22,000–35,000 to Las Condes; flat zone-based, slip-issued).

✈️ Connecting to Patagonia, Atacama, Easter Island

SCL is the only viable jumping-off point for Easter Island (Mataveri IPC) — LATAM’s 5h flight 4–6x weekly is the only route in. For Patagonia (Punta Arenas PUQ, Puerto Montt PMC), LATAM, Sky and JetSmart fly daily from T1; allow 90 minutes for international-to-domestic transfers. San Pedro de Atacama: fly to Calama (CJC) on LATAM/Sky/JetSmart, then 100 km transfer by van. All these connections are domestic and use T1.

Easter Island booking: book early — LATAM caps the route at ~50 weekly seats and they sell out 2–4 months ahead in peak season (Dec–Feb summer, Jul school break). Flights are operationally fragile (single weekly fleet rotation) and delays cascade. Don’t book a same-day SCL connection on the way home; overnight in Santiago.
⚠️ Santiago Traffic — Costanera Norte and the Friday Evening Reality

Santiago’s traffic peaks on the Costanera Norte expressway (the SCL-to-Las-Condes route) at 07:30–09:30 and 17:30–20:00. Friday-evening rain plus rush hour can stretch the 17 km journey to 90+ minutes. Centropuerto + Metro stays predictable because the Metro doesn’t hit traffic. Schedule airport runs for early morning (06:00–08:00) or late evening (after 21:00) if your flight allows.

🛍️ 4. Lounges: Pacific Club, LATAM Premium & Plaza Premium (Added 2024)

SCL’s lounge offering jumped in 2024 with the opening of a Plaza Premium location in T2 international, joining the existing Salón VIP Pacific Club and the LATAM Premium Lounge. The American Admirals Club covers oneworld Sapphire+ for AA flights. If you have only Priority Pass and no airline status, SCL T2 has two options for you in 2026 — better than most of the LATAM peer airports.

✨ Plaza Premium Lounge T2 (international airside, Priority Pass)

Walk-in price:
~US$483-hour stay
Access:
Priority Pass · LoungeKey · DragonPass · Plaza Premium membership · paid walk-in
Hours:
24/7
Wi-Fi / showers:
Yes / Yes
Opened in late 2024 in the new T2 international concourse. Hot Chilean buffet (cazuela, pastel de choclo, empanadas), espresso bar, full Pisco Sour bar with named-bottle pisco, shower suites, and quiet zones with reclining seats. Best for the morning bank to Europe via MAD/LIS/AMS (06:00–10:00 wave) and the evening bank to North America. The Pisco selection (Capel, Mistral, Bauzá Reservado) is genuinely good — not airport-tier filler.

✨ Salón VIP Pacific Club (Priority Pass)

~US$42 walk-in / 3-hour stay. The original Priority Pass option at SCL, in T2 international. Smaller and quieter than Plaza Premium, with a tighter buffet but the same Pisco Sour station. Priority Pass and LoungeKey accepted. Useful when Plaza Premium is full or you want a quieter space. Has been in operation since pre-2022 and survived the T1-to-T2 international migration intact.

⭐ LATAM Premium Lounge (status only)

oneworld Sapphire/Emerald, LATAM Black/Black Signature only — no walk-in, no Priority Pass. Recently expanded into a full T2 international corner space with a curated Chilean wine bar (14 different Chilean Cabernets and Carmenères rotating monthly), full hot Chilean buffet, shower suites, sleeping pods. 05:00–01:00. The wine bar is a standout among LATAM premium lounges.

✨ American Admirals Club — Citi/Amex Coverage

For oneworld Sapphire/Emerald, AAdvantage Executive Platinum and Citi/AAdvantage Executive cardholders flying American on the day, the American Admirals Club in T2 international is the access point. Smaller than the LATAM Premium Lounge; coffee is better; food slightly worse. 05:30–20:30. Amex Platinum cardholders flying AA also get access (same day).

