There is no city quite like Santa Fe. Perched at 7,000 feet above sea level in the high desert of northern New Mexico, the capital of the Land of Enchantment has earned its official nickname — “The City Different” — through sheer force of character. It is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the United States, a place where Native American, Spanish colonial, Mexican, and Anglo-American cultures have layered upon one another for centuries, producing something genuinely unlike anywhere else in the country.
Santa Fe’s adobe architecture glows warm amber in the afternoon light. Its sky is a shade of blue that painters have been chasing for over a century. Its streets are scented with pinon wood smoke in winter and the wild fragrance of high desert sage in summer. Its art scene is internationally significant. Its food is an education in itself. And its pace — unhurried, contemplative, and quietly confident — is an antidote to the frenetic energy of most American cities.
Whether you come for art, history, hiking, food, indigenous culture, spiritual renewal, or simply the incomparable quality of the light, Santa Fe is the kind of place that changes people. Visitors who expect a quaint Southwestern town discover a city of genuine cultural depth and unexpected sophistication. Those who plan a long weekend often end up extending their stay. Many never fully leave.
This guide covers everything you need to know to experience Santa Fe at its finest.
A BRIEF HISTORY
The story of Santa Fe is one of the oldest and most layered in North America. Long before the Spanish arrived, this high desert valley was home to indigenous Pueblo peoples. The area around present-day Santa Fe was inhabited by the ancestors of today’s Pueblo communities for centuries — the nearby Ogha Po’oge, a Tewa-speaking pueblo, was occupied well before European contact.
In 1609 and 1610, the Spanish governor Pedro de Peralta established Santa Fe as the capital of the province of Nuevo Mexico, making it the oldest state capital in the United States. The Palace of the Governors, constructed at that time, is the oldest continuously occupied government building in the country — a remarkable distinction that is still tangible today when you stand in front of its long portal.
The Spanish colonial period was neither peaceful nor uncomplicated. In 1680, the Pueblo peoples of New Mexico launched the Pueblo Revolt, a coordinated uprising that successfully drove the Spanish out of Santa Fe for twelve years — one of the most decisive indigenous resistance movements in North American history. The Spanish returned in 1692, and the colonial period continued until Mexican independence in 1821, when Santa Fe became part of the new republic of Mexico.
American control came in 1846, during the Mexican-American War, and New Mexico was eventually admitted to the United States as a state in 1912. The arrival of the railroad in 1880 brought new economic life and waves of new arrivals, including artists who were captivated by the light, the landscape, and the ancient cultures they found there. By the early twentieth century, Santa Fe had established itself as one of the most significant art colonies in the world — a reputation it has never relinquished.
Today, Santa Fe is a city of roughly 85,000 permanent residents, swelled considerably each year by millions of visitors drawn to its extraordinary combination of history, culture, cuisine, and natural beauty.
WHEN TO VISIT
Santa Fe’s elevation gives it a climate that surprises many visitors. Despite its desert location, the city experiences genuine seasons, and the altitude means temperatures are noticeably cooler than in Albuquerque or Phoenix, even in midsummer.
Spring (March through May) is beautiful but unpredictable. Temperatures are mild and the desert begins to bloom, but late-season snowstorms are possible even in April. Spring is an excellent time to visit for those who prefer smaller crowds, more affordable accommodations, and the fresh energy of a city shaking off winter. The Santa Fe Farmers Market reopens and the gallery scene is active.
Summer (June through August) is the high tourist season and the most festive time to visit. Days are warm and sunny — typically in the low 80s Fahrenheit (mid-20s Celsius) — but the altitude keeps conditions comfortable compared to lower-elevation desert cities. Afternoon thunderstorms, part of the summer monsoon season, arrive reliably and dramatically most afternoons in July and August, cooling temperatures and illuminating the sky in spectacular fashion. The Santa Fe Opera season runs through the summer, and the city’s major festivals cluster in this period. Book well in advance for summer visits.
The Spanish Market and the Santa Fe Indian Market — two of the most important indigenous and Hispanic arts markets in the country — take place in July and August respectively, drawing serious collectors, artists, and art lovers from around the world. The Indian Market, held on the Plaza in August, is considered one of the premier events in the Native American art world and has been held annually for over a century.
Fall (September through November) is many regular visitors’ favorite season. The weather is ideal — warm days and cool nights, with the aspens in the surrounding mountains turning brilliant gold in late September and October. The Balloon Fiesta takes place in nearby Albuquerque in early October. Crowds thin noticeably after Labor Day, prices moderate, and the city takes on a quiet, golden quality that is deeply appealing.
