Explore all that Los Cabos has to offer With over 30 miles of beach, world-class hotels and spas,and some of the best golf courses in North America, Los Cabos truly offers a vacation for everyone.
The Pacific Just north of Cabo San Lucas, the Pacific coastline is developing rapidly, with electricity and other services pushing north from Los Cabos and south from Todos Santos. While much of the coastline is still undeveloped, a paved highway provides easy access and sightseeing, including frequent whale sightings during their winter months of migration.
Cabo San Lucas Cabo San Lucas, noted for its vitality and nightlife, offers a variety of attractions, including The Marina, which features 380 slips for vessels up to 200 feet, El Arco, marking Land’s End, Playa Del Amor, where couples can stroll hand in hand when the tide is low, and for water enthusiasts, gardens of black coral and waterfalls of sand.
The Corridor Between San Lucas and San Jose, the 20-mile Corridor is defined by the azure blue and turquoise waters of the Sea of Cortés, rugged cliffs, quiet coves teeming with marine life, desert vistas and mountains that all come together with a wash of vibrant colors. Amidst all this are luxury hotels and a variety of premier, world-class golf courses.
San Jose Del Cabo San Jose del Cabo is reminiscent of an older time, where the days are longer and the mood softer. However, its attractions are just as desirable as the more upbeat Cabo San Lucas. The Old Jesuit Mission, known as Parroquia San José, dates back to the 1730′s, and The Estero, an estuary with an endless variety of colorful birds and wildlife.
The East Cape Beginning just north of San José, the East Cape stretches nearly a hundred miles along the Sea of Cortés. This beautiful stretch of desert coastline is still mostly undeveloped, however the towns of Los Barriles and Buena Vista are thriving fishing and tourist communities offering lodging, cuisine and pangas to rent for a day of casting your line into the deep.