Los Cabos
The resort corridor from San José to Cabo San Lucas, for better and worse
“High prices, spring-break energy, and beaches you often can't swim off; the arch, sportfishing, and San José's old town are the redeeming parts.”
What Los Cabos actually is
Los Cabos is two very different towns tied together by a 20-mile strip of resorts, golf courses and shopping plazas at the bottom tip of the Baja peninsula. At the south end is Cabo San Lucas: the marina, El Arco, the sportfishing fleet and the loud bars. At the north end is San José del Cabo: an actual old town with a plaza, a church and an art district. The stretch between them, marked by kilometer signs along Highway 1, is the “corridor” where the big all-inclusives sit behind their gates.
Here’s the honest read. We rate Los Cabos “if nearby” because the value math is bad and the beaches often betray you. Prices run closer to San Diego than to mainland Mexico. For weeks each spring, Cabo San Lucas turns into a spring-break town. And a lot of the beaches you’ll photograph from your balcony are for looking, not swimming — the open-Pacific coves have currents and shore break that drown people every year. What redeems the place is specific and real: El Arco and the sea life at Land’s End, genuinely world-class marlin fishing, gray whales passing close to shore in winter, and San José’s old town, which still feels like a Mexican town instead of a mall.
How the place is laid out
Think of it as three zones on one road. San José del Cabo (north, near the airport) is the calm, walkable, food-and-galleries end. Cabo San Lucas (south) is the marina, the party and the boats. The corridor in between is resort land — you’ll need a taxi, an app ride or a car to leave your hotel for anything. The airport (SJD) sits north of San José, so you land closer to the quiet end and drive south into the noise. Decide your base by which of those two towns matches your trip; see where to stay for the trade-offs.
The signature experiences
The one sight that earns its reputation is El Arco at Land’s End, best reached by a cheap water taxi or panga from the Cabo San Lucas marina, landing at Lover’s Beach on the calm bay side. The sportfishing is the other genuine draw — Cabo is a top marlin and dorado fishery, and a shared half-day charter out of the marina is a good morning even if you never cast. From December through March, gray and humpback whales pass within sight of shore, one of the more reliable whale encounters anywhere. For actual swimming and snorkeling, skip the corridor’s postcard beaches and go to the protected coves at Chileno and Santa María, or wade in at Medano in Cabo San Lucas. Full breakdown in things to do, and the wider category pages for beaches and diving and snorkeling.
How many days, and how to structure them
Three days covers it without dragging. Day one, settle into San José, walk the old town around Plaza Mijares and eat well. Day two, drive down to Cabo San Lucas in the morning, take a panga to the arch and Lover’s Beach, then spend the afternoon on Medano. Day three, pick your water day — a fishing charter, a whale trip in winter, or a snorkel session at Chileno. If you have a fourth or fifth day, run it out to Todos Santos or drive northeast to Cabo Pulmo; both are laid out in day trips.
When to go
Come January through April, or November and December. Those months are dry, warm and prime for whale watching, which is why they’re peak and why prices climb. Avoid August and September: hot, humid, and the core of hurricane season, when storms can close the water for days. The exception is surfers — the summer south swells light up Costa Azul near San José, so if surf is your reason to come, you’re trading weather for waves.
How we’d play it
Base in San José for the food and the mellow evenings, treat Cabo San Lucas as a day destination rather than a place to sleep, and get out on the water at least once — the arch by panga, or a shared fishing boat. Do your swimming at Medano, Chileno or Santa María and let the corridor’s unswimmable beaches stay in the background. If you want the real Baja Sur rather than the resort version, La Paz and Todos Santos up the road deliver it; the wider Baja California Sur hub has the rest of the peninsula.
When to go
bestthink twice
Peak season runs winter through spring break. Costa Azul surf is best in summer swells, which is also the hot, storm-prone stretch.