Where Costa Ballena Actually Is
The villas sit on Costa Ballena — "the Whale Coast" — a stretch of Costa Rica's Southern Pacific shore between the towns of Dominical and Ojochal, with Uvita at its center.
It's roughly a three-and-a-half-hour drive south of San José along the coast, in the country's greener, less-developed south. This is not a planned resort zone like Guanacaste up north. It's a living region of small towns, forested hills, river mouths, and quiet roads, where the rainforest comes down close to the water. The name is no accident: humpback whales pass along this coast on their migration, and the sandbar at Uvita is shaped, almost unbelievably, like a whale's tail.
"North or south — where exactly does it sit?"
South. You fly into San José, then drive southwest to the coast and turn south. Jaco and Manuel Antonio are north of Costa Ballena; the Osa Peninsula and Corcovado lie further south. The villas are in the calmer middle of that line.
The Three Towns: Dominical, Uvita & Ojochal
Costa Ballena is really three small towns strung along about half an hour of coastline. Most villas sit in the hills around one of them, and which one shapes the feel of your stay more than anything else.
Dominical
The original surf town — barefoot, a little bohemian, younger in energy. A sandy beach with real waves, a cluster of casual restaurants and bars, and the launch point for the Nauyaca Waterfalls and the Barú river basin inland. If "Costa Rica beach town" is the picture in your head, this is closest to it.
It's also the practical, family-friendly end: a Friday farmers market, urgent care close by, and plenty of kid- and vegan-friendly spots. Just south, the gentler waves at Dominicalito make it a fine place for children and teenagers to take their first surf lessons — well worth exploring if you're traveling with young ones. And Dominical is the closest of the three towns to Manuel Antonio — about a 35-minute drive — and to the domestic airport at Quepos.
Uvita
The practical heart of the coast and the gateway to Marino Ballena National Park and the Whale's Tail. This is where the larger supermarket (BM) is, along with banks, clinics, and most services. Many guests base their week around Uvita simply because everything is reachable from it.
Its weekly feria runs Wednesday and Saturday mornings, and the town is the jump-off point for the whale-watching boats. If you want one base with everything — services, beach, the national park, and an easy reach to both Dominical and Ojochal — Uvita is it.
Ojochal
The quietest and most international of the three, tucked into the jungle and known — genuinely — for its restaurants. More residential, more private, greener still. Guests who want stillness and good dinners over surf and bustle tend to love it here.
The entrance of Ojochal is where everyone gathers — the Deli Super market, restaurants like Citrus, Potz, and Heliconia, Botanica for its unusual range of natural products, and, most recently, a pair of pickleball courts — while the interior, up in the green, is where people stay. Accommodation tends to run a little gentler than Uvita or Dominical, and you're very close to Ventanas and Piñuela beaches.
Can You Walk to the Beach?
For most Pura Villas homes, no — the beach is a short drive, not a walk. This is the single most common question we get, and the honest answer matters.
The views and the privacy that make these homes special come from sitting a little up in the hills. That elevation is exactly why you can see the ocean from the pool — and also why you wouldn't want to walk back up from the sand in the heat. A few homes are genuinely close to the beach; most are a five-to-fifteen-minute drive. If walking to the beach is essential to your trip, tell us early and we'll point you to the homes where it's realistic, rather than letting you discover the hill on arrival.
How Far Is the Beach, the Town, and the Shops?
From most villas, the nearest beach and town are a short drive — often around ten to fifteen minutes — with the others close behind.
Because the towns are strung so closely together, basing in the hills above one of them still leaves the whole coast open to you: a villa might be minutes from Uvita's beaches and shops, with Dominical and Ojochal each a short drive in either direction. The exact minutes belong on each villa's page — but the pattern holds: close enough for spontaneous beach mornings, far enough up for the view and the quiet.
Is It a Gated Community? Is It Safe?
Most Pura Villas homes sit in quiet, gated communities or on private land, and the area is calm and safe in the ordinary, sensible way.
Many homes are behind a community gate with an entry code, and several have a guard on the neighborhood — guests are given gate codes and door codes on arrival. These aren't fortress compounds; they're peaceful residential pockets in the hills. As anywhere, you lock up and use common sense, but the day-to-day feeling guests describe is one of quiet and ease, not worry. Security specifics for your home — gate, guard, codes — are covered on its villa page.
"Is there an exact address?"
Often not, in the way you're used to — rural homes here may not have a street address. Instead we share a precise Google Maps pin to the community gate, and for many homes the team meets you there in person to lead you in.
Standalone, or in a Community? How Close Are the Neighbors?
It varies by home. Some are private standalone properties; others sit within a small gated community with neighbors nearby but rarely on top of you.
Privacy is one of the things guests care about most, and it's one of the things that genuinely differs house to house — how visible the neighbors are, whether there's building going on nearby, how enclosed the pool feels. We'd rather tell you plainly than let a photo imply more seclusion than a home has, so each villa page is candid about its privacy and its immediate surroundings.
What's Around You
Within a short drive: beaches, Marino Ballena National Park and the Whale's Tail, waterfalls, restaurants, and the everyday shops you'll need.
The signature outings are close. Marino Ballena National Park at Uvita is where you walk out onto the Whale's Tail sandbar at low tide; the Nauyaca Waterfalls near Dominical are the classic day trip; Ojochal is the place to go for dinner. For provisioning, BM Supermarket in Uvita or Dominical covers most needs — guests are sometimes surprised to find beach chairs, coolers, and beach gear there too. The full list of beaches, parks, and day trips has its own guide; this is just the lay of the land.
A word on the whales, since they're what the coast is named for. Humpbacks move through these waters across two long stretches of the