If you are heading south from San Diego, Tijuana is a necessary
evil (unless you invest 40 more miles of driving and cross the
border at Tecate). The best (and quickest) route is to take
U.S. I-5 or I-805 south to the border crossings.
Highways I-5 and I-850 merge just north of the border crossing.
Prior to the merge point there are several exits for San Ysidro - this
is where you should take care of insurance and money exchange,
if you haven't already done so. Getting Mexican insurance on
your vehicle is a must! (See the Auto Insurance Page for
more information.)
Exchanging US dollars for pesos is not required, but it's a
smart way to save money (exchanges made along the highway
usually result in a very poor exchange rate for the tourist).
Warning: Don't use an exchange house ("Casa de Cambio") that
charges a commission!
There are two border crossings to choose from: San Ysidro and
Otay Mesa. Here are some of the pros and cons as I see it (other
experienced Baja travelers will certainly have differing views).
I almost always use the San Ysidro crossing as I find it more
convenient to the toll road, my usual route south.
Consideration |
San Ysidro |
Otay Mesa |
Drive to the Toll Road |
Shorter, less driving with stoplights, etc.. |
Greater distance, with lots of stoplights, etc.. |
Drive to the Free Road |
About the same for both crossings. Lots of stoplights, etc.. |
Ease of crossing |
Often very crowded. |
Much less crowded. |
Insurance/Exchange Stop |
Right on the way. |
Must drive about four extra miles to San Ysidro and back. |
Obtaining Tourist Card |
Probably equally good. Migración office at each crossing. |
Hours of operation |
24 Hours |
6 AM to 10 PM |
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The Mexican Customs inspection at Tijuana uses the same system
as implemented at the Mexican airports - a random selection
indicated by a red and green lights. I assume a
small computer is making the random selection. If you get a
green light there will be no inspection. If you get a red
light, you will be shunted off to the right for an
inspection.
RVs: Note that all RVs get inspected. This is
one case where the random selection process gets turned off!
San Ysidro Border Crossing:
Note: The initial section of this route is new in 2004!
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After crossing into Mexico, and while still next to the inspection
area, position yourself in the second lane from the right (the
right-most lane will shortly veer off to connect to local
streets).
After the right-most lane turns off to a local street
you'll automatically be in the right-most lane as the road crosses a flood
channel.
Shortly after crossing the flood channel, traffic will
enter from the right -- quickly merge into this new lane and follow it as an
exit to the right opens up.
There are signs pointing to Ensenada and Ensenada Cuota - Scenic Road
(the toll road). This curving exit drops you into a merge with
Calle Internacional, where you are now merging into the "fast
lane."
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Best to go slow and let the other drivers honk at you. If you
miss a turn, keep in mind that the general idea is to parallel
the border fence west towards the ocean until the road ("Calle
Internacional") bears to the left and merges with a major
highway heading west - this highway shortly becomes the Ensenada
toll road.
Otay Mesa Border Crossing:
If you haven't taken care of the Mexican insurance and any money
exchange, follow I-5 or I-805 down to San Ysidro to take care of
those matters - then return north (I-805 a bit shorter) to pick
up California Route 905.
From either I-5 or I-805 take California Route 905 east - there
are signs directing you to the border crossing. You'll pass a
large airport (Brown Field) on your left, and then eventually
turn south to the border.
Once you've crossed the border, you have two choices (in a
general sense): drive the city streets to the area of the San
Ysidro crossing (not recommended) or drive city streets to the circuit
road around Tijuana - look for signs for Libramiento. You
generally bear to the west and drop down a hill to a crowded
area. Continue on the main street southwest (Blvd. Lazaro
Cardenas) - this will merge into the circuit road. Finally,
you'll reach the San Ysidro route several miles west of that crossing.
Continue on to the toll road.
Note: In August of 2007, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection
website
(http://apps.cbp.gov/bwt)
still shows the hours of operation at Otay Mesa as
6AM to 10PM
However, other reports indicate that the crossing is now open 24
hours, 7 days a week. I can't vouch for either claim.