| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 June 2026, Monday | 5:41 AM | 7:50 PM | 14h 09m |
| 2 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:41 AM | 7:51 PM | 14h 09m |
| 3 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:40 AM | 7:51 PM | 14h 10m |
| 4 June 2026, Thursday | 5:40 AM | 7:52 PM | 14h 11m |
| 5 June 2026, Friday | 5:40 AM | 7:52 PM | 14h 12m |
| 6 June 2026, Saturday | 5:40 AM | 7:53 PM | 14h 12m |
| 7 June 2026, Sunday | 5:40 AM | 7:53 PM | 14h 13m |
| 8 June 2026, Monday | 5:40 AM | 7:54 PM | 14h 13m |
| 9 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:40 AM | 7:54 PM | 14h 14m |
| 10 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:40 AM | 7:55 PM | 14h 14m |
| 11 June 2026, Thursday | 5:40 AM | 7:55 PM | 14h 15m |
| 12 June 2026, Friday | 5:40 AM | 7:55 PM | 14h 15m |
| 13 June 2026, Saturday | 5:40 AM | 7:56 PM | 14h 16m |
| 14 June 2026, Sunday | 5:40 AM | 7:56 PM | 14h 16m |
| 15 June 2026, Monday | 5:40 AM | 7:56 PM | 14h 16m |
| 16 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:40 AM | 7:57 PM | 14h 16m |
| 17 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:40 AM | 7:57 PM | 14h 17m |
| 18 June 2026, Thursday | 5:40 AM | 7:57 PM | 14h 17m |
| 19 June 2026, Friday | 5:40 AM | 7:58 PM | 14h 17m |
| 20 June 2026, Saturday | 5:41 AM | 7:58 PM | 14h 17m |
| 21 June 2026, Sunday | 5:41 AM | 7:58 PM | 14h 17m |
| 22 June 2026, Monday | 5:41 AM | 7:58 PM | 14h 17m |
| 23 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:41 AM | 7:58 PM | 14h 17m |
| 24 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:42 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 17m |
| 25 June 2026, Thursday | 5:42 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 16m |
| 26 June 2026, Friday | 5:42 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 16m |
| 27 June 2026, Saturday | 5:42 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 16m |
| 28 June 2026, Sunday | 5:43 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 16m |
| 29 June 2026, Monday | 5:43 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 15m |
| 30 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:44 AM | 7:59 PM | 14h 15m |
Tijuana sits on the Pacific coast of Baja California, with its western neighborhoods fronting the open ocean. The coastal areas provide clear sunset horizons over the water, and the hills ringing the eastern side of the city offer elevated vantage points for sunrise.
The park sits at the US-Mexico border where the fence meets the Pacific, with an open beach and sky to the east over low coastal hills. No entrance fee; reachable by car or taxi through the Playas de Tijuana neighborhood.
The 543-meter summit is the highest point in Tijuana and delivers a 360-degree panorama; on clear mornings the San Diego skyline is visible to the north. The trailhead is about 20 minutes by car from downtown and no permit is required.
This large municipal park in eastern Tijuana, on Boulevard Insurgentes between Avenida O'Higgins and Paseo del Parque, has open grassy areas with a clear eastern sky. The park opens early in the morning and charges a small entrance fee.
The boardwalk and beach of Playas de Tijuana face west over the Pacific with an unobstructed horizon year-round. Street parking is available on Paseo Ensenada; beach access is free.
This bullfighting arena stands one block from the Pacific and is known internationally as the Bullring by the Sea. On non-event days the surrounding esplanade and adjacent beach are freely accessible, with a clear western horizon.
From the park's western edge, the border fence runs straight into the ocean and the Pacific horizon is fully open. On weekends between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., US Border Patrol escorts visitors to the mesh fence on the American side.
The western edge of the summit looks over the Pacific coastline toward Rosarito. The main trail covers 2.5 miles with 1,380 ft of elevation gain; allow roughly 2 hours and bring water and sturdy footwear.
The toll road running south from Playas de Tijuana hugs the Pacific cliffs and has several marked pull-off miradores with open western views over the ocean. The first mirador is about 5 minutes from the Playas de Tijuana toll booth.