REVIEW · LOS CABOS
Sunset Boat and Shopping Tour Combo
Book on Viator →Operated by Cabo Day Trips · Bookable on Viator
That golden-hour boat ride is a built-in reason to go. This 5-hour Los Cabos combo pairs a sunset cruise with classic Cabo photo stops, plus snorkeling at Chileno Bay and time for shopping and tequila. If you hate tight timing, read the schedule details closely—this one runs on sunset and can feel compressed on the land portion.
Two things I really like: you get a lot packed into one afternoon without having to coordinate multiple tickets, and the group size caps at 15 people, so your guide can actually work with you. The biggest potential drawback is that the land portion and timing can feel shorter than the wording suggests, so you should confirm what’s included for your specific day before you set expectations.
In This Review
- Key Points That Make This Tour Worth Your Afternoon
- A 5-Hour Los Cabos Combo Built Around Sunset
- Price and Logistics: What $139 Really Covers
- Pickup Timing Can Shift with the Season
- “City Tour” Expectations: How to Read the San Jose del Cabo Part
- Cabo San Lucas Arch Stop: Photos, Sea Lions, and Lovers Beach Views
- Chileno Bay Snorkeling on a Natural Coral Reef
- Onboard Fun: Entertainment, Dancing, Dinner, and Drinks
- Tequila Tasting and Shopping Time: Where the Tour Adds Local Flavor
- Small Group Size: Why Max 15 Matters on a Packed Day
- Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- Should You Book This Sunset Boat and Shopping Combo?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the Sunset Boat and Shopping Tour Combo?
- What time does the tour start?
- Does the tour include hotel pickup?
- Is the tour in English?
- What’s included in the price?
- What is not included?
- How big is the group?
- What is the cancellation window?
Key Points That Make This Tour Worth Your Afternoon

- Sunset cruise + dinner + drinks keeps the vibe rolling without you hunting for meals.
- Small group (max 15) means fewer people to compete with for guidance and photo time.
- Cabo San Lucas Arch stop is quick but packed for iconic photos and a Sea Lions Colony sighting.
- Chileno Bay snorkeling at the coral reef is the nature anchor of the day.
- Tequila tasting and shopping time add a fun, local-leaning mix beyond the water.
- Seasonal timing affects pickup and day flow, so your exact start can shift with sunset.
A 5-Hour Los Cabos Combo Built Around Sunset

This tour is designed for one thing: getting you on the water for the best light. You start in the late afternoon, then the day swings toward Cabo’s coastline—first with dramatic viewpoints and short stops, then with a sunset cruise that includes onboard fun like entertainment and dancing.
What I like about this format is that it reduces decision fatigue. Instead of choosing between a snorkeling trip, a city walk, and a separate boat ride, you get one package that strings it all together with transport and tickets handled.
The tradeoff is that the day is structured. You’re not doing a slow, lingering exploration. You’re moving, stopping, and getting back on track for the boat portion. If you’re the type who wants hours to wander at your own pace, you’ll be happier with a more flexible tour.
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Los Cabos
Price and Logistics: What $139 Really Covers

At $139 per person, this is priced as a full “activity sandwich”: transport, major admissions, dinner, and drinks are part of the package. Included items listed for the experience are alcoholic beverages, dinner, air-conditioned vehicle, shopping time, and a tequila tasting.
One cost detail to watch: there’s a Los Cabos port fee ($5 per person) that isn’t included. That’s small, but it matters when you’re budgeting.
Also keep timing expectations grounded. The tour indicates a start time of 3:30 pm. Pickup is offered from select hotels, and the operator advises you to coordinate your shortest and best transportation by reaching out one day prior. In real life, that can be the difference between a smooth arrival and scrambling to catch the boat.
Pickup Timing Can Shift with the Season

Here’s the practical piece: sunset timing changes throughout the year, and the tour flow adjusts with it. The operator has explained that the timing can differ between winter and summer because sunset moves earlier or later. That means the start you see may not feel like a fixed, clockwork schedule.
How you handle this: treat pickup like a confirmation-based plan, not a guess. When you contact the operator the day before, ask for the exact pickup time you should plan around and what time you should be ready at. Then give yourself a little buffer. This is one of those tours where being early matters more than being right.
If you’re trying to line it up with other plans the same day, you’ll want that extra slack. The tour is about getting you onto the water at the right moment, and everything else is built to support that.
“City Tour” Expectations: How to Read the San Jose del Cabo Part

The tour description positions a land portion that gives you an overview of San Jose del Cabo. That’s a smart idea if you want context—who lives where, what’s historically important, and where to look when you’re taking photos later.
But here’s my caution: on some days, the reality of time can be more transfer-heavy than sightseeing-heavy. If you’re expecting a long guided walking tour of downtown, don’t lock yourself into that assumption. Ask the operator what the land portion looks like on your date, and whether there’s a true guided city segment or mostly a quick introduction before the waterfront schedule takes over.
The practical value is still there even if the city time is brief. You’ll get orientation so the coastline stops make more sense, and you’ll come away with a better sense of how San Jose connects to Cabo San Lucas.
Cabo San Lucas Arch Stop: Photos, Sea Lions, and Lovers Beach Views