Winter (December through February) is magical. Snow dusts the mountains and occasionally the city itself. Canyon Road hosts its legendary Christmas Eve Farolito Walk, when thousands of farolitos — small paper lanterns traditionally lit with candles — line the entire length of the street, creating one of the most beautiful and atmospheric experiences in the American Southwest. The Santa Fe ski area, just 16 miles from downtown, opens in late November or December and attracts skiers and snowboarders through the spring. Winter lodging rates are generally the most affordable of any season.
A note on altitude: at 7,000 feet (2,134 meters), Santa Fe’s elevation is significant enough to affect visitors who are not acclimatized. Common effects include mild headache, fatigue, shortness of breath with exertion, and disrupted sleep, particularly in the first day or two. Drink water generously, reduce alcohol consumption initially, and take it easy on your first day. Most people adapt quickly.
GETTING THERE AND GETTING AROUND
Santa Fe Regional Airport (SAF) is a small airport with limited direct service, primarily to Dallas and Denver. Most visitors fly into Albuquerque International Sunport (ABQ), about 65 miles south of Santa Fe via Interstate 25 — roughly an hour’s drive. Shuttle services run between Albuquerque’s airport and Santa Fe, and renting a car in Albuquerque is a common and practical choice that gives you flexibility for day trips.
By car, Santa Fe sits on Interstate 25, making it accessible from Albuquerque to the south, Colorado to the north, and beyond. The drive from Denver is approximately six hours; from Phoenix, approximately seven. The Turquoise Trail (State Road 14) is a scenic alternative route between Albuquerque and Santa Fe that winds through old mining towns and high desert landscapes and is worth taking at least one way.
Within Santa Fe, the historic downtown core — centered on the Plaza — is compact and eminently walkable. Most of the major museums, galleries, historic sites, and restaurants within the city center can be reached on foot. Canyon Road is an easy fifteen-minute walk from the Plaza.
For attractions farther afield — Museum Hill, Meow Wolf, and Ten Thousand Waves — a car, taxi, or rideshare is necessary. Rideshare services operate in Santa Fe but can be slow during peak times. The Santa Fe Trails public bus system is inexpensive and covers much of the city, though service is less frequent than in larger cities.
THE PLAZA: HEART OF THE CITY
Every visit to Santa Fe begins at the Plaza. Established in 1610 as the central gathering place of the new Spanish colonial capital, the Plaza has served as the social, commercial, and ceremonial heart of Santa Fe for over four hundred years. It is surrounded by some of the city’s most significant buildings and is framed by strings of chile ristras — dried red chiles — hanging from the lampposts.
The Plaza itself is a pleasant public square with benches, trees, and a central gazebo where free summer concerts take place on many evenings. It is always animated, with locals and visitors mingling in roughly equal measure, vendors selling roasted corn and other street foods from carts, and the general pleasant buzz of a genuinely public space.
On the north side of the Plaza stands the Palace of the Governors, completed around 1610 and the oldest continuously occupied government building in the United States. Under the Palace’s long, shaded portal, Native American artisans from New Mexico’s 22 pueblos and tribes lay out their handmade jewelry, pottery, and crafts on blankets each day, as they have for generations. This is one of the best places in the world to purchase authentic, handcrafted Native American art directly from the makers. The artists are vetted by the state, ensuring that everything sold is genuinely handmade by members of New Mexico’s pueblo and tribal communities. Take time to speak with the artists — they are often generous with information about their traditions, their materials, and their communities.
The Palace of the Governors now serves as part of the New Mexico History Museum, whose entrance is adjacent to the Palace and which houses extensive exhibits on New Mexico’s history from its ancient indigenous past through the twentieth century.
Just a short walk east of the Plaza, the Cathedral Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi is one of the most striking buildings in Santa Fe. Constructed between 1869 and 1886 by Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy (the historical model for the protagonist of Willa Cather’s novel “Death Comes for the Archbishop”), the Romanesque Revival cathedral feels almost incongruous amid the low adobe buildings around it — a deliberate assertion of European Catholic authority in a city that had its own deep religious traditions. The interior is serene and beautiful, and the cathedral welcomes visitors respectfully throughout the day.
A few blocks south of the Plaza, the Loretto Chapel is famous for its mysterious “miraculous staircase” — a circular wooden staircase with no visible means of central support, built in the 1870s by an unknown craftsman. Whatever its structural secrets, the staircase is an engineering marvel and an object of enduring fascination.
CANYON ROAD: THE WORLD’S GREATEST ART STREET
If the Plaza is the historic heart of Santa Fe, Canyon Road is its creative soul. This half-mile, tree-lined street southeast of the Plaza contains the highest density of art galleries in the United States — well over one hundred galleries, studios, boutiques, and restaurants packed into a stretch of charming adobe buildings that were once private homes and agricultural properties.
