After a chaotic 48 hours of viral fear, flight cancellations, and widespread panic regarding a U.S. Embassy security alert in Mexico, the dust is finally settling.
If you have a trip booked to Mexico this week, you need to step away from social media and look at the actual boots-on-the-ground intelligence. Mexico is a massive country, and this weekend’s events impacted different regions in entirely different ways.
Here is the exact ground truth for Mexico’s top three tourist destinations today, Tuesday, February 24, and whether your vacation is actually in jeopardy.

Puerto Vallarta: The Epicenter Reopens
The physical disruptions that triggered the massive flight cancelations on Sunday were entirely localized to the western state of Jalisco. Following a major federal military operation, organized crime groups launched retaliatory blockades to slow down authorities.
Today, that localized threat has been neutralized. The highway blockades have been cleared, and the local government has resumed all regular commercial and civilian activities. The massive aviation bottleneck is also breaking; major carriers including Air Canada, WestJet, and United Airlines are officially resuming flights into Puerto Vallarta (PVR) today.

The Verdict: The airspace is open, but the region is heavily militarized. The federal government has deployed roughly 9,500 troops to secure Jalisco, and the U.S. Embassy warning remains active for the immediate area. If a massive military presence makes you uncomfortable, utilize your airline’s flexible fee-waiver policy to push your trip back. If you choose to fly in, stick strictly to the resort corridors and rely only on verified private transfers.
Cancun & The Mexican Caribbean: The Alert Is Removed

The mass panic for Caribbean travelers online over the last two days stemmed entirely from a bureaucratic dragnet, not a physical threat.
Because embassies cast incredibly wide nets during rapidly developing security events, the initial shelter-in-place order temporarily included government personnel in Quintana Roo out of an extreme abundance of caution. That sweeping diplomatic precaution is now officially over. The U.S. Mission to Mexico has explicitly removed the alert for the Caribbean coast, stating the region has returned to normal operations.
The Verdict: Keep your trip. Cancun and Puerto Vallarta are separated by over 1,200 miles. The physical events of Sunday had absolutely zero impact on the resorts, highways, or beaches of Quintana Roo. The diplomatic lockdown has ended, and the Mexican Caribbean is officially vacation as normal.

Los Cabos: The Geographic Misunderstanding
The primary reason Los Cabos got swept up in the viral anxiety comes down to a fundamental misunderstanding of Mexican geography.
When the U.S. Embassy released its official security alert, it explicitly included “Baja California” which is located at the northern border near Tijuana. Travelers quickly skimmed the warning and immediately assumed their luxury resorts in Cabo San Lucas were under lockdown. They were looking at the wrong state. Los Cabos is located in Baja California Sur—an entirely different, separate state that occupies the southern tip of the peninsula.

The Verdict: Keep your trip. The State Department deliberately excluded Los Cabos from the shelter-in-place order because the region remained entirely stable and physically isolated from the mainland fallout across the Sea of Cortez. A travel alert was never issued for Baja California Sur.
The Ground Truth: Live Safety Data
When governments issue blanket alerts, the media panics. To cut through the viral noise, we rely on hard, verifiable data. Our live Traveler Safety Index—which tracks real-time sentiment from verified tourists currently on the ground—proves the diplomatic drama barely registered for people actually on vacation.
As of this morning, Cabo San Lucas is holding an incredibly strong safety score of 90. Over in the Mexican Caribbean, Cancun is sitting highly stable at 88.The thousands of travelers currently sitting by the pools in these clear zones are reporting a completely normal, secure vacation environment.
In Puerto Vallarta, the safety index is slowly recovering and currently is sitting at 40 after bottoming out 48 hours ago.
Double-check your airline app for any residual ripple-effect delays, but proceed to the airport with confidence.
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