Baja California Packing List 2026
Interactive checklist for Los Cabos, La Paz, Valle de Guadalupe, and Todos Santos — with reef-safe essentials and whale watching gear picks.
Laundry Strategy for Baja California
Pack for 5–7 days — laundry is easy in Los Cabos, La Paz, and Ensenada. Most hotels offer laundry service; self-service laundromats (lavanderias) cost MX$60–100 ($3–5) per load. In smaller towns like Todos Santos or Loreto, laundry options are more limited — pack more quick-dry fabrics. Resort areas often have same-day dry cleaning available.
Must have 6+ months validity from your travel date — airlines and immigration will turn you away without it.
Check requirements for your passport — many countries have visa-on-arrival or eVisa options.
Print a copy AND have it on your phone. Include the emergency phone number.
Printed + digital copies of flights, hotels, and any pre-booked tours.
Some visa-on-arrival counters still require physical photos. Print at CVS, Walgreens, or any pharmacy before you go — takes 10 minutes.
Have some local cash before leaving the airport — not everywhere accepts cards.
Charles Schwab, Wise, or a travel card — foreign transaction fees add up fast.
Laminated card: embassy number, insurance hotline, family contacts. Keep separate from wallet.
Schedule at usps.com/manage/hold-mail.htm — free, takes 2 minutes, holds mail up to 30 days. Overflowing mailbox is a visible signal your home is empty.
Quick-dry, light-colored. Pack roughly 1 per 2 days — laundry is cheap and available.
Doubles as beach and town wear. Avoid cotton — it stays wet forever in humidity.
Required for temples, nicer restaurants, and cooler evenings. Lightweight linen or nylon.
You'll be in the water. A lot. Pack two so one can dry.
Beach cover-up, temple scarf, picnic blanket, emergency towel. Most versatile item you'll pack.
Lightweight, broken-in before you go. Your feet will thank you after 15,000 steps on cobblestones.
Beach, boats, showers at budget guesthouses. Chacos or Tevas hold up far better than cheap flip-flops.
Packable wide-brim hat for all-day sun exposure. Baseball caps don't protect your neck.
Lightweight. You'll want it in air-conditioned rooms which can be arctic.
Reef-safe mineral sunscreen for coastal destinations — oxybenzone destroys coral. Apply every 2 hours.
💡 Available locally but reef-safe options are limited and expensive
Bring 2x what you need plus copies of prescriptions. Some medications are controlled or unavailable abroad.
Band-aids, antiseptic wipes, gauze, medical tape, pain relievers. Compact kits fit in a zip-lock.
💡 Available at pharmacies — assemble your own or buy compact kits
Before every meal, after every market, after every tuk-tuk. Non-negotiable.
💡 Available everywhere — buy on arrival
Travel-size toothpaste goes fast. Pack 2 tubes for longer trips.
💡 Available everywhere locally
Solid shampoo bars are great for travel — no liquids restriction, last longer.
💡 Most hotels provide basics — buy locally for longer stays
Get a solid stick or crystal deodorant — gels count as liquids at security.
💡 Available locally but familiar brands may not be found
Pack more solution than you think you need. Daily disposables eliminate solution hassle.
Lips burn too — especially on boats and beaches at altitude.
You will get burned. Have this ready. Keeps in the fridge of your room for maximum relief.
💡 Available at pharmacies and 7-Eleven
Imodium + ORS packets. The ones who don't pack these are the ones who need them most.
💡 Available at pharmacies everywhere
Your navigation, translation, offline maps, and camera all in one. Pack the cable AND a wall adapter.
Big enough to charge your phone 4–5x. Non-negotiable on long travel days and remote islands.
Check the plug type for your destination. A universal adapter works everywhere.
For long flights, buses, and drowning out snoring hostel roommates.
If you want shots better than your phone. Even a compact point-and-shoot is a step up for landscapes.
Cheap insurance. One wave on a boat and your unprotected phone is gone.
Kindle Paperwhite is the standard. Hundreds of books, weeks of battery, beach-readable in sunlight.
Secure your data on public WiFi — essential for hotel, airport, and cafe networks abroad.
Stabilized video from your phone — no editing needed.
Separate from your main luggage for daily exploring. Packable ones fold to nothing.
Insulated bottle keeps water cold for hours in tropical heat. Reduces plastic waste too.
Polarized lenses cut ocean glare and protect your eyes properly. Don't cheap out on this one.
Beach resorts provide towels. Island-hopping boats, waterfalls, and homestays don't.
Game-changer for organization. Your bag stays tidy even after 3 weeks of living out of it.
Island hopping means your stuff rides in open boats. One wave and your unprotected gear is soaked.
For checked baggage and hostel lockers. TSA-approved so security can open without cutting it.
