What Actually Happens on the Day
Meet at The Hook on the La Paz Malecón
Your departure time is confirmed the evening before via WhatsApp — CONANP (Mexico's federal park authority) assigns zone access slots to each operator the afternoon prior. Noon departure is standard outside peak season. Meet at The Hook on Paseo Alvaro Obregon — you can walk from most La Paz hotels.
Equipment fitting and briefing
Your marine guide fits you with a full wetsuit, mask, fins, and snorkel. CONANP requires that all guests in the water wear either a wetsuit or a lifejacket — both are provided. A detailed briefing covers whale shark behavior, regulations (no touching, 3 meters minimum distance, no flash photography), and snorkel technique. If you've never snorkeled before this is covered here — don't worry.
Boat transit to the whale shark zone
Depart Muelle Fiscal into La Paz Bay. The whale shark aggregation zone is in the protected bay — not open ocean. The water is calm and sheltered. Transit time varies by conditions but is typically 20–40 minutes.
The guide locates the whale sharks
Whale sharks are filter feeders that congregate near the surface to feed on plankton. Your guide and captain use years of local knowledge to locate the aggregation. When a whale shark is found the boat positions itself so guests enter the water alongside the animal — not chasing it from behind.
You enter the water
CONANP regulations limit 5 snorkelers plus one guide in the water at any time. The Hook rotates guests in groups of 3–4 — this means every guest goes multiple times, with extended unhurried time alongside the whale sharks. On most departures guests enter the water 3–5 times each.
Return to the Malecón
After the 2-hour CONANP zone window, the boat returns to Muelle Fiscal. Total tour time is approximately 4 hours. Most guests don't want to leave.
What Does It Actually Feel Like?
Nothing prepares you for the scale. Whale sharks can reach 12 meters — about the length of a school bus. When one passes beneath you in clear water, your entire spatial sense recalibrates. They move slowly and deliberately, completely unbothered by your presence.
The experience is quiet. No engine noise, no crowd noise — just the sound of your own breathing through the snorkel and the occasional exhale of the person next to you. The water in La Paz Bay during whale shark season is clear enough to watch the animal approach from 10–15 meters away.
People cry. Not dramatically — just quietly, at the mask. That happens more than you'd think.
One thing nobody tells you: The waiting between rotations on the boat is not dead time. Watching a whale shark from the surface while your group cycles in and out is extraordinary on its own. You see the full animal from above — the spotted pattern, the broad pectoral fins, the width of the tail. Many guests say the above-water view is as memorable as being in the water.
What to Bring
✅ Bring These
- Biodegradable reef-safe sunscreen (mandatory)
- Light windbreaker or rash guard
- Swimsuit worn under clothes
- Water bottle — at least 1 liter
- Light snack for the boat
- Camera or GoPro
- Seasickness medication if you're prone
- Small dry bag for valuables
🚫 Leave These Behind
- Chemical sunscreen — harms whale sharks, not allowed
- Single-use plastics
- Expectations of touching the animals
- Plans for immediately after — tours can run long
- Jewelry that could snag on equipment
Do I Need to Know How to Swim?
You must be a confident, comfortable swimmer. You do not need to be a strong swimmer or have prior snorkeling experience — your guide briefs you fully and stays in the water with you at all times. Life vests are always available and there is zero shame in using one.
You should be comfortable floating face-down in open water and breathing through a snorkel. If you have never used snorkel equipment before, practice in a pool or shallow water beforehand — it makes the experience significantly better.
Children 5 and older who are comfortable in water are welcome. The experience is extraordinary for young people and the marine biology briefing is tailored to all ages.
What Happens If We Don't See Whale Sharks?
In 6 years of operation The Hook has had one day without a whale shark encounter — an exceptional season when the ocean cooled dramatically and the season ended early. This is a seasonal aggregation, not a migration sighting, and La Paz Bay is one of the most reliable whale shark destinations on earth. The animals are here, in known locations, feeding on concentrated plankton blooms that occur predictably year after year.
In the genuinely rare event no whale sharks are spotted, we offer a rebooking on the next available departure or a partial refund. This situation is uncommon enough that most guides have seen it happen only a handful of times in their careers.
The Conservation Side
Whale sharks in La Paz are protected under Mexican federal law by CONANP. All permitted operators must adhere to strict regulations: no touching, no riding, no flash photography, no feeding, 3-meter minimum approach distance, and 5 snorkelers maximum per whale shark at any time. The zone is limited to 2 hours per vessel and daily boat quotas are enforced.
These regulations exist because the whale sharks come here to feed — not to interact with tourists. The experience is extraordinary precisely because the animals are not habituated, harassed, or altered by the tourism. They do what they do. You observe. That distinction matters.
The Hook uses biodegradable sunscreen only — chemical sunscreen compounds are harmful to whale shark mucous membranes and banned from all tours. You will be asked to wash off chemical sunscreen before boarding if you've applied it.