Caracas Travel Guide
- About Caracas
- Caracas History
- Did you know?
- Weather in Caracas
Getting around Caracas
- Public transport
Visitors need to rely on public transport in Caracas to get around as the city’s attractions spread far and wide. The clean, cheap and efficient
Telephone: +58 212 206 7733
Website: www.metrodecaracas.com.ve runs from early morning around 05:30 until 23:00.
The metro does not cover the whole city but connects with Los Teques Metro at Las Adjuntas Station, with links between the city of Los Teques and Caracas. It has more than 45 stations and five functional lines, with a sixth under construction.
The same company has a connecting bus network above ground called Metrobús, which can take you on to your final destination. There are plenty of cheap independent buses too, their destinations given in the front window. The Metro is generally safe during daylight hours, although pickpockets do operate.
City buses are regularly held up by gunmen and are best avoided. For savings in both time and money, pick up a multiabono (multiple ticket) that pays for 10 metro rides of any distance. A multiabono integrado can also be used on Metrobús.
- Taxis
Every third car is likely to a taxi in Caracas, and fares are inexpensive. You’re expected to decide a price with the driver before setting off, so have your haggling skills at the ready. Always use official company cabs (white with yellow plates) that sit in ranks outside malls and big hotels rather than the many independent taxis. Booking ahead is often the safest option, reputable companies include
Movíl-Enlace
Telephone: +58 416 630 0002
Taxis Altamira
Telephone: +58 414 931 5891
Taxi Caracas
Telephone: +58 412 590 2266
- Driving
You have to be brave to get behind the wheel of a car in Caracas. Bad signposting, gridlocked streets and poor driving combine to make driving here very hard work, though it’s a good way to get about beyond the capital. If you do drive, choose manned car parks.
- Bicycle hire
Cycling isn’t recommended in Caracas unless you’re happy taking your life into your own hands in the chaotic streets. Hiring bikes is also difficult.
Bicishop
Address: Avenida Veracruz, Letrero Bicishop, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 424 183 9152
Website: www.bicishopvenezuela.com
- Car hire
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Things to see in Caracas
Attractions
- Capitolio Nacional
Taking up a whole block and covered in gold domes and neoclassical frills, this enormous, stately building dates from the 1870s. It is particularly famous for the murals splashed across the dome of its Salón Elíptico (Oval Hall), which depict the battle of Carabobo in the Wars of Independence. Tours inside made by prior appointment. For reasons of personal safety, try to avoid any political protests or demonstrations outside.
Address: Hemiciclo. Palacio Federal Legislativo, Carmelitas, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 414 641 1667
Opening times: Mon-Sat 08:00-17:00.
Website: www.asambleanacional.gob.ve
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- El Hatillo
One of the city’s most beguiling corners, El Hatillo is a colourful colonial village that was gobbled up by the expanding city, but managed to hang on to its small-town charms with brightly painted adobe buildings and a whitewashed little church. Centred on a pretty plaza, it is also the best place in Caracas to shop for handicrafts.
Address: El-Hatillo, Miranda, Caracas.
Opening times: Various.
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Panteón Nacional
This stately monument is home to the final resting place of national and continental hero El Libertador (The Liberator) Simón Bolívar, as well as other members of Venezuela’s historic great and good. An elegant ecclesiastic-style building, it is well worth seeing if only for the murals that smother the ceiling en route to Bolívar’s excessively extravagant tomb.
Address: Parroquia Altagracia, Foro Libertador, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 506 1145
Opening times: Wed-Fri 09:00-14:00
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Museo de Arte Contemporáneo
This gallery is one of the continent’s top spots for modern art, with plenty of big names from the national and international stages, including Picasso, Chagall, Bacon, Freud, Miró and the world-famous Venezuelan artist Jesús Soto. There are also temporary exhibits including photography, video art and installation.
Address: Bellas Artes, Zona Cultural de Parque Central, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 573 8289
Opening times: Thurs-Sun 10:00-16:00.
