Puerto Escondido, Mexico

An operator guide to renting a luxury villa in Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca: which beach to stay on, when to go, and the design-driven houses worth the trip.

Mexico
Puerto Escondido
The Oaxacan surf town that got discovered and kept its soul, where the luxury lives entirely in the houses.
Puerto Escondido is the rare beach town that got discovered and somehow kept its soul. Ten years ago it was a surf secret on the Oaxacan coast, known to the people who came for Zicatela's barrels and not much else. Then the designers arrived, Casa Wabi went up, and a certain kind of traveler followed. Today it is one of Mexico's most interesting luxury destinations precisely because it never turned into Cabo. The town is still raw, still local, still built around the ocean rather than a resort strip. What changed is the houses. The villa is the reason to come. Puerto Escondido has almost none of the five-star hotel inventory that Cabo or Tulum carry, and that is the point.
The luxury here lives in private homes: architect-designed concrete-and-wood houses tucked into the hills above La Punta, oceanfront places on the quieter beaches, a handful of genuinely spectacular estates that would cost twice as much on a more polished coast. Renting a villa is not the upgrade in Puerto Escondido, it is the entire way the place works. Understand the town as a string of beaches, each with its own personality. Zicatela is the famous one, a long stretch of dark sand and serious surf, lined with cafes, taco stands, and after-dark energy. La Punta, at its southern end, is the boho heart: yoga, matcha, sunset drinks, the neighborhood most of the design crowd calls home. North of town, Carrizalillo and Puerto Angelito are the swimmable cove beaches, calmer water, better for a family or anyone who does not surf. And a short drive out, the coast empties toward the bay near Casa Wabi, where the estates get bigger and the quiet gets deeper. This is not a manicured destination, and travelers should know that going in.
The roads are rough in places, the town runs on its own rhythm, and the polish is in the houses rather than the streets. That rawness is exactly what the people who love Puerto Escondido come for. It rewards the traveler who wants somewhere with a pulse over somewhere sanded smooth. If your idea of a beach holiday is a golf-cart resort, this is the wrong coast. If it is a design-forward house, a private chef cooking the day's catch, and a surf break you can walk to, there are few places better. We place a small number of groups into these homes each season, and we handle the parts a raw destination makes harder: confirming a house is genuinely as private and as finished as it photographs, arranging the chef and the airport transfers so nothing needs solving on a coast where solving things takes longer, and being honest about which villas hold up to the standard in person. If a house does not clear that bar, it is not in this collection.
When to visit Puerto Escondido
The dry season, November through April, is the safe and popular window. Days are warm and rainless, the humidity drops, and the beaches are at their best. This is peak, so the best houses and the holiday weeks (Christmas, New Year, Easter) book earliest and command the highest rates.
May through October is the green season. The rains come, usually as short heavy afternoon storms rather than all-day weather, and the landscape turns lush. It is quieter and better value, and it overlaps with the biggest surf of the year on Zicatela, which draws serious surfers. If you do not mind some rain and want the town at its calmest, the shoulder months of May and November are a sweet spot.
Two things drive demand independent of weather: the surf and the design crowd. Zicatela's swell peaks in summer, and the town has a season of its own around the holidays and the Day of the Dead period, when Oaxaca as a whole is at its most alive. We will read the specific weeks for you against what you are coming for.
The beaches that decide your trip
Zicatela is the main event: a long dark-sand beach with world-class surf, the town's densest strip of cafes, mezcalerias, and nightlife, and a raw energy that runs late. Stay here or nearby to be in the middle of it, and understand that the surf beach itself is powerful and not for casual swimming.
La Punta, at Zicatela's southern end, is the boho-luxury heart. Yoga studios, specialty coffee, sunset spots, and most of the design-driven houses the town is now known for. It is walkable, social, and the neighborhood most repeat visitors gravitate to.
Rinconada and the northern coves, Carrizalillo and Puerto Angelito, are the calmer, swimmable side of town. Sheltered water, better for families and non-surfers, a quieter residential feel, and some of the best sunset views. A short taxi from the Zicatela energy when you want it.
Out past the edges of town, toward the Casa Wabi bay and the emptier stretches of coast, the estates get larger and the isolation deeper. This is where the biggest private houses sit, for groups who want the design and the ocean with almost no one else around.
Top villas in Puerto Escondido
Casa Rhino
A six-bedroom estate for seventeen, one of the town’s largest private houses, for a full group on the coast.
