Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta

REVIEW · PUERTO VALLARTA

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta

  • 5.0112 reviews
  • 3 hours (approx.)
  • From $292.73
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Operated by Dirty Monkey Atv Adventure · Bookable on Viator

A mountain RZR tour in Puerto Vallarta feels like a shortcut to the Sierra Madre. You get panoramic lookout time at the Mirador del Coyote, plus a waterfall or natural pool break where the day turns from driving to cooling off. It’s the kind of half-day that makes the rest of your vacation feel extra easy.

You also get safety gear and a real guide included, so you can focus on the ride instead of logistics. The one thing to plan for is extra spending at the tequila/food stops and for optional photo/video packages that are not part of the base price.

Key things I’d zero in on before you book

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Key things I’d zero in on before you book

  • Private-group pricing (up to 2) makes it easier to plan than per-person tours.
  • Three focused stops: Mirador del Coyote, El Jorullo ranch country, and Rancho Mi Abuelo water pools.
  • Included tequila tasting with a 18+ rule, plus tequila/mezcal education at the end.
  • Safety gear provided (helmet, goggles, bandana) and an expert guide riding with you.
  • Small maximum group size (14 travelers) helps keep the ride feeling controlled.
  • Expect dust. Even on easy routes, you’ll come back muddy in the best way.

Private RZR Through the Puerto Vallarta Mountains: What You’re Actually Buying

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Private RZR Through the Puerto Vallarta Mountains: What You’re Actually Buying
This is a private RZR adventure built around three simple goals: good views, rural scenery, and a cool-down at the end. The ride runs about 3 hours, which is long enough to feel like an outing, but short enough that you’re not stuck away from Puerto Vallarta all day.

The price is $292.73 per group (up to 2). That group-based pricing matters. If you’re traveling with a friend or partner, you’re not doing the math of a full per-person ticket. You’re paying for a small, guided RZR experience with fuel, safety gear, and key cultural stops folded in.

Another value point: the inclusions aren’t just “you sit while we drive.” You get practical stuff that reduces friction during your trip. You’ll be provided with helmet, goggles, and a bandana, and you’ll have an expert guide with you the whole time. Plus, fuel is included, so you’re not wondering what else might be added later.

The tradeoff is that some of the fun extras are optional and priced on-site. Tequila tasting is included, but additional tequila bottles, food, and photo/video packages come at your discretion. If you’re price-sensitive, you’ll want a quick budget mindset going in.

You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Puerto Vallarta

Meeting Point and Timing: How This Fits Into Your Day

You’ll start and end at the same place: Felipe Angeles 680, Paso Ancho, 48373 Puerto Vallarta, Jal., Mexico. Having a single meeting point you return to is a big deal on short tours, especially if you’re trying to line things up with dinner plans.

The tour is offered in English, with confirmation provided at booking time. It’s also noted as near public transportation, so if you’re not driving in Puerto Vallarta, you’re not locked out.

One practical reality: this is booked about 21 days in advance on average, so if you’re visiting during peak cruise or vacation weeks, don’t wait for the last-minute miracle plan. Also, if you’re coming in late, give yourself margin. Some people have had enough time to make it work after getting in from a cruise day, but you don’t want to cut it too close.

Stop 1: Rancho El Coyote and the Mirador del Coyote View Break

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Stop 1: Rancho El Coyote and the Mirador del Coyote View Break
Your first moment is all about elevation and photo opportunities: you’ll go to Mirador del Coyote after starting from Rancho el Coyote. The stop lasts about 40 minutes, and the big point is a panoramic overlook where fresh air and big views do most of the work.

This is the part I’d call the “reset your camera roll” moment. The ride starts, you adjust to the RZR feel, and then—boom—there’s a lookout break. You get time to stand back, look around, and decide how you want to document the day.

Why this stop is smart for most people: it sets expectations early. If you’re thinking this is purely a driving adventure, the viewpoint helps you understand the balance. You’re not just bouncing down dirt. You’re traveling through Sierra Madre country and stopping where it’s worth it.

Potential drawback: 40 minutes is enough for photos and a stretch, but not enough to turn this into a long hike. If you’re chasing a workout vacation, you’ll need to add separate walking trails elsewhere.

Stop 2: El Jorullo Ranch Country, Wildlife Sights, and Dirt Roads

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Stop 2: El Jorullo Ranch Country, Wildlife Sights, and Dirt Roads
Next comes El Jorullo, about 1 hour. This is where the tour shifts from viewpoints to “you’re out in nature” energy. The plan here is to drive through rural scenery at your own pace and take in the local flora and fauna.

One highlight in the descriptions is the countryside feel, including a chance to explore a ranch area and enjoy the mood of rural life. Some tours in this zone also include rodeo-style activity at the ranch, though what you’ll see can vary with conditions and what’s happening on-site.

Then you’ll continue toward the Vallejo Route, with fun dirt-road segments. This is where the RZR part becomes the star. Roads get rougher, speeds vary, and you’ll feel the difference between paved travel and Sierra Madre driving.

What to keep in mind: even if routes are described as easy to handle, you’re still dealing with dust and outdoor conditions. One of the most repeated real-world notes from participants is simple: you will be dusty. Plan on bringing wipes or being ready to rinse off when you’re back in town.

Also, if you were expecting a jungle-trail type of adventure only, there can be stretches that feel more like access roads through ranch communities before you reach the more scenic sections. The upside is you still get the countryside experience and viewpoints; the downside is you shouldn’t assume every minute is singletrack trail riding.

