Mexico Fishing License
Cabo Guide
The complete guide to Mexican fishing licenses for Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo: who needs one, current costs, where to buy, what it covers, bag limits, and how Daliken handles it for you so you can focus on fishing.
Required for every angler age 13+ on any boat carrying fishing tackle.
Yes, you need a Mexican fishing license to fish in Cabo. The license is required by Mexican federal law for every person age 13 or older on board any boat carrying fishing tackle, even if you plan to release everything. A daily license costs approximately $20 USD. Daliken Sportfishing handles the entire process for our clients so you arrive at the dock ready to fish, not paperwork.
Do You Need a Fishing License in Cabo?
The short answer is yes. Mexican federal law requires a sport fishing license for any person on board a boat that carries fishing tackle in Mexican waters. This rule applies regardless of whether you actually fish, whether you intend to catch and release, or whether you are an experienced angler or absolute beginner. If you are on a fishing boat in Mexico and you are at least 13 years old, you need a license.
The exception
A fishing license is not required if you are fishing from shore. This means beach fishing, jetty fishing, or any land-based fishing technique does not require a Mexican federal license. However, the moment you step onto a boat carrying any fishing tackle, the requirement applies. There is no separate "passenger" status.
Anglers on a Daliken charter, properly licensed and ready to fish. Every adult on this trip carried a valid Mexican federal fishing license, arranged in advance through our office.
The legal basis
The requirement is established under Mexican federal sport fishing regulations administered by CONAPESCA (Comisión Nacional de Acuacultura y Pesca), the National Commission of Aquaculture and Fishing. The applicable norm is NOM-017-PESC-1994, which governs Mexican sport fishing and includes the license requirement, bag limits, prohibited methods, and minimum distances from commercial fishing operations.
Federal law also requires that ALL persons aboard a fishing-equipped vessel carry licenses, even children old enough to hold a fishing rod. This applies to family groups where some members fish and others come along to enjoy the trip. If the boat has fishing tackle on board, the rule applies to everyone of qualifying age.
"We keep everything smooth and legal so you can focus on the fun, not the paperwork. Every Daliken client arrives at the dock fully licensed and ready to fish."
Who Needs a Mexican Fishing License?
The rule is broader than most first-time visitors expect. Understanding exactly who needs a license helps avoid surprises at the marina or during inspections at sea.
Every Adult Angler
All persons age 18 and older on any fishing-equipped boat in Mexican waters must hold a current license. No exceptions for tourists or first-time visitors.
Children Age 13-17
Minors age 13 and older are required to carry licenses if they will be fishing. Some operators apply the requirement to any minor on board carrying tackle, regardless of age.
Non-Fishing Passengers
Federal interpretation: if the boat carries fishing tackle, all adult passengers should have licenses. Practical enforcement varies. Daliken arranges licenses for everyone on the boat as a precaution.
Citizens and foreigners alike
The license requirement applies equally to Mexican citizens, residents, and foreign visitors. Holding US citizenship, Canadian citizenship, or any other passport does not exempt you. The license is a federal requirement based on the activity (sport fishing in Mexican waters) and the platform (boat with tackle), not the angler's nationality.
Charter clients
If you book a fishing charter, your charter operator is responsible for ensuring all anglers on board hold valid licenses. Reputable operators (including Daliken) handle this for you or guide you through the process before the trip. Operators who tell you "don't worry about it" or "we'll deal with it if asked" are setting you up for problems at inspection.
When you book with Daliken, we ask for your full name, date of birth, and number of anglers in your group. We then arrange Mexican fishing licenses for everyone before your trip date. You arrive at the marina with the licensing done. This is included as part of our service and saves you significant time and confusion.
How Much Does a Mexican Fishing License Cost?
Mexican fishing license prices are set by CONAPESCA and the Baja California Sur state fisheries office. Federal prices are listed in Mexican pesos and the USD equivalent fluctuates with the exchange rate. The table below shows current approximate pricing.