Website: mac.fmn.gob.ve
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Parque Nacional El Ávila
A mountainous national park towering over the city, El Ávila makes the perfect getaway from the constant noise and confusion in downtown Caracas. A lofty cable car runs to the mountain top from the suburb of Maripérez. The mountain slopes are criss-crossed by trails and there is a tourist complex on the 2,175m-high (7,135ft) summit, that includes a restaurant, ice-rink and several hungry monkeys.
Address: El Ávila Mountain, Subida Sabas Nieves, Caracas.
Opening times: Daily 10:00-20:00.
Website: www.el-avila.com
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Museo de Arte Colonial
Housed in a delightful old colonial mansion called the Quinta de Anauco and surrounded by manicured gardens, this museum of colonial art is well worth the trip 15 minute’s walk north of the centre.
Address: Nº 18 Av. Gamboa, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 551 8650
Opening times: Tues-Sun 09:30-16:00.
Website: www.quintadeanauco.org.ve
Admission Fees: Adults: Bs.F. 1,000, Concessions: Bs.F. 800.
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Casa Natal de Bolívar
The birthplace of Venezuela’s most famous son, Simón Bolívar, is now a shrine to the independence hero who saw off the Spaniards in the 19th century. A colonial house in central Caracas, it has been refitted in the original style and is decorated by murals of his finest moments.
Address: Distrito Capital, San Jacinto, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 541 2563
Opening times: Daily 24 hours.
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Galería de Arte Nacional
A display numbering than 4,000 pieces, across eleven rooms, includes some of the finest Venezuelan artwork with everything from pre-Hispanic prints to contemporary sculpture.
Address: Avenida México, las estaciones Parque, Puente Brión, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 5768 707
Opening times: Tues-Sun 10:00-16:30.
Website: www.ilamdir.org
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
Tourist Offices
- Ministry of Popular Power for Tourism
Address: Avenida de, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 208 4651
Opening times: Mon-Fri 08:00-18:00.
Website: www.mintur.gob.ve
Things to do in Caracas
- Get away from it all in Hacienda Trinidad
South American cities are busy, alive, and sometimes feel like they never stop moving. Caracas is no different, so if you crave a little tranquility spend an afternoon in this centrally located park
Telephone: +58 212 9433133
Website: www.haciendalatrinidad.org
With its art exhibits, galleries and bookstore, it’s one for sunbathers and culture vultures alike.
- Salsa salsa salsa
Centro San Ignacio
Address: Santa Teresa de Jesús, Av. Blandín, Caracas .
Telephone: +58 212 263 3953
Website: www.centrosanignacio.com is a vast, modernist office and shopping complex that of a night turns into a throbbing cavalcade of dancing bodies, all twisting to the unique beat of the salsa drum.
There’s multiple clubs and bars, and of course the buzzphrase with salsa is: don’t be shy!
- See the best of Venezuelan art
Caracas is not blessed with an abundance of art galleries, so the
National Art Gallery
Address: Avenida México, Bellas Artes , Puente Brión, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 576 8707
Website: www.ilamdir.org is a must-visit for anyone that wants to dip into the country’s history.
With over 4,000 pieces of work to view, you’ll not be left wanting.
- Take a trip to the past at the Universidad Central de Venezuela
Parts of the university
Website: www.ucv.ve date back to 1721, but the must-visit portion is the 200-hectare campus designed by Anglo-Venezualan architect Carlos Raul Villanueva.
He worked in conjunction with 28 avant-garde artists of the 1940s to create this masterpiece of modern architecture that has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Take the gondola up El Avila Mountain
If you wish to see the very best view in Caracas, then a ride on this gondola up to the 2,100m (6890 ft) Avila Mountain will have you cooing. Pick a clear day, and you can expect to have a bona-fide life-affirming vista laid out before you: the city of Caracas on one side, and the coastline on the other.
Caracas tours and excursions
Caracas tours
- Fly over Caracas
Undoubtedly the safest way to see Caracas and all its many boroughs, Caracas Fly offer tandem paragliding experiences over the capital with a flight that lasts between 8 and 15 minutes, landing back down at Playa Los Cocos.
Caracas Fly
Telephone: +58 414 232 8133
Website: www.caracasfly.com
- City tours
There are few operators offering city tours, but it’s possible to hire a local guide through any travel agency used to dealing with foreigners. Most tour operators have their sights set far beyond the city, but for excursions nearby you can try Caracas CityTour on the La Candelaria, and Trotamundos on the third floor or Torre America on Avenida Venezuela in Bello Monte.