Worth it for anything over 6 hours. Memory foam compressible ones are far better than inflatable.
Markets, beach trips, random purchases. Many countries now charge for plastic bags.
Wet clothes, snacks, liquids for carry-on, sand-proofing electronics. Pack 5–10.
Capture snorkeling, diving, and beach adventures hands-free.
A valid passport is required to enter Mexico — even by car at the Tijuana or Tecate border crossing. US enhanced driver's licenses are no longer sufficient. Ensure your passport is valid for at least 6 months beyond your travel dates. Keep a photocopy in a separate bag.
Baja California is more dollar-friendly than mainland Mexico, but markets, local taquerias, parking lots, and tips are always in pesos. USD is accepted widely in tourist areas but at poor exchange rates. OXXO and Banamex ATMs have reasonable withdrawal fees.
Baja California UV is extreme — desert reflected UV plus Pacific coast sea reflection creates intense exposure. Reef-safe is required near Cabo Pulmo National Marine Park (legally protected, fines apply for conventional sunscreen). Apply before ocean entry, not after.
Baja's desert climate creates dramatic temperature swings — Los Cabos can be 85°F at noon and 55°F at midnight. The Valle de Guadalupe wine country sits at elevation and cools sharply after sunset. Always bring a layer, even in summer.
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Gear We Recommend for Baja
Tested from the whale watching lagoons to the Valle de Guadalupe wine country.
Waterproof Dry Bag / Day Pack
~$35Baja combines whale watching, kayaking, off-road ATV tours, and beach days — all in the same trip. A waterproof dry bag protects your phone and wallet on water excursions and converts to a beach bag for the afternoon. Essential for Los Cabos, La Paz, and Todos Santos water activities.
View on Amazon →Reef-Safe Mineral Sunscreen (SPF 50+)
~$22Cabo Pulmo National Marine Park bans conventional chemical sunscreens — violations carry fines. Beyond compliance, Baja's UV index consistently hits 11+ from May–September. Mineral (zinc oxide) sunscreen protects skin and the ecosystem simultaneously.
View on Amazon →Water Shoes / Reef Shoes
~$25Baja beaches are beautiful but rocky near the water line. Tide pools at Cabo Pulmo, El Arco kayaking, and snorkeling entry points all benefit from reef shoes. They protect against urchins and sharp volcanic rock and double as lightweight walking shoes at the market.
View on Amazon →Underwater Camera or Housing
~$75Baja is one of the world's top whale watching destinations (January–April humpback and gray whales in the Sea of Cortez) and has world-class snorkeling at Cabo Pulmo. A waterproof action camera or phone housing captures both above and below water.
View on Amazon →Collapsible Soft Cooler
~$30Baja road trips between Tijuana, Ensenada, Valle de Guadalupe, and Los Cabos are long — a soft cooler keeps water cold, wine from the Valle chilled, and snacks fresh for the desert stretches where convenience stores are scarce. Collapses flat when not in use.
View on Amazon →Baja California Packing FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
The Baja essentials: a valid passport (required even for road trip border crossing), Mexican pesos for local restaurants and markets, reef-safe SPF 50+ sunscreen (required at Cabo Pulmo National Park), and lightweight layers for cold desert nights. If visiting January–April, whale watching gear (binoculars, waterproof jacket) is worth adding.
Yes — a valid US passport is required to enter Mexico, including by car at Tijuana, Tecate, or Mexicali. US enhanced driver's licenses are no longer accepted at land borders. Ensure your passport is valid for at least 6 months beyond your trip dates. Keep a photocopy separate from your original.
No adapter needed — Baja California uses standard US-style Type A/B plugs. The voltage is 127V (slightly lower than US 120V) but all modern electronics handle this without issue.
Tourist areas of Baja — Los Cabos, La Paz, Ensenada, Valle de Guadalupe, and Todos Santos — are generally safe and well-visited by American and Canadian tourists. Stay in established tourist corridors, use reputable transportation, and check the US State Department's current travel advisory before driving through Tijuana and the northern border region.
Whale watching in the Sea of Cortez and Pacific lagoons runs January–April. Pack: a warm windproof jacket (open-water wind chill is significant even on warm days), binoculars (essential for distant whale behavior), a waterproof bag for your phone and camera, and motion sickness medication if prone to seasickness. The experiences at Magdalena Bay and San Ignacio Lagoon are world-class.
Skip chemical sunscreens with oxybenzone or octinoxate — banned at Cabo Pulmo and harmful to the Sea of Cortez. Also skip excessive cash from home — ATMs in Los Cabos and La Paz are plentiful. Avoid bringing anything you'd be upset losing near water — boat trips and beach days are Baja's centerpiece and things get wet and sandy.