License pricing by duration
Prices fluctuate based on USD/MXN exchange rate and periodic government updates. The annual license has historically cost approximately $50 USD for the past 25 years. Daily license has remained near $20 USD. Always confirm current pricing at time of purchase.
Where the money goes
License fees fund Mexican fisheries management, including CONAPESCA enforcement, marine research, fish stock assessments, and conservation programs. The fees are modest by international comparison and represent direct financial support for the conservation infrastructure that keeps the fishery productive year after year.
Daliken captains and crew at Puerto Los Cabos Marina. License fees directly support the Mexican fisheries management system that keeps captains like these in business decade after decade.
Why annual licenses are a smart choice for some
Annual licenses cost slightly less than monthly licenses and provide 12 months of coverage. For anglers who visit Cabo more than once a year, or who own/charter boats throughout Mexico, the annual license is often the best value. The annual license is valid for one year from the date of issue (not a calendar year), so timing of purchase matters.
How and Where to Buy a Mexican Fishing License
Mexican fishing licenses can be purchased through several channels, with varying convenience and cost. Below are the practical options for visitors fishing in Cabo San Lucas or San Jose del Cabo.
Option 1: Online through official government portal (recommended)
The Mexican Federal Government's authorized portal, sportfishingmx.com, allows online purchase with immediate printable license. Payment in Mexican pesos calculated at current exchange rate. The license is valid Federal document accepted throughout Mexico.
Option 2: Baja California Sur State portal
The state of Baja California Sur operates its own portal at sportfishingbcs.gob.mx. This is a fideicomiso (trust) established by the BCS state government for fishing promotion and protection. Licenses purchased through this channel are valid for fishing in BCS waters.
Option 3: At the marina (Puerto Los Cabos)
Licenses can typically be purchased on arrival at Puerto Los Cabos Marina from authorized agents who set up at the dock area. This is convenient but may involve waiting in line and requires extra time at the marina before your scheduled departure.
Option 4: Through your charter operator (most convenient)
Many charter operators including Daliken arrange licenses for clients in advance. You provide your information at booking, we handle the entire process, and you arrive at the dock fully licensed. This is the recommended option for most visitors because it removes any chance of error or delay.
Option 5: US-based service providers
Several US companies offer Mexican fishing license service for an additional fee. These include Discover Baja Travel Club, Mexpermits, BajaBound, and others. Useful for anglers who want to handle paperwork well before their trip without dealing with Mexican government websites directly. Note: as of June 2019, the CONAPESCA office in San Diego is permanently closed.
For 90% of visitors, the simplest and most reliable path is: book your charter with Daliken, provide names and dates of birth at booking, and let us handle the entire license process. Zero stress, zero waiting at the marina, and we ensure compliance with current regulations.
"A valid license is permission to fish. It is not permission to ignore bag limits, prohibited species rules, or release requirements. Responsible anglers know both."
What Does Your Mexican Fishing License Cover?
A Mexican federal sport fishing license issued by CONAPESCA covers recreational fishing activities in all Mexican waters within the regulations of NOM-017-PESC-1994. Understanding what is and is not covered helps you fish legally and responsibly.
What is covered
- Recreational rod-and-reel fishing in Mexican waters
- Catch of permitted species within bag limits
- Fishing from sport fishing vessels in Mexican territorial waters
- Fishing at Mexican Pacific and Sea of Cortez coastal areas
- Trolling, drift fishing, bottom fishing, jigging, kite fishing, and fly fishing
- Use of natural or artificial baits within regulations
What is NOT covered by a sport fishing license
- Commercial fishing (separate commercial permits required)
- Spearfishing of protected species
- Underwater hunting in marine protected areas
- Collection of marine life (shells, coral, fish) in protected zones
- Fishing inside National Marine Parks like Cabo Pulmo (separate permits required for permitted activities)
- Boat operation (separate temporary import permit required for foreign-registered vessels over 14.5 feet)
The 250-meter rule
Important to know: Mexico's Sport Fishing Norm (NOM-017-PESC-1994) prohibits any recreational fishing activities within 250 meters (820 feet) of commercial fishing vessels or fixed/floating fishing tackle in Mexican waters. This is important in northern Baja waters where tuna pens attract wild tuna. Fishing within the exclusion zone, even with a valid license, will result in legal action.
