Ships anchor offshore; tender boats required to reach shore.
Choose the Right Port Day
Quick Take
- Port Type
- Small expedition anchorage
- Best For
- Snorkeling, marine life viewing, and small-group shore excursions. Not a destination for shopping or nightlife.
- Avoid If
- You want independent exploration, city walking, or cultural attractions. This is a dive/snorkel port with minimal onshore infrastructure.
- Walkability
- Not walkable. The port is a beach anchorage with no town center or road access; all activity depends on tender service and organized excursions.
- Budget Fit
- Mid-range to premium. Ship-organized snorkel tours typically cost $80–150 USD; independent beach time is free once ashore.
- Good For Short Calls?
- Yes, strongly. Most cruisers spend 3–5 hours in water or on beach. A full second day would be repetitive.
Port Overview
Cabo Pulmo is a small anchorage off the southern tip of Baja California, about 12 miles northeast of Cabo San Lucas. Ships cannot dock and tender passengers ashore to a pristine beach in a protected marine reserve. The port is virtually uninhabited and has zero commercial infrastructure—no shops, restaurants, or town.
Cabo Pulmo exists almost entirely for snorkeling and diving. The reef and bay are part of a protected marine national park, home to large schools of fish, rays, jacks, and occasional larger pelagics. Most cruise days here revolve around organized snorkel excursions or simple beach time.
This port is best suited to expedition and small-ship lines (Lindblad, Ponant, Silversea, Windstar, American Cruise Lines) whose passengers expect active, naturalistic shore days rather than shopping and restaurants. A half-day here is ideal; a full day becomes repetitive unless you are a keen diver or underwater photographer.
Is It Safe?
Cabo Pulmo itself is safe for organized cruise visits. The beach and bay are under Mexican federal protection as a marine reserve, and cruise operators have strong relationships with local authorities. Petty theft is minimal because there is no town or commercial foot traffic.
Seaworthy concerns: Seas can be rough, especially November–March, and tender service may be cancelled. The anchorage is well-sheltered, but patience is needed if weather delays operations.
No crime or security issues typical of port visits. Simply follow the ship's guidance on tender schedules and stay within designated beach and snorkel zones.
Accessibility & Walkability
Accessibility is very limited. The beach is reached only by tender; passengers with severe mobility issues will find it difficult. Once ashore, the beach is flat sand with no paved paths, and snorkel entry is direct from shallow water. Wheelchair users should consult the ship's accessibility office before booking this port.
Outside the Terminal
There is no terminal building. You will tender to a natural beach with some palapa structures (open-sided shelters) and possibly a small ranger station. The immediate scene is pristine sand, turquoise water, a few boats, and nothing else. Within sight: reef, adjacent headlands, and open bay. It feels isolated and marine-focused—exactly the point.
Beaches Near the Port
Cabo Pulmo Beach
The only beach at this port. White sand, shallow entry, warm water, protected by the bay. Crystal-clear visibility. No amenities, shade, or facilities.
Local Food & Drink
There are no restaurants or vendors on the beach. Bring lunch and snacks from the ship's provisions or cafeteria. Some cruises may offer a picnic lunch as part of shore excursions, but always confirm.
Water: Bring plenty. The beach has no freshwater source; dehydration is a real risk in the tropical sun.
Shopping
There is no shopping. Cabo Pulmo is a protected marine reserve with no commercial activity. If you need to buy anything—sunscreen, water, snacks—purchase it onboard the ship before tendering ashore.
Money & Currency
- Currency
- Mexican Peso (MXN); USD widely accepted at cruise-arranged excursions
- USD Accepted?
- Yes
- Card Payments
- No merchant facilities on the beach. Payment is handled through the ship.
- ATMs
- No ATM on the beach. Withdraw cash onboard or in Cabo San Lucas if your ship calls there.
- Tipping
- Tips for excursion guides are customary (5–10% or $10–20 USD if cash-based). This is typically handled through the ship's account.
- Notes
- Since there is no commerce on the beach, money is rarely needed once ashore.
Weather & Best Time
- Best months
- October–April (calm seas, warm water, low rain)
- Avoid
- June–September (heat, humidity, tropical storms, occasional hurricane risk)
- Temperature
- 70–85°F (21–29°C) water; air 75–90°F (24–32°C)
- Notes
- November–March can see occasional heavy swells and tender cancellations. Spring and fall offer the best balance of calm seas and pleasant conditions.
Airport Information
- Airport
- Los Cabos International Airport (SJD)
- Distance
- Approximately 40 miles northwest
- Getting there
- Cruise lines typically arrange group airport transfers. Check with your cruise line for embark/disembark logistics if you are flying in/out.
- Notes
- Cabo Pulmo is not a typical embark/disembark port. If your cruise starts or ends nearby, transfers to Cabo San Lucas town are coordinated by the ship.
Planning a cruise here?
American Cruise Lines, Lindblad Expeditions, Ponant & more sail to Cabo Pulmo.
Getting Around from the Port
Only way ashore. Ships anchor offshore and run repeated tender service to the beach. Check your daily program for tender times and duration.
Ship-run or pre-arranged guided snorkel or dive tours. Typically includes equipment, guide, multiple reef sites, and transportation by boat.
Tender ashore and spend time on the beach swimming, snorkeling in the bay shallows, or relaxing. Bring your own snorkel gear if qualified.
Top Things To Do
Guided snorkel or dive excursion
The flagship activity. Ships arrange daily guided snorkel tours to reef sites within the bay. Tours typically include 2–3 snorkel stops, professional guides, full gear, and a boat. Expect schools of jacks, snappers, rays, occasional groupers, and excellent coral.
Book Guided snorkel or dive excursion from $80⚡ Popular — books out early. Reserve before you sail.
Beach time and shallow bay snorkeling
Tender ashore and spend the day on Cabo Pulmo beach. Swim in the protected bay; snorkel in shallow water near shore if you bring your own gear and are confident. The bay is warm, calm, and clear.
Book Beach time and shallow bay snorkeling on ViatorMarine wildlife photography (with guide)
Some small-ship lines offer underwater or topside nature photography excursions. Professional or serious amateur photographers can join guides to capture reef life and marine megafauna.
Book Marine wildlife photography (with guide) from $120Practical Tips for Cruise Passengers
- Book snorkel excursions on the first day or early in the cruise; popular tours fill quickly and may be limited by sea conditions.
- Bring strong reef-safe sunscreen and reapply often. The sun is intense, water reflection amplifies UV, and there is minimal shade on the beach.
- Wear water shoes or sneakers with grip; the beach has rocks and sharp coral edges in some areas, especially near snorkel entry points.
- Check the daily program the night before for tender times and weather alerts. Rough seas can delay or cancel tender service.
Frequently Asked Questions
You can snorkel independently in the shallow bay if you have your own gear and are a strong, confident swimmer. However, a guided tour shows you much more marine life and takes you to better reef sites. Tours are strongly recommended.
No. Bring lunch, snacks, and plenty of water from the ship. There are no vendors, shops, or facilities on Cabo Pulmo beach.
The ship will announce cancellation early in the morning. You will remain onboard. This is rare but possible October–April. There is usually no compensation beyond a shipboard credit; check your cruise contract.
Cabo Pulmo is an unspoiled marine paradise perfect for snorkeling and diving, offering authentic small-town charm away from Cabo San Lucas crowds.
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