10 days · Pacific coast + Copper Canyon

10 daysAmbitious pacedistance-checked ✓ · updated Jul 3, 2026

1
Mazatlán
3 nights · Warm up on the coast before heading inland
Days 1–3
🚌 4h — North up the coast toward Los Mochis and El Fuerte
2
El Fuerte
1 night · Overnight before catching El Chepe
Day 4
🚆 5h — El Chepe climbs into the Sierra
3
Barrancas del Cobre
2 nights · The canyon's marquee overlooks
Days 5–6
🚆 1.5h — Short hop to Creel
4
Creel
2 nights · Plateau day trips and crafts
Days 7–8
🚆 5h — Descend to Chihuahua city
5
Chihuahua
1 night · Fly out from the eastern end of the line
Day 9
Reality check: Ten days chaining a beach city to the Sierra means long transit days, and both Sinaloa and Chihuahua carry advisories — this suits confident travelers who check conditions, not nervous first-timers.

Is this route safe? The honest answer: both Sinaloa and Chihuahua carry State Department advisories, and that is not marketing noise. But the specific corridor here — Mazatlán’s tourist zones and the El Chepe train line — is a well-worn tourist route that thousands of people ride every year without incident. The advisories mostly concern rural areas and highways you will not be driving. You stay on the coast, then on a train. Check current conditions before you book, and keep your plans on the beaten path.

Days 1–3: Mazatlán, easing in

Mazatlán is a working port city with a real old town, not a resort bubble. Base yourself in Centro Histórico or the Malecón end rather than the Zona Dorada high-rises — the historic center has the plazas, the seafood, the actual city. Walk the malecón at sunset, eat aguachile and grilled marlin, and use these three days to reset your body clock and confirm your onward tickets. This is your buffer: if a bus or train time shifts, you have slack here.

Day 4: The coast run to El Fuerte

The bus north toward Los Mochis and El Fuerte is roughly four hours of flat farmland. El Fuerte is a small colonial town that exists, for most travelers, as the smart place to board El Chepe — boarding here instead of Los Mochis skips the least interesting stretch of track and gives you a quieter overnight. Sleep early; the train leaves in the morning.

Days 5–8: Into the Sierra on El Chepe

This is the reason you came. The train climbs through tunnels and switchbacks into Barrancas del Cobre, a canyon system deeper than the Grand Canyon. Two nights at the rim get you the marquee overlooks and the aerial tram; two in Creel get you the plateau — Tarahumara craft markets, waterfalls, and quiet pine forest. What a friend who lives here would tell you: buy your Chepe tickets in advance in high season, because seats sell out and the schedule is unforgiving.

Days 9–10: Down to Chihuahua and out

The final leg descends five hours to Chihuahua city — a genuine northern capital, good for a last night and a museum before you fly home.