🍷 5. Food & Duty-Free: Cazuela, Cabernet & Pisco Sour

🍲 Cazuela at La Picada del Aeropuerto — Chile’s National Comfort Food

Cazuela is Chile’s national comfort dish: a clear chicken or beef broth with potato, pumpkin, corn-on-the-cob, rice, and a wedge of squash. La Picada del Aeropuerto at the T2 food court does it for ~CLP 6,500–9,500. Other airport options: Pastel de choclo (corn pie with chicken/beef filling) at the same stand for ~CLP 8,000. The McDonald’s and Starbucks are at the food court too — skip them, you can have those anywhere.

☕ Café Tarragó & Café Caribe — The Coffee Spectrum

Chile is not a coffee-growing country, so most Chilean coffee is South American import — primarily Colombian and Brazilian. Café Tarragó at the T2 international concourse does proper specialty espresso; Café Caribe at the central food court is more pragmatic. Order a cortado (espresso with a splash of warm milk) for the most Chilean coffee experience — the local default. Skip the airport Starbucks.

🛒 Duty-Free: Pisco, Carmenère, Mote con Huesillo & Lapis Lazuli

Pisco Chileno — the export-gift default, despite Peru’s rival claim. Pisco Capel Reservado, Mistral Nobel and Bauzá Reservado de Familia are the standout duty-free brands at CLP 12,000–25,000 a bottle. Chilean wine is the bigger gift category — Carmenère is the unique Chilean varietal (the ‘lost grape of Bordeaux’), Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah are also strong. Concha y Toro Don Melchor, Almaviva, Errazuriz Don Maximiano — Chile’s flagship reds, US$80–150 a bottle at duty-free. Lapis Lazuli jewellery (Chile is one of two world sources, the other being Afghanistan) at the SCL airport stalls; certified pieces for CLP 80,000–800,000. Avoid the airport-priced Mapuche silver jewellery — Santiago Bellavista artisan markets are 50% cheaper.

🍸 The Pisco Sour Wars — Drink One Before You Leave

Both Chile and Peru claim Pisco Sour as their national drink, and both versions are subtly different. The Chilean style uses sweeter, lower-strength Pisco Reservado, no pisco-de-uva differentiation, and slightly less egg white. Try one at the Plaza Premium or Pacific Club lounge — they’re properly mixed, free with your access, and use mid-tier Pisco. Order a second to compare with what you’ll get in Lima three days later. There is no winner; have both.

💡 6. Insider Tips: Smog, Patagonia, Easter Island, Cash

🌤 The Santiago Smog — Winter Mornings, May to August

Santiago sits in a basin between the Andes (east) and Chilean Coastal Range (west), which traps cold winter air and pollution from cars + wood fires + industry. May to August mornings, AQI can hit hazardous levels, with the city visible only as a brown layer from up in Las Condes. The airport is at the western edge and slightly less affected, but morning visibility can briefly delay departures. Days when the city declares an “Alerta Ambiental”, restrictions on private cars apply; doesn’t affect taxis or buses. The smog clears mid-morning; the afternoon is usually clear blue skies even in winter.

⛰️ Easter Island, Patagonia & Atacama — SCL Is The Hub for All Three

Easter Island (Mataveri, IPC): 5h LATAM-only flight, ~CLP 350,000–700,000 round trip, 4–6 weekly. Book early (Dec–Feb summer + Jul school break sells out 2–4 months ahead). Don’t book a same-day onward connection — flights are operationally fragile and delays cascade. Patagonia (Punta Arenas PUQ, Puerto Montt PMC): LATAM/Sky/JetSmart daily from T1, ~CLP 80,000–200,000 r/t. Atacama (via Calama CJC): daily from T1, then 100 km transfer by van to San Pedro. All these are domestic and depart from T1; international-to-domestic transfer at SCL takes 90 minutes minimum.

💧 Tap Water — Safe in Santiago, Mineral-Heavy

Santiago tap water is safe to drink — including airport washroom taps. Chilean cities are unusual in LATAM in this regard; the water utility (Aguas Andinas) maintains strict drinking-quality standards. The catch: Santiago water has a high mineral content (calcium, magnesium — the Andes melt-water signature) and tastes “harder” than what most North American or European visitors are used to. Some travellers’ stomachs initially react. Bottled water airside (CLP 1,500–2,500 for 500 ml) is common from habit, not necessity. Hot drinks (coffee, tea) are obviously safe.

