A long table with craft beers from all over Baja California. The Beer Route

Official Trails
from Baja California

Exploring the State's Natural Beauty

We invite you to enjoy the State's craft beer in all its presentations. Each brewery has its own personality, its touch and its flavor. Come and enjoy them with your friends!

Two girls drinking craft beer, Ruta de la Cerveza, Baja California

What are Approved Trails?

They are an initiative of the Ministry of Tourism designed to connect history, nature and adventure in a single system of standardized routes. Implemented through the Baja California Official Trail Equipment System (SESO BC), this project ensures that each trail has signage and equipment under international standards, offering accessible, safe and sustainable experiences.

Each trail is an opportunity to reconnect with the natural environment, enjoy unique landscapes and contribute to the conservation of the ecosystems that make Baja California a special place.

Outstanding activities

Live unique experiences designed to make every moment unforgettable.

Incomparable Landscapes

Dare to walk among deserts, mountains, coasts and forests that form unforgettable scenery, such as the cliffs of Ensenada or the vastness of the Sierra de San Pedro Mártir.
Two girls choosing the type of craft beer. Beer Route, Baja California

Emblematic Locations

Discover iconic destinations such as the Constitution National Park of 1857, the Guadalupe Valley and many more, where nature and culture intertwine.
Detailed plan of a dish, Beer Route, Baja California

Much more than a walk

Each trail is an invitation to discover the essence of Baja California, with landscapes and biodiversity that will remain etched in your memory.
Family eating seafood, The Beer Route, Baja California
Two people carving a pumpkin and decorating it. Flower Route
A chef preparing a local dish, Ruta de la Cerveza, Baja California

Official State Trails Approved by the Baja California Secretariat of Tourism.

The official trails are one of the actions of the “Shamelj” program, which means “All” in Kumiai, of the ecotourism development program for rural communities aimed at the conservation of biodiversity and biocultural heritage, integrating them into the production chain through tourism products.

For the first time in history, Baja California has 18 trail and canoe route operators, trained with international and national standards backed by the Agreement for Tourism Training of Mexico (Acturmex), which guarantees the beginning of the regularization of safe, environmentally responsible trails that trigger economic development in communities and destinations of the state to enrich the tourist offer.

Millennial Deserts

With emblematic species such as cardón, torote, cirio and ocotillo.

Chaparral and Coastal Scrubland

Aromatized by plants such as white sage and rosemary.

Coniferous and Oak Forests

In the mountains of San Pedro Mártir and Juárez, where Jeffrey pines, oaks and firs stand out.

Wetlands and Coastal Vegetation

Mangroves and dunes that surround the coasts.