Mexico Road trips
10 curated road trips in Mexico — Baja California Highway 1, Chiapas Highlands San Cristobal to Palenque, Riviera Nayarit and Sierra Madre Coast. Mapped stops, distance, duration, best season, and practical route notes.
Baja California Highway 1The world's longest peninsula drive, Highway 1 traces 1,700 km of Pacific surf, Sea of Cortez lagoons, giant cardón cacti, and grey whale sanctuaries from Tijuana all the way to Cabo San Lucas.
Chiapas Highlands San Cristobal to PalenqueThis classic Chiapas drive drops from the cool cobblestone streets of San Cristóbal de las Casas into lush canyon country, pine forest, and humid lowland jungle before ending at Palenque’s Maya ruins. It is a dramatic one-way transition from highland culture to tropical archaeology.
Riviera Nayarit and Sierra Madre CoastThis Riviera Nayarit road trip links Puerto Vallarta with the Pacific beaches and jungle-backed fishing towns of Nayarit, then climbs into the Sierra Madre for a cooler inland finish. Expect whale-watching bays, surf breaks, cobbled village streets, and dramatic ocean-to-mountain scenery throughout.
Sierra Gorda de QueretaroThis highland circuit threads through Querétaro’s Sierra Gorda, climbing from the colonial streets of Jalpan into pine-oak forests, deep canyons, and cloud-forest viewpoints. It links Franciscan missions, mountain villages, and dramatic lookouts along one of central Mexico’s most rewarding road trips.
Valle de Guadalupe Wine RouteThis easy Baja wine-country drive links Ensenada to the rolling vineyards of Valle de Guadalupe, where rustic tasting rooms, farm-to-table restaurants, and boutique lodges sit among olive groves and dusty ranch roads. The route is short, scenic, and best enjoyed slowly over a long weekend.
Tequila and Jalisco HighlandsA relaxed loop through the blue-agave hills and colonial towns west and north of Guadalajara, this drive links the tequila heartland with the cool highlands of Jalisco. Expect distillery visits, hacienda views, and stone-plaza towns set against volcanic landscapes and broad ranch country.
Copper Canyon DriveDeeper than the Grand Canyon in four separate gorges, the Barranca del Cobre is Mexico's greatest natural spectacle, a highland-to-canyon plunge through Rarámuri pine forests, mission ruins, and 1,800 m vertical walls of copper-tinted rock.
Mexico's Colonial HeartlandThe silver cities of the Bajío, a UNESCO-saturated circuit through Querétaro, San Miguel de Allende, and Guanajuato where 16th-century grandeur, painted alleyways, and cantina culture reach their Mexican peak.
Oaxaca to the PacificFrom 2,500-year-old Zapotec temples on cloud-wrapped peaks to mezcal villages in high pine valleys and world-class surf breaks, Oaxaca's mountain-to-coast road is Mexico's most culinarily and culturally intense drive.
Yucatan Peninsula LoopA circular odyssey through the greatest concentration of living Maya culture, cenotes, Caribbean sea cliffs, fortified colonial ports, and jungle pyramids in a single loop from Mérida.