每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Buses and shuttles follow fixed schedules and routes, which often means transfers, waiting, and arriving on someone else's timeline. A Daytrip private transfer takes you directly from your starting point to Quetzaltenango with no stops you didn't choose. You can also book optional sightseeing stops along the route — such as the Maximon shrine in Santiago Atitlan or a viewpoint over Lake Atitlan — so the journey itself becomes part of the experience rather than time to endure.
Most travelers find four to six hours enough to explore the colonial center comfortably, with time to visit the main churches, walk the central plaza, and enjoy a meal. If you want to venture beyond the city — to nearby hot springs or the Santa Maria volcano — plan for a full day. The journey from Guatemala City covers roughly 200 km (124 miles) and typically takes around three to four hours each way, so an early departure makes the most of your time there.
It's an excellent fit. Quetzaltenango attracts a quieter crowd than Antigua or Lake Atitlan, which means fewer tour groups and a more genuine sense of everyday Guatemalan life. The city has a strong local identity — shaped by its pre-Columbian Mayan roots, its brief stint as a regional capital after independence, and its 19th-century coffee wealth — and that layered history is visible in its architecture and street life without being packaged for visitors. If you want depth over crowds, Xela delivers.
The colonial center is the natural starting point. The Ermita de la Concepcion is a standout — its ornate Baroque facade conceals the oldest altarpieces in Central America and the first effigy of the Virgin Mary brought from Europe. Nearby, the Espiritu Santo Cathedral rewards a closer look: the modern structure was built around the preserved 16th-century facade of the original parish church, creating a striking visual contrast. The Parque Centro America, the main square, anchors the whole area and is a great spot to absorb the city's relaxed pace between sights.
Quetzaltenango, known locally as Xela, is Guatemala's second-largest city but feels nothing like one. Its well-preserved colonial center packs in centuries of history, from a Baroque church housing the oldest altarpieces in Central America to grand neoclassical and Italian Renaissance-style architecture that hints at the city's coffee-boom prosperity. Unlike tourist-heavy Antigua, Xela offers an authentic, unhurried Guatemalan city experience — the kind that stays with you long after you've left.
The route from Guatemala City winds through the Western Highlands and is genuinely scenic — expect mountain passes, pine forests, and views that few travelers see because they're focused on getting there quickly. The roads in this region can be narrow and winding, so the quality of your driver matters. Daytrip works with experienced local drivers who know these routes well, which makes a real difference on highland roads that reward local knowledge over GPS confidence.