6 BR | sleeps 17 | From $1,150 USD per night
Casa Nova Puerto Escondido
Six bedrooms for twelve, design-forward and built around the pool and the ocean.
6 BR | sleeps 12 | From $1,450 USD per night
Niku House
A five-bedroom house for twelve, easy and beachy, and available for instant booking.
5 BR | sleeps 12 | From $1,400 USD per night
La Flia Oceanfront Casa
An oceanfront four-bedroom for twelve, the water at the edge of the deck.
4 BR | sleeps 12 | From $1,400 USD per night
Casa Volta near Casa Wabi
A one-bedroom hideaway for two out near Casa Wabi, for a couple who wants the quiet end of the coast.
1 BR | sleeps 2 | From $405 USD per night
Beyond the villa gates
The ocean is the whole point. Zicatela is a world-class surf break for the experienced; for everyone else, the coves at Carrizalillo and Puerto Angelito are for swimming, and the surf schools at La Punta will get a beginner standing up. Boat trips run out to spot dolphins and turtles, and the bioluminescence in the nearby lagoons is worth a night trip in the right season.
On land, this is Oaxaca, which means the food is a reason to come on its own. The town has grown a serious dining scene, from beachfront seafood to design-hotel restaurants, and a mezcal culture that runs deep. Casa Wabi, the Tadao Ando-designed art foundation just outside town, is worth the visit for anyone interested in architecture or contemporary art.
Getting there and getting around
Puerto Escondido has its own airport (PXM), with a growing number of direct flights, including from Mexico City in under an hour. Many travelers still route through Mexico City or Oaxaca City and connect, or make the long but scenic drive from Oaxaca. We arrange the airport transfer as part of any booking.
On the ground, the town is spread out and the roads are rough in places, so most guests use taxis or arrange a driver rather than renting a car. Within a neighborhood like La Punta you can walk; between beaches you will want a ride. It is worth building a driver into the trip, and we can set that up with the house.
Puerto Escondido is the one that got discovered and kept its soul. The town is raw on purpose, and the luxury is entirely in the houses. Book the wrong one and you feel the rough edges; book the right one and it is the best design-forward beach trip in Mexico.
Cameron Elder, ERentals Exclusive
Frequently asked
Is Puerto Escondido a luxury destination?
Increasingly, yes, but not in the polished-resort sense of Cabo. The luxury here lives in private homes: architect-designed villas above La Punta, oceanfront houses, a handful of genuinely spectacular estates. The town itself stays raw and local, which is exactly why the design crowd loves it. Renting a villa is the way the place works.
When is the best time to visit?
The dry season, November through April, is the reliable window: warm, rainless, the beaches at their best. Summer brings the rains and the biggest surf. The holiday weeks and the Day of the Dead period book earliest. We read the specific weeks for you against what you are coming for.
Which beach or neighborhood should we stay in?
Zicatela and La Punta for the energy, the surf, and the design-driven houses; the northern coves (Carrizalillo, Puerto Angelito) for calm swimmable water and families; the estates out past town for groups who want deep quiet. Tell us the trip and we will match the neighborhood to it.
Is it good for families, or mostly surfers?
Both, if you pick the right side of town. The surf on Zicatela is powerful and not for casual swimming, but the coves at Carrizalillo and Puerto Angelito are calm and family-friendly, and there are surf schools for beginners at La Punta. We steer families toward the swimmable beaches and houses to match.
How do we get to Puerto Escondido?
It has its own airport (PXM), with direct flights including a sub-hour hop from Mexico City. Others connect through Mexico City or Oaxaca. We arrange the airport transfer with every booking, and a driver for getting around, since the town is spread out and the roads are rough.
Do we need a car?
Most guests do not rent one. The roads are rough and the town is spread out, so a driver or taxis work better. Within a neighborhood you can walk; between beaches you will want a ride. We can build a driver into the trip through the house.
How much do the villas cost?
Rates run from a few hundred dollars a night for an intimate house to well into five figures for the largest oceanfront estates, depending on the size, the season, and how finished the home is. Puerto Escondido still offers more house for the money than a more polished coast. We quote the real all-in figure for your dates.
What makes Puerto Escondido different from Tulum or Cabo?
It never turned into a resort strip. Where Cabo is polished and Tulum has gone commercial, Puerto Escondido stays raw, local, and built around the ocean rather than the hotels. The luxury is in the houses, not the town. It rewards the traveler who wants somewhere with a pulse over somewhere sanded smooth.
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