
Souma Hotel, Vignette Collection by IHG
When you book Souma Hotel, Vignette Collection by IHG in Lima, Peru through our IHG Destined partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit. Plus, for a limited time, a complimentary night is included with your stay.
Special Offer: Free night
Complimentary night + Receive a complimentary night* on 3, 4, 5, or 7 consecutive night stays at participating hotels
Exclusive Booking Perks
- $100 USD (or local currency equivalent) hotel credit per stay
- Daily complimentary breakfast for 2 guests (full or continental, depending on the hotel)
- Complimentary room upgrade (subject to availability)
- Local welcome amenity
- Early check-in / late check-out (subject to availability)
Location
Miraflores stretches along Lima's Pacific coastline, where colonial history meets contemporary Peruvian confidence. The neighbourhood's name, "behold the flowers", rings true in the parks that punctuate its low-rise streetscape: jacaranda and ficus shade the sidewalks, and bougainvillea spills over garden walls. This is the district where limeños come to see and be seen, where boardwalk joggers share the malecón with paragliders launching from the clifftops above the surf.
The property sits in Cocharcas, a quieter pocket of Miraflores where residential streets open suddenly onto ocean views. Mercado San Martin, four hundred metres away, is a neighbourhood fixture for fresh produce and early-morning ceviche. The surf breaks at Playa La Estrella pull boarders year-round, while clifftop parks like Parque del Amor curve along the coast with views that stretch from the port of Callao to the southern beaches.
Lima's historic centre, a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1988, lies nine kilometres inland. Jorge Chávez International Airport is fifteen kilometres north, linked by highway or taxi. The city's roots as the Spanish colonial capital of South America show in the baroque grandeur of its plaza mayor and monastery cloisters, though earthquakes have rewritten much of its architecture over centuries.
Start with the morning light at Mercado San Martin, where fish vendors unload the Pacific catch and cevicheras prep lime-cured corvina before noon. The Bioferia de Miraflores, just over a kilometre away, gathers organic growers each Saturday with stalls of Andean tubers, fresh-pressed juices, and artisan cheeses. For surf, head to the rental stalls half a kilometre from the property; the breaks here suit beginners, with calmer swells than the southern beaches.
Curador, a six-hundred-metre walk, curates Peruvian wines and pisco in a tasting room that doubles as a neighbourhood gathering spot. The Lima Golf Club, three kilometres inland, offers city views from its fairways. For deeper history, the Historic Centre of Lima rewards a morning: the Monastery of San Francisco's catacombs, the Torre Tagle Palace's Moorish-inflected balconies, and the Plaza de Armas, where Pizarro founded the city in 1535. Book a table at one of the capital's forward-thinking restaurants to taste what Peruvian chefs are doing with causa, anticuchos, and the thousand varieties of potato that grow in the Andes.
Summer, December through March, brings Lima's warmest and sunniest months, when temperatures climb into the mid-twenties and the city migrates outdoors. The beaches fill, the malecón hums with cyclists, and evening fog burns off by midday. This is peak season for coastal energy and open-air dining.
Winter, June through August, wraps the city in a grey coastal blanket called garúa. Temperatures hover in the high teens, and the marine layer settles over Miraflores for days at a time. The light turns soft and diffused, the parks quiet. Locals retreat indoors for pisco sours and long lunches.
Spring and autumn offer the clearest skies without summer's crowds. April and November bring cooler mornings and reliably dry afternoons, ideal for walking the historic centre or lingering over market stalls. The city feels most itself in these transitional months, when the rhythm slows and the light sharpens.
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