Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure

REVIEW · CABO SAN LUCAS

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure

  • 4.1165 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $118
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Operated by Eco Xperiences · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Camel calm meets Baja horsepower in three hours. This combo adventure in Cabo San Lucas pairs a slow, scenic camel ride with a high-power UTV day through rugged desert country, ending at the white-sand dunes of Migriño Beach.

I especially like how you get two very different vibes back-to-back: first coastal serenity with Pacific views, mountain ranges, and desert wildflowers; then real dirt-and-rock driving through desert canyons with your guide keeping things organized. It’s built for people who want both sightseeing and adrenaline without spending the whole day in a car.

One thing to plan for: the tour price can turn into a bigger total after the US $25 park entrance fee per person, and some riders also spend extra on optional add-ons like liability insurance and photo packages (especially if you’re not allowed to bring your own phone/camera).

Key things I’d put on your must-do list

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Key things I’d put on your must-do list

  • Camel ride by the Pacific with wide-open beach views and a slow pace that actually lets you look around
  • Drive your own UTV through rugged Baja trails and desert canyon scenery
  • Migriño Beach dunes plus ocean-side cliff views at the end
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off in an air-conditioned van, with a live English/Spanish guide
  • Safety gear included, and the operation is set up to keep the day moving on schedule
  • Photo/phone rules can affect cost, so decide early if you want the official photo package

Camel to Cabo’s coastline: what the beach ride is really like

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Camel to Cabo’s coastline: what the beach ride is really like
This adventure starts with that Cabo feeling you came for: sun, ocean air, and the sense that the coast is wide open. The camel portion is meant to be the slower, scenic intro—think walking along beach stretches on the Pacific Ocean, with views of nearby mountain ranges and desert wildflowers popping up in the dry Baja light.

What I like about this first act is the pacing. UTV days can feel like constant motion, but the camel portion gives your brain a break. You’ll be able to look at the coast, watch the waves, and take in the mix of beach and dry hills that makes Baja feel different from the Mexico you might picture from big resort strips.

Also, it’s a good way to get comfortable with the vibe of the day. You’re guided the whole time, so you’re not trying to figure out logistics, routes, or timing on your own. You just show up, get briefed, and start moving with confidence.

If you’re thinking about timing: some departures can line up with golden-hour light. One guest specifically called out a camel ride during sunset, which tells me at least some groups catch that extra-soft view—but don’t count on it for every start time.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cabo San Lucas.

Off-road UTV power: driving the Baja desert with a guide

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Off-road UTV power: driving the Baja desert with a guide
Then comes the reason many people book the combo: the UTV off-road adventure. This is where the day switches from calm scenery to high-horsepower fun. You drive your own off-road vehicle along rugged desert trails that run through areas with desert canyons and mountainous scenery.

The best part here is that you’re not just riding. You’re behind the controls, moving through the rough terrain as your guide keeps you on course and the group together. It’s a very hands-on way to see Baja around Cabo—dry, rocky, and dramatic in a way that doesn’t really show up on standard city sightseeing.

A few practical points I’d keep in mind:

  • Expect bumps and uneven ground. Even if the guides handle the pacing, you’ll still feel the trail.
  • Bring a mindset for dusty conditions. The included safety gear helps, but dirt is part of the experience.
  • If you care about photos, note that multiple riders mention the tour restricts bringing your phone/camera during parts of the experience. That affects how you plan to document your day.

The tour also supplies safety equipment and runs with a live guide in both English and Spanish. And you’ll have that built-in structure: the stops aren’t random, and the order matters so you end with the dunes at Migriño Beach.

Migriño Beach dunes and ocean-cliff views: the grand finale

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Migriño Beach dunes and ocean-cliff views: the grand finale
The end of the tour is the payoff: arrival at the white sandy dunes of Migriño Beach. This is where the Baja desert and the Pacific coastline feel like they’re sharing the same stage.

You get spectacular ocean-side cliff views, plus that surreal mix of sand texture and sea energy. The dunes are a totally different setting from the earlier desert trails—less rocks, more wide open space, and a visual reset that helps the day feel complete instead of one long blur of driving.

This finale is also why the combo format works. You don’t just leave Cabo thinking you did an activity. You leave with a clear memory: camel along the coast, UTV through the desert, then dunes with the ocean rising right beside you.

Price and the real cost: $118 plus the fees that can add up

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Price and the real cost: $118 plus the fees that can add up
The listed price is $118 per person, and on paper the value is strong because several big pieces are included: guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, round-trip transportation in an air-conditioned van, camel experience, off-road adventure, and safety equipment.

But here’s the part you should budget for up front:

  • Park entrance fee: US $25 per person (not included)
  • Liability insurance: US $45 per vehicle (optional)

So your total can move depending on how many people you have in your vehicle and whether you choose the optional coverage. That’s not unusual in places where trails or park areas require extra rules, but it’s still money you should plan for.

