Colorful street food stalls and fresh ceviche on the La Paz Malecón, Baja California Sur, Mexico
Food & Drink

Food Tour La Paz Mexico: Street Food, Tacos, Seafood & Spirits (2026)

Written by: Cabo Tour Guides Content Last Updated May 2026 8 min read
Price
From $53
Per person
Duration
1–4 hrs
Walking & tastings
Season
Year-round
Daily departures
Top Pick
$81
Baja Food Tours

La Paz has one of the most distinct food identities in Mexico, built on chocolata clams, Baja-style fish tacos, and spirits from seven protected designations of origin. These guided tours get you inside the local food culture in three hours or less.

What You Should Know

  • All five tours are run by two operators: Baja Food Tours (street food, tacos, seafood; all ages; 3–4 hours; from $81) and Mexican Spirits Club (tequila and spirits tastings; 18+ only; 1–1.5 hours; from $53).
  • The walking tours cover roughly 2 km on uneven downtown pavement with around 11,000 steps. La Paz is not flat. Wear comfortable closed-toe shoes and arrive with an empty stomach; each tour covers a full meal's worth of food.
  • All three walking tours include all food, dessert, and a welcome drink. Stops are at small local spots most visitors never find on their own; shark tacos, chocolata clams, and market specialties appear because the guide chooses them, not because they are on tourist menus.
  • The spirits tastings are 18+ and held on a rooftop at Bermejo Suites. The short session covers 4 distillate tastings with a Damiana and flavoured tequila dessert pour but no food; the full 1.5-hour session adds 10+ spirits and extensive food pairings.

Food Tours in La Paz, Mexico

A food tour in La Paz, Mexico is one of the most effective ways to understand Baja California Sur quickly. La Paz has a distinct culinary identity shaped by its geography: endemic seafood from the Sea of Cortez, a tradition of dried meats and handmade tortillas, and a spirits culture built around seven certified Mexican distillates with protected designations of origin. Guided tours get you into the hole-in-the-wall spots and local markets you won't find by walking the Malecón on your own. This guide covers all five bookable La Paz food and drink tours, split between walking food tours and tequila and spirits tastings.

Best Food Walking Tours in La Paz

Baja Food Tours runs three walking tours, each built around a different slice of La Paz's food identity. Here's how we'd frame each one and who it suits.

1
Best Overall

Baja Street Food Tour (3–4 hours, from $81/person)

The morning walking tour is our pick for the best first-day activity in La Paz, because the guide doubles as a local historian and leaves you with a mental map of where to eat for the rest of your stay. Starting at the cathedral steps at 9 AM, your guide takes you through roughly nine stops covering traditional Baja-style fish tacos, shark tacos at a food truck, machaca at a local butcher, empanadas, churros, and seasonal specialties including chocolata clams, an endemic Sea of Cortez bivalve you won't find on tourist menus. The tour weaves in La Paz history, neighborhood murals, and Mercado Francisco I. Madero. The final stop is a dessert in an art gallery setting. All food and dessert plus one drink are included. Groups capped at 8.

Check availability
2

Taco Trail Tour: Traditional to Gourmet (3–4 hours, from $105/person)

The evening taco tour departs at 6 PM and is deliberately structured: it starts with mesoamerican blue corn tortilla tacos and progresses through traditional and fusion styles to gourmet variants, visiting street taquerias and sit-down restaurants in the same evening. All food, dessert, and a welcome drink (beer or agua fresca) are included. Max 8. We'd lean toward this one if tacos are specifically what you're after or if you want an evening activity. The food overlaps minimally with the morning street food tour. Note: a minority of reviewers felt the price was high relative to the food quantity; most were satisfied.

Check availability
3

Seafood Tour La Paz (3 hours, from $108/person)

The seafood tour focuses entirely on what the Sea of Cortez produces: chocolata clams, Pacific oysters, ceviche, tuna sashimi, aguachile with shrimp, and scallops, all sourced seasonally at small, family-run spots away from the tourist strip. All food, dessert, and a welcome drink are included. About 2 km of walking through local neighborhoods. We'd book this for anyone who wants to build an entire meal around Baja's coastal food identity; it's also the best option if you've already done the street food tour and want to go deeper on seafood specifically. Max 8.