Telephone: +58 212 267 1166
Website: www.clubdeltrotamundo.com
Caracas excursions
- Archipelago Los Roques
Hop on a short flight out to the idyllic islets of Archipelago Los Roques, 160km (99 miles) off the coast from Caracas, to enjoy ivory-white beaches and transparent waters with not a single chain hotel or nightclub in sight. Or catch a bus to the coastline just beyond the airport, where there are some reasonable beaches.
Website: www.losroques.org
- Colonia Tovar
Take a day trip out to the mountain town of Colonia Tovar, ensconced in the cloud forest 60km (37 miles) west of Caracas. Once an enclave of German immigrants, it is filled with incongruous Black Forest architecture, traditionally dressed shopkeepers and enough sausages to feed an army. A unique German oasis in a Latin American home.
Address: Colonia Tovar, Col Tovar.
Telephone: +58 286 920 2512
Shopping in Caracas
There are few things that set Caraqueño hearts (and banknotes) fluttering quite like shopping. The city is home to some of the biggest and swankiest centro comerciales (shopping malls) on the continent, making shopping in Caracas something of a challenge and a delight.
- Key areas
For bargain Venezuelan jewellery, head to the Edificio La Francia off Plaza Bolívar.
- Markets
Markets here are not the kaleidoscopic spectacles of other Latin American destinations and can be unsafe for foreigners. But El Hatillo is the Holy Grail for handicraft hunters. The widest selection is found at
Hannsi
Website: www.hannsi.com.ve which has everything from stuffed piranhas to hammocks and traditional ceramics to devil masks used in local festivities.
- Shopping centres
The enormous Centro Comercial Sambil
Website: www.tusambil.com on Avenida Libertador is a goliath, with five levels, rooftop amphitheatre and enough footwear shops to shoe a small nation. Other malls to trawl include
San Ignacio
Website: www.centrosanignacio.com on Avenida Blandín, Centro
Comercial El Recreo
Website: www.elrecreocc.com in Sabana Grande and Centro
Comercial Ciudad Tamanaco
Website: www.miccct.com just off the Autopista Caracas Baruta.
- Opening hours
Shops in Caracas generally open from 09:00 to 19:00.
Caracas Food And Drink
Food In Caracas
- Arepas
Arepas—a thick corn or flour tortilla filled with cheese, meat and vegetables—Venezuelan food also includes staples such as corn, rice, plantains, yams, and a variety of meats. Venezuelan typical food, arepas, and their different combinations. Chicken, fish, meat, cheese, black beans, and pork.
- Pabellón Criollo
Pabellón Criollo is considered to be the national dish of Venezuela with a long history and cultural significance. It’s indispensable at family and community festivities. The juicy meat is first slow cooked, shredded, and then added to fried onions, garlic, and bell pepper.
- Hallaca
Hallacas: It is a Venezuelan Christmas wrapped in banana leaves! An hallaca consists of a cornmeal dough stuffed with a stew of beef, chicken and pork and other ingredients such as raisins, capers and olives. The classic Caracas seasonings are what we use, you will not find potatoes, eggs, nut or chickpeas.
- Cachapas
Cachapas are made from fresh or frozen corn kernels that are ground to a purée and cooked much like pancakes. Arepas are made from pre-cooked cornmeal that is reconstituted with water to make a stiff dough.
- Hervido
Hervido de gallina. Fried Hen soup, usually with chunks of corn, potatoes . Caracas version of chicken pot pie made with pâte sablée. Pastelitos. Hearty soup of beef, chicken or fish with root vegetables.
- Pan de Jamón
Pan de jamón (ham bread) is a typical Venezuelan Christmas bread, filled with ham, raisins and green olives. Many variations have been created, some filling the bread with other ingredients like turkey or cream cheese and others using puff pastry as the dough.
- Tequeños
Tequeño is a fried spear of wheat dough stuffed with semi-hard queso blanco (fresh cheese), and is a popular meal or snack in Venezuela. To prepare it, the dough is wrapped around a cheesestick, formed into a breadstick and then fried or sometimes oven-baked.