This is your classic Cabo moment. You stop at the Arch of Cabo San Lucas for a photo-worthy break. It’s short (about 30 minutes), but it’s timed so you can catch the shapes and colors people come for.
The stop also includes a look at several shoreline highlights:
- Sea Lions Colony
- Lovers Beach
- Land’s End
A quick stop like this is always a tradeoff: you’ll want to sprint for photos, and you won’t have time to linger in one exact spot. Still, it’s a strong way to get the signature “I’m really here” views without spending half your day on one coastline viewpoint.
Tip: if you’re doing photos, decide what you’re prioritizing before you arrive at the arch area. With limited minutes, trying to plan on the fly costs time.
Chileno Bay Snorkeling on a Natural Coral Reef

Now for the part that feels most like a vacation. Your snorkeling takes place at Chileno Bay and the tour specifically calls out a natural coral reef with sea flora and fauna. In other words: you’re not just hopping in for a quick look. You’re heading to a spot known for underwater life and reef structure.
The snorkeling time is listed as 1 hour, which is usually long enough to feel like you actually did something underwater, without turning it into a full-length ordeal. If you want active moments, this is the best block of the day for it.
One consideration: snorkeling comfort varies by person. If you’re new to snorkeling or you get tired quickly in open water, be ready for that hour to feel like more effort than you expect. If you’re comfortable in the water and you like reefs, this stop is the one that can justify the whole tour.
Onboard Fun: Entertainment, Dancing, Dinner, and Drinks

After the shore stops, the day pivots to the boat. Your sunset cruise includes dinner and alcoholic beverages, plus entertainment and dancing onboard. That matters because it changes the mood from scenic to social.
Even if you’re not a dancer, onboard entertainment can be a good way to pass time while you’re waiting for the horizon to shift color. It also helps the group energy, especially for people who might be arriving from travel fatigue.
What to do: go hungry. The dinner is part of what’s included, and this is one of those tours where you don’t want to rely on finding food later. If you’re sensitive to alcohol, drink slowly—this is a long afternoon and you’ll be out in coastal weather.
Tequila Tasting and Shopping Time: Where the Tour Adds Local Flavor

Two included items in the package are tequila tasting and shopping time. That combo usually means you’ll have structured chances to experience something local and then browse in a more tourist-friendly setting.
I like this approach for two reasons:
- Tequila tasting gives you a simple, guided introduction rather than you wandering into a shop and guessing what to order.
- Shopping time is built into the schedule, so you’re not forced to leave early or ask for directions mid-activity.
Still, be smart about it. Treat shopping time like a window, not a promise of endless variety. If you’re picky about souvenirs, go with a plan: pick what you want to buy (small items, specific products), and then move on.
Small Group Size: Why Max 15 Matters on a Packed Day
A max group size of 15 people may sound like a marketing number, but it’s meaningful here because the tour has multiple moving parts. When the schedule has boat seating, photo stops, and snorkeling timing, crowds can slow everything down.
With a smaller group, you’re more likely to:
- get clearer guidance during transitions,
- spend more time at the stops you care about,
- and have a better chance of sorting out timing questions without getting lost in a sea of people.
This is also where your guide can make a difference. One guide named Rene has been praised for quick problem-solving when something didn’t happen as expected on the day. That kind of attitude matters when plans shift. It’s not about perfection—it’s about how the team handles it.
Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)
This tour fits best if you want:
- a sunset boat experience with dinner and drinks,
- a single afternoon with both views and snorkeling,
- and included stops that cover Cabo highlights without you organizing logistics.
It’s also a good match if you like group tours but don’t want the chaos of a big bus situation. The small group cap helps.
If you don’t like time pressure, or you’re the type who expects long guided sightseeing in town, you may find the land portion feels short. In that case, consider booking something with more dedicated city time, or pair this with an earlier or later self-guided exploration.
Should You Book This Sunset Boat and Shopping Combo?
I’d book it if your priority is a sunset cruise plus one meaningful nature stop (Chileno Bay snorkeling), and you like the idea of a guided afternoon that ends with food, music, and a chance to shop and taste tequila.
I would pause and confirm details before booking if you’re mainly interested in a long San Jose del Cabo city tour. The plan includes an overview, but the actual time on land can be tighter than some people imagine, because everything is set to support the boat schedule.
If you decide to go, do these two things:
- Contact the operator one day ahead to confirm your pickup time for your exact date.
- Plan to arrive on time and keep other activities flexible, since the tour is driven by sunset.
If you nail those, this can be a great value way to experience Cabo in one afternoon—sun, sea, and that signature horizon glow—without building a DIY itinerary from scratch.
FAQ
What is the duration of the Sunset Boat and Shopping Tour Combo?
It runs about 5 hours, depending on timing and the day’s schedule.
What time does the tour start?
The start time listed is 3:30 pm.
Does the tour include hotel pickup?
Pickup is offered from select hotels, and the operator recommends coordinating timing by contacting them 1 day prior.
Is the tour in English?
Yes, English is offered.
What’s included in the price?
The package includes alcoholic beverages, dinner, air-conditioned vehicle, shopping time, and a tequila tasting. Some admissions are listed as free or included depending on the stop.
What is not included?
The Los Cabos port fee is not included and is listed as $5.00 per person.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum of 15 travelers.
What is the cancellation window?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
If you want, tell me your travel month and where you’re staying in Los Cabos/San Jose del Cabo, and I’ll help you think through how the seasonal sunset timing might affect your day.






























