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Yes, and it makes for an excellent pairing. Maldonado and Punta del Este sit side by side, roughly 3 km (2 miles) apart, so combining both into a single day trip is straightforward. Daytrip allows you to add custom sightseeing stops along your route, meaning you can spend the morning in Maldonado's historic center and the afternoon at Punta del Este's waterfront — all in one seamless journey without backtracking or rebooking separate transfers.
Maldonado is approximately 130 km (81 miles) east of Montevideo, making it a natural day trip from the capital. The drive along Ruta Interbalnearia takes roughly 1.5 to 2 hours depending on traffic. A private Daytrip transfer is the most comfortable way to make the journey — door-to-door service means no navigating bus terminals or managing luggage on public coaches, and you travel at your own pace rather than on a fixed timetable.
Most travelers find that 4 to 6 hours is the sweet spot — enough time to visit both museums, walk the historic center, take in the cathedral, and explore Calle Royal without feeling rushed. The city is compact and walkable, so you won't waste time in transit between sights. A Daytrip driver can pick you up at a time that works for your schedule and bring you back when you're ready, so there's no clock-watching to catch the last bus.
Absolutely. The museums are highlights, but Maldonado's appeal goes beyond them. The Spanish barracks themselves are architecturally striking and worth seeing even from the outside. The Cathedral of San Fernando de Maldonado is one of the finest colonial churches in Uruguay. And Calle Royal offers something more grounded and local than most tourist itineraries — fast food joints and street-level Uruguayan culture that give you a real sense of everyday life in the city. Maldonado rewards curiosity, not just museum-goers.
Maldonado punches well above its size for a day trip. The Didactic Artigas Museum inside the colonial Spanish barracks is a standout — a compact collection of Uruguayan paintings and sculptures that traces the country's artistic identity across centuries. The Francisco Mazzoni Regional Museum, set inside a former high-society mansion, gives you a genuinely personal look at colonial life through tools and artifacts from both the elite and indigenous communities of the era. Beyond the museums, the Cathedral of San Fernando de Maldonado anchors the historic center, and Calle Royal is the place to finish the day with a taste of local Uruguayan street food.
Punta del Este gets the international headlines, but Maldonado is where the genuine history lives. While Punta del Este is defined by its beaches and modern resort scene, Maldonado has been quietly accumulating character since the 1500s, shaped by Spanish colonial architecture and Guarani cultural influence. The barracks, the cathedral, the colonial mansion museums — none of that exists a few kilometers down the road. If you want to understand Uruguay rather than simply sunbathe in it, Maldonado is the more rewarding stop.