REVIEW · PUERTO VALLARTA
Vegan Food Tour in Vallarta
Book on Viator →Operated by Vallarta Food Tours · Bookable on Viator
Three hours in Puerto Vallarta can change your diet. This vegan food tour pairs easy sightseeing—Malecón art views, murals, and bay scenery—with practical tips for eating plant-based in town. It ends in Zona Romántica, so you can roll right into dinner plans without starting from scratch.
What I like most is the pairing of food with context: guides such as Silvia and Miel connect what you’re tasting to local ingredients and how Mexican cuisine fits together. I also like the pacing for a small group—this runs with a maximum of 10 people, so you actually get answers instead of shouting over a crowd.
A possible drawback: it’s about a 3-hour tour with multiple stops, so if you prefer long sit-down meals or slow wandering, you’ll feel the schedule.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Why Puerto Vallarta Makes a Vegan Food Tour Easy
- The Meet-Up: Where the Tour Starts and How to Plan Your Timing
- Malecón Cruise: Art, the Seahorse Statue, and Bay Views
- Zona Romántica Walk: Murals, Plazas, and Practical Neighborhood Cues
- So What Do You Eat on a Vegan Food Tour in Vallarta?
- The Guides: Silvia and Miel Bring More Than Food
- Group Size and Pacing: Why the Tour Feels Manageable
- Price and Value: Is $59 Worth It?
- Who Should Book This Vegan Food Tour
- Should You Book This Vegan Food Tour in Vallarta?
- FAQ
- How long is the Vegan Food Tour in Puerto Vallarta?
- What does the tour cost?
- What time does the tour start?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What is the group size limit?
- Where do I meet the tour?
- Can I get a full refund if I cancel?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Malecón first, with photo stops at major sights, including the Seahorse Statue
- Vegan-focused tastings across several businesses, with some tours hitting seven stops
- English-language guiding, and you may meet guides named Silvia or Miel
- Small group size (max 10), which helps questions and conversation
- Zona Romántica finish near Emiliano Zapata, ideal for continuing on foot
- Mobile ticket + confirmation at booking means you can travel light
Why Puerto Vallarta Makes a Vegan Food Tour Easy

Puerto Vallarta has a reputation for being friendly to different eating styles, and this tour is designed to prove it. You’re not just eating vegan food—you’re learning how to spot what works locally, what to ask for, and how ingredients show up across everyday meals.
I like tours that lower the stress level. Here, you get a guided route that takes you through two of the most useful areas for first-timers: the Malecón for orientation and Zona Romántica for the everyday vibe. That matters because once you understand where things are, eating vegan afterward becomes way more straightforward.
And even if you’re not strictly vegan, you’ll still benefit. The food portion tends to be varied, and the tour format helps you compare flavors and textures without guessing. One review even noted how easy it was to eat vegan in Puerto Vallarta—and that feeling is exactly what this tour is built to deliver.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Puerto Vallarta
The Meet-Up: Where the Tour Starts and How to Plan Your Timing

You meet at Vallarta Food Tours at Av México 1193-A, 5 de Diciembre, Puerto Vallarta, Jal. The start time is 1:00 pm, and the tour runs about 3 hours.
That timing is a sweet spot. It’s late enough that you’re not rushing, but early enough that you can still have a solid dinner plan afterward. Since the tour ends in Zona Romántica, Emiliano Zapata, I recommend having a rough idea of where you’ll go next—walkable streets start right around there.
This also helps if you’re mixing the tour with other activities. The route is built for a mid-day city reset: art and ocean views first, then a neighborhood loop, then you’re positioned for more food and drinks nearby.
Malecón Cruise: Art, the Seahorse Statue, and Bay Views
The first stretch is a ride along the Malecón, Puerto Vallarta’s seaside boardwalk where public art and street energy come together. You’ll see bronze sculptures, colorful murals, and the famous Seahorse Statue—plus you’ll get photo stops and short stories about what you’re seeing.
What makes this part useful is that it’s not just pretty scenery. The guide points out landmarks and little local details, so the Malecón stops being a vague shoreline and becomes a map you can use later. Even if you’ve visited before, the art and landmark context can change how you notice the area.
Depending on the time of day, you might catch live performers, artisans, or even a sunset view over Banderas Bay. That flexibility matters on a vacation, because weather and timing always shift. The tour keeps it casual, with enough pauses for photos without dragging.
Potential drawback here: you’ll be moving at a guided pace, so if you want to linger at every sculpture for 20 minutes, you’ll want to plan your own Malecón walk afterward.
Zona Romántica Walk: Murals, Plazas, and Practical Neighborhood Cues
After the Malecón, you head into Zona Romántica, a neighborhood known for colorful streets, historic-style architecture, and creative energy. The route follows charming cobblestone streets, and you’ll pass murals, boutique cafes, plazas, and classic colonial-era looking buildings.
This section is the one I find most helpful for real-life navigation. Your guide points out local spot categories—places like panaderías, taco joints, or art galleries—and shares stories that connect the neighborhood feel to daily food culture. Even if you only remember one or two recommendations, you’ll be better equipped to find places independently later.
