Is not hard to reach Pucon; this beautiful and welcoming city of the IX Region of La Araucania has efficient ways of access, which allow travellers visiting the tourist attractions of the zone with no inconvenience, while enjoying its admirable tourist infrastructure at the same time.
Located 789 kilometres south of Santiago, and at 112 kilometres from Temuco, the regional capital, Pucon can be reached by air and by land. You choose the means that best suits you.
By air: the airport of Pucon only gets regular flights coming from Santiago during the high tourist season (January and February) and on some long weekends; the flight lasts more than an hour.
One has to fly from Santiago up to Temuco during the rest of the year; there are daily departures. Once in the capital of the IX Region, Temuco, one has to go to the city's bus terminal (it is downtown) to board the vehicles setting off to Pucon every 15 minutes. The distance is of 112 kilometres and the trip lasts 90 minutes approximately. It is also possible to rent a car and drive all the way up to your destination.
Information about flights from Santiago to Temuco you can find in:
www.lan.com
• By land: three are the main highways to arrive in Pucon by land, and they connect the city with the north, the south and the east. This last highway is an international road connecting Chile and Argentina.
• To the north: it is the route linking Pucon with Santiago and Temuco. The distance to the capital of the country is of 789 kilometres, which can be covered in 9 or 10 hours travelling along the North Pan American Highway, an asphalted road in very good conditions. The route goes by the cities of Temuco, Freire and Villarrica.
•To the south: it connects Pucon with Puerto Montt, the capital of the X Region of Los Lagos. The distance is of 340 kilometres, which are covered in 5 hours approximately travelling along the South Pan American Highway, an asphalted road in very good conditions.
• To the east: it connects Pucon with the Argentine City of San Martin de Los Andes, located at a 242-kilometre distance. The entrance to Chilean territory is across the Mamuil-Malal Pass, also known as El Tromen; it is a dirt road almost 100 kilometres long that goes through a flashy forest of araucarias.

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