Stop 3: Rancho Mi Abuelo Water Pools and the Tequila/Mezcal Moment

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Stop 3: Rancho Mi Abuelo Water Pools and the Tequila/Mezcal Moment
The last stop, Rancho Mi Abuelo, is about 45 minutes, and it’s built around water. You’ll arrive at a waterfall or natural water pools where you can cool off, relax, and enjoy that quiet sound change when you’re near moving water.

This is the part most people remember because it’s a clear switch in pace. You go from driving, dust, and wind… to sitting near water and actually feeling human again. If you’re someone who gets tired easily on car days, this stop helps your energy reset.

Then there’s the cultural piece. You’ll have time to learn about the artisanal tequila & mezcal process, and you’ll taste different processes as part of this stop. Tequila tasting is also listed in the tour inclusions and is 18+ only, so keep that in mind if you’re with younger riders.

Food and drinks can be available at an additional cost. That’s also where people sometimes feel sticker shock, mainly because the on-site vendors set their own pricing. A few participants mentioned tequila and meal add-ons feeling expensive versus what they expected to pay. My practical take: keep your base tour experience in mind as the value core, and treat anything beyond tastings and included items as optional spending.

Photo note: if photographers are part of your group, you may be offered photos or video packages after the ride. One common note is that these can cost more than expected, so decide in the moment rather than assuming it’s automatically included.

What’s Included vs. What Costs Extra (So You Don’t Get Surprised)

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - What’s Included vs. What Costs Extra (So You Don’t Get Surprised)
Here’s what’s clearly included:

  • Use of safety equipment: helmet, goggles, bandana
  • Expert guide
  • Fuel surcharge
  • Tequila tasting (18+)
  • Visit to the waterfall or natural water pools

And here’s what is specifically not included:

  • Tips & souvenirs
  • Collision insurance: listed as $30 USD x RZR per booking
  • Other drinks and food not mentioned
  • Optional photography/video packages (not priced in the base details, and commonly treated as extras)

The collision insurance part is important for planning. Even if you feel like a careful driver, you’re in a natural environment and on dirt roads. I’d treat that insurance line item as part of responsible budgeting, not a surprise fee you deal with on the spot.

About tips: you’ll see that expected tips aren’t bundled in. If the guide and team make the ride feel safe and smooth, tipping is a normal way to say thanks—especially since you’re getting real guidance, not just a handoff.

Guides, Photos, and Real-World Comfort on the Ride

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Guides, Photos, and Real-World Comfort on the Ride
One of the strongest themes from people who enjoyed the tour is the team. Names like Jose and Vincente come up in positive comments, along with praise for guides who are patient and attentive. There are also mentions of photographers and staff working together to keep things organized and safe while capturing moments.

That matters because an RZR day has a rhythm: helmets on, rules explained, formation set, and then lots of movement. If the guide is good, your day feels calm even when the terrain is not.

On the comfort side, the gear list is a plus. A helmet and goggles can make the ride more enjoyable and less irritating to your eyes. The bandana helps with dust, too—one of those details that sounds small until you’re riding through dry air.

The comfort drawback is the dust itself. Even with bandanas and goggles, the Sierra Madre driving can make you feel gritty. So bring a change of clothes if you want to go straight to dinner afterward, and keep wet wipes handy.

Who This Tour Is Best For

Private RZR Tour through the mountains of Puerto Vallarta - Who This Tour Is Best For
This is a great fit if you want:

  • A guided RZR ride without spending the day studying routes yourself
  • View stops plus a nature break, not just driving nonstop
  • A cultural add-on through tequila/mezcal process learning at the end
  • A short tour that still feels like an adventure

The age guideline is minimum 6 years old accompanied by an adult. Drivers need a valid driving license. If you’re traveling with kids, the included safety gear and shorter duration can help the day stay manageable.

It’s also a good option for people who want to see more than just the town. If you’re only thinking about beach time, this gives you a different Puerto Vallarta side: mountain country, rural roads, and a place to cool off.

Should You Book This Dirty Monkey RZR Tour?

If you want a short, guided Sierra Madre RZR experience with included safety gear, a viewpoint stop, a ranch-country driving segment, and a water break with tequila/mezcal tasting, this is the kind of tour that fits well. The high satisfaction rate and the repeated praise for guides, safety, and the final water stop are exactly what you hope to see in an adventure like this.

I’d book it if you can accept two realities:

1) some optional add-ons (tequila bottles, food extras, photos/videos) may be priced high because vendors run their own business on-site, and

2) you’ll likely be dusty—so plan your clothes and expectations.

Skip it or think twice if your main goal is a fully trail-only, jungle-jogging ride with no dusty access-road segments and no upsells. This tour is more about driving + viewpoints + water, not an all-day technical off-road expedition.

If you’re curious, this one’s an easy yes for the right style of traveler: people who like the outdoors, like photos, and don’t mind spending a little extra only if you want the extras.

FAQ

How long is the private RZR mountain tour?

The experience lasts about 3 hours.

What’s included in the price?

Included features are safety equipment (helmet, goggles, bandana), an expert guide, fuel surcharge, tequila tasting (18+), and a visit to a waterfall or natural water pools.

Is collision insurance included?

No. Collision insurance is not included and is listed as $30 USD per RZR per booking.

Can children participate?

Yes. The minimum age is 6 years old, and a child must be accompanied by an adult.

Do drivers need a license?

Yes. Drivers must present a valid driving license.

Where do I meet for the tour?

The start and end point is Felipe Angeles 680, Paso Ancho, 48373 Puerto Vallarta, Jal., Mexico.

Is the tour offered in English?

Yes. The tour is offered in English.

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