Overview
Artisan Craft Routes
Máncora Beach Gateway
First Spanish City Heritage
Far-North Coastal Food
North Peru and Ecuador Transit Node
History
Culture
Practical Info
Piura sits in a semi-arid valley at 29 meters altitude — Peru's hottest major city, averaging around 35°C — in the far northwest, 1,040 km north of Lima. Founded on August 15, 1532 by Francisco Pizarro as San Miguel de la Nueva Castilla, it was the first Spanish city established in Peru and one of the earliest on the Pacific coast of South America; the settlement moved to its current site by 1588. For travelers, Piura functions both as a practical transit hub — with a domestic airport 2 km from the plaza, long-distance bus links to Lima, and the nearest Peruvian city before the Ecuadorian border crossings — and as the access point for two distinct artisan traditions: the gold and silver filigree workshops of Catacaos (12 km southwest) and the denomination-of-origin smoked ceramics of Chulucanas (55 km east). The 162-km road north through the coastal desert to Máncora passes Cabo Blanco, the deep-water fishing port where Ernest Hemingway spent 32 days in 1956 catching marlin during production of the film of The Old Man and the Sea. Piura's food identity is sharply northern: seco de chabelo (dried beef with green plantain and chicha de jora), chinguirito (dried ray marinated lime-and-chili), and natillas (caramelized milk dessert) form a distinct coastal tradition separate from Chiclayo and Lima cooking.
Discover Piura
Tourism & destination guides
Official government sites
Official Piura municipal portal — city services, district administration, and civic calendar.
Official Piura regional government portal — regional administration and tourism authority for the department containing Piura city, Catacaos, Chulucanas, and the Máncora beach corridor.