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Guatemala Bets on Maya Tourism as Rural Development Engine

Guatemala launched the Ruta Maya 2030 plan to convert Maya archaeological heritage, including Tikal, into a driver of rural and indigenous development in high-poverty communities.
Tikal temples in Guatemala rising above the tropical jungle of El Petén at dawn

Tikal temples in Guatemala rising above the tropical jungle of El Petén at dawn

Gabriel Torres Ibarra | Lima, Peru
2 min read | Last Updated: Apr 15 2026 | 9:00 AM IST
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Guatemala City: Guatemala launched in 2026 its ambitious Ruta Maya 2030 plan, a cultural and archaeological tourism strategy that seeks to convert the rich heritage of the Maya civilization into an engine of economic development for rural and indigenous communities that concentrate the country's highest poverty rates. The plan envisions investments in access infrastructure, signage, interpretation centers, and training of tourist guides in Maya languages and Spanish.

Guatemala is home to some of the world's most impressive Maya archaeological sites, including Tikal in the Petén department, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Quiriguá, Iximché, and the important El Mirador complex, considered the largest Maya site in terms of surface area.

Tikal and Nature Tourism

Tikal is Guatemala's main tourist attraction, receiving more than 300,000 visitors per year. The site combines the grandeur of its temples and plazas with the biodiversity of Petén's tropical jungle, where jaguars, tapirs, and hundreds of bird species share the space with archaeological structures. The experience of hearing howler monkeys at dawn while contemplating the Temple of the Great Jaguar above the mist is considered by many travelers to be one of the most memorable in the world.

The Ruta Maya 2030 plan includes improvements to the access road to Tikal, the construction of a modern visitor terminal, and the implementation of a sustainable management system that limits the impacts of tourism on the ecosystem. It also envisions the creation of handicraft, gastronomy, and community lodging cooperatives managed by Maya communities.

Sustainable Tourism Challenges

Guatemala faces the challenge of growing in tourism without repeating the mistakes of other destinations that prioritized volume over quality. The example of Machu Picchu in Peru, which had to implement access restrictions to protect the site, is a warning about the importance of planning tourist growth with sustainability criteria from the start.

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