Drink In Caracas
- Wine
The varieties grown are ‘Tempranillo’, ‘Syrah’ and ‘Petit Verdot’, as well as white ‘Chenin Blanc’, ‘Macabeo’, ‘Malvosie’, ‘Malvasia Istria’, ‘Muscat D’ Petit Grain’ and ‘Moscato Bianco’, with which the wines are made in this area.
- Coffee
Espresso style. The best-known Maracaibo coffees, in addition to Cúcuta, are Mérida, Trujillo, and Táchira. Mérida typically displays fair to good body and an unemphatic but sweetly pleasant flavor with hints of richness. Táchira and Cúcuta resemble Colombias, with rich acidity, medium body, and occasional fruitiness.
- Chicha de Arroz
- Merengadas
Leche merengada is a typical drink of Spain. It is made from a base of milk and egg whites, sweetened with sugar and flavored with cinnamon. It is usually served very cold, such that part of the drink is partially frozen with a texture similar to snow.
- Papelón con limon
Papelón con limón (Regional Spanish for: Panela with lemon) is a Venezuelan beverage made with rapadura (raw hardened sugar cane juice), water and lemon or lime juice.
- Frescolita
Frescolita is a Venezuelan cola. It is very similar to red cream sodas in the United States, with a taste similar to gum. Frescolita is also used to bake in some places in Venezuela.
- La Tizana
La Tizana is a classic Venezuelan drink, enjoyed at birthday parties, at the beach, in the summer, with an afternoon snack – really for any occasion. The word tizana is the Spanish version of tisane, or herbal remedy/tea, which is appropriate since the tizana is definitely a refreshing pick-me-up.
Restaurants in Caracas
Despite the food shortage crisis, Caracas is still considered the best place to eat in the whole of Venezuela. There are award-winning restaurants in Caracas offering an extraordinary range of cuisines, from home-style Venezuelan fare to Pan-Asian cuisine. Specialities include beef steaks and arepas (corn-bread snacks stuffed with fillings of your choice). The Caracas restaurants below have been grouped into three different pricing categories:
Expensive (above BsF 300)
Moderate (BsF 150 to BsF 300)
Cheap (up to BsF150)
Prices are for a three course meal for one, with half a bottle of house wine or equivalent, tax and service included.
Expensive
Cordero
Cuisine: Fusion
Recently voted one of the best restaurants in Latin America, this fine-dining experience blends the best in European and Caribbean fare in a contemporary fusion style.
Address: C. París, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 412 376 4580
Website: www.corderoccs.com
Balconata Romana
Cuisine: Italian
Will be happiest in Balconata Romana, which has a long list of dishes cooked to perfection. It is a friendly and well-loved place with personal attention and two dining spaces to choose from: one laidback with music and the other more formal.
Address: Las Mercedes, Av. Río de Janeiro, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 991 1968
Website: www.la-balconata.albergatore.top
- Oceanía
Cuisine:
Famous for its various dishes straight from the Venezuelan plains of the interior, Oceanía is an upmarket Caracas restaurant in a beautiful building with interiors, and faultless service.
Address: Los Palos Grandes, Transversal, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 285 8561
Website: www.oceania.winktienda.com
Moderate
- Salvaje Caracas
Cuisine: Venezuelan
This Salvaje Caracas is one of the very best spots to sample Venezuela’s rich culinary culture, though it’s no museum piece with contemporary art, Salvaje offers the very best cuisine from around the region.
Address: Calle Madrid Piso, New York, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 424 204 2697
Website: www.caracas.salvaje.world
- Taiko Sushi
Cuisine: Japanese
While nothing to do with the world-famous chain, Taiko in Caracas still manages to serve up some of the city’s best sushi and sashimi from a pan-Asian menu focused particularly on Japan and Thailand. This wildly popular place can be.
Address: Av. La Trinidad, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 993 5647
Website: www.sushifugu.com
- Amor & Fish Restaurante
Traditional Japanese restaurants are the mainstay of Caracas cuisine, and this one is especially recommended. It is located in a white-painted rectangular building and has a lively atmosphere. It specializes in serving signature dishes.