Check availability
Our Top Pick

Baja Food Tours: Baja Street Food Tour

From $81  ·  ⭐ 4.8 (84 reviews)

The most-reviewed food tour in La Paz, covering roughly nine stops of tacos, shark tacos, machaca, and endemic chocolata clams in a single morning, with all food, dessert, and a drink included.

Book Now

Best Food Walking Tour Operators in La Paz: Side-by-Side Comparison

Tour OperatorPriceOnline RatingAgesCapacityDurationTimeFood IncludedDrink Included
Top Rated
Baja Food Tours
Baja Street Food Tour
Book Now
From $81 ⭐ 4.8 (84 reviews)
Read Reviews
All ages Max 8 3–4 hours Morning (~9 AM) All food and dessert 1 complimentary drink
Baja Food Tours
Taco Trail Tour
Book Now
From $105 ⭐ 4.9 (26 reviews)
Read Reviews
All ages Max 8 3–4 hours Evening (~6 PM) All food (4+ taco stops + dessert) Welcome drink (beer or agua fresca)
Baja Food Tours
Seafood Tour
Book Now
From $108 ⭐ 4.9 (12 reviews)
Read Reviews
18+ for wine Max 8 3 hours Varies All seafood (clams, oysters, ceviche, aguachile, scallops) Welcome drink

ℹ️ All tours and information were personally reviewed by our team on May 6, 2026. Prices and availability may change — always confirm with the operator before booking.

Option 2 · Book

Book the Most Popular Option Directly

Live pricing and dates for the top-rated Baja Street Food Tour — pick your date below.

  • All food and dessert included
  • One complimentary drink
  • Small group (max 8)
  • Local guide with history & art background
  • Endemic chocolata clams & shark tacos
  • No hotel pickup (meet at cathedral)

We may earn a commission on bookings made through this link — at no extra cost to you.

What to Expect on a La Paz Food Tour

The Baja Food Tours walking tours (street food, taco trail, seafood) all follow the same format:

  1. 01Start

    Meeting point

    Front door of the Catedral de Nuestra Señora de La Paz, Calle 5 de Mayo and Revolución de 1910, facing Jardín Velasco. No sign or desk; look for a small group forming at the cathedral steps.

  2. 0210–15 min

    Orientation

    The guide introduces the route, the history of La Paz's food culture, and the neighborhood context before the first stop. Guides often have backgrounds in local art and history; mural explanations and plant identification are common along the route.

  3. 032.5–3 hrs

    Food stops

    Six to nine stops, roughly 2 km on foot. Each stop has 1–2 items. Stops mix city markets, street vendors, food trucks, and sit-down spots in the same tour. The food includes items most travelers would not order on their own; shark tacos, chocolata clams, and machaca preparations come up specifically because the guide chooses them. The guide's curation is the main differentiator; without it, most of these spots would never appear on a first-time visitor's radar.

  4. 04Throughout

    Walking load

    Around 11,000 steps on uneven pavement, with some inclines. La Paz is not flat. Most reviewers flag more walking than expected. Wear comfortable closed-toe shoes. Guides build in rest breaks.

  5. 05Finish

    Return

    Tours end near the cathedral. The street food tour wraps before noon; the taco trail ends around 9:00–10:00 PM.

The Mexican Spirits Club tastings involve no walking. You arrive at Bermejo Suites (second floor, rooftop terrace), sit down, and the host works through each spirit with a structured presentation. The 1-hour session covers 4 distillates plus a dessert pour; the 1.5-hour session covers 10+ with food pairings. Book the 6:00 PM slot for the Malecón sunset view. Confirm the La Paz address at booking, as the operator also runs sessions in Cabo San Lucas.

