Best Day Trips From San Diego: 5 Drives Worth the Rental Car
One of them has an expiration date. The Anza-Borrego superbloom is peaking right now, and the rest of the island exploration beyond San Diego is spectacular year-round.
Best Day Trips From San Diego: 5 Drives Worth the Rental Car
If you are reading this in March or April 2026, one of these trips has an expiration date. Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is in the middle of a wildflower superbloom right now, and once temperatures climb above 85 degrees, the show is over for the year.
But here is the bigger point: San Diego is not really the destination. It is the base camp. The best experiences in this part of California – the sea caves, the desert wildflowers, the wineries, the surreal rock formations – are all 30 minutes to 2 hours outside the city. You need a car to reach every single one of them.
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These are the five drives that justify the rental. For each one, I will tell you exactly how far it is, when to go, and what you actually need to bring.
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park – The Superbloom
Distance from San Diego: 86 miles east, about 2 hours
When to go: Mid-March through early April for peak wildflower bloom. Any time of year for desert hiking, but avoid summer.
Anza-Borrego is 600,000 acres of raw desert – the largest state park in California. Most of the year it is beautiful in a stark, empty way. But when winter rains are generous, the entire desert floor erupts in purple, orange, and white wildflowers. 2026 is one of those years. The bloom is real, it is peaking now, and it will not last.
The best displays are along Henderson Canyon Road near Borrego Springs. Park along the road and walk straight into the fields. Desert lilies, sand verbena, desert sunflowers, and dune evening primrose cover the ground in every direction.
What you need to know before you go:
- Arrive by 7 AM on weekends. Parking along Henderson Canyon fills up early during superbloom season. Weekdays are dramatically less crowded.
- Download offline maps. Cell service is essentially nonexistent in the park. Google Maps lets you download regions for offline use – do this before you leave San Diego.
- Bring more water than you think you need. There are no water sources in the park and no shade. The desert sun is punishing even in March.
- Pick the right base. If you are heading to Anza-Borrego early, staying somewhere near the I-8 corridor saves time. Browse our San Diego city page to find a hotel that works as a launchpad.
Bring at least a liter of water per person for every hour you plan to be out. There are two camps on desert water bottles and both are right. The Nalgene Wide Mouth is the classic – it started as laboratory equipment in the 1940s and became the default bottle on every serious trail because it is virtually indestructible, weighs nothing, and the wide mouth fits ice cubes. Every thru-hiker you have ever seen carries one. If you prefer stainless steel, the YETI Rambler 26oz keeps water ice cold for hours in double-wall vacuum insulation, which matters when it is 95 degrees and your car has been baking in a desert parking lot all morning.
Check Nalgene 32oz Wide Mouth price on Amazon
Check YETI Rambler 26oz price on Amazon
La Jolla Cove and Sea Caves
Distance from San Diego: 14 miles north, about 30 minutes
When to go: Year-round, but summer has the calmest water and best visibility for snorkeling.

La Jolla Cove is a marine preserve, which means no fishing, no collecting, and the underwater life is absurdly abundant for a spot this close to a major city. You will see bright orange garibaldi fish within seconds of putting your face in the water. Leopard sharks cruise the shallows at La Jolla Shores in summer. Sea lions lounge on the rocks and occasionally swim alongside snorkelers without a care in the world.
La Jolla Cove vs. La Jolla Shores: The Cove has the dramatic cliffs and sea caves but entry is rocky and surf can be unpredictable. Shores, a short drive north, has a sandy beach entry that is much easier for beginners. Both spots are part of the same marine preserve, so the underwater life is comparable.
The sea caves are the highlight for kayakers. Guided tours launch from the Shores and paddle into seven caves carved into the sandstone cliffs. You can also rent solo kayaks if you have experience, but the caves require navigating swells and tight entrances – go with a guide your first time. If you want to stay close to the cove and skip the morning drive, check our boutique hotels in San Diego – several are in the La Jolla area.
One thing people get wrong here: La Jolla is a marine preserve. Regular sunscreen washes off in the water and damages coral and marine life. Reef-safe mineral sunscreen is not just a courtesy – it is an expectation. Sun Bum Mineral SPF 50 is what you will find in every surf shop in San Diego for a reason. It is Hawaii reef-act compliant, goes on without the white cast that makes most mineral sunscreens miserable, and it actually stays put in the water.
