Canyon views meet dirt-road thrills. A Wild Canyon Park Pass in Cabo San Lucas stacks big outdoor stuff in one 5-hour block: you’ll bounce from off-road rides and zip lines over the oasis to a rescued animal sanctuary and a cooling water zone. I especially like the unlimited zip lines idea, because it keeps your day flexible if lines or pacing slow you down. The other big win is how the day is kept practical with free lockers and water refills. One possible drawback: if you’re banking on every high-adrenaline option, some activities can be off-limits due to height/vertigo fears or rider weight, and busy days can mean waiting between stations.
If you hate heights, skip it. The park includes a glass-bottom gondola suspended 300 feet above the canyon, plus suspension bridges. If you’re traveling with kids, keep an eye on weight limits for the bungee/swing options, and plan on heat and walking.
In This Review
- Key Highlights to Know Before You Go
- Wild Canyon Pass: The Value Is in the Variety (Not Just the Price)
- Pickup in Los Cabos: Smooth for Some, Tight for Others
- First Stop Vibe: Kingdom Rescued Animals (A Breather, Not a Side Quest)
- Off-Road ATVs and UTVs: Fun, Dusty, and Very Procedure-Driven
- UTVs: Oasis Views, Double-Vehicle Riding
- ATVs: Desert-to-Beach Energy
- What I’d plan for
- Guides you may hear named
- Zip Lines Up to 2,673 Feet: Why Unlimited Matters (and When It Won’t Feel Unlimited)
- My practical advice for zip line day
- The Glass-Bottom Gondola: Giant Swing or Bungee at 300 Feet
- Camel Ride and Horse Riding: Fun, But It’s Not Always Long
- Canyon Bridge Crossing: Suspension Views Without Needing a Fear of Heights
- Wagona Splash Island: Cooling Off (But It’s Not a Beach Pool Day)
- Food, Drinks, and Photos: Budget for On-Site Temptations
- Safety Equipment and the Insurance You’ll See at Check-In
- Who This Park Pass Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
- You’ll likely enjoy it if you:
- You should think twice if you:
- The Big Picture Verdict: Worth It for the Right Day Plan
- Should You Book Wild Canyon Adventures Park Pass?
- FAQ
- What activities are included with the Wild Canyon Park Pass?
- Is zip lining unlimited with this pass?
- Does the price include lockers and water?
- How does hotel pickup work?
- What extra costs are not included?
- What’s the daily time window for the experience?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key Highlights to Know Before You Go

- Unlimited zip lines (real steel Swedish line lengths up to 2,673 feet), so you can repeat if your schedule allows
- Kingdom rescued animal sanctuary, with time to see animals in a calmer, slower setting than the rides
- Glass-bottom gondola 300 feet up for choosing bungee jump or giant swing
- ATV and UTV courses built for speed through Baja desert, with training before you start
- Free lockers plus hydration refill stations, so you don’t have to pay for basic water
- Wagona Splash Island helps you cool off, but it’s more kid-friendly than you might expect
Wild Canyon Pass: The Value Is in the Variety (Not Just the Price)
At $249 per person for about 5 hours, this pass is aiming to replace the “one thing per day” Cabo problem. You’re not just buying one thrill. You’re buying a whole menu: off-road vehicles, zip lines, canyon crossing, animal time, and a water stop.
That variety is exactly where the value comes from. If you love fast rides, ATVs and UTVs do the job. If you want views and photos (and less dust on your face), the zip lines and canyon bridge help you slow down. If you want a break from adrenaline, the sanctuary and splash area give your body a reset.
The catch is simple: your day can only fit so much. If you try to cram everything at peak times, you may end up with waits between activities or find that certain options have timing limits. One more reality check: the park opens and runs through a tight window (9:00 AM to 2:30 PM), so you’ll feel it if your pickup or check-in starts late.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cabo San Lucas.
Pickup in Los Cabos: Smooth for Some, Tight for Others

The day starts at Wild Canyon Adventures near San José del Cabo (Carretera Federal Libre Transpeninsular, KM Cabo San Lucas–San José del Cabo). The activity returns to the same meeting point.
Pickup is offered from most hotels in Cabo San Lucas, the Tourist Corridor, and San José del Cabo. There are also two broad pickup zones: Puerto Paraiso (Cabo San Lucas) and Mega (San José del Cabo).
Two practical notes based on what can go wrong:
- If you’re staying in Diamante, Hard Rock Hotel, Nobú, Rancho Cabo San Lucas, Zadun, Acre, Flora Farms, El Encanto de la Laguna, you should expect extra time and a $20 USD per person transportation supplement.
- When pickup lands later than planned, your day can shrink fast, since the park is only open until mid-afternoon.
So if you’re able, I’d plan to be ready early. Think of this as a half-day mission where timing affects what you can actually finish.
First Stop Vibe: Kingdom Rescued Animals (A Breather, Not a Side Quest)