Canyon Road’s origins stretch back to the thirteenth century, when it was a trail leading from a Tewa pueblo in the area of present-day Santa Fe up into the mountains. After the Spanish founded the city in 1610, settlers built homes, gardens, and an irrigation ditch — the Acequia Madre — along the trail. Artists began moving into the neighborhood in the early twentieth century, and by the 1960s, when the area was rezoned for commercial use, Canyon Road had transformed into the gallery district it is today.
The art on Canyon Road spans an extraordinary range — from traditional Pueblo pottery and Navajo weaving to nineteenth-century landscape paintings, contemporary abstract sculpture, photography, glass art, and work by emerging artists from across New Mexico and the world. Galleries like Zaplin Lampert feature early Santa Fe Art Colony painters alongside contemporary Native American artists. Other galleries specialize in Western art, Spanish colonial religious pieces, or cutting-edge contemporary work. Many of the galleries have established relationships with major collectors and appear regularly at top art fairs and museum exhibitions across the country.
Canyon Road is best explored on foot and at a leisurely pace. Most galleries are open daily from roughly 10 AM to 5 PM. Do not feel obligated to buy — gallery staff are generally welcoming to browsers, and simply walking through the spaces and engaging with the art is its own reward. On Friday evenings throughout the summer, many galleries open late and host receptions with wine and light refreshments, turning Canyon Road into one long, informal open-air art party. These Friday evening openings are free to attend and are among the most enjoyable social events in Santa Fe.
At the upper end of Canyon Road, the street transitions into Upper Canyon Road, where the galleries thin out and the environment becomes quieter, more residential, and greener. The Randall Davey Audubon Center and Sanctuary, set in a historic mill house surrounded by wooded trails, offers a peaceful nature escape within walking distance of the gallery district.
For food on Canyon Road, The Compound Restaurant is one of Santa Fe’s finest dining destinations, housed in a beautifully restored adobe building that was once the centerpiece of a private family compound. The Teahouse, toward the upper end of Canyon Road, is a beloved local institution offering more than 150 varieties of tea along with breakfast, lunch, and dinner in a cozy, art-filled interior. El Farol, one of Santa Fe’s oldest bars and restaurants, is the place to stop for Spanish tapas and live music in an atmosphere thick with history and character.
THE GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM
No cultural institution in Santa Fe better captures the city’s artistic identity than the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, located a short walk from the Plaza on Johnson Street. Dedicated to the life and work of America’s most celebrated female artist, the museum houses the largest collection of O’Keeffe’s art in the world — more than 3,000 works spanning the full arc of her career.
Georgia O’Keeffe first visited New Mexico in 1929 and was immediately and permanently transformed by the landscape. She returned every summer, eventually settling permanently in the village of Abiquiu, about an hour north of Santa Fe, in 1949. The New Mexico desert — its bleached bones, its sculptural cliffs, its overwhelming sky — became the central subject of her mature work, producing the iconic flower paintings, skull-and-sky compositions, and abstract landscape studies that remain among the most recognizable images in American art.
The museum presents O’Keeffe’s work with scholarly depth and visual intelligence, contextualizing each period of her career and tracing the evolution of her singular vision. The building itself, a converted adobe, is sympathetic to both the art and the city. Special exhibitions rotate regularly and often bring in significant related works and archival materials.
Tours of O’Keeffe’s home and studio in Abiquiu are offered by advance reservation only and are extremely popular — book months ahead if you wish to visit. The home has been preserved largely as it was during her lifetime, and spending time there, surrounded by the landscape she painted for decades, is one of the most affecting artistic pilgrimages in the American Southwest.
MUSEUM HILL
A short drive or a pleasant uphill walk southeast of the Plaza, Museum Hill is one of the finest concentrations of museums in any American city of Santa Fe’s size. Four world-class institutions cluster around a central plaza with sweeping views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
The Museum of International Folk Art is a revelation. Its permanent collection holds more than 135,000 objects from over 100 countries — an astonishing accumulation of handmade objects, textiles, toys, religious art, and everyday functional items from cultures around the world. The main gallery presents thousands of objects together in dense, kaleidoscopic installations that are simultaneously overwhelming and joyful. For those interested in how people make things with their hands across cultures and centuries, there is no better museum in the American Southwest.
The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture presents the artistic and cultural heritage of the Native peoples of the American Southwest, with particularly strong holdings in pottery, textiles, jewelry, and contemporary Native American art. The permanent exhibition “Here, Now and Always” provides a comprehensive introduction to Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache cultures and is one of the most respectful and thoughtfully curated presentations of indigenous culture in American museology.
The Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian was founded in 1937 in collaboration with Navajo ceremonial leaders and has evolved into one of the country’s finest institutions for contemporary and historical Native American art. Its building is modeled after a traditional Navajo hogan.