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If you snorkel regularly or plan to visit reefs on future trips, owning your own mask-and-fin set is worth it. Rental gear at La Jolla runs about $30 for a single day and the fit is always a gamble – one trip with your own gear and it has already paid for itself. The Cressi Palau set is the Wirecutter top pick – adjustable fins, a solid silicone mask, and a dry-top snorkel that actually keeps water out. Do not want to pack bulky fins in your carry-on? Order on Amazon and have it shipped to an Amazon Locker near your San Diego hotel before you arrive.
Check Cressi Palau snorkel set price on Amazon
Where We’d Stay in San Diego
Temecula Wine Country
Distance from San Diego: 60 miles north, about 1 hour
When to go: Year-round. Spring and fall have the best weather for outdoor tastings. Weekdays are quieter and some wineries offer weekday-only tasting deals.
Temecula has over 40 wineries and it feels nothing like the rest of Southern California. Rolling hills, vineyards in every direction, and tasting rooms that range from rustic barn to full Mediterranean estate. You drive over a ridge on the 15 freeway, drop into the valley, and suddenly you are in a different climate. It is genuinely surprising the first time.
The wineries worth your time:
- Ponte Winery – The one most people start with. Large property, good food on-site, and a reliable tasting flight. Book a table at the restaurant if you want lunch with a vineyard view.
- Leoness Cellars – Smaller, quieter, and the views from the terrace are the best in the valley. Their Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah are the reason people come back.
- Callaway Vineyard – One of the original Temecula wineries. The tasting room is no-frills compared to the newer estates, but the wines are solid and it is rarely crowded.
- South Coast Winery – Worth the stop for the grounds alone. It is the largest winery in the valley and has a resort attached if you decide to stay overnight.
One thing people get wrong here: They try to hit five or six wineries in a day and end up rushing through all of them. Two or three is the right number. Tastings run $20-30 each, most waive the fee if you buy a bottle, and the actual experience of sitting on a terrace overlooking the vines is the whole point. You do not need reservations during the week, but weekends at Ponte and Leoness fill up – book ahead.
If you want to make the morning dramatic, book a hot air balloon ride at sunrise. Several operators launch from the vineyard fields and you float over the entire valley as the fog burns off. It is one of those experiences that sounds touristy until you are actually up there.
The drive back is easy. Take the 15 south and you are back in San Diego in an hour. If you are combining this with La Jolla, hit the cove in the morning and Temecula in the afternoon – they pair well. Temecula also makes a great romantic day trip if you are staying in San Diego with a partner – browse our top-rated San Diego hotels for couples for a good base.
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Joshua Tree National Park
Distance from San Diego: 170 miles northeast, about 2.5 hours
When to go: October through May. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees and the park service strongly discourages hiking.
Joshua Tree looks like another planet. The rock formations are massive, alien, and stacked in ways that seem structurally impossible. The Joshua trees themselves look like they were designed by someone who had never seen a real tree. It is genuinely one of the most unusual landscapes in North America.
Best stops for a day trip from San Diego:
- Skull Rock – a short walk from the parking area. Exactly what it sounds like.
- Cholla Cactus Garden – a quarter-mile loop through a dense field of teddy bear cholla. Do not touch them.
- Keys View – a panoramic viewpoint that stretches from the Salton Sea to Mount San Jacinto on a clear day. Worth the drive to the overlook alone.
- Arch Rock Trail – a short out-and-back hike to a natural stone arch. One of the most photographed spots in the park.
The strategy for a day trip: Leave San Diego at sunrise. You will arrive by 8 or 9 AM, which gives you the coolest hours for hiking. Do the major stops in the morning, grab lunch in the town of Joshua Tree or Twentynine Palms on your way out, and drive back in the afternoon. It is a long day, but a manageable one.
Hydration is not optional here – it is a safety issue. The National Park Service recommends bringing one gallon of water per person per day. That is not an exaggeration. The desert is dry, the sun is relentless, and there are no water sources anywhere in the park. Bring the water bottles from your Anza-Borrego trip and then bring two more. Freeze one the night before – it will thaw through the morning and you will have cold water when you need it most. You will want a hotel with a good bed after this drive – browse all verified San Diego stays and look for free parking, since you will have the rental car.
Julian
Distance from San Diego: 60 miles east, about 1 hour
When to go: Year-round. Fall is peak apple season. Spring wildflowers in the surrounding meadows are excellent in wet years.