If you visit a marine protected area like Cabo Pulmo National Park, you must pay an access fee to that park separately from your fishing license. If you bring your own boat over 14.5 feet, you also need a Temporary Boat Import Permit from Banjercito, valid for 10 years.
Mexican Sport Fishing Bag Limits
Mexican federal regulations establish daily catch limits per angler. Understanding these limits is part of fishing legally and responsibly with your license. The CONAPESCA bag limits are designed to prevent overharvest and ensure sustainable fisheries.
Daily bag limits per angler (CONAPESCA)
Catch and release best practices
Bag limits represent the legal maximum, not a target. Daliken Sportfishing recommends catch and release for all billfish (marlin, sailfish, spearfish) as standard practice. For meat species like dorado, tuna, and wahoo, we recommend selective harvest: keep only what you and your group will actually consume during your trip. See our complete sustainable fishing guide for detailed conservation practices.
The most respected anglers in Cabo, including tournament champions, voluntarily release billfish regardless of legal limits. The future of the fishery depends on this self-restraint. Daliken's standard practice is 100% catch and release for billfish, selective harvest for table fish within limits, and zero retention of protected species.
Prohibited species (full release required)
- Totoaba (critically endangered, protected since 1975)
- All sea turtles
- Marine mammals (whales, dolphins, sea lions)
- Whale sharks
- Manta rays
- Several shark species (varies by zone)
What Happens If You Fish Without a License?
Mexican authorities conduct enforcement on sport fishing operations through spot checks at marinas, dock inspections, and at-sea inspections. Penalties for fishing without a valid license can be significant and can ruin your trip.
Typical consequences
- Fines: Per-person fines can range from $250 to $1,000 USD or higher per violation, depending on circumstances
- Detention of catch: Authorities may confiscate any fish caught without valid license
- Trip cancellation: Boats may be denied departure if licenses cannot be produced
- Equipment detention: Fishing gear and even the boat may be detained pending resolution
- Legal complications: For foreign visitors, fines and legal issues may complicate future Mexico travel
Inspections happen
Mexican authorities (PROFEPA, Naval inspections, port captain authorities) regularly conduct checks. Inspections can happen at the marina before departure, at sea during your trip, or at the dock upon return. The standard inspector question is "Tienen sus licencias?" (Do you have your licenses?), and inability to produce them creates immediate problems.
A daily license costs approximately $20 USD. Fines for fishing without one routinely exceed $250 USD. Trip cancellations can cost you the full charter cost (potentially $450 or more). There is no economic case for trying to skip the license. The math always favors compliance.
Why reputable operators insist
Charter operators who routinely take unlicensed anglers expose themselves to operational penalties, license suspension, and criminal liability. Reputable operators like Daliken require licenses on every trip without exception. If an operator tells you not to bother with the license, choose a different operator.
Special Considerations
Most sport anglers visiting Cabo only need to worry about the standard sport fishing license. A few situations require additional permits or special attention.
Bringing your own boat
If your vessel is of foreign registration (US, Canadian, etc.) and measures at least 14.5 feet (4.42 m) in length, you must obtain a Temporary Import Permit (TIP) from Banjercito (the Mexican Army bank). This permit is valid for 10 years and can be obtained online at banjercito.com.mx/registro-vehiculos or in person at any border crossing or arrival point. The TIP is separate from your fishing license; you need both.
Visiting marine protected areas
If your fishing trip will enter or pass near any Mexican National Park or marine protected area (including any of the 1,400+ protected island areas), you must pay an access fee for each protected area you visit. Day passes can be paid at the nearest CONANP office. For frequent visitors, an annual Conservation Passport (Pasaporte de la Conservación) is available online at pasaportedelaconservacion.conanp.gob.mx.