The Museum of Spanish Colonial Art focuses on the art, culture, and heritage of the Spanish colonial period in New Mexico, from the sixteenth century to the present. Its collection of santos (religious figures), textiles, furniture, and devotional objects is unparalleled.
Between and around the museums, the sculpture garden on Museum Hill offers impressive outdoor works and panoramic views of the mountains that are worth the trip on their own.
MEOW WOLF: IMMERSIVE ART FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
No description of Santa Fe’s art scene would be complete without Meow Wolf, which has become one of the city’s most visited and most talked-about attractions since its permanent installation opened in 2016. Located inside a converted bowling alley in the Sanbusco Market area south of downtown, Meow Wolf’s House of Eternal Return is a 20,000-square-foot immersive, interactive art installation unlike anything else in the world.
The premise involves a mysterious house that has experienced some kind of reality-fracturing event, leaving its rooms connected to portals leading to bizarre and beautiful alternate dimensions. Visitors explore freely, crawling through refrigerators and fireplaces that open into entirely different worlds, climbing through tunnels, discovering hidden passages, and encountering a constantly surprising sequence of elaborately designed rooms, each created by different artists from the collective.
The experience is simultaneously playful and genuinely strange, filled with glow-in-the-dark environments, interactive sound and light installations, cryptic narrative clues, and a level of artistic and craft detail that rewards repeated visits. It is equally engaging for children and adults, though for very different reasons. Children experience it as a wild, sensory adventure; adults find it philosophically provocative and visually stunning.
Meow Wolf was co-founded with support from Santa Fe resident George R.R. Martin, author of the Game of Thrones series, who helped the collective acquire and renovate the bowling alley building. The Santa Fe installation’s success spawned locations in Denver and Las Vegas, but the original remains a pilgrimage site for fans and a point of local pride. Book timed-entry tickets in advance, particularly on weekends and during summer, as it sells out regularly.
THE RAILYARD DISTRICT
South of the Plaza, the Railyard District has emerged as one of Santa Fe’s most dynamic and contemporary neighborhoods. Centered on a reclaimed rail yard that once served the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, the area has been thoughtfully redeveloped into a mixed-use district with parks, galleries, restaurants, shops, and cultural venues.
Railyard Park itself is a beautifully designed public space with native plantings, seating areas, walking paths, and mountain views. On Tuesday mornings and Saturday mornings, the Santa Fe Farmers Market takes place in the Railyard, offering locally grown produce, herbs and spices, prepared foods, artisan goods, and live music. The market is one of the best in the American Southwest and a wonderful way to engage with the local food culture.
SITE Santa Fe, located in the Railyard District, is one of the premier contemporary art spaces in the American Southwest, presenting ambitious exhibitions by nationally and internationally significant artists in a large, flexible gallery building. A satellite of the New Mexico Museum of Art also opened in the district in recent years. The Railyard Arts District complements Canyon Road’s more traditional gallery scene with a commitment to contemporary and experimental work.
The Railyard is also home to some of Santa Fe’s best and most innovative restaurants, reflecting the neighborhood’s younger, more experimental spirit. The area is particularly active on weekend afternoons and evenings.
NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE AND HERITAGE
Understanding Santa Fe requires engaging with the Native American cultures that shaped it long before European contact and that remain a living, vital presence in the city and the surrounding region today. New Mexico is home to 23 federally recognized tribes and pueblos, and the influence of Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache cultures is woven into virtually every aspect of Santa Fe’s art, food, architecture, and civic life.
The Palace of the Governors portal, where indigenous artisans sell their work daily, is the most visible expression of this presence in the heart of the city. The experience of meeting the artists, learning about their traditions, and purchasing directly from them is one that visitors consistently describe as among their most meaningful in Santa Fe.
The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque (about an hour south) offers the most comprehensive introduction to the nineteen Pueblos of New Mexico — their history, governance, art, and contemporary life — and is an excellent starting point for visitors who want a deeper understanding of Pueblo culture before visiting the pueblos themselves.
Several of New Mexico’s pueblos welcome visitors, though opening days, hours, and policies vary. Tesuque Pueblo is just a few minutes north of Santa Fe. San Ildefonso Pueblo, about 25 miles north of the city, was the home of Maria Martinez, the legendary potter who revived the ancient black-on-black pottery tradition in the twentieth century — a tradition her descendants continue today. The San Ildefonso Pueblo Museum presents the history of the community and the evolution of its distinctive pottery tradition.
Visitors should approach pueblo communities with respect. Photography policies vary by pueblo and should be strictly observed. Many pueblos are not open to visitors on certain religious feast days, and private or sacred areas are clearly marked and must be respected. When in doubt, ask — pueblo staff and community members are generally welcoming to respectful visitors.