One of the most praised parts is the Kingdom rescued animal sanctuary. After the bus ride and early adrenaline talk, it’s a nice change of pace. You get to slow down, walk at a human speed, and see rescued animals up close in a dedicated area.
This part matters more than it sounds. If your group is split—some people want maximum thrills and others want something lighter—the sanctuary can keep everyone satisfied. It also gives you shade-and-rest moments before you commit to more heat and activity.
Also, don’t treat it like a quick photo stop. People tend to enjoy it most when they actually spend time watching how the animals interact and how the staff guides you.
Off-Road ATVs and UTVs: Fun, Dusty, and Very Procedure-Driven
This is where Wild Canyon leans into what Baja does well: speed and terrain.
UTVs: Oasis Views, Double-Vehicle Riding
With UTVs, you’ll ride a double vehicle and work toward the kind of “oasis” scenery the park talks about. The big feel here is motion plus views. You’ll typically want to listen carefully during any training or safety briefing, because you’re driving on a course with rules.
ATVs: Desert-to-Beach Energy
The ATV experience is described as heading to the beach at full speed through the desert. That’s basically the park’s way of telling you: expect dust, expect vibration, and expect you’ll earn your water bottle refills.
What I’d plan for
You should assume you’ll be waiting at least some periods between vehicle groups. Off-road rides run in blocks. One person can’t just jump onto a UTV whenever they feel like it.
Also, some riders get dusty more than others depending on position in the line. If you’re worried about sunscreen and makeup survival, bring goggles or wear something you don’t mind getting grit on.
Guides you may hear named
Staff names repeatedly praised include Emmanuel (ATV/UTV guiding), Panda (ATV/UTV guidance), Rafael (ATV fun), and Nemo (ATV instructor). Even when the course is intense, these guides are mentioned for keeping things safe and fun.
Zip Lines Up to 2,673 Feet: Why Unlimited Matters (and When It Won’t Feel Unlimited)

Zip lining is arguably the star attraction of a Park Pass day. The park promises unlimited zip lines, using Swedish steel ziplines up to 2,673 feet in length—think nearly 8 football fields.
Here’s the honest take on how unlimited works in real life:
- You may repeat lines when your schedule allows.
- On busy days, you might not be able to do every line if your time gets pulled by other activities, earlier-than-expected closures, or group rotation.
One theme that pops up is that long uphill hiking can be part of getting to the longer lines, so you should treat zip lining as both cardio and adrenaline.
My practical advice for zip line day
- Wear shoes you trust. You’ll be walking more than you think.
- Bring a water container you can refill. Hydration stations are included, and it helps a lot in Cabo heat.
- If you care about the longest lines, do those earlier rather than assuming your schedule will magically stay open.
Zip line staff and the ride itself are frequently described as amazing—just don’t ignore the walking and waiting that comes with moving groups through an attraction chain.
The Glass-Bottom Gondola: Giant Swing or Bungee at 300 Feet

If you want one moment that feels like a real cliffhanger, this is it: a glass-bottom gondola suspended 300 feet above the canyon.
From there, you choose your adrenaline level:
- Giant swing (alone or with someone)
- Bungee jump
This is where I’d be extra careful with planning and expectations. Some families found that bungee/swing wasn’t possible for kids under 110 lbs. If your group includes younger kids, verify rider requirements before you fall in love with the idea.
The upside? The people who did get to jump or swing tend to call it a once-you-do-it-you-remember-it experience.
You may see staff names like Angel and Augustine tied to the giant swing experience, with praise for safety and enthusiasm while you’re getting harnessed and launched.
Camel Ride and Horse Riding: Fun, But It’s Not Always Long

There’s a reason the camel time gets high marks. People mention it as unexpectedly great, with guides who teach you how to interact and even feed the animals.
That said, this is still a theme-park timing reality. Some visitors felt camel and horse rides were more like a shorter, guided loop than the big adventure they expected. Horses are described as following a course you don’t have to steer much yourself—more guided than hands-on.
If you go in with the right mindset, you’ll probably enjoy it more. Treat it like a short, cute, photo-worthy break that balances the dirt and sky.
Also, some guides mentioned include Jesus (praised for making people feel welcome) and camel staff who are called out as amazing.
Canyon Bridge Crossing: Suspension Views Without Needing a Fear of Heights

