Bay of Cabo San Lucas
Bay of Cabo San Lucas
4.5
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Monday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Tuesday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Wednesday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Thursday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Friday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Saturday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Sunday
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
About
Nestled at the southern tip of the Baja Peninsula, this resort town is popular for its year-round warm weather, surfing, and fishing.
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801 within 3 miles
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69 within 6 miles
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4.5
903 reviews
Excellent
714
Very good
154
Average
27
Poor
2
Terrible
6
Angie P
Milwaukee, WI3 contributions
Mar 2020 • Friends
Amazing!! Learned the history! Felt amazing to be able to be in 2 oceans at the Same time! Whale watching was amazing. We went on a boat that maintained its space from the mom’s and their babies. Got to see whales jumping out of the water breaching. Still so fascinating. Glass bottom boat tour, great!
Written 29 March 2020
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Craig-World-Travelle
Agoura Hills, CA1,721 contributions
Feb 2020
Really loved visiting this area. Great views of rocks, water and whale watching. Even saw lots of Manta Rays jumping out the water. It is a wild place both from nature and fun perspective.
Can't wait to go back.
Can't wait to go back.
Written 16 February 2020
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Worldwide Dave
Meridian, ID688 contributions
Nov 2021
There are many fun things to do within the Bay of Cabo San Lucas.
Vibe: Super relaxing
Food: Many options
Service: Varies from bars to dance clubs to stand up paddle boards and more
Access: Easy from boat or valet park near waterfront at Sur Beach House or The Office
Would I go again: Yes of course
We love the bay. So much to do. Always spend a few days a week here.
Vibe: Super relaxing
Food: Many options
Service: Varies from bars to dance clubs to stand up paddle boards and more
Access: Easy from boat or valet park near waterfront at Sur Beach House or The Office
Would I go again: Yes of course
We love the bay. So much to do. Always spend a few days a week here.
Written 23 November 2021
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
FarAway23900338095
2 contributions
Oct 2023 • Family
We took the boat to pelican island from the beach. When we were coming back to the beach we were dropped of in the marina with no way back to our resort the man Blacky was not answering any phone calls to help get us back to the resort. The man that was at the rice and beans booth we not helpful at all
This was the worst time I had on a boat.
This was the worst time I had on a boat.
Written 6 October 2023
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Shotgunbullet
Phoenix, AZ26 contributions
Jun 2021 • Family
Cabo is a beautiful vacation spot. Cabo Bay and the rock formations known as Land’s End are incredibly beautiful and should be on every traveler’s bucket list. My family and I just returned from a week long vacation there and while this story has a happy ending, it was nearly a tragedy. My 11 year old son was pulled into the sea by a rogue wave on Divorce Beach. With the help of two strangers, my wife and I were able to rescue him and for that I am so thankful. After this experience, we started researching water tragedies in Cabo and the numbers are staggering. I would not go so far as to say that the tourist industry is covering it up, but I would say they are doing nothing to warn you or publicize the fact that numerous people have suffered tragic consequences as a result of rogue waves, powerful currents and rip tides on Cabo beaches. Apparently TripAdvisor keeps closing any posts on this topic. I think that is a tragedy in and of itself that Trip Advisor seems to be complicit in hiding the truth about the dangers of Cabo’s rogue waves. After my son narrowly escaped, I was told that there has been a long list of tragedies from rogue waves in and around Cabo but particularly on Divorce Beach, one of the most visited places in Cabo. I can’t go into specifics because TripAdvisor will hide this post if I get too descriptive. Please do your own research regarding the tragedies that continue to happen on Divorce Beach, Lover’s Beach, Médrano Beach and many others.