📱 eSIMs & Local SIMs — Entel and Movistar Win on Coverage

For Santiago and major tourist areas: Airalo, Holafly, GigSky and Saily all work fine — ~US$10–20 for 5–10 GB / 14 days. For travel beyond — Patagonia, Atacama, the Coastal valleys — buy a local SIM. Entel has the best Chilean rural coverage (especially in Patagonia and the Atacama); Movistar is second. The Entel kiosk at SCL T2 arrivals takes a passport and 10 minutes; ask for the “Plan Turista” bundle (~CLP 15,000–25,000 for 30 days unlimited domestic data).

👩 Solo Female Travellers — Las Condes & Providencia Are Safe

Santiago’s tourist core — Las Condes, Providencia, Lastarria, Bellas Artes, Bellavista — is among South America’s safer urban districts, with active police presence. The Metro is well-policed at all hours. Avoid: centro at night (especially Plaza Italia and post-2019-protest impact areas), Recoleta and Conchalí outskirts, La Florida outskirts. The single biggest rule: do not hail street taxis; use Uber, DiDi or Cabify only. The SCL airport itself has standing security and the official taxi desk is 100% safe.

💵 Cash & Tipping — Card Friendly, Tip 10%

Chile is card-saturated airside and in tourist Santiago; cash matters in markets, food carts, smaller restaurants in non-tourist neighbourhoods, and rural Patagonia/Atacama. Withdraw CLP 200,000–400,000 in arrivals at a BCI, Banco de Chile or Santander ATM — both have decent rates. The CLP 20,000 note is hard to break in markets; ask for CLP 5,000s and 1,000s if possible. Tipping: 10% is included on most restaurant bills as “propina sugerida” — it’s not strictly mandatory but socially expected; just leave it on. Don’t double-tip.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get from Santiago Airport (SCL) to Las Condes or central Santiago? +
SCL is 17 km northwest of central Santiago via the Costanera Norte expressway. Three good options: Centropuerto bus (CLP 1,900–2,500 every 5–15 min to Pajaritos Metro, 25–35 minutes; from Pajaritos, Metro Line 1 takes you to Las Condes/Providencia for an additional CLP 770–900 in ~25 min). Turbus Aeropuerto (CLP 2,000–2,500 to Estación Central). Uber, DiDi or Cabify from the T2 Level 1 app pickup zone (CLP 12,000–25,000 to Las Condes). The official airport taxi desk past Customs is CLP 22,000–35,000 flat. There is no train; Metro Line 7 to SCL is planned for 2028–2030.
Do US, Canadian or Australian travellers still pay a reciprocity fee to enter Chile? +
No — the reciprocity fee was abolished in March 2014 and is no longer collected. US passport holders used to pay ~US$160, Canadians ~US$132 and Australians ~US$117 on arrival. This is over. Many guidebooks and outdated airline emails still mention it; it does not apply. EU and UK passports never had this fee. Mexican passports continue to face a different ID-on-entry process. As of 2026, all of EU/UK/US/CA/AU/NZ get up to 90 days visa-free with just a passport stamp and the small Tourist Card (Tarjeta de Turismo).
Is the new Terminal 2 at Santiago Airport open? Which terminal does my flight use? +
Yes — Terminal 2 opened in 2022 and was fully ramped in 2024. It now handles all international flights. Terminal 1 (the original 1994 building) is now domestic-only: LATAM Chile, Sky Airline, JetSmart Chile to Concepción, Punta Arenas, Calama, Easter Island, etc. The two terminals are connected by an airside corridor for through-passengers; international-to-domestic transfer with bag re-check takes 90 minutes minimum. International departures and arrivals all use T2.
How early should I arrive at SCL for an international flight? +
Domestic: 90 minutes. International to the US: 2.5–3 hours. International to Europe or Asia: 3 hours. T2 is large — allow 10–15 minutes to walk from check-in to your gate. Add 30 minutes during May–August winter morning smog episodes when reduced visibility briefly affects ground ops. Santiago traffic peaks 07:30–09:30 and 17:30–20:00 on the Costanera Norte; allow 60–75 minutes from Las Condes to SCL in those windows instead of 25–40 off-peak.
Can I drink the tap water at Santiago airport? +
Yes — Santiago tap water is safe to drink, including airport washroom taps, unlike most LATAM cities. Chile’s water utility (Aguas Andinas in Santiago) maintains strict drinking-quality standards. The catch: Santiago water has a high mineral content (calcium, magnesium from Andes melt-water) and tastes “harder” than European or North American water. Some travellers’ stomachs initially react. Bottled water airside is common from habit, not necessity. Hot drinks like coffee and tea are safe.
What lounges can I access at SCL with Priority Pass? +
Two main public lounges, both Priority Pass eligible: Plaza Premium Lounge T2 (~US$48 walk-in, 3-hour stay, 24/7) opened late 2024 with Chilean buffet, espresso and Pisco Sour bar; and Salón VIP Pacific Club (~US$42 walk-in, 3-hour stay) which has been the original Priority Pass option through the T1-to-T2 international migration. Both also accept LoungeKey, DragonPass and Plaza Premium membership. The LATAM Premium Lounge (oneworld Sapphire/Emerald, LATAM Black) and American Admirals Club (Citi/AAdvantage Executive cardholders) are status-only.
How do I fly to Easter Island from SCL? +
LATAM Airlines is the only airline serving Easter Island (Mataveri, IPC), 5 hours west of SCL. 4–6 weekly flights, ~CLP 350,000–700,000 (~US$370–740) round trip in 2026. Book early — the route caps at ~50 weekly seats and sells out 2–4 months ahead in peak season (Dec–Feb summer + Jul school break). Flights are operationally fragile (single weekly fleet rotation) and delays cascade. Don’t book a same-day SCL connection on the way home; overnight in Santiago. Easter Island flights depart from T1 domestic concourse since they’re Chilean-internal.
Are airport taxis safe at Santiago airport? +
Yes — the official airport taxi desk past Customs in the Arrivals hall is fully licensed and 100% safe. Flat zone-based rate posted at the desk, dispatcher pairs you with a car, card payment accepted. Skip every “taxi, my friend” tout in the parking zone — those are unlicensed and overcharge by 2–3x. Uber, DiDi and Cabify are all fully legal in Chile (since 2023’s ride-app legalisation) and pickups happen at the T2 Level 1 designated app zone — equally safe and 30–50% cheaper than the official desk.