The Los Cabos Canyon Bridge is a suspension bridge experience. You’re crossing the canyon, so yes, it comes with height.
If you’re afraid of heights or have vertigo, you’re warned not to do this activity. If you’re okay with heights, people say the bridge isn’t as scary as it looks once you’re actually out there—though everyone’s limits vary.
This stop is a good “midday reset.” You get big views, but it’s not as physically intense as a vehicle or zip line run.
Wagona Splash Island: Cooling Off (But It’s Not a Beach Pool Day)
When the heat hits, Wagona Splash Island is a welcome break. You’ll find water slides and a water zone to cool off.
Just keep your expectations grounded. One pattern in feedback is that the slides and pool skew toward smaller kids: shallow water, lots of younger children, and not a deep swim situation.
That doesn’t make it bad. It makes it practical. Adults and older kids can use it to rinse off, cool down, and reset between adrenaline blocks.
Food, Drinks, and Photos: Budget for On-Site Temptations
Lunch isn’t included. You’ll likely face choices inside the park: food and drinks are available on-site, and people mention items like shrimp nachos, burgers, margaritas, and even tequila tasting.
That’s fun, but it’s not part of the included value math. If you want to keep the day from turning into a spend fest, eat before you arrive or plan your on-site meal early and stick to a budget.
Photos are another variable. Some folks liked the GoPro-friendly setup (equipment has holders), and some described photo sales as worth it, especially for big adrenaline moments. Others disliked how packages were offered or re-priced during discussions.
So I’d treat photo packages like any impulse buy:
- Decide your budget before you walk away from the photographer.
- If a price changes, stop and think. You’re already paid for the day.
Safety Equipment and the Insurance You’ll See at Check-In
Safety gear for the activities is included, and free lockers plus hydration refill stations help you show up prepared.
What’s not included is collision insurance per driver. You’ll pay at check-in or have a charge held based on the final number of drivers.
This matters for groups. If you’re splitting vehicles with multiple drivers, the “not included” cost can add up fast. If you want to minimize surprises:
- Know how many people will drive.
- Confirm what you’re paying for at check-in so the total matches your plan.
Who This Park Pass Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
This Park Pass is built for people who want variety and can handle a hot, active half-day.
You’ll likely enjoy it if you:
- Want off-road + aerial thrills in one place
- Have a group where people want different things (vehicles, zip lines, animals, water)
- Like a “pace yourself” day where you can choose what to do first
- Appreciate a park that keeps things moving through activity stations
You should think twice if you:
- Have vertigo or fear of heights (bridge and 300-foot gondola are not for you)
- Have mobility limits or visual/motor/respiratory disabilities (it’s not recommended)
- Are traveling with kids who may be under the bungee/swing rider weight requirements
Heat is also a real factor. Wear sun protection like you mean it, and don’t plan to feel fresh after lunch—this is an outdoors day.
The Big Picture Verdict: Worth It for the Right Day Plan
Wild Canyon’s Park Pass is best described as a one-stop action park with practical extras. You get a strong mix: off-road rides, long zip lines, big canyon experiences, rescued-animal time, and splash-down cooling.
Where it can disappoint is usually the “human schedule” part—waiting between activities, time limits that make certain options feel out of reach, and extra costs like collision insurance that kick in at check-in. A few families also felt the bungee/swing rules limited what their kids could do, and some felt camel/horse time was shorter than expected.
If you go in with a plan—do the highest-priority adrenaline first, keep an eye on rider requirements, and accept that this is a hot walking day—you’ll likely feel you got your money’s worth.
Should You Book Wild Canyon Adventures Park Pass?
Yes, if you want a high-energy Cabo half-day where you can mix ATV/UTV riding, zip lines, and canyon thrills with calmer breaks at the animal sanctuary and Splash Island. It’s especially compelling when you’re traveling with a mixed-age group that needs variety.
I’d book with extra caution if your group includes riders under 110 lbs for bungee/swing, anyone with vertigo or strong height anxiety, or anyone who needs lots of mobility support. In those cases, the odds of frustration go up—mostly because the park’s signature features aren’t optional for the people they’re not safe for.
FAQ
What activities are included with the Wild Canyon Park Pass?
The Park Pass includes access to UTVs and ATVs, bungee or swing options from the glass-bottom gondola, camel rides, unlimited zip lines, horse riding, the rescued animal sanctuary called Kingdom, suspension bridges, and Wagona Splash Island water slides.
Is zip lining unlimited with this pass?
The pass includes unlimited zip lines, and the zip lines are described as Swedish steel ziplines with lengths up to 2,673 feet.
Does the price include lockers and water?
Yes. Free lockers are included, and there are hydration (water) stations where you can refill a bottle for free. The info says to bring your own container.
How does hotel pickup work?
Pickup is offered from most hotels in Cabo San Lucas, the Tourist Corridor, and San Jose del Cabo. There are also two general pickup points: Puerto Paraiso in Cabo San Lucas and Mega in San Jose del Cabo. Diamante and several other hotel zones have a $20 USD per person transportation supplement.
What extra costs are not included?
Lunch and alcoholic beverages are not included. Collision insurance per driver is also not included and is paid at check-in (or a charge may be held based on the final number of drivers).
What’s the daily time window for the experience?
The park is listed as open Monday through Sunday from 9:00 AM to 2:30 PM.
Can I cancel for free?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.
