Tequila and Spirits Tastings in La Paz

Mexican Spirits Club runs two tasting sessions from a rooftop at Bermejo Suites (Belisario Domínguez 1514, second floor) overlooking the Sea of Cortez. Both are 18+ only, available at 12:30 PM or 6:00 PM, and structured as educational experiences covering production process, regional geography, and flavor identification before each pour. Neither is a bar session: you sit at a table and the host works through each spirit in a fixed sequence, with the educational context front-loaded before each pour rather than served alongside it.

1
Best Value

Spirit of Mexico: Tequila Tasting (1 hour, from $53/person)

The introductory session covers 4 tequila or distillate tastings of your choice, with a dessert course of Damiana liqueur and flavoured tequila. No food is included. Max 10 guests. We like this option for travelers who want a genuine tequila education in under an hour, without committing to the full pairing menu or a $105 price tag.

Check availability
2

Spirits of Mexico: Full Tasting and Pairing (1.5 hours, from $105/person)

The full session covers 10+ artisanal distillates across tequila, mezcal, sotol, raicilla, bacanora, and charanda, each with a protected Mexican designation of origin. It includes a welcome mezcal cocktail and extensive food pairings: shrimp, steak, chocolate, cheese, worm salt, chapulines, guava candy, mole, and a dessert of tequila-based chocolate liquor with ice cream. We'd give this the edge for anyone who takes spirits seriously or wants a full sit-down pairing experience. Max 10.

Check availability

Best Tequila Tasting Operators in La Paz: Side-by-Side Comparison

Tour OperatorPriceOnline RatingAgesCapacityDurationTimeFood IncludedDrink Included
Mexican Spirits Club
Spirit of Mexico: Tequila Tasting
Book Now
From $53 ⭐ 4.6 (26 reviews)
Read Reviews
18+ Max 10 1 hour 12:30 PM or 6 PM 4 tequila/distillate tastings; dessert: Damiana liqueur & flavoured tequila
Mexican Spirits Club
Spirits of Mexico: Full Tasting
Book Now
From $105 ⭐ 4.5 (37 reviews)
Read Reviews
18+ Max 10 1.5 hours 12:30 PM or 6 PM Extensive pairings (shrimp, steak, chocolate, chapulines, mole, ice cream) 10+ spirit tastings + welcome mezcal cocktail

ℹ️ All tours and information were personally reviewed by our team on May 6, 2026. Prices and availability may change — always confirm with the operator before booking.

How Much Do Food Tours in La Paz Cost?

Walking food tours range from $81 (street food, 3–4 hours, all food and dessert included) to $108 (seafood tour, 3 hours). The taco trail is $105 for a 3–4 hour evening tour. Spirits tastings start at $53 for 1 hour or $105 for the 1.5-hour full pairing session. See current prices on Viator

Spirits tasting$53

Short tequila session (1 hour) — 4 distillate tastings and a dessert pour, no food. The most affordable way into La Paz's spirits culture.

Food walking tour$81–108

All three Baja Food Tours options include all food, dessert, and a welcome drink. The street food tour at $81 covers the most stops and has the highest review volume; the seafood tour at $108 is the most expensive walking option; the taco trail at $105 is evening-only.

Full spirits pairing$105

The 1.5-hour full tasting adds 10+ distillates, a welcome cocktail, and extensive food pairings. The price gap reflects food and spirits volume, not a quality difference.

The sweet spot for most visitors is the Baja Street Food Tour at $81: the most food, the most time, and the highest review volume of any tour in this guide.

From Our Experience

What we consistently see in reviews is that doing the street food tour on your first full day in La Paz is the single best use of your time. Guides orient you to the city, introduce local vendors, and give you a map of where to return. Travelers who did it mid-trip or on the last day regularly said they wished they had started with it.