NEW MEXICAN CUISINE: A FOOD TRADITION UNLIKE ANY OTHER
New Mexican cuisine is not Mexican food, not Tex-Mex, and not Southwestern fusion. It is its own tradition — ancient, specific, and deeply rooted in the agricultural and cultural history of the region. At its core are three elements: beans, corn, and chile. But it is the chile that defines everything.
New Mexico’s red and green chiles, grown primarily in the Hatch Valley to the south, are unlike any other chile in the world — distinct in flavor, heat, and culinary versatility. Green chile is picked fresh and has a bright, herbaceous heat. Red chile comes from dried, ripened green chile and has a deeper, earthier, more complex flavor. When you order New Mexican food, you will invariably be asked “red or green?” — the most important question in the state. “Christmas” is the answer you can give when you want both, and many visitors quickly discover that “Christmas” is the correct answer.
The classic New Mexican dishes that every visitor should try include:
Red and Green Chile Enchiladas: corn tortillas, cheese or meat, smothered in one or both chiles. Humble, perfect, irreplaceable.
Sopapillas: light, puffy fried dough pillows served with honey, traditionally at the end of a New Mexican meal. Sopapillas are simultaneously bread, dessert, and a vehicle for the honey that soothes the chile heat.
Posole: a hominy and pork stew seasoned with red chile and topped with oregano, cabbage, and lime — warming, complex, and deeply satisfying.
Tamales: masa (corn dough) stuffed with pork, cheese, or chile and wrapped in corn husks. New Mexican tamales tend toward the spare and flavorful.
Fry Bread: a staple of Pueblo and Navajo cuisine, fry bread is a flat, golden disc of fried dough that can be served sweet (with powdered sugar or honey) or savory as a Fry Bread Taco (also called an Indian Taco), topped with beans, meat, cheese, and chile.
The Green Chile Cheeseburger has achieved something approaching religious significance in New Mexico. The state takes it seriously enough to have an official Green Chile Cheeseburger Trail spanning dozens of locations statewide, each claiming the definitive version.
For dining in Santa Fe, the range of options spans the full spectrum from casual to world-class.
The Shed, located in a 300-year-old hacienda between the Plaza and the Cathedral, is one of the definitive addresses for traditional Santa Fe cuisine. It almost always has a wait, but the red chile here is considered by many to be among the best in the city.
Cafe Pasqual’s, a few steps from the Plaza, has been a Santa Fe institution for decades. It serves bold, globally influenced New Mexican cooking in a colorful, mural-covered dining room. Breakfast and brunch are particularly celebrated, and the line often forms before the doors open. Reservations are recommended.
The Compound Restaurant on Canyon Road represents Santa Fe’s fine dining at its most accomplished — sophisticated contemporary cuisine in an adobe setting of quiet elegance.
Jambo Cafe, a local favorite in the Railyard neighborhood, brings African and Caribbean flavors to the Santa Fe table in ways that feel both surprising and perfectly at home in this multicultural city. The goat stew is legendary.
Izanami at Ten Thousand Waves serves Japanese small plates in an atmosphere of mountain-resort serenity, making dinner there an experience as much as a meal.
The Santa Fe Margarita Trail connects visitors to more than 40 restaurants, bars, and local hangouts across the city, each serving creative takes on the classic cocktail. Some lean traditional with fresh lime and tequila; others incorporate local ingredients like chile, lavender, or prickly pear cactus. The trail can be followed via a downloadable app or a paper passport. It is worth noting that Santa Fe has a historically significant relationship with tequila — the city is reportedly the first place in the New World to import the spirit from Mexico.
The Chocolate Trail is a related program connecting visitors with local chocolatiers, pastry chefs, and cafes producing artisan chocolate confections with New Mexican flavors and ingredients.
The Santa Fe Brewing Company, founded in 1988, is New Mexico’s oldest and largest craft brewery and a good stop for those interested in local beer.
TEN THOUSAND WAVES: MOUNTAIN SPA SANCTUARY
About three miles up the mountain from downtown Santa Fe, Ten Thousand Waves is one of the most distinctive and beloved hospitality experiences in the American Southwest. Inspired by the traditional Japanese mountain hot spring resorts (onsen), Ten Thousand Waves offers private and communal outdoor soaking tubs, a full spa menu, Japanese-style lodging, and the Izanami restaurant, all set against a backdrop of wooded mountain terrain.
The soaking tubs — filled with hot mineral water and surrounded by pine and juniper — are available in private configurations for couples or groups and in communal arrangements open to all guests. Women’s-only communal tubs, saunas, and cold plunges are also available. The combination of mountain air, hot water, pine scent, and mountain views produces a state of relaxation that visitors consistently describe as transformative.