Here is our story. My wife and I took our three kids to Cabo. We have two teenage daughters and one son who is 11. We stayed at one of the five-star resorts on Medrano beach which is advertised as having “the only swimmable beach in Cabo.” Medrano Beach is across the bay from the beautiful rock formations for which Cabo is known. We hired a water taxi to take us from our beach to the rock formations. Hundreds, if not thousands, of these water taxis ferry people back and forth from the rock formations every day. After a short but spectacular water tour of the geographic wonders of Land’s End, the water taxi pulls up to a relatively small beach called Lover’s Beach. The taxi drops off its passengers to let them explore and then will return to pick up the passengers in 30 minutes to an hour. If you walk away from the water on Lover’s Beach you will see a wide gap in the rock formations that gives way to a broad path to the other side of this little isthmus. To be clear, Lover’s Beach is on the bay side which is the Sea of Cortés, the beach on the other side of the isthmus faces the Pacific Ocean, and it is quaintly called Divorce Beach because of the stark contrast between the two beaches. Both are extremely beautiful.
When disembarking, a local man who had helped us off of the boat told us that Divorce Beach had very dangerous currents and riptides. He told us that there was no swimming on that side. He said to be careful and watch our kids closely. When you get a warning like that in Mexico, you better pay attention to it. We did.
We walked to the other side and began to take pictures. There are no flags, no markers and no barricades anywhere on this beach. My 11 year old son and one of his sisters were running along the beach and playing 20 to 30 feet away from the water. They were not swimming or even wading in the water. Out of the deep blue sea, a 10 foot tall rogue wave swelled up and came crashing down on my son and daughter while my wife and I watched. My daughter saw it coming and was able to break a few steps in the right direction. She was still smashed and rolled by the wave but I could immediately see that she was clambering her way out of the explosive surf. My son never saw it coming. The wave rose up well above his head and came crashing down on him, the powerful current scraping him off of the beach into the sea. One second he was there, the next second all I could see was an explosion of white foam and a wave that came to the highest point on the beach. The next instant I saw my son’s head bob up to the surface. He was 30 yards out into the Pacific Ocean where we had just been told that the currents and riptides were extremely dangerous. The sea is so powerful at this place that my son was carried very quickly closer to the beach on the next wave. My wife was about twice as close to the kids as I was when the first wave hit. She immediately ran for the water and dove into the waves to save our son. In what can only be described as the grace of God, my wife came close enough to my son that she was able to reach into the water in front of her and she caught the ends of his fingers before the next wave mercilessly rolled over them. She immediately choked up and grabbed him around the wrist. She had no plan but to hold onto him and never let go. They both hit their heads repeatedly as a set of four or five devastating waves threw their bodies like rag dolls. I ran into the sea with two other men who were strangers. I could only see my wife’s feet sticking up above the water for a second as she was rolled over and over.
One of the other men was two steps ahead of me. He managed to grab her first but he went two steps too deep and the current pulled his feet out from under him and he started to be swept out to sea. He grabbed onto my wife’s ankle and was holding on for dear life. At that exact moment I was able to catch my wife’s hand. I locked hands with her and literally used every bit of strength in my body to tow the train of people far enough in that they could get on their feet. At some point, the other man somehow managed to get my son from my wife and I know he cradled my son and carried him all the way to dry land. When I got my wife and the man who had fallen to a place where they could stand in about waist deep water, my wife looked at me and I could see she had used every bit of strength she had to get to this place. At the same moment, I could see the next wave swelling behind her. The sound of the waves was deafening so I yelled as loudly as I could for her to run to the beach as fast as she could. All three of us scratched and pawed our way up the beach as the sea did its best to knock us down and drag us back in.
We made it. The episode seems like it lasted an hour. It was all of about one minute. We all laid there on the beach too weak to even express how overjoyed we were that our son, that our family, was together and safe. As one of the strangers who had risked his life to save us struggled his way up the beach past us, the only words my wife could utter were, “You saved our lives.” We don’t know who those two people were. One of them, the one closest to me was a local who worked on the beach as a tour operator. I believe the other man was a tourist. I cannot express how grateful my family is to these two men. Had they not been there and been willing to risk their own lives for others, this story would have had a very different ending.
Before anyone goes blaming this on inexperience or anything else, let me tell you a few facts. This is a family of surfers. My kids have been surfing California and Hawaii since they were old enough to stand on a board. We spend a month at the beach every summer. We are all strong ocean swimmers including my son. He is an athletic kid. My wife is a Cross-fit trainer who is in peak physical condition. We do not drink and we do not do drugs. If you read this story and want to explain it away so you can tell yourself this won’t happen to you, you’re just wrong. We did everything we were supposed to do and the Pacific Ocean did what it does in Cabo.
