每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
The main attractions are spread across a 20 km (12 mile) radius from the city center, and public transport connections can be infrequent or timed inconveniently for day-trippers. A private transfer solves this cleanly — your driver picks you up at your hotel, gets you to the park or port on your schedule, and can wait or coordinate returns so you are not watching the clock on a trailhead. This matters especially in Patagonia, where weather shifts fast and flexibility is genuinely useful.
A full day is the right amount of time. Tierra del Fuego National Park alone rewards three to four hours, and a Beagle Channel cruise typically runs two to three hours on the water. Combine the two and you have a well-rounded day without feeling rushed. Arriving early gives you the best light for photos and first access to trails before group tours fill the popular routes.
Yes, and this is an underrated quality of the destination. The national park has well-marked, flat and gently rolling trails that are manageable for most fitness levels. Beagle Channel cruises require no physical exertion at all. The End of the World Train is a seated, scenic ride. The city itself is walkable and has good cafes and a museum quarter. Ushuaia tends to attract adventure travelers, but the actual day-trip experience is fully accessible to families, older travelers, and anyone who simply wants to stand at the end of the world and take it in.
Tierra del Fuego National Park, just 11 km (7 miles) from the city center, is the centerpiece of any day here. Its forest trails, glacial lakes, and dramatic coastline along Lapataia Bay are accessible even without serious hiking experience. A Beagle Channel boat excursion is the other essential — it brings you past the iconic Les Eclaireurs Lighthouse, sea lion colonies, and nesting cormorant islets. If time allows, a ride on the Tren del Fin del Mundo, the End of the World Train, adds historical depth to the natural spectacle.
More than most destinations of comparable size. In and around Ushuaia you have a realistic chance of seeing Magellanic and Gentoo penguins on Martillo Island, South American sea lions on rocky channel outcrops, Andean condors soaring over the national park, and a variety of seabirds including cormorants and albatross on the open channel. Estancia Harberton, a historic sheep farm east of the city, is the access point for penguin colony visits and also hosts a respected marine mammal museum with whale and seal skeletons.
Ushuaia sits at the very bottom of the world — the southernmost city on Earth, wedged between the Andes and the Beagle Channel in Argentine Patagonia. That alone makes it unlike anywhere else you will visit. In a single day you can walk inside a subantarctic national park, watch sea lions hauled out on rocky islets, spot penguins in the wild, and ride a historic narrow-gauge railway once used to transport prisoners. The scenery is raw and dramatic, and the sense of being at the edge of the planet is something travelers genuinely remember for the rest of their lives.