The lodging at Ten Thousand Waves consists of Japanese-inspired casitas and suites on the hillside, each with private hot tub access and mountain views. Staying overnight is a particular luxury in the winter, when snow dusts the trees and the hot tubs steam against the cold air.
Book well in advance for any visit to Ten Thousand Waves, especially on weekends and during summer. It is one of Santa Fe’s most popular experiences and regularly sells out.
For those seeking additional spa and hot spring experiences in the region, Ojo Caliente Mineral Springs Resort and Spa, about an hour north of Santa Fe, offers natural mineral-fed soaking pools in a stunning desert landscape. Multiple distinct pools contain different mineral compositions — iron, arsenic, soda, and lithia — each with reputed therapeutic properties. The resort also offers lodging, dining, and full spa services.
OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES AND HIKING
Santa Fe sits at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, part of the southern Rocky Mountains, and the outdoor recreation available within a short drive of the city is exceptional.
The Santa Fe National Forest begins immediately east of the city and offers hundreds of miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking, and, in winter, cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. The Winsor Trail in the Pecos Wilderness is one of the most popular day hikes, climbing through aspen and spruce forest to alpine meadows with sweeping views. The Dale Ball Trail System, with more than 22 miles of interconnected trails beginning near the edge of the city, is easily accessible for visitors without a car and offers beautiful high-desert hiking with mountain views.
The Ski Santa Fe resort, located just 16 miles from downtown via the Ski Basin Road, sits at a summit elevation of 12,075 feet (3,680 meters) and offers excellent skiing and snowboarding from late November through early April, depending on snowfall. The drive up the Ski Basin Road is itself one of the most scenic routes in New Mexico, particularly in autumn when the aspens turn golden.
Hyde Memorial State Park, on the way to the ski area, offers camping, picnicking, and access to the trail network at a more relaxed pace.
The Randall Davey Audubon Center and Sanctuary, on Upper Canyon Road, protects 135 acres of riparian and upland habitat along the Santa Fe River and offers gentle nature trails and excellent birdwatching within walking distance of the gallery district.
BANDELIER NATIONAL MONUMENT AND BEYOND
Santa Fe’s position in northern New Mexico places it within easy reach of some of the most significant archaeological and natural landscapes in North America.
Bandelier National Monument, about 45 miles west of Santa Fe, is one of the most compelling and accessible archaeological sites in the American Southwest. The monument preserves the ancestral homeland of the Pueblo peoples who lived in the canyons of the Pajarito Plateau for thousands of years. Visitors walk through Frijoles Canyon to reach remarkable cliff dwellings carved directly into the soft volcanic tuff — rooms, kivas, and ceremonial spaces accessible via wooden ladders that allow visitors to climb into spaces where people lived six hundred or more years ago. The landscape, where canyon walls glow pink and orange in the afternoon light, is as striking as the archaeology.
The Manhattan Project National Historical Park in Los Alamos, adjacent to Bandelier, preserves and interprets the history of the secret wartime laboratory where the atomic bomb was designed and built between 1943 and 1945. The Los Alamos National Laboratory remains one of the country’s premier scientific research facilities, and the history museum offers a nuanced and thought-provoking account of one of the most consequential scientific projects in human history.
Taos, about 70 miles north of Santa Fe, is one of the great day trips or overnight extensions for Santa Fe visitors. Taos Pueblo, continuously inhabited for more than a thousand years and designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is the most significant indigenous architectural monument in North America. The multi-story adobe buildings of the North and South Houses rise against the Taos Mountain, virtually unchanged in appearance for centuries. The pueblo’s community welcomes visitors on most days, and guided tours led by community members provide an intimate and respectful introduction to Taos Pueblo life.
The town of Taos itself has its own vibrant art scene, its own historic Plaza, and the Harwood Museum of Art, which houses an important collection of work by the Taos Society of Artists — the early twentieth-century painting movement that, alongside the Santa Fe Art Colony, helped introduce the landscapes and peoples of northern New Mexico to the world.
The High Road to Taos is one of the most scenic drives in the American Southwest, winding through mountain villages, apple orchards, and piñon forests, with stops at the weaving village of Chimayo (home of El Santuario de Chimayo, one of the most sacred pilgrimage sites in North America) and the art colony of Truchas along the way.
Abiquiu, about an hour northwest of Santa Fe, is where Georgia O’Keeffe made her home and where the landscape she painted for decades surrounds the visitor on all sides. The multicolored cliffs and mesas of the Piedra Lumbre — red, ochre, white, and grey rock forms rising from the high desert — are as extraordinary in person as they appear in her canvases. Ghost Ranch, a conference and retreat center on the road to Abiquiu, offers trail rides, hiking, and paleontological tours of badlands rich with dinosaur fossils.