Address: Qta. Berta, Avenida Alma.Mater, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 414 207 6159
Website: www.amoryfish.com
Cheap
- Arepa Factory
Cuisine: Venezuelan
The place to try the popular Latin American fare in Caracas, this made-to-order eatery has a fresh, fast-food feel with an extensive menu of toppings and side dishes.
Address: Cristal Palace Transversal 2, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 2851 125
- Pizzeria Romana
Cuisine: Pizza
An authentic pizzeria serving up wood-fired pizzas in Mercedes, with a cosy, family-friendly atmosphere.
Address: Metropolitan District, Calle Madrid, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 9926 204
- Trolly
Cuisine: Fastfood
This classic Trolly restaurant is open 24 hours a day and is known for its diverse deli menu, roasted chicken and yucca.
Address: C. La Guairita, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 991 6964
Website: www.trollycaracas.com
Caracas Nightlife
You’ll find few Latin American cities with nightlife as energetic as that in Caracas, and that is saying something on a continent that prides itself on partying until the llamas come home. The best clubs, bars and cafes are found in the districts of Las Mercedes, Altamira, El Rosal and La Castellana. Bars open their doors around 1900 but most barflies don’t come out until 2300 when the action really starts. Most clubs open around 2200 and shut around 0500 or when the last reveller leaves.
Bars in Caracas
- 360º Roof Bar
Finally, to meet the real in-crowd in the city, and for some incredible views of Caracas after dark, head to 360º Roof Bar, an open air cocktail emporium on the top of the Hotel Altamira Suites.
Address: Trans. 1, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 209 3493
- El León
Caracas drinking spots can come and go in the blink of an eye, but one enduring favourite is the low-key El León, an open-air bar popular with the city’s youth.
Address: 2da. Trans, Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 263 6014
- Pino’s Bar
Paradise for petrolheads, this Pino’s Bar in the Sucre con Mohedano district opens five nights a week (Tue-Sat) until 02:00.
Address: Sucre con Mohedano, Qta Araira, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 266 2114
Clubs in Caracas
- Hard Rock Café
Rock ’n’ roll-themed chain with a high-energy vibe serving burgers & American classics. One of the liveliest clubs in Caracas, Hard Rock enjoys two levels of electro tunes with four bars and an outdoor terrace.
Address: La Ghiringuella, Parcela S/N antigua, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 412 206 9238
Website: www.cafe.hardrock.com
Rosa Caracas
To burn the midnight oil, join the beautiful people at Rosa Caracas disco club the chicest and hippest spot in town, with some serious control.
Address: Qta. Keops, Distrito Capital C. Madrid, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 991 7989
La Guapa VIP
A more relaxed option is nearby La Guapa VIP, a Latin American rhythms where nobody stands on ceremony and where the dancing is truly wild.
Address: Distrito Capital, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 730 3805
Live music in Caracas
Centro Nacional de Acción Social por la Música
An Concert hall with regular live music and classic rock-inspired DJ sets, open Thursday to Sunday every week.
Address: Blvr. Amador Bendayán, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 508 0211
Website: www.elsistema.org.ve
- Casa Club
For a burst of live music, head to old favourite Casa Club, a self-described.
Address: Miranda, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 210 0800
- Juan Sebastián Bar
Alternatively, for some cool live jazz, try the long established Juan Sebastián Bar.
Address: El Rosal, Avenida Venezuela, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 951 0595
Website: www.juansebastianbar.com.ve
Dance in Caracas
- Complejo Cultural Teresa Carreño
The principal stage for theatre, dance and classical music is the Complejo Cultural Teresa Carreño. It hosts frequent productions by the Compañía Nacional de Teatro and top dance groups such as the Ballet Nuevo Mundo de Caracas.
Address: Paseo Colón, Parque Los Caobos, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 574 9122
Website: www.teatroteresacarreno.gob.ve
Theatres in Caracas
- Teatro Transnocho Cultural
You can see more productions at the younger, funkier Teatro Transnocho Cultural.
Address: 1060 Avenida Principal de las Mercedes, Caracas.
Telephone: +58 212 993 1910
Website: www.trasnochocultural.com
