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Discover Buenos Aires: A Self-Guided Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is S$10 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 8h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Buenos Aires' passionate soul and faded grandeur with your self-guided audio tour, allowing you to explore Argentina's intoxicating capital at your own pace. Begin in the elegant Plaza de Mayo where the Casa Rosada's pink facade has witnessed Eva Perón's speeches, military coups, and the Mothers who still march for their disappeared children. Wander through the boulevards of Recoleta where mansions and the famous cemetery housing Evita's tomb. Cross into the colourful streets of La Boca where tango was born in the conventillos of Italian immigrants and the painted zinc houses of Caminito create Buenos Aires' most photographed scene. Explore the cobblestoned streets of San Telmo where Sunday antiques markets, crumbling colonial architecture, and intimate milongas preserve the Buenos Aires of memory and imagination. Discover the transformed Puerto Madero waterfront, then lose yourself in the bookshops of Corrientes Avenue that stay open until midnight.

Activity location

  • Plaza de Mayo
    • Av. Hipolito Yrigoyen S/N,
    • Buenos Aires, Argentina

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Plaza de Mayo
    • s/n Avenida Hipólito Yrigoyen
    • C1087, Buenos Aires, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina

Check availability

Discover Buenos Aires: A Self-Guided Tour
  • Activity duration is 8 hours and 30 minutes8h 30m
    8h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
S$10.30 x 1 AdultS$10.30
Total
Price is S$10.30
Until Thu, 19 Mar

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 50+ Buenos Aires attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Digital Map
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

Plaza de Mayo

  • 30m
The historic heart of Buenos Aires has witnessed independence declarations, Peronist rallies, military coups, and every significant moment in Argentine history since the city's founding in 1580. The Casa Rosada's distinctive pink facade—where Evita addressed adoring crowds and Maradona celebrated World Cup victories—dominates the eastern edge while the Cabildo colonial town hall and Metropolitan Cathedral complete the ensemble of national monuments. The Madres de Plaza de Mayo still march here each Thursday, their white headscarves commemorating children disappeared during the military dictatorship and reminding visitors that history here remains painful and present.

Casa Rosada

  • 30m
The presidential palace takes its name from the pink wash originally created by mixing ox blood into whitewash, though the romantic explanation that it combines red (Federalist) and white (Unitarian) to symbolise national unity is almost certainly apocryphal. The building's balcony served as Evita's stage for addressing the descamisados and has since hosted papal appearances, World Cup celebrations, and political declarations that continue to shape Argentina. Free guided tours access the state rooms, the Museo del Bicentenario beneath the plaza, and occasionally the famous balcony itself.

San Telmo

  • 1h
Buenos Aires' bohemian area preserves the colonial architecture and intimate scale that the wealthier classes abandoned after the 1871 yellow fever epidemic drove them north to Recoleta. The Sunday antiques market fills Plaza Dorrego and surrounding streets with vendors, tango dancers, and crowds browsing silverware, vintage fashion, and the bric-a-brac of Argentine history. The neighborhood's crumbling mansions, converted into apartments, restaurants, and boutique hotels, maintain an atmosphere of faded grandeur while the traditional bars and tango venues preserve the culture that UNESCO recognised by declaring tango Intangible Cultural Heritage.

La Boca

  • 1h
The working-class immigrant area where tango was born preserves its heritage in the brightly painted zinc houses, street tango performances, and the football passion that surrounds La Bombonera stadium. Caminito's pedestrian street of coloured buildings creates the most photographed scene in Buenos Aires, though the surrounding neighborhood's authenticity rewards exploration beyond the tourist-oriented strip. The area's Italian immigrant heritage lives on in the Boca Juniors fan culture, the traditional cantinas, and the artistic tradition that produced Quinquela Martín's vivid paintings of port life now housed in the museum bearing his name.

Recoleta

  • 30m
Buenos Aires' wealthiest area showcases the belle époque grandeur that once made Argentina among the world's richest nations, its French-style mansions, embassies, and cultural institutions lining wide avenues beneath flowering jacaranda trees. The neighborhood's cafes, boutiques, and the parks where nannies supervise wealthy children reveal the lifestyle that porteños of means maintain despite economic volatility. The Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, the Design Centre in a converted pump house, and the weekend craft fair in Plaza Francia complete Recoleta's cultural offerings.

Recoleta Cemetery Experience (Pass by)

Argentina's most famous cemetery houses the remains of presidents, generals, writers, and Eva Perón in elaborate mausoleums that create a necropolis reflecting the nation's wealth, ambition, and complicated history. The Duarte family tomb where Evita rests draws pilgrims and curious visitors who leave flowers and notes for the woman whose memory still divides Argentina. Beyond Evita, the cemetery's architectural variety—from neo-Gothic to Art Nouveau to Art Deco—and the stories of the families entombed here provide a compressed history of Argentine society over two centuries.

Puerto Madero

  • 30m
Buenos Aires' newest area occupies the converted warehouses and new towers that have transformed the former port into a district of restaurants, offices, and the promenade where porteños jog, cycle, and enjoy waterfront dining. The Puente de la Mujer, Santiago Calatrava's asymmetrical cable-stayed bridge, has become the district's symbol while the ecological reserve at the waterfront's edge provides unexpected wilderness within the urban centre. Puerto Madero's gleaming development contrasts sharply with the faded grandeur that defines older areas, representing Buenos Aires' ongoing efforts at renewal.

Palermo

  • 1h
Buenos Aires' largest area encompasses the green expanses of the Bosques de Palermo, the boutiques and cafes of Palermo Soho, the restaurants of Palermo Hollywood, and the botanical and zoological gardens that have provided recreation for over a century. The neighborhood's diverse sub-barrios reveal different faces of contemporary Buenos Aires—design studios in Palermo Viejo, craft breweries and food trucks in Palermo Hollywood, traditional polo at the Campo Argentino. The parks' rose garden, planetarium, and weekend crowds of mate-sipping families create the relaxed atmosphere that makes Palermo the area of choice for young porteños and visitors alike.

Teatro Colon (Pass by)

One of the world's great opera houses has hosted the most celebrated voices in classical music since opening in 1908, its magnificent acoustics, red velvet and gold decoration, and seven-tier horseshoe auditorium ranking alongside Milan's La Scala and Vienna's Staatsoper. Guided tours access the main auditorium, the presidential box, and the workshops where costumes and sets are created, while evening performances provide the full experience of Argentine high culture. The building's location on Avenida 9 de Julio, the world's widest avenue, places it at the symbolic heart of a city whose cultural ambitions have always exceeded its resources.

Avenida de Mayo

  • 1h
The grand boulevard connecting Plaza de Mayo to the National Congress building preserves the European grandeur that defined Buenos Aires' golden age, its belle époque buildings, Art Nouveau facades, and the historic Café Tortoni creating the atmosphere of turn-of-the-century prosperity. Café Tortoni, serving porteños since 1858, maintains the tradition of literary and artistic gathering that once brought Jorge Luis Borges and Carlos Gardel to its marble tables. The avenue's Spanish and Italian immigration heritage lives on in the theatres, bookshops, and the traditional confiterías that provide welcome refuge from the chaotic streets.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Plaza de Mayo
    • Av. Hipolito Yrigoyen S/N,
    • Buenos Aires, Argentina

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Plaza de Mayo
    • s/n Avenida Hipólito Yrigoyen
    • C1087, Buenos Aires, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina

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