Cabo Pulmo specific
Fishing is prohibited inside Cabo Pulmo National Park regardless of your license status. You may visit Cabo Pulmo for snorkeling, diving, or observation with a CONANP access fee, but a sport fishing license does not grant fishing rights inside the park. See our Cabo Pulmo Fishing Guide for details.
The 250-meter exclusion zone
NOM-017-PESC-1994 prohibits recreational fishing within 250 meters (820 feet) of commercial fishing vessels or fixed/floating fishing tackle (including tuna pens). This is most relevant in northern Baja waters where tuna pens are common. Fishing inside the exclusion zone creates legal exposure even with a valid sport fishing license.
Tournament participation
Major billfish tournaments (Bisbee's Black & Blue, Los Cabos Billfish Tournament, etc.) typically require an entry fee that may or may not include a fishing license, depending on the event. Always confirm what is included in your tournament entry and arrange your sport fishing license separately if not covered.
How Daliken Handles Your License
For 95% of visitors, the simplest solution is to let Daliken handle the entire license process. Our standard procedure removes any chance of error, delay, or confusion at the marina.
Book Your Trip
Confirm your charter with Austin via WhatsApp or our booking links. Include trip date and number of anglers in your group.
Share Angler Info
Provide full legal names and dates of birth for everyone in your group who will be on the boat. Used only for license processing.
Show Up & Fish
Arrive at Puerto Los Cabos Marina at 6:30 AM with Felipe waiting at check-in. Licenses already arranged. You go straight to the boat.
What is included
License processing is included as part of our standard charter service. We do not add a service fee or markup; you pay the official license fee only. We handle the paperwork as a service to make your trip easier.
If you want to buy your own
Some anglers, especially those visiting Mexico frequently, prefer to manage their own annual or monthly licenses. If you already hold a valid license, bring proof (printed or on your phone) and we will verify before departure. Let us know in advance so we do not duplicate the process.
Every Daliken client departs Puerto Los Cabos Marina with valid Mexican fishing licenses in hand. No surprises, no scramble, no fines, no problems. This is part of our standard service because we want your day to be about fishing, not paperwork.
Real Daliken Trips, All Legal
Every catch shown here was on a Daliken trip where every angler held a valid Mexican fishing license, arranged before departure. Selective harvest within bag limits, billfish released.
Mexico Fishing License Cabo FAQ
Do you need a license to fish in Cabo?
How much does a Mexican fishing license cost?
Where can I buy a Mexican fishing license for Cabo?
Does my child need a fishing license in Mexico?
What if I'm just a passenger and not fishing?
What is the daily bag limit in Mexico?
What happens if I fish without a license in Mexico?
Is the Mexican fishing license valid throughout Mexico?
How long is a 1-year Mexican fishing license valid?
Does Daliken arrange fishing licenses for clients?
- CONAPESCA (Comisión Nacional de Acuacultura y Pesca) - Mexican Federal Fisheries Commission
- Sportfishingmx.com - Official Mexican Federal Government authorized sport fishing portal
- SportfishingBCS.gob.mx - Baja California Sur State fideicomiso for sport fishing
- NOM-017-PESC-1994 - Mexican Federal Sport Fishing Norm establishing license requirements, bag limits, and exclusion zones
- San Diego Marine Exchange - Cruising guide on Mexican fishing license process
- Discover Baja Travel Club - Mexican fishing license service for US-based anglers
- BajaBound (mexpermits.com) - Authorized US provider of Mexican fishing permits
- CONANP - National Commission of Natural Protected Areas (for marine park access permits)
- Banjercito - Mexican Army Bank, issuing authority for Temporary Boat Import Permits
Skip the Paperwork, Focus on the Fish
Book a Daliken charter and we handle your Mexican fishing license as part of our service. Show up at 6:30 AM with Felipe at check-in. Everything else is taken care of.