Discover Tumbes
Travel Types
Santuario Nacional Los Manglares de Tumbes — boat tours from Puerto Pizarro through mangrove canals (1.5–2 h, PEN 20–35), American crocodile sightings, endemic black clam habitat, and frigate bird roosts.
Zorritos, Punta Sal, and the Tumbes coast — the only genuinely warm-water (24–28°C) beach corridor in Peru, with tropical marine life, sea turtles at El Ñuro, and low-season whale watching.
Conchas negras ceviche (black ark clams available only from Tumbes mangroves), sudado de mariscos, and the freshest shellfish market at Tumbes Mercado Central — a regionally unique food experience.
Parque Nacional Cerros de Amotape — dry tropical forest with Tumbesian endemic birds, white-tailed deer, ocelot, and the southernmost Pacific-coast mangrove crocodile population.
Aguas Verdes–Huaquillas land crossing (30 km, colectivos PEN 5–8) — the main Pacific-coast Peru–Ecuador border point, connecting Tumbes to Machala and Guayaquil (Ecuador).
- •Mangrove boat tours depart Puerto Pizarro at dawn (07:00–08:00) for best wildlife activity — afternoon tours are acceptable but crocodiles are less visible and bird activity is lower; book the day before with Puerto Pizarro port operators or through Tumbes city agencies.
- •Conchas negras availability: harvesting is periodically banned by PRODUCE (fisheries ministry) for conservation recovery; always check current availability — if a ban is in effect, the restaurant cannot legally serve them; the ban is enforced and respected by legitimate restaurants.
- •Ecuador crossing at Aguas Verdes: the Migraciones office at the Peru side processes exit stamps during daylight hours (approximately 07:00–22:00); the actual border commercial zone is chaotic — keep valuables secured and use official taxis or colectivos rather than individual mototaxis at the crossing.
- •Sea turtle snorkeling at El Ñuro: arrive at high tide for best visibility (3–4 m depth); avoid touching the turtles (prohibited, enforced by local guides); the access road from the Pan-American to El Ñuro is unpaved (3 km), passable in normal cars in dry season.
- •Wet season (January–April): Tumbes has genuine tropical rainfall, unlike the coastal desert south; heavy rain is common and the Tumbes River can flood; the wet season does not prevent beach visits but makes overland road conditions variable.
- •TBP Airport: small terminal with irregular service; confirm flights are operating before leaving Lima for Tumbes connections; buses from Piura (~3 h) and from Lima (~18 h) are more reliable options.
- •Cerros de Amotape access: the El Caucho ranger station requires a 4WD vehicle and SERNANP guide registration; guided birding programs (USD 50–100/day) can be arranged through Tumbes tour operators; the dry forest birding is exceptional May–November when deciduous trees are leafless and visibility improves.
- •Conchas negras sustainable sourcing: the most reputable source is directly from the Puerto Pizarro market or from restaurants in Tumbes city that identify their supplier as a licensed extractor — the mangrove ecosystem's health depends on regulated harvesting.
- •Beach safety north of Zorritos: the coast north of Punta Mero toward the Ecuador border has limited beach infrastructure and minimal emergency services; swim only at established beach towns with visible lifeguard presence.
Tourism & destination guides
Official government sites
Official Peru protected-areas authority page for the Santuario Nacional Los Manglares de Tumbes — crocodile management, mangrove boat tour regulations, and conservation status.
Official Tumbes regional government portal — regional administration, beach corridor management, and public services for the department.
Official Peru protected-areas authority page for Parque Nacional Cerros de Amotape — Tumbesian dry forest access, endemic wildlife, and guided visit registration.