THE SANTA FE OPERA
The Santa Fe Opera is one of the great opera companies in North America and one of the most beloved summer traditions in the American Southwest. Founded in 1957, the company performs in an architecturally stunning, partially open-air amphitheater in the foothills just north of the city, with the mountains visible behind the stage and the desert sky overhead.
The open-air design means that performances often occur against a backdrop of sunset light fading to stars — an experience that has no parallel in the opera world. The company produces five operas each summer season (typically July and August), a mixture of standard repertoire and rarities, presented in the original language with supertitles.
Tailgate picnics before performances are a beloved Santa Fe Opera tradition. Visitors arrive early, spread blankets and folding chairs on the hillside, and enjoy elaborate picnics that have evolved over decades into something of a competitive sport. The opera’s parking lot on a summer evening, filled with candlelit tables and picnic spreads, is a scene entirely its own.
Tickets range from affordable spots in the uppermost sections to premium seating in the center orchestra. Advance booking is strongly recommended, particularly for popular productions.
ARTS EVENTS AND FESTIVALS
Santa Fe’s festival calendar is rich and worth planning around.
The Santa Fe Indian Market, held annually in August on and around the Plaza, is the largest and most prestigious Native American art market in the world. For over a hundred years, artists from more than 200 indigenous nations have gathered to sell their work — pottery, jewelry, textiles, sculpture, paintings, and more — directly to collectors and the general public. The quality of work is exceptional, and the event draws serious collectors from across the country and around the world. Arrive early on the first morning for the best selection.
The Spanish Market, held in July, celebrates the living traditions of Spanish colonial art in New Mexico — woodcarving, tinwork, weaving, embroidery, and the religious folk art forms that have been practiced in northern New Mexico for centuries.
The Santa Fe Fiesta, held in September, is the oldest community celebration in the United States, marking the Spanish reconquest of Santa Fe in 1692 with parades, religious ceremonies, music, and dancing. It is a living expression of the city’s complex cultural identity.
The International Folk Art Market, held in July on Museum Hill, brings master folk artists from dozens of countries to sell their work directly to visitors — an extraordinary opportunity to purchase exceptional handmade objects from cultures around the world.
The Christmas season in Santa Fe is magical, culminating in the Canyon Road Farolito Walk on Christmas Eve, when thousands of farolitos light the entire length of Canyon Road and carolers sing in the streets.
SHOPPING AND MARKETS
Santa Fe is one of the finest shopping destinations in the American West, with an emphasis on art, craft, jewelry, and handmade goods over mass-market retail.
Turquoise jewelry is the defining Santa Fe purchase for many visitors, and buying it well requires a little knowledge. The finest turquoise in the American Southwest comes from mines in New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and Colorado, each producing stones with distinct color and matrix characteristics. Authentic Navajo, Zuni, and Hopi silverwork is distinguished from mass-produced imitations by the quality of the silverwork itself, the quality and authenticity of the stones, and the hallmark of the artist. The Native American artisans selling under the Palace of the Governors portal offer some of the most reliably authentic work in the city, backed by state vetting requirements.
On Museum Hill, Canyon Road, the Railyard District, and the streets around the Plaza, visitors will find galleries, boutiques, and shops selling art, textiles, furniture, ceramics, clothing, and artisan food products. Seret and Sons, near the Plaza, is a remarkable store specializing in Central Asian hand-carved furniture, antique textiles, and architectural salvage elements.
The Santa Fe Farmers Market, held in the Railyard on Tuesday and Saturday mornings, is the best place to buy local produce, heirloom chile, artisan cheeses, and prepared foods made from traditional New Mexican recipes.
WHERE TO STAY
Santa Fe’s accommodations reflect the city’s character: adobe-wrapped, art-filled, and often surprising in their quality and individuality.
La Fonda on the Plaza is the grande dame of Santa Fe hotels. Located on the corner of the Plaza and San Francisco Street, an inn has occupied this site since the early seventeenth century. The current building dates primarily from the 1920s, and its public spaces — the lobby, the La Plazuela restaurant, the bar — are among the most beautiful interiors in the city. Staying here is staying at the literal center of four centuries of Santa Fe history.
The Inn of the Five Graces, a Relais and Chateaux property just off the Plaza, is one of the most extraordinary boutique hotels in North America. Its interiors are decorated with antique textiles, intricate tile mosaics, and furnishings imported from Afghanistan, India, Morocco, and other cultures — an aesthetic that somehow feels deeply appropriate to Santa Fe’s layered cultural identity. The spa added in 2021 has been warmly received.
Inn and Spa at Loretto, adjacent to the Loretto Chapel, occupies a beautifully maintained building modeled on the Taos Pueblo architecture. Its spa and courtyard are popular, and its location puts guests within easy walking distance of the Plaza.