This is the best warning you are going to get. No one in Cabo is going to tell you about the rogue waves or the scores of people who have faced tragedy. We really loved Cabo and we will return there, but the sad truth about Cabo is that it is not a place to go to enjoy the beach. The sea is deep around Cabo and the beaches are short and steep. The combination leads to terrifying waves, currents and tides in every part of Cabo.
Everyone posts that they saw guards by the beaches when they were there. Here is what I saw. Each resort posts one guy at the top of the stairs leading down to the beach. The guards are all dressed in business casual slacks. They are not lifeguards. They are not facing or watching the beach. I never encountered one who spoke English at all. Their purpose was a mystery to me. I never saw a lifeguard on any beach. They do have a flag system which tells you the danger level. The flags are hard to see and the signs explaining what the colors mean are even harder to see. No one anywhere ever told us that the ocean in this area has a tendency to swell up from time to time and grab tourists off the beach with a set of rogue waves.
I did a lot of research before posting this. Originally, I posted links to about 15 stories about people affected by the rogue waves. I’m not posting them here because I’m trying to write this in a way that will not cause TripAdvisor to close it. You can find the same articles with a few internet searches.
Do your research. Cabo needs to come clean about this and take action. Divorce beach should be closed. If it was California, that beach would be gated off as a no trespassing area. It’s just too dangerous. Read the articles. And they need to at least post trained lifeguards with jet skis on all of these beaches. There has been too much tragedy already.
Here is our story. My wife and I took our three kids to Cabo. We have two teenage daughters and one son who is 11. We stayed at one of the five-star resorts on Medrano beach which is advertised as having “the only swimmable beach in Cabo.” Medrano Beach is across the bay from the beautiful rock formations for which Cabo is known. We hired a water taxi to take us from our beach to the rock formations. Hundreds, if not thousands, of these water taxis ferry people back and forth from the rock formations every day. After a short but spectacular water tour of the geographic wonders of Land’s End, the water taxi pulls up to a relatively small beach called Lover’s Beach. The taxi drops off its passengers to let them explore and then will return to pick up the passengers in 30 minutes to an hour. If you walk away from the water on Lover’s Beach you will see a wide gap in the rock formations that gives way to a broad path to the other side of this little isthmus. To be clear, Lover’s Beach is on the bay side which is the Sea of Cortés, the beach on the other side of the isthmus faces the Pacific Ocean, and it is quaintly called Divorce Beach because of the stark contrast between the two beaches. Both are extremely beautiful.
When disembarking, a local man who had helped us off of the boat told us that Divorce Beach had very dangerous currents and riptides. He told us that there was no swimming on that side. He said to be careful and watch our kids closely. When you get a warning like that in Mexico, you better pay attention to it. We did.
We walked to the other side and began to take pictures. There are no flags, no markers and no barricades anywhere on this beach. My 11 year old son and one of his sisters were running along the beach and playing 20 to 30 feet away from the water. They were not swimming or even wading in the water. Out of the deep blue sea, a 10 foot tall rogue wave swelled up and came crashing down on my son and daughter while my wife and I watched. My daughter saw it coming and was able to break a few steps in the right direction. She was still smashed and rolled by the wave but I could immediately see that she was clambering her way out of the explosive surf. My son never saw it coming. The wave rose up well above his head and came crashing down on him, the powerful current scraping him off of the beach into the sea. One second he was there, the next second all I could see was an explosion of white foam and a wave that came to the highest point on the beach. The next instant I saw my son’s head bob up to the surface. He was 30 yards out into the Pacific Ocean where we had just been told that the currents and riptides were extremely dangerous. The sea is so powerful at this place that my son was carried very quickly closer to the beach on the next wave. My wife was about twice as close to the kids as I was when the first wave hit. She immediately ran for the water and dove into the waves to save our son. In what can only be described as the grace of God, my wife came close enough to my son that she was able to reach into the water in front of her and she caught the ends of his fingers before the next wave mercilessly rolled over them. She immediately choked up and grabbed him around the wrist. She had no plan but to hold onto him and never let go. They both hit their heads repeatedly as a set of four or five devastating waves threw their bodies like rag dolls. I ran into the sea with two other men who were strangers. I could only see my wife’s feet sticking up above the water for a second as she was rolled over and over.