Now, the other cost people bring up is the photo situation. Several reviews mention they don’t allow personal phones/cameras during key parts, and that pushes people toward the official photo package. One rider cited a photo package price of about $104, and another mentioned a much higher cost option tied to private tours (like additional fees for the phone exception). I’m not saying you’ll face that exact cost on your departure—but you should assume you might spend extra if you want lots of ride photos and you’re expecting to shoot video from your own device.

My practical advice: decide early which you care about more:

  • If you’re fine with memories in your head and a few official pics, you’ll likely feel good about the value.
  • If you want to film your full POV and capture your own moments, budget for the possibility that you won’t be able to.

Getting there and getting back: pickup, timing, and avoiding rough edges

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Getting there and getting back: pickup, timing, and avoiding rough edges
The operation includes round-trip van transportation and a live guide, with pickup from your hotel area. You’ll want to be ready 5 minutes before your scheduled pickup time in your lobby. That small habit helps avoid the kind of waiting that can make any excursion feel longer.

The tour duration is about 3 hours, and starting times depend on availability. So you’re not signing up for an all-day time sink, which is a real advantage if you’re trying to balance beaches, dining, and other Cabo plans.

One mixed note from the feedback: a couple of riders talked about long waits on the way back. That doesn’t automatically mean it happens every time, but it’s enough of a pattern that I’d recommend you don’t schedule something tight immediately after your pickup window ends. Give yourself buffer time to get back, cool down, and regroup.

A nice detail from the experience side: at least one guest mentioned water bottles were provided for free, which matters in Baja heat. And overall, multiple reviews praised smooth, organized transportation and well-kept equipment.

Guides make the day: what the names tell you

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Guides make the day: what the names tell you
For a tour like this, your guide does more than point directions. They set the tone—especially when you’re switching activities and moving through different terrain types.

Several guide names came up clearly in the feedback:

  • Hector (praised for being entertaining and patient)
  • Enrique (praised as awesome)
  • Johari (liked for camel and UTV enjoyment)
  • Noel (praised for an excellent, helpful approach)
  • Gerado (praised along with animal-care-focused comments from one guest)
  • Luis (praised as the best by one rider)
  • Herrera (praised as nice and knowledgeable)

That cluster of names suggests you can reasonably expect a guide who communicates well and keeps the day feeling safe and on track—especially since this is a combo with both animals and machinery.

Also, one review mentioned a photographer (Julio) working with the group. That lines up with the photo-package angle: the operation seems designed to generate official images rather than leave it entirely up to your phone.

Who should book this combo adventure in Cabo

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Who should book this combo adventure in Cabo
This is a great match if you want:

  • A balanced day: beach calm plus real off-road driving
  • A guided experience you don’t have to plan
  • A short excursion length (about 3 hours) that still feels like you went somewhere

You should think twice if:

  • You have back problems (explicitly not suitable)
  • You’re pregnant (explicitly not suitable)
  • You strongly prefer recording everything yourself and hate the idea of official photos only

If your group includes different interests, the combo format works well. The camel portion appeals to people who want scenery and something gentler, while the UTV side satisfies the adventure crowd. One rider even said the camel portion was short, but the UTV impressed them—so you can treat this as a “both parts, but one main event” day.

What to bring (and why cash matters)

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - What to bring (and why cash matters)
For this tour, bring:

  • A passport or ID card
  • Cash

The cash requirement is worth taking seriously here because you may need to cover the park entrance fee (US $25 per person) on the spot, and the operator may also offer optional add-ons like liability insurance. If you come without the right payment setup, you might end up delaying the start.

I’d also pack a basic heat-and-dust mindset: sun protection, water habits, and clothing you don’t mind getting slightly dusty. Even with safety gear, desert trails tend to be… desert trails.

Should you book the Cabo San Lucas Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo?

Cabo San Lucas: Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo Adventure - Should you book the Cabo San Lucas Camel Ride & Off-Road UTV Combo?
I think this is worth booking if you want a compact, guided Cabo day that mixes sea views with genuine Baja driving. The value is solid for the $118 base price because pickup/transport, camel time, UTV time, a guide, and safety equipment are included—then you just add the known extra park fee and decide on insurance.

I’d only hesitate if:

  • You’re counting on filming everything with your own phone/camera, or
  • You’re trying to keep the day strictly budgeted without any extra charges.

If you do book, go in with a simple plan: bring your ID and cash, assume personal phone restrictions may affect photos, and schedule your post-tour time with buffer room. Done that way, this combo can feel like a smart use of a few hours in Cabo—two types of memories, one day, zero guessing.

FAQ

How long is the Cabo San Lucas camel ride and UTV combo?

The tour lasts about 3 hours. Starting times depend on availability.

What is included in the $118 per person price?

The included items are a guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, round trip transportation in an air-conditioned van, the camel experience, the off-road adventure, and safety equipment.

What extra costs should I expect?

The park entrance fee is US $25 per person (not included). Liability insurance is US $45 per vehicle and is optional.

Are there age or health limits?

The tour is not suitable for pregnant women or people with back problems.

What languages are the guides?

The live tour guide is available in English and Spanish.

What do I need to bring with me?

Bring a passport or ID card and cash.

What is the cancellation policy?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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