Tips for Booking a La Paz Food Tour

  • Book the street food tour for day one: You'll leave with a working knowledge of where to eat for the rest of your trip, which local spots to revisit, and what to order. Travelers who took this tour early consistently returned to specific stops on subsequent days.
  • Arrive with an empty stomach: Every walking tour covers a full meal's worth of food plus dessert. Eating before wastes the experience. The seafood tour in particular packs in six distinct seafood dishes.
  • Wear comfortable closed-toe shoes: Around 11,000 steps on uneven pavement with some inclines. La Paz is not flat. Flip-flops and dress shoes are a poor choice.
  • Expect the food to include things you would not order on your own: Shark tacos, chocolata clams, machaca preparations, and regional market items come up because the guide chooses them. That's a core part of the value; don't eat a big breakfast and arrive with a plan to skip stops.
  • If you're visiting around major holidays, confirm the route in advance: Regular stops can be closed around New Year's and other holiday periods. Guides adapt, but the standard route may vary.
  • Book the 6:00 PM spirits session for the sunset view: The Mexican Spirits Club rooftop overlooks the Sea of Cortez. The evening slot lines up with La Paz's Malecón sunset; the 12:30 PM session does not.
  • Confirm the La Paz address for the spirits tasting: The operator runs sessions in both La Paz and Cabo San Lucas. Multiple guests have arrived at the wrong venue. Check the address in your confirmation email the day before.
  • Vegetarians are accommodated on all three walking tours: Every stop has a vegetarian option. Let your guide know at the start.

How We Selected These Tours

The Cabo Tour Guides team reviewed all bookable La Paz food and drink experiences on Viator, weighting guide quality, food variety, and cultural depth for walking tours, and educational structure and spirit selection breadth for tastings. We excluded tours with fewer than 8 verified reviews or unclear inclusions. We selected across four formats: street food overview, taco trail, seafood-only, and two spirits tasting tiers, so you can choose based on the experience you actually want.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are food tours in La Paz worth it?+

Yes, particularly if La Paz is new to you. The guides are locals who take you to vendors and markets you wouldn't find on your own, and the cultural context they provide changes how you understand what you're eating. The Baja Street Food Tour is consistently described by reviewers as something they wish they'd done on day one of their trip.

How much do food tours in La Paz cost?+

Walking food tours range from $81 (street food, 3–4 hours) to $108 (seafood tour, 3 hours); the taco trail is $105. All include food, dessert, and a welcome drink. Mexican Spirits Club tastings start at $53 for 1 hour (4 distillates, no food) or $105 for the 1.5-hour full session with food pairings.

What food is La Paz known for?+

La Paz is known for chocolata clams (an endemic Sea of Cortez bivalve), Baja-style fish tacos, machaca (traditional dried shredded beef), ceviche, and aguachile. It also has a distinct spirits culture built around tequila, mezcal, sotol, raicilla, bacanora, and charanda, each a certified Mexican spirit with a protected designation of origin.

How long are food tours in La Paz?+

The Baja Food Tours walking tours (street food, taco trail, seafood) run 3–4 hours and cover roughly 2 km on foot through downtown. Mexican Spirits Club tastings are 1 hour (6 distillates) or 1.5 hours (10+ distillates). There are no full-day food tour options currently bookable in La Paz.

Do La Paz food tours accommodate vegetarians?+

Yes. Baja Food Tours explicitly offers vegetarian options at every stop on all three walking tours: street food, taco trail, and seafood. Let your guide know at the start. Mexican Spirits Club tastings are not food-focused, but non-alcoholic alternatives are available.

What is the best food tour in La Paz?+

The Baja Street Food Tour ($81, 3–4 hours, max 8 guests) has the highest review volume and covers the broadest range of Baja food culture in a single morning. For a seafood-focused experience, the Seafood Tour ($108, 3 hours) is the best option. For spirits, the full Mexican Spirits Club tasting ($105, 1.5 hours) is more comprehensive than the shorter $53 introductory session.

Is La Paz or Cabo better for food tours?+

La Paz has the more interesting food culture for a guided tour. The food identity is more distinct (endemic seafood, machaca, Baja-specific preparations), the downtown walking circuit is compact and walkable, and guide-to-guest ratios are smaller. Cabo has a tequila tasting experience but fewer dedicated food walking tours. If food is the priority, La Paz is the better base.

Affiliate note: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

Other Popular Tours

Loading tours…

Related Guides

Book Now