One of the other men was two steps ahead of me. He managed to grab her first but he went two steps too deep and the current pulled his feet out from under him and he started to be swept out to sea. He grabbed onto my wife’s ankle and was holding on for dear life. At that exact moment I was able to catch my wife’s hand. I locked hands with her and literally used every bit of strength in my body to tow the train of people far enough in that they could get on their feet. At some point, the other man somehow managed to get my son from my wife and I know he cradled my son and carried him all the way to dry land. When I got my wife and the man who had fallen to a place where they could stand in about waist deep water, my wife looked at me and I could see she had used every bit of strength she had to get to this place. At the same moment, I could see the next wave swelling behind her. The sound of the waves was deafening so I yelled as loudly as I could for her to run to the beach as fast as she could. All three of us scratched and pawed our way up the beach as the sea did its best to knock us down and drag us back in.
We made it. The episode seems like it lasted an hour. It was all of about one minute. We all laid there on the beach too weak to even express how overjoyed we were that our son, that our family, was together and safe. As one of the strangers who had risked his life to save us struggled his way up the beach past us, the only words my wife could utter were, “You saved our lives.” We don’t know who those two people were. One of them, the one closest to me was a local who worked on the beach as a tour operator. I believe the other man was a tourist. I cannot express how grateful my family is to these two men. Had they not been there and been willing to risk their own lives for others, this story would have had a very different ending.
Before anyone goes blaming this on inexperience or anything else, let me tell you a few facts. This is a family of surfers. My kids have been surfing California and Hawaii since they were old enough to stand on a board. We spend a month at the beach every summer. We are all strong ocean swimmers including my son. He is an athletic kid. My wife is a Cross-fit trainer who is in peak physical condition. We do not drink and we do not do drugs. If you read this story and want to explain it away so you can tell yourself this won’t happen to you, you’re just wrong. We did everything we were supposed to do and the Pacific Ocean did what it does in Cabo.
This is the best warning you are going to get. No one in Cabo is going to tell you about the rogue waves or the scores of people who have faced tragedy. We really loved Cabo and we will return there, but the sad truth about Cabo is that it is not a place to go to enjoy the beach. The sea is deep around Cabo and the beaches are short and steep. The combination leads to terrifying waves, currents and tides in every part of Cabo.
Everyone posts that they saw guards by the beaches when they were there. Here is what I saw. Each resort posts one guy at the top of the stairs leading down to the beach. The guards are all dressed in business casual slacks. They are not lifeguards. They are not facing or watching the beach. I never encountered one who spoke English at all. Their purpose was a mystery to me. I never saw a lifeguard on any beach. They do have a flag system which tells you the danger level. The flags are hard to see and the signs explaining what the colors mean are even harder to see. No one anywhere ever told us that the ocean in this area has a tendency to swell up from time to time and grab tourists off the beach with a set of rogue waves.
I did a lot of research before posting this. Originally, I posted links to about 15 stories about people affected by the rogue waves. I’m not posting them here because I’m trying to write this in a way that will not cause TripAdvisor to close it. You can find the same articles with a few internet searches.
Do your research. Cabo needs to come clean about this and take action. Divorce beach should be closed. If it was California, that beach would be gated off as a no trespassing area. It’s just too dangerous. Read the articles. And they need to at least post trained lifeguards with jet skis on all of these beaches. There has been too much tragedy already.
Written 28 June 2021
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Elizabeth B
Winnipeg, Canada105 contributions
Jan 2017 • Couples
We took 'Rice and Beans' water taxi over to Lover's Beach. Price was very reasonable. It was a lot of fun! The guide showed us tropical fish, the rock arches, seals, and talked about the area. On Lover's Beach, the rock formations were interesting but, in truth, we didn't expect or like being pestered for money/tips by men who grabbed our backpacks and helped us get off the boat!