El Farolito and Four Kachinas are charming, smaller bed-and-breakfast properties near Canyon Road that offer intimate, personalized hospitality and a genuine sense of place.
For those seeking a spa resort experience in a more secluded setting, Encantado Resort, a Auberge property in the foothills above the city, offers stunning mountain views, a full spa, and a level of luxury that complements Santa Fe’s own particular brand of refinement.
Ten Thousand Waves, as described above, offers mountain-retreat lodging for those who want to make the spa experience the center of their stay.
PRACTICAL TIPS FOR VISITORS
Sun and Altitude: The combination of high altitude and New Mexico’s intense sunshine requires more sun protection than most visitors anticipate. Wear broad-spectrum sunscreen, carry sunglasses, and stay hydrated. The UV index at 7,000 feet is significantly higher than at sea level.
Dress in Layers: Temperature swings between day and night are pronounced, particularly in spring and fall, when afternoons can be warm and evenings quite cool. A light jacket is useful year-round.
Water: Drink more water than you think you need. The dry desert air accelerates dehydration, and the altitude compounds its effects. Many visitors mistake the fatigue of dehydration for altitude sickness.
Tipping: Standard American conventions apply. Plan on 18-20 percent at restaurants.
Art Purchases: Santa Fe is one of the best places in the country to purchase fine art, indigenous jewelry and craft, and folk art. Take your time, ask questions, and buy from artists and galleries you trust. If authenticity matters — and it should, particularly for Native American work — purchase from verified sources.
Photography: Ask before photographing people, particularly Native American artisans at the Palace of the Governors portal. Many are happy to be photographed but appreciate being asked. In pueblo communities, photography policies are strictly enforced — respect them always.
Reservations: Book restaurant reservations, hotel rooms, and tickets to the Santa Fe Opera and Meow Wolf well in advance, especially in summer. Popular breakfast and brunch spots can have long waits on weekends.
Day Trips: Build at least one day trip into any visit of four days or more. Taos, Bandelier, Abiquiu, and the High Road to Taos are all exceptional and add enormous depth to a Santa Fe itinerary.
CONCLUSION: WHY SANTA FE ENDURES
Santa Fe has been described as a “museum of living cultures,” and while that phrase might suggest something static or preserved behind glass, the reality is far more dynamic. The cultures that make Santa Fe extraordinary — Pueblo, Navajo, Spanish colonial, Hispanic New Mexican, and Anglo American — are all actively alive here, in tension and conversation with one another, producing art, food, architecture, and ceremony that evolve continuously while remaining rooted in centuries of tradition.
There is a spiritual quality to Santa Fe that even the most secular visitor tends to notice. It may be the quality of the light, which painters have been documenting as something extraordinary since the early twentieth century. It may be the altitude, which creates a sense of physical closeness to sky and mountains that is literally true. It may be the accumulated weight of human habitation going back thousands of years — the sense that this high desert valley has been the site of human searching, ceremony, and creativity for an almost incomprehensible span of time.
Whatever its source, that quality is real and it is why Santa Fe occupies a place in the American imagination that no city of its modest size has any right to hold. Come prepared to be surprised by depth where you expected mere scenery, moved by history where you expected museums, and utterly seduced by a city that has been enchanting strangers for four hundred years and shows no sign of stopping.
QUICK REFERENCE: TOP THINGS TO DO IN SANTA FE
- Walk the Santa Fe Plaza and meet the artisans under the Palace of the Governors portal
- Spend a morning on Canyon Road visiting galleries and studios
- Visit the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum
- Explore Museum Hill: Museum of International Folk Art, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Wheelwright Museum
- Attend Meow Wolf’s House of Eternal Return (book tickets in advance)
- Soak in the mountain tubs at Ten Thousand Waves
- Try a complete New Mexican meal — red and green chile enchiladas, sopapillas, posole
- Visit the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi and Loretto Chapel
- Attend the Friday evening gallery openings on Canyon Road (summer)
- Shop the Santa Fe Farmers Market in the Railyard on Saturday morning
- Attend a performance at the Santa Fe Opera (summer season)
- Take a day trip to Bandelier National Monument
- Drive the High Road to Taos, stopping in Chimayo and Truchas
- Walk the Canyon Road Farolito Walk on Christmas Eve (December)
- Plan a day in Taos, including Taos Pueblo
ESSENTIAL FESTIVALS AND EVENTS:
August: Santa Fe Indian Market (world’s premier Native American art market)
July: Spanish Market / International Folk Art Market
July-Aug: Santa Fe Opera summer season
September: Santa Fe Fiesta (oldest community celebration in the U.S.)
December: Canyon Road Christmas Eve Farolito Walk
Year-round: Friday evening gallery openings on Canyon Road (May-October)