REVIEW · CABO SAN LUCAS
Hiking Experience in Cabo San Lucas
Book on Viator →Operated by Fishing4Cabo · Bookable on Viator
Sea views in a short hike. This walk up toward Cerro De La Z is built around a mountain sunset feel, with big outlooks over the Sea of Cortés and the Pacific. I like that the distance is tight enough to feel doable, yet you still get a top-of-the-hill payoff.
I also like the mix of scenery: Cabo San Lucas below, the famous Pedregal neighborhood on the way back, plus water views that shift as the light changes. One thing to consider: communication and cell service can be spotty near the trail area, so you’ll want to plan ahead for meeting up and getting to the starting point smoothly.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Notice
- A Two-Hour Mountain Hike Built Around Sunset Light
- Price and Value: What You’re Buying (Besides Steps)
- Meeting at Hotel Tesoro and the One Thing to Not Assume
- Stop 1: Cabo San Lucas First Look and Orienting Yourself
- Stop 2: Cerro De La Z Views, Whale Season, and the Sweat-to-Payoff Ratio
- Timing Tip: Why Early Morning or Actual Sunset Can Beat Mid-Afternoon
- Stop 3: Pedregal de Cabo San Lucas and the Coastline Story
- How the Pace Works for Real People
- Whales in Season: What to Expect Without Getting Unrealistic
- Weather, Clothing, and Footwear That Won’t Make You Miserable
- Who This Hike Suits Best
- Who Should Rethink It
- Book It or Skip It: My Decision Guide
- FAQ
- How long is the hike?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- What kind of fitness level do I need?
- What is the main hike distance?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Where does the tour end?
- Is whale watching possible?
- How big are the groups?
- Are service animals allowed?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Notice

- Sea of Cortés + Pacific views from one mountain perspective
- 2.5k hike that fits a short guided outing
- Whale season opportunities from December to April
- Pedregal de Cabo San Lucas views tied to the coastal geography
- Small-group feel (up to 75 travelers) for a guided hike
- English-speaking guide and a clear, simple route flow
A Two-Hour Mountain Hike Built Around Sunset Light

This is a short guided hike designed for a dramatic payoff: you’re moving during the late part of the day so you can see Cabo San Lucas under changing light. The terrain is framed for people with moderate physical fitness, not endurance athletes or people who want a casual stroll in flip-flops.
The real value here is viewpoint density. In about two hours, you’re set up to look down over the marina and resorts, then out across both bodies of water, and finally back toward the coast-facing neighborhood of Pedregal.
You can also read our reviews of more hiking tours in Cabo San Lucas
Price and Value: What You’re Buying (Besides Steps)

There’s no sense buying long, complicated tours if your main goal is one strong view. Here, you’re paying for a guided route with a good viewing plan, plus the chance of seasonal whale spotting from December through April.
You also get something hard to DIY: timing. Sunset hikes live and die by timing, and this one is structured around catching that look over the water rather than just walking to a random viewpoint.
I can’t tell you a cost because none is provided here, but I can say the value equation tends to work if you want scenery and a guide, and you don’t want to spend your whole afternoon commuting and figuring routes out.
Meeting at Hotel Tesoro and the One Thing to Not Assume
The meeting point is at Hotel Tesoro, on Blvd. Paseo de la Marina, Lote 9 y 10, Centro, in Marina, Cabo San Lucas. The experience ends back at the same spot, so you don’t have to plan a separate return.
Here’s the practical consideration: cell coverage around parts of the area can be weak. So I’d treat this like a connectivity test. Save the operator contact details before you go, screenshot any key info, and don’t wait until you’re standing in the wrong place with no signal.
Stop 1: Cabo San Lucas First Look and Orienting Yourself

You’ll begin with Cabo San Lucas in front of you—good for getting your bearings fast. This first phase matters because it helps you understand what you’re actually seeing later from the heights.
From the start area, you can often pick out the marina and the resort belt, which makes the viewpoint at the top feel more personal. Instead of seeing a blur of buildings, you recognize shapes and locations as the route rises.
A good rule: use the early stretch to settle in. If you arrive stressed, the hike gets harder than it needs to be.
Stop 2: Cerro De La Z Views, Whale Season, and the Sweat-to-Payoff Ratio