Julian is a tiny mountain town at 4,200 feet elevation that built its entire identity around apple pie. That sounds like a gimmick until you try the pie, and then you understand.
Mom’s Pie House and Julian Pie Company are the two names everyone argues about. Mom’s has been there since 1984 and does a traditional double-crust with a flaky, buttery pastry. Julian Pie Company uses a crumb topping that borders on streusel. The correct move is to try both and pick a side.
Beyond pie, Julian has a Main Street that looks like a gold-rush film set – because it was a gold-rush town. The Eagle Mining Company offers underground tours of a real 1870s gold mine. It is unexpectedly interesting and takes about an hour.
For the hikers: Volcan Mountain Wilderness Preserve has a five-mile out-and-back trail that climbs through oak woodlands to a viewpoint overlooking the entire Anza-Borrego Desert. If you are combining Julian with Anza-Borrego on the same day, this hike connects the two areas thematically and geographically. Hike in the morning, pie for lunch, wildflowers in the afternoon. Julian is also a great family day trip – the mine tours and easy Main Street stroll work for all ages. See our top San Diego hotels for families if you are traveling with kids.
When to Take Each Trip
| Season | Best Day Trips | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Spring (Mar-Apr) | Anza-Borrego, Julian | Superbloom peaks mid-March. Julian wildflowers follow in wet years. |
| Summer (May-Aug) | La Jolla, Temecula | Calmest water and best snorkeling visibility. Outdoor tastings at their best. |
| Fall (Sep-Nov) | Julian, Temecula | Apple harvest peak. Wine country has cooler days and harvest events. |
| Winter (Dec-Feb) | Joshua Tree, Temecula | Desert hiking without the heat. Temecula is pleasant year-round. |
La Jolla works any time of year. Joshua Tree is dangerous in summer – avoid it June through September.
Where to Stay While You Explore
All five of these day trips start and end in San Diego. Your hotel is your launchpad, and the best approach is to pick a neighborhood that matches your priorities for the evenings: the Gaslamp Quarter for nightlife and dining, Pacific Beach for a laid-back surf vibe, or La Jolla if you want to be close to the cove without the morning drive.
We have reviewed 52 verified hotels in San Diego and scored them across dozens of factors. If you are planning multiple day trips, look for a property with free or reasonably priced parking – it will save you real money over the course of a week. Browse our guide to San Diego’s best beachfront and downtown stays for a full neighborhood breakdown, or jump straight to the San Diego city page to filter by what matters to you.
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Planning a San Diego trip? Browse all 52 verified stays on our San Diego city page and lock in your rental car before availability tightens.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about staying in San Diego, answered with data from our research.
Do I need a rental car for San Diego day trips?
Yes. Public transit in San Diego barely covers the city itself, and none of these day trips are reachable by bus or trolley in any practical way. Rideshare to Anza-Borrego or Joshua Tree would cost hundreds of dollars round-trip, and most drivers will not take the fare. A rental car gives you the freedom to leave early, stay late, and stop whenever something catches your eye.
When is the best time for Anza-Borrego wildflowers?
Peak bloom typically falls between mid-March and early April, depending on winter rainfall. In 2026 the superbloom started in early March and is expected to last through April in higher elevations. Arrive before 7 AM on weekends because parking at Henderson Canyon Road fills up fast. Download offline maps before you leave San Diego – there is virtually no cell service in the park.
Is La Jolla Cove good for beginner snorkelers?
La Jolla Cove itself can have moderate surf and rocky entry points, which can be tricky for first-timers. La Jolla Shores, a short drive north, has a sandy beach entry with gentler conditions and is a much better starting point for beginners. Both are part of the same marine preserve, so the underwater life is equally spectacular at either location.
How far is Joshua Tree from San Diego?
About 170 miles, or roughly 2.5 to 3 hours depending on traffic. The most scenic route takes I-15 north to I-215 and then Highway 62 east. Leave San Diego at sunrise, spend the morning hiking, and you can be back by late afternoon. It is a long day, but the landscape is unlike anything else in Southern California.
Can I combine two day trips in one day?
Julian and Anza-Borrego pair well because they are on the same general route east of San Diego. You could hit Julian for pie and a short hike in the morning, then drop down to Anza-Borrego for wildflowers in the afternoon. La Jolla is close enough to combine with Temecula if you start at the cove in the morning and head to wine country after lunch. Joshua Tree is too far to combine with anything else.
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