March 6, 2026

Slow Travel News

Your resource for nomadic travel and international living – new articles daily

Why This Coastal Baja Town Is The New Mexican Digital Nomad Hotspot

6 min read
Why This Coastal Baja Town Is The New Mexican Digital Nomad Hotspot  Travel Off Path

Share The Article

For a long time, places like Mexico City, Playa del Carmen, and Tulum have topped the average digital nomad’s Mexico wishlist.

Whether it was for CDMX’s buzzing city life and metropolitan vibe, or the Mexican Caribbean’s chilled-out atmosphere and endless sunshine, expats and location-independent workers have flocked to the exact same three spots year in, year out.

In 2026, a new digital nomad hub has entered the scene, and if you’ve been run out of Mexico City over the anti-gentrification protests and the Gringo Go Home graffiti, this laid-back coastal town on the Pacific shores is still very much rolling out the welcome mat for foreigners:

A Scenic Street In Todos Santos In Baja California Sur, MexicoA Scenic Street In Todos Santos In Baja California Sur, Mexico

Is Todos Santos The Next Big Thing For Digital Nomads?

A small town roughly an hour north along the coast from Cabo San Lucas, Todos Santos is officially one of Mexico’s pueblo mágicos and a promising expat haven in one of the quietest parts of Baja California Sur.

No large-scale resorts, no beach clubs, and none of the usual tourist traps.

With a population of only 7,185—as of a 2020 count, anyway—it is a sleepy, peaceful coastal community where the usual concerning headlines coming out of larger urban centers seem like a distant concern, and social cohesion remains at an all-time high.

Revolving around a picture-perfect colonial center, largely preserved from the 19th-century, when Todos Santos truly thrived as a fishing port in Baja California Sur. If you’ve been craving a change of scenery and you feel like slowing things down a notch, there’s truly nowhere better to be than here:

Digital nomad with laptop under palm treeDigital nomad with laptop under palm tree

Slow-Living By The Pacific

Todos Santos may be small and unassuming, but it’s absolutely packed with manmade and natural wonders, and we’re not sure about you, but there’s nothing that gets our creative juices flowing quite like being surrounded by beauty on all sides.

With its romantic plazas, including a scenic Plaza del Beso (Kiss Square), pedestrian-friendly lanes framed by colorful regional banderoles, and boutique-dotted center, Todos Santos feels like a breath of fresh air after a month-long stint in a sprawling conurbation like CDMX.

It doesn’t have the same wide range of coffee shops and coworking spots, sure, but the cozy café culture, intimate feel of the local community, and slow-paced rhythm more than make up for the lack of cosmopolitan feel.

And let’s face it, working from a patio while taking in the details of a colonial mission church dating back to the 18th century, right on the main square, does help lift the spirits up after having American suburbia for view for months.

A Street In The Historic Center Of Todos Santos, MexicoA Street In The Historic Center Of Todos Santos, Mexico

Beautiful Beaches Galore

Of course, it sure doesn’t hurt that Todos Santos is a short drive away from some of the most beautiful beaches in Baja.

A short 1.5 mile from the downtown and easily-reached by bike or even on foot, Playa La Cachora is a long sandy strip hugged by azure seas. Unlike the overdeveloped coastal stretches off Cabo, it feels far more natural and unpretentious, without the backing of five-star resorts and luxurious spas.

Playa Punta Lobos is equally stunning, and a popular sunset spot among locals. If you’re renting a car during your stay, drive south on Highway 19 until the Km 54 marker, then verge off west on a dirt road. The beach will be some 1.5 miles from that point onward.

For the iconic, postcard-worthy beach in the area, Playa San Pedrito, near El Pescadero, is the place to go. A 15 min drive away, it’s great not only for beach walks and sunbathing, but it offers epic waves for surfing, and it’s within easy access of Todos Santos on the Carretera Transpeninsular.

Woman walking on a beach in Todos Santos, MexicoWoman walking on a beach in Todos Santos, Mexico

Is Todos Santos Cheap For Long-Term Stays?

Naturally, as a small town, Todos Santos does not boast the same diversity of accommodation options, nor the competitive prices you’d get in larger urban centers south of the border.

That doesn’t mean it’s exactly that much more expensive—it’s surely cheaper than resort-dominated Cabo San Lucas or its accompanying vacation hub San José del Cabo—but you should expect a more limited range of prices, and standardized rates for long-term accommodation.

Unless you’re signing a local rental contract, monthly Airbnb rates during peak winter months can be as high as $3,289, with the cheapest cottage-style, private stays starting at $1,364 in the off-season.

While the “live like a king for cheap” mantra doesn’t quite hold here anymore, particularly with nomads flocking in from big cities, swapping urban chaos and insecurity for Todos Santos’ peace and quiet is still a smart trade, especially with similar monthly costs in CDMX.

