Why this isn't a normal ticket
Two operators run the beds — and you need both
The refugios and campsites along the W Trek aren't run by the park; they're split between two separate concessionaires, each with its own booking site, availability and rules. A standard west-to-east W links huts from both, so a self-organised trek means juggling two booking systems for the right nights in the right order — and CONAF won't let you start until every night is confirmed.
A guided day tour is the other way in
If a multi-day trek with hut logistics isn't your trip, Torres del Paine is also very doable as a guided day tour from Puerto Natales — a full-day scenic loop of the park's viewpoints, a one-day hike to the Base of the Towers, or a boat trip to Grey Glacier. These carry the park pass and logistics for you, and are the simplest way to see the icons in a day.
Season and weather set hard limits
The park is at its best from roughly October to March, with the famous Patagonian wind at full strength in midsummer. Outside that window most trekking facilities close for winter, which makes a self-guided W impractical — another reason the season, not just the route, shapes the trip.
The three arms of the W
The classic W Trek links three valleys into a W-shape over 4–5 days. Here's what each arm delivers.
| Arm | The payoff | The walk |
|---|---|---|
| Base of the Towers | The three granite towers above a glacial lake — the classic sunrise | A long, steep final climb over boulders |
| French Valley | The hanging Francés glacier and the Británico amphitheatre of peaks | A long day up into the central valley and back |
| Grey Glacier | Icebergs and the vast face of Grey Glacier off the Southern Ice Field | Undulating lakeshore trail, often very windy |
W Trek, day tours & season guides
The core decision
W Trek vs a day tour — how to see Torres del Paine
A multi-day hut-to-hut trek or a single guided day — here's the real trade-off.
Read the guide →The two-operator maze
How to book the W Trek — the refugio reality
Two concessionaires, one park authority, and every night pre-booked — here's the order it happens in.
Read the guide →From Puerto Natales
Torres del Paine day tours from Puerto Natales
The icons in a single day — here are the main guided day options and what each delivers.
Read the guide →When to go
The best time to visit Torres del Paine
Long summer days, ferocious wind, and a winter shutdown — here's how to weigh the season.
Read the guide →The route explained
The three arms of the W Trek, explained
Base of the Towers, French Valley and Grey Glacier — what each arm actually delivers.
Read the guide →CONAF pass & rules
Torres del Paine park fee and entry rules
The pass is a separate online purchase — and the rules are changing in 2026.
Read the guide →Questions people actually ask
Can you do the W Trek without a tour operator?
In theory yes, but it's genuinely hard to self-organise. The refugios and campsites are split between two separate concessionaires with their own booking systems, and CONAF requires every night to be pre-booked before you enter the park. Beds sell out months ahead in summer, so most travellers book through an operator who assembles the nights, or take a guided day tour instead.
How much is the Torres del Paine park entrance fee?
CONAF charges a park entrance pass — around USD $35 for foreign adults in the high season (roughly November–March) and less in the low season, with under-18s free. It must be bought online in advance at the official pasesparques.cl site, separately from any tour. It's a government charge, not something operators or we set.
How long is the W Trek and what does it cover?
The classic W Trek runs about 4–5 days over roughly 80 km, linking three valleys in a W shape: the Base of the Towers, the French Valley (Mirador Británico), and Grey Glacier. You sleep in refugios or campsites along the way, which is exactly why the two-operator booking system matters so much.
Can you visit Torres del Paine as a day trip?
Yes. Guided day tours run from Puerto Natales — a full-day scenic tour of the park's main viewpoints, a one-day hike to the Base of the Towers, or a boat trip to Grey Glacier. They include the park logistics and are the easiest way to see the highlights without committing to a multi-day trek.
When is the best time to visit Torres del Paine?
The main season is roughly October to March, with peak conditions December to February — long days and (usually) the most stable weather, though also the strongest winds and the biggest crowds. November and March are quieter shoulder months. In winter, most trekking refugios close, which makes a self-guided W impractical.
Are there any 2026 changes to Torres del Paine access?
Yes — CONAF is moving to route-based park tickets (for example separate Full-day, Base Torres and W-circuit passes) bought at pasesparques.cl, and certified guides are no longer mandatory on the Base of the Towers trail. Rules and fees can shift, so confirm the current details on the official CONAF site close to your trip.
Torres del Paine treks and Patagonia day tours on Viator
See Torres del Paine tours on Viator ↗Still deciding W Trek vs day tour, or which month?
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