Written 11 March 2017
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Jenna
Gainesville, GA464 contributions
Jul 2017 • Couples
We took a water taxi for $9/ person. There are many drivers at the marina trying to get your business. They started at $30/ person. It's easy to negotiate because they know you will just go to the next guy. Then they wanted $1 per person as an entrance fee, we told them "no" and they just said OK. It was awesome. The driver was more like a guide. He was knowledgeable and brought food to feed the fish. Dont get sucked in by those $100 sunset cruises with 100's of tourists piled on a boat. The water taxi is cheap and personalized. You wont regret it.
Written 13 July 2017
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Rbunte
San Francisco, CA6 contributions
Aug 2017 • Family
A must visit for all traveling to Cabo. I highly recommend as just seeing this is a experience that you will never forget. Great restaurants and bars and but can get a little crowded at times. Bring you sunscreen. Ron Bunte
Written 22 January 2018
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
melissajv
Maryville, IL157 contributions
Mar 2019 • Couples
We got a water taxi for $10/person, paid $1/person to walk into the marina and get on the water taxi. Four of us shared a glass bottom boat taxi to the rocks/beaches. Tipped another guy to help us off the boat and onto shore. There was another guy waiting to sell us jewelry and another to sell us drinks. The experience was great! The water was clear and we could see tons of beautiful fish, along with sea lions and pelicans. Great photo ops at every turn! The people here are super friendly.
Written 16 March 2019
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
N F
Playa del Carmen, Mexico189 contributions
Mar 2019 • Friends
We rented a boat directly in marina, was 15 dollars per person, we were just 4 persons woth us on the boat, tour goes around beautiful rocks, beaches, and views are breathtaking! 1 hour and we came back to marina. I loved it!
Written 4 March 2019
This review is the subjective opinion of a Tripadvisor member and not of Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor performs checks on reviews as part of our industry-leading trust & safety standards. Read our transparency report to learn more.
Cuánto te cuesta el tour para conocer el arco de los cabos? Cuánto dura el recorrido, y qué tanto vale la pena?
Written 1 July 2019
depende si es enlancha unos 1000 pesos mx por persona si el en catamaran como 3000 pesos mx. vale la penay mucho llevar bebidas si es en lancha x q te dejan de regreso en la playa de el amor en la que puedes ver x un lado el mar de cortes y a uno 100 caminado vas a al otro lado que el el oceano pacifico.. una experincia grandiosa
Written 1 July 2019
Can you see this from the beach or road or do you have to do a tour to get to it?
Written 29 June 2019
You can see it from the beach but will need a water taxi to get to see it up close.
Written 4 July 2019
Is there a water taxi heading here from the cruise port?
Written 29 December 2018
Yes, they are at almost every beach location. A really good way to get around since they are inexpensive. You can catch them at the beach near Villa De Palmar, Pueblo Bonito Los Cabos, The Mango Deck and the Office. Almost anywhere on the beaches and there is always someone to ask. These water taxis will take you to the Marina and other places on the beach. Water taxis from the marina will take you to any of the beach locations where water taxis can come to the beach and to other boats for Parasailing and other water activities.
Written 1 January 2019
Si ahora están en aguas cálidas y vienen a parir hasta abril
Written 15 January 2018
wesbran
Indianapolis, Indiana
Is the end of October a great time to go and visit Cabo? I'd like to go for my 30th birthday..?
Written 17 August 2017
Hurricane season weather can be iffy. It will be warm.
Written 23 June 2018
Who and what company did you use? My son and grandma will be going Dec 30th. Please reply soonest. Thanks.
Written 25 December 2016
Which company or person / boat did u guys use?
Written 25 December 2016
Water taxi runs out to most of the hotels. We went out on a Cat. Princessa I believe was the boats name but as said before, there are a lot! Of cruise providers. Have a great time!
Written 23 April 2018
Can you get off the boat and walk along the beach near the Arch?
Written 2 August 2016
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