Digital-nomad-at-work-outsideDigital-nomad-at-work-outside

Why Todos Santos Is A Great Nomad Hub Alternative In 2026

Starlink Is Here

As reported by The Cabo Sun, the ease of traveling with Starlink to Todos Santos is a major upgrade for nomads, and nothing short of a game-changer. While security isn’t really a common cause for complaint, bad Wi-Fi across Baja was a widely-known issue, and this is probably no longer the case.

Sargassum-Free Beaches

Swim-appropriate beaches year-round. You know the sargassum nightmare that often spoils your perfect workcation out in the Mexican Caribbean? The Pacific is largely shielded from the proliferation of seaweed, and beaches in the vicinity of Todos Santos stay clean regardless of season.

Nomad Infrastructure Already In Place

There are plenty of digital nomad-friendly eateries to pick from. Todos Santos is not another one of those offbeat Mexican beach towns with nonexistent infrastructure, where you’ll find yourself hiding away in your Airbnb all the time, as there are no cafés or anywhere to go to socialize.

Todos Santos beach in MexicoTodos Santos beach in Mexico
An Expat-Friendly Hotel

Perro Surfero is a tried-and-true nomad refuge in Todos Santos: a boutique hotel specifically designed for them, it features a homely feel, dedicated workspaces, and the vibe is more community-centered (if your budget allows $90-on-accommodation-per-night).

Quiet Means Quiet

If your primary goal is to relax and have a stress-free couple of weeks by the ocean, this is the place for you. However, if you can’t live without 24-hour convenience stores, DiDi deliveries in the dead of night when the munchies hit, or barefoot raving on the sand, maybe stick to Tulum over on the Caribbean side.

The Travel Off Path Advantage: Your Travel Toolkit

/* Scoped Styles for the Promo Box to prevent theme conflicts */
.top-promo-wrapper-v2 {
font-family: ‘Poppins’, sans-serif;
max-width: 896px;
margin: 2.5rem auto;
background-color: #ffffff;
padding: 2rem;
border-radius: 1.5rem; /* Increased for a softer look */
box-shadow: 0 10px 25px -5px rgba(0,0,0,0.1), 0 8px 10px -6px rgba(0,0,0,0.1);
border: 1px solid #e5e7eb;
}
.top-promo-grid-v2 {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: repeat(1, minmax(0, 1fr));
gap: 1.5rem;
}
.top-promo-card-v2 {
display: block;
padding: 1.5rem;
border-radius: 1rem;
text-align: center;
border-width: 1px;
transition: transform 0.2s ease-in-out, box-shadow 0.2s ease-in-out;
text-decoration: none !important; /* FIX: Added !important to override theme styles */
}
.top-promo-card-v2:hover {
transform: translateY(-5px);
box-shadow: 0 10px 20px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1);
text-decoration: none !important; /* FIX: Ensure no underline on hover */
}
.top-promo-card-v2 .icon-container {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: 0.75rem;
}
.top-promo-card-v2 .icon-circle {
width: 3rem;
height: 3rem;
border-radius: 9999px;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
justify-content: center;
}
.top-promo-card-v2 .icon-svg {
width: 1.5rem;
height: 1.5rem;
color: #ffffff;
}
.top-promo-card-v2 .icon-svg-fb {
width: 1.75rem;
height: 1.75rem;
color: #ffffff;
}
.top-promo-card-v2 h3 {
font-size: 1.25rem;
line-height: 1.75rem;
font-weight: 700;
margin: 0;
text-decoration: none !important; /* FIX: Prevent underline on child elements */
}
.top-promo-card-v2 p {
font-size: 0.9rem;
line-height: 1.4rem;
margin-top: 0.5rem;
color: #4b5563;
text-wrap: pretty;
text-decoration: none !important; /* FIX: Prevent underline on child elements */
}
/* Specific colors */
.top-promo-card-v2.purple { background-color: #faf5ff; border-color: #e9d5ff; }
.top-promo-card-v2.purple:hover { border-color: #c084fc; }
.top-promo-card-v2.purple .icon-circle { background-color: #7e22ce; }
.top-promo-card-v2.purple h3 { color: #5b21b6; }

/* Responsive grid for larger screens */
@media (min-width: 768px) {
.top-promo-grid-v2 {
grid-template-columns: repeat(2, minmax(0, 1fr));
}
/* Make the first card span the full width */
.top-promo-grid-v2 > a:first-child {
grid-column: span 2 / span 2;
}
}

Subscribe To Our Latest Posts

Enter your email address to subscribe to Travel Off Path’s latest breaking travel news, straight to your inbox.

***
This article has been archived by Slow Travel News for your research. The original version from Travel Off Path can be found here.
Copyright © All rights reserved. | Newsphere by AF themes.