Mexico · Sonora

Camino del Diablo Sonoran Desert

The deadliest border crossing in North America

Expert

This is the route that killed more travelers than any other border crossing in North America — a brutal 130-mile stretch of sand washes, volcanic rock, and scattered bones that follows ancient indigenous trails and later became the preferred path for rum runners and modern smugglers. Starting near Sonoyta, Sonora, the trail parallels the border fence through the heart of the Gran Desierto, passing Tinaja Altas where desperate travelers carved their names in rock beside life-saving water holes.

Expert-level difficulty requiring serious desert preparation and recovery gear — soft sand, sharp volcanic rock, and zero services for the entire route. Travel in convoy with GPS navigation, extra fuel, water for at least five days, and repair supplies. Permits required from both Mexican and US authorities. Summer temperatures exceed 120°F; attempt only November through March. This isn’t recreation — it’s a pilgrimage to understand what desperation looks like when the desert stops playing games.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features,
Length (miles)130 mi / 209.2 km
Duration4-5 days
Max elevation (ft)2100 ft
Best seasonNovember-March
Minimum vehicleBuilt 4WD with recovery gear
Nearest townSonoyta, Sonora
Land managerMixed federal/ejidal
Permit requiredYes
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsNo
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Official: Expert

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