📊 2026 Summary Data Table

Feature Current Data (2026)
IATA Code SCL
Terminals T2 international (live since 2022, fully ramped 2024, 14 contact gates, 200,000 m²) + T1 domestic only · connected airside corridor
Distance to Las Condes 17 km via Costanera Norte expressway · 25–40 min off-peak · 60–75 min in rush hour
Primary Currency Chilean Peso (CLP, $) · ~950 per USD · cards everywhere airside
Centropuerto bus CLP 1,900–2,500 every 5–15 min · 06:00–23:30 · to Pajaritos Metro (25–35 min); + Metro to Las Condes ~25 min
Uber / DiDi / Cabify CLP 12,000–25,000 to Las Condes · pickup at T2 Level 1 app zone · fully legal since 2023
Train link None — Metro Line 7 extension to SCL planned for 2028–2030
Plaza Premium / Pacific Club Plaza Premium ~US$48 / 3h (24/7, opened 2024); Pacific Club ~US$42 / 3h; both Priority Pass eligible
Reciprocity fee status Abolished March 2014 · US/CA/AU pay nothing on entry · 90 days visa-free + paper Tourist Card (Tarjeta de Turismo)
Visa policy Up to 90 days visa-free on arrival for EU/UK/US/CA/AU/NZ · extendable once for another 90 days at Departamento de Extranjería in Santiago · no EES/ETIAS
Climate Mediterranean · warm dry summers (Dec–Feb, 25–33°C) · cool wet winters (Jun–Aug, 5–15°C with morning smog episodes)
Tap Water Safe in Santiago (high mineral content) · bottled CLP 1,500–2,500 from habit not necessity

This guide is maintained by the aifly.one Autonomous Intelligence Team. Verified for May 2026 travellers. All prices in Chilean Peso (CLP) unless stated otherwise.


Posted 7h ago

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