Things to do

Mazatlán, Sinaloa

What’s genuinely worth your time

Mazatlán rewards people who wander the old city and eat well more than people chasing a checklist of attractions. Here’s the honest ranking.

Worth it

  • The Centro Histórico on foot — the single best thing to do here. Plazuela Machado, restored townhouses, the cathedral, small galleries and the bars and restaurants that fill the old streets at night. Give it a full evening.
  • The malecón at sunset — one of the longest seafronts in Mexico. Walk it, bike it or ride a pulmonía along it as the light goes. Locals turn out for the same reason.
  • Teatro Ángela Peralta — a restored 19th-century opera house in the Centro. Worth stepping inside even if there’s no show; check what’s on.
  • Isla de la Piedra — a short panga boat ride to a long, quieter beach with palapa seafood shacks. A proper half day.
  • Seafood, everywhere — treat eating as an activity. Aguachile, ceviche, smoked marlin, fish tacos (see the food page).
  • El Faro lighthouse hike — a steep climb to one of the world’s higher natural lighthouses, with a big view over the coast. Go early before the heat.

Fine, not essential

  • Zona Dorada beaches and water sports — pleasant enough, but this is the generic resort experience. Don’t build the trip around it.
  • Cliff divers at Olas Altas — a brief, touristy spectacle. Watch if you’re passing; don’t plan a day around it.

Oversold

  • Banana boats, parasailing and beach vendors on the strip — the hard-sell tourist machine. Easy to skip.
  • Package “city tours” by trolley — you’ll see more on your own two feet in the Centro.

What a friend here would tell you: the Centro and the seafood are the trip. The beach is a bonus, not the headline.