Jalisco (Pacific Coast)
The Malecon and El Centro
Puerto Vallarta's mile-long seafront promenade and old-town core: bronze sculptures, the crowned Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe a few streets back, and the nightly sunset stroll. Free, and best done in the early evening.
Where
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Opening hours
Open access (always open). The promenade and the old-town streets are public and free at any hour; the church keeps its own daily visiting hours around services, and bars, galleries and shops run their own evening-leaning hours.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed to walk the Malecon, see the sculptures or wander El Centro. The Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe is free to enter, dress respectfully; you only spend on food, drinks, galleries or the buskers if you choose to.
Time needed
An hour or two for an early-evening stroll along the Malecon and up into El Centro; longer if you stop for dinner, galleries and the sunset.
In short
Visiting The Malecon and El Centro
The Malecon is Puerto Vallarta's mile-long seafront promenade and the free, do-it-on-arrival walk: bronze sculptures, street performers, bars and the nightly sunset crowd. A few streets back, El Centro's cobbled lanes climb to the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe with its distinctive crowned tower. Walk it in the early evening when the heat eases and the promenade comes alive, not in the midday sun.
The seafront promenade
The Malecon is Puerto Vallartaโs mile-long seafront promenade, and it is the free thing you can do the moment you arrive. It runs the length of the old townโs waterfront, paved and pedestrianised, studded with the cityโs well-known bronze sculptures and lined with bars, galleries, ice-cream stalls and restaurants. In the evenings it fills with street performers โ musicians, sand sculptors, the occasional clay-painted statue act โ and the whole place takes on a relaxed, carnival air as the sunset colours the bay.
The single most useful tip is when to walk it. Midday here is hot and the promenade is exposed, so leave it until the early evening, when the heat eases, the light softens and the crowds come out. Start at one end, drift the length of it, and let it deliver you to dinner.
Up into El Centro
A few streets back from the water, El Centro is the cobbled old town that climbs the hillside. The landmark is the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe, whose distinctive crowned tower is the cityโs emblem; it is free to step inside if you dress respectfully and a service isnโt on. Around it the lanes are full of small galleries, taquerรญas and rooftop bars, and the gentle climb rewards you with views back down over the rooftops to the sea.
None of it needs a ticket โ you only spend if you eat, drink, buy art or tip the buskers. Treat the Malecon and El Centro as one early-evening loop: down the seafront for the sunset, up into the old town for dinner. It is the easiest, most authentic introduction to the city, and the part most visitors remember most fondly.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Puerto Vallarta city guide.