You’ll also understand what makes Zona Romántica different from other areas of Puerto Vallarta. The tour frames it as a place where tradition and creativity sit side-by-side, and once you walk it with a guide, it’s easier to choose where to return for breakfast, a snack, or a calmer evening.
So What Do You Eat on a Vegan Food Tour in Vallarta?
This is a vegan tour, so you can expect plant-based choices built into every stop. The format is tasting-focused, with several businesses included. One review specifically mentioned seven different businesses, and another described lots of vegan tacos, so you can reasonably expect that the menu style leans into Mexican comfort food staples.
What I like about this setup is the “variety by design” effect. Instead of eating one type of vegan dish repeatedly, you’re more likely to try different ingredient combinations and flavors across multiple stops. One review called out that the tour had many different ingredients, which is exactly what you want when you’re learning what vegan food can taste like in this region.
If you have dietary preferences beyond vegan, keep it simple. Start by telling your guide what you avoid and what you can handle. The value here is that the guide is helping you order with confidence in real places—not just trying to guess from a menu.
Small tip: pace yourself. You’re eating across multiple stops, so don’t arrive starving. Plan for a relaxed stomach, not a race to finish everything.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Puerto Vallarta
The Guides: Silvia and Miel Bring More Than Food
This tour’s real strength shows up in the guiding. Two guide names come up clearly: Silvia and Miel. Their approach isn’t just about where to eat—it’s about connecting food to local ingredients and Mexican context so it makes sense as you go.
Silvia is described as having tons of local knowledge, with a focus on Mexico and Puerto Vallarta and how that history relates to cuisine styles and ingredients. Another review also praised Silvia’s English and personality, which matters because good vegan touring depends on clear communication—especially when you’re asking questions or clarifying what’s actually vegan.
Miel gets similar praise for warmth and genuine passion for the local community. One review highlighted how helpful and friendly Miel was, and that every stop was delicious and distinct—plus the tour taught the family about vegan-friendly restaurants they could revisit later.
If you care about conversation, that’s a big plus. The maximum group size (10 people) helps the guide keep things interactive. You’re more likely to get answers tailored to what you like and what you’re unsure about.
Group Size and Pacing: Why the Tour Feels Manageable
This tour caps at 10 travelers, and that affects the whole experience. With a smaller group, you spend less time waiting and more time actually enjoying each stop. It also makes it easier to ask follow-up questions—about ingredients, about local ordering habits, or about where you can go next.
At around 3 hours, the schedule is tight but not frantic. Reviews mention a pace that felt perfect, and that matches how a well-run tasting tour should work. You get movement, you get time at stops, and you end with your appetite still ready for what’s next.
This also means you should come prepared to walk and ride. You’ll cruise along the Malecón, then move through Zona Romántica streets. Wear shoes you’re comfortable in for cobblestones and short distances.
If you’re traveling with kids or you like a more structured outing, the small group can feel calmer than typical bigger tours. Still, this is not a long, slow sightseeing day.
Price and Value: Is $59 Worth It?
At $59 per person for about 3 hours, you’re paying for a few things at once: access to multiple vegan-friendly tasting stops, guided routing through key parts of town, and a local guide who explains the why behind what you’re eating.
Is it cheaper than DIY? Sure, you can always shop for food on your own. But DIY rarely solves the hard parts: finding vegan options you can trust and learning what to order without second-guessing. This tour compresses all of that into one afternoon.
It also helps that the tour is limited to a small group and offered in English. That combination—small group, clear communication, and multiple tastings—usually translates into better value than a big, generic walking tour where you barely get time at each stop.
If you’re only in Puerto Vallarta for a short time, it’s a smart way to “front-load” vegan confidence. You’ll eat well now and also know where to go later.
Who Should Book This Vegan Food Tour
Book it if you want:
- Vegan food tastings with a guide and a planned route
- A quick way to learn your way around Malecón and Zona Romántica
- A smaller-group experience with time for questions
- A tour that helps you eat vegan in Puerto Vallarta without guessing
I’d skip it if you want:
- A long, slow food crawl with lots of free time
- A deep-detailed museum-style day
- A purely self-guided plan where you don’t want any structure
For most people, it hits a sweet spot: you eat, you see the sights, and you leave with practical knowledge you can use again.
Should You Book This Vegan Food Tour in Vallarta?
Yes—if you want a low-stress, vegan-forward way to see two of the most helpful areas in Puerto Vallarta and eat your way through it. The combo of Malecón art orientation plus Zona Romántica neighborhood cues is exactly what makes this tour more than just food.
If you’re picky about pacing, arrive hungry-but-not-starving and plan to continue your evening on foot afterward. With the small group size, you’ll likely get more out of it than you would with a larger, less focused outing.
FAQ
How long is the Vegan Food Tour in Puerto Vallarta?
It runs for about 3 hours.
What does the tour cost?
The price is $59.00 per person.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 1:00 pm.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
What is the group size limit?
The tour has a maximum of 10 travelers.
Where do I meet the tour?
You start at Vallarta Food Tours, Av México 1193-A, 5 de Diciembre, 48350 Puerto Vallarta, Jal., Mexico.
Can I get a full refund if I cancel?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.































