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El Salvador’s Surf Coast Is Making a Strong Case to Costa Rica Travelers

For many longtime Central America travelers, El Salvador once sat far down the list of places to visit for pleasure. In the early 1990s, a trip to San Salvador often meant flying in for business, staying close to the hotel, moving around with an armed driver and leaving as soon as the meeting was over.

That old image is now colliding with a very different reality.

El Salvador has been drawing more attention across the region as its tourism industry grows, helped by improved security, lower prices, easy air access and a Pacific surf coast that is becoming harder for travelers to ignore. For people based in Costa Rica, the comparison is especially sharp. El Salvador is close, affordable and simple to reach, with a flight from San José that takes about an hour.

A recent four-night trip from Costa Rica to El Salvador showed how much the country has changed for travelers. The arrival process was fast, immigration and customs were straightforward, and a private taxi from the airport to El Tunco, one of the country’s best-known beach towns, cost $35.

The drive took about half an hour.El Tunco is compact. Its narrow streets are lined with small stores, surf shops, cafés, restaurants and bars, all set around one of the most recognizable surf breaks in Central America. It does not take a full day to walk the main area, but the appeal is not in its size.

It is in how easy everything feels once you are there.The town has the feel of a place built around surf travelers, weekend visitors and locals who know exactly what they are doing. Food is one of the surprises. A beachfront restaurant with picture menus might normally raise doubts, but one dinner quickly turned into three meals there in less than 48 hours.

For travelers used to high coastal prices in Costa Rica, the value stands out.Coffee was another strong point. A local café in El Tunco delivered the kind of quality that suggests a maturing hospitality scene, not a destination simply getting by on location.

Part of that may come from Salvadorans returning after years abroad, bringing back experience in restaurants, service and tourism.For Costa Rica travelers, the biggest difference may be cost. El Salvador uses the U.S. dollar as legal tender, which makes pricing simple for many visitors. Meals, transportation and lodging can often come in well below comparable beach areas in Costa Rica. Airfares can also be attractive, with regional flights sometimes priced lower than a short domestic flight inside Costa Rica.

The roads also make an impression. The route from the airport to the coast was smooth, and beach traffic was light. For anyone used to weekend backups on Costa Rica’s Pacific highways, that alone changes the rhythm of a short beach trip.Surf remains the main draw along this stretch of coast.

El Tunco sits in the middle of one of Central America’s most consistent Pacific surf corridors. The beach break at El Tunco works well for beginners and intermediate surfers, with waves that are manageable enough for lessons but still strong enough to keep more experienced surfers interested.A few minutes up the coast, Playa El Zonte offers longer rides and a point break better suited to surfers with more experience.

The town has also gained international attention as Bitcoin Beach, the small coastal community linked to El Salvador’s cryptocurrency experiment. Further along the coast, Punta Roca near La Libertad is the country’s best-known wave. The right-hand point break has hosted international competitions and is regularly mentioned among the top surf spots in Central America. Warm water year-round adds to the appeal. The dry season, from November through April, is generally the best-known window for consistent conditions, although surfers visit throughout the year. The coast has a relaxed pace, with surf setting much of the daily schedule.

El Salvador is still not Costa Rica, and that is part of the point. It does not offer the same national park network, wildlife tourism infrastructure or established eco-tourism reputation. Costa Rica remains the region’s best-known destination for rainforest travel, biodiversity and family-friendly nature trips. But El Salvador is making a different pitch. It is close, affordable, easy to move around, strong on surf and food, and no longer feels like the place many travelers remember from decades ago.

For Costa Rica residents and repeat visitors looking for a short regional escape, the country now deserves a serious look. A four-night trip is enough to test the waters, eat well, catch the coast and see why El Salvador’s tourism rise is no longer just a headline.

It is happening on the ground.

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