Introduction
Travel route in Latin America The Gringo Trail refers to a string of the Latin American places most often visited by "gringos", North Americans, Europeans, Australasians, other budget travellers and also vice tourists.
While the route is famed for its iconic towns and ruins, the real texture lies in the small‑town cafés where locals negotiate prices in a blend of Spanish and English. Here, you can watch a bus driver explain the day's weather forecast while a market vendor teaches a tourist the rhythm of a traditional dance. Engaging in these everyday exchanges offers a glimpse of the region’s hospitality that no guidebook can capture, and often leads to unexpected invitations to community festivals or family meals.
The conventional itinerary assumes a dry‑season sprint, yet the rainy months unveil a quieter side of the trail. Rivers swell, creating natural waterways that locals use for transport, while the mist‑cloaked highlands host a burst of wildflowers. Adjusting your travel dates to include a week of rain can mean fewer crowds, lower prices, and the chance to experience festivals that are deliberately timed with the agricultural calendar, revealing a deeper connection between the landscape and its inhabitants.
Most travelers glide between hubs via budget airlines or long‑distance buses, but an alternative is the network of regional hitch‑hiking spots that sprout near hostels. These informal pickups are organised through community boards, where travellers trade contact information and share tips on safe routes. Embracing this method not only reduces carbon footprints but also embeds you in a transient community of nomads, each with their own stories of the trail’s twists and turns.
Travel route in Latin America The Gringo Trail refers to a string of the Latin American places most often visited by "gringos", North Americans, Europeans, Australasians, other budget travellers and also vice tourists.
[edit] The Gringo Trail encompasses almost all of Latin America, except Brazil, but there is no overland route on the Pan-American Highway between Central America and South America across the Darién Gap. Travelers generally charter boats in Panama or take the ferry. North America Mexico: Chichen Itza Guanajuato Isla Mujeres Oaxaca Puerto Escondido Querétaro Tulum Cancún Central America Belize: Caye Caulker San Ignacio Costa Rica: Arenal La Fortuna Jacó Manuel Antonio National Park Montezuma Nosara Puerto Viejo de Talamanca Guatemala: Antigua Lake Atitlán Semuc Champey Tikal Honduras: Bay Islands Copán Nicaragua: Corn Islands Granada Leon Ometepe Island San Juan del Sur Panama: Bocas Del Toro Boquete Panama City (especially the Casco Viejo) San Blas Islands El Salvador: Joya de Cerén El Sunzal Tazumal South America Argentina: Buenos Aires Iguaçu Falls Mendoza Ushuaia Bolivia: La Paz Potosí Salar de Uyuni Lake Titicaca Chile: Easter Island Pucón San Pedro de Atacama Torres del Paine Colombia: Bogotá Cartagena Medellín San Gil Taganga Tayrona National Natural Park Ecuador: Cuenca Galápagos Islands Mompiche Montañita Quito Peru: Arequipa Cusco Ica (Huacachina) Iquitos Lima Machu Picchu Máncora Nazca Puno