Baja California Sur
Desert meeting two seas, whales in winter, and Mexico's calmest big-name coast
Baja California Sur is for people who want desert and ocean in the same day, whether that means a swim-up bar in Cabo or a panga ride to watch gray whales. The state runs the full range: polished resorts at the tip, a laid-back capital on the Sea of Cortez, and empty highway in between.
Getting oriented
The peninsula is long and thin, and where you land shapes the trip.
- Los Cabos — Cabo San Lucas is the party end; San Jose del Cabo is quieter, with an arts district and better dinners. This is resorts, marinas, and golf.
- La Paz — the capital, and the calmest big town on the coast. Base here for the malecon, island trips to Espiritu Santo, and swimming with whale sharks in season.
- Todos Santos — a small Pacific town of galleries and surf breaks, roughly an hour north of Cabo.
- Loreto and the north — mission-town history, the Sea of Cortez islands, and access to the whale lagoons around Puerto Lopez Mateos.
Is it safe?
Yes. Baja California Sur is consistently one of Mexico’s safest states, and La Paz, Loreto, and Todos Santos feel genuinely relaxed by day and night.
The honest caveat is the Los Cabos nightlife strip. The real annoyances there are over-serving, taxi overcharging, and people offering drugs, not violent crime. What a friend who lives here would tell you: agree on the taxi fare before you get in, skip anything a stranger offers on the street, and don’t leave your bag on the sand while you swim. Petty beach theft is the main thing to watch.
When to go
Winter and spring are the sweet spot: warm, dry, and prime gray-whale season on the Pacific side, roughly mid-December to mid-April. November is a quieter shoulder month with good water. Avoid August and September, when the heat is brutal and hurricane season can scrub a trip entirely.
How we’d play it
Fly into La Paz if the sea life is the point: whale sharks, Espiritu Santo, and cheaper, calmer nights. Fly into Cabo (SJD) if you want resort comfort, then day-trip to Todos Santos to break up the polish. A rental car makes either version easier.
Safety, honestly
Baja California Sur is consistently one of Mexico's safest states, and La Paz, Loreto, and Todos Santos feel genuinely relaxed. The usual caution applies in the Los Cabos nightlife strip, where over-serving, taxi overcharging, and drug offers are the real annoyances rather than violent crime. Petty theft on unattended beaches is the main thing to watch.
Beaches
Pueblos
Nature
Island
When to go
bestthink twice
Winter and spring are the sweet spot: warm, dry, and prime gray-whale season on the Pacific side (roughly mid-December to mid-April). Late summer into September is brutally hot and falls within hurricane season, when trips can get scrubbed.
Getting there
Los Cabos (SJD) is the main international gateway with the most flights; La Paz (LAP) and Loreto (LTO) have smaller airports that put you closer to the Sea of Cortez towns. A rental car makes the peninsula far easier, and the Transpeninsular Highway (Mex 1) links everything.