This is the core segment, built around the mountain viewpoint at Cerro De La Z. You’ll be walking roughly a 2.5k route total for the hike component, and the payoff is the sight of the Sea of Cortés and the Pacific in the same general viewing session.
If you travel in December to April, keep an eye out for whales. It’s seasonal, not guaranteed, but the timing window is part of why this hike is appealing during those months.
And yes, you’ll likely notice man-made landmarks too—some groups report being able to spot an observatory from the higher vantage. That kind of landmark helps you judge distance and scale. Cabo can feel huge until you see how everything lines up from above.
Timing Tip: Why Early Morning or Actual Sunset Can Beat Mid-Afternoon

The experience is described as a sunset on the mountain. In real life, that matters because clouds, angle, and temperature can change how crisp the coast looks.
If you do it earlier, you might trade peak glow for clearer visibility. If you do it at a true sunset window, you get the best contrast between water and coastline. Either way, expect the session to feel best when the light is doing the work for you, not when the sun is flat overhead.
Stop 3: Pedregal de Cabo San Lucas and the Coastline Story

After the main viewpoint, the route brings you back with Pedregal de Cabo San Lucas in the mix. Pedregal is a major part of the story of Cabo because it clings to the slopes above the water.
Seeing Pedregal from the right angle makes Cabo’s geography click. You stop thinking of the town as one flat place and start understanding the hills, the coves, and how the neighborhoods sit along the coastal edges.
If your travel style is more about reading a city through its views than museum stops, this is the portion that often sticks with people after the hike ends.
How the Pace Works for Real People

This outing is listed for travelers with moderate physical fitness. That’s a helpful label, because it signals you’ll be walking enough to feel it, but it’s not framed as a grueling climbing day.
Group size is capped at 75 travelers, which tends to keep the logistics manageable, especially in a short, viewpoint-focused hike. In practice, the pace can also depend on your guide’s rhythm and the group’s comfort level.
One name you might hear is Adrian, who has been noted for keeping things fun and stopping when needed. That matters if you’re hiking with older family members or you just want a guide who reads the room instead of rushing everyone.
Whales in Season: What to Expect Without Getting Unrealistic
From December to April, the tour is positioned for whale watching opportunities. You’re looking for movement on the water far out, and you’ll want patience more than perfect binocular skills.
Don’t treat it like a whale guarantee. Ocean viewing always has variables: weather, visibility, and where animals decide to surface. But if whale season is your goal, this hike gives you a solid coastal vantage at the right time of year.
Weather, Clothing, and Footwear That Won’t Make You Miserable
A short hike can still punish bad shoes. Choose footwear with grip and consider something lightweight for sun plus a layer for cooler evening air on the mountain.
Bring water. Two hours goes fast, but Cabo heat can turn quick exertion into a bigger deal than you planned.
If it’s windy at the viewpoint, you’ll appreciate having a cap or sunglasses ready. The coast can reflect light hard.
Who This Hike Suits Best
This is a strong match if you:
- Want sunset views without booking a full-day excursion
- Enjoy coastal scenery and want both water perspectives in one outing
- Travel during December to April and care about whale season chances
- Prefer a guided experience where someone handles the timing and route flow
It’s also a good option if you’re staying in Cabo for a short trip and want one memorable physical activity that still fits sightseeing.
Who Should Rethink It
You might want a different plan if:
- You’re looking for something truly easy with minimal walking
- Your schedule can’t handle a timed outing during late daylight
- You rely heavily on strong cell coverage for updates and meeting coordination
Not because it’s impossible. Just because the hike is short, and the timing is part of the value.
Book It or Skip It: My Decision Guide
I’d book this hike if your top priority is scenery with a sunset angle, and you want a short guided route that hits Cabo, Cerro De La Z, and Pedregal viewpoints without complexity. The 2.5k distance is a big reason it works, and the seasonal whale window is a real bonus in the right months.
I’d also book with one mindset: treat coordination and signal as something you manage before you arrive. Have your confirmation info handy and plan your arrival so you’re not hunting your guide with no service.
If you do that, you’re setting yourself up for the part that people remember—looking out over the water and feeling the coast make sense from up high.
FAQ
How long is the hike?
It’s listed at about 2 hours.
What language is the tour offered in?
The experience is offered in English.
What kind of fitness level do I need?
You should have a moderate physical fitness level.
What is the main hike distance?
The hike is described as about a 2.5k climb.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet at Hotel Tesoro, Blvd. Paseo de la Marina Lote 9 y 10, Centro, Marina, 23450 Cabo San Lucas, B.C.S., Mexico.
Where does the tour end?
The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is whale watching possible?
Whale watching is mentioned as seasonal, from December to April.
How big are the groups?
There’s a maximum of 75 travelers.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
What’s the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes, it includes a mobile ticket.



























