The Residences at Solaz a Luxury Collection Resort, Los Cabos
San Jose Del Cabo Mexico Mexico
When you book The Residences at Solaz a Luxury Collection Resort, Los Cabos in San Jose Del Cabo, Mexico through our Marriott Stars partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Personalized and customized amenity
- Complimentary breakfast daily for two guests per room
- All STARS hotels offer a hotel credit valued at $100 USD (once per stay)
- Early check-in and late check-out (when available)
- Complimentary upgrade (if available at check-in)
Location
The Luxury Collection brings together independent properties distinguished by their sense of place, and this Solaz outpost on the Baja California Sur coast exemplifies that philosophy. Here, the portfolio's emphasis on local character translates to a low-slung architecture that follows the rugged contours of the Pacific coastline, where the desert meets the sea in a collision of ochre rock and cerulean water. The Lomas del Tule neighbourhood sits between the twin poles of Los Cabos: the historic mission town of San José del Cabo, founded in 1730, and the resort hub of Cabo San Lucas.
San José del Cabo itself retains a quiet colonial dignity, its cobbled streets and art galleries a contrast to the sportfishing bustle of its western neighbour. The shallow bay that cradles the city has long drawn travelers to this southern tip of the peninsula, where the Gulf of California meets the Pacific. The light here is sharp and unfiltered, the kind that turns the Sierra de la Laguna mountains into dark silhouettes at sunset.
Los Cabos International Airport lies 21 kilometres north, a straightforward drive along the Transpeninsular Highway. The property's perch between two seas makes it a natural base for exploring the beaches and surf breaks that punctuate the Corridor, the dramatic stretch of coastline linking the two Cabos.
Book a table at Cocina de Autor Los Cabos, just over a kilometre from the property. This Michelin-starred restaurant occupies a bougainvillea-draped corner of the Grand Velas, where chef Sidney Schutte's Mexican tasting menu draws on Baja ingredients with quiet precision. The oceanfront setting and resort-formal dress code lend the evening a studied elegance. Closer to the hotel, the string of beaches along the Corridor invites exploration: Playa Chileno, less than four kilometres south, offers calm waters for snorkelling over rocky reefs, while Playa Santa María, six kilometres away, is similarly sheltered and transparent. The sand at both is golden and coarse, the water the kind of blue that looks retouched until you're standing in it.
For golfers, the landscape here is a gift. Chileno Bay Golf, four kilometres distant, carves through desert arroyos with views of the Sea of Cortez, while La Querencia, seven kilometres away, is a Jack Nicklaus design that winds through granite outcroppings and cacti forests. Surfers head to Zippers, nine kilometres east, where a consistent right point break peels along the rocky headland at Costa Azul. The town of San José del Cabo, with its Thursday evening art walk and Plaza Mijares, offers a quieter counterpoint to the resort corridor, its mission church dating to the 18th-century Spanish colonial period.
Winter, from December through March, is the high season for a reason. Daytime temperatures hover in the mid-twenties, the air dry and crystalline, the water cool but swimmable. The light has a particular clarity, shadows sharp-edged on the sand. This is peak time for spotting grey whales on their southern migration.
Spring stretches into May with warming days and empty beaches, the heat building slowly but never oppressive. Summer brings the monsoonal rains, brief and dramatic, usually in the late afternoon. The landscape greens almost overnight, humidity rises, and the air thickens. September sees the heaviest rainfall, though mornings often start clear and bright.
Autumn transitions back to dry weather by November, the temperatures still warm but the edge taken off. The water remains bathwater-warm through October, and the crowds thin as the desert begins its slow shift back to winter tones. Most visitors time their stay for the November-to-May window, when rain is rare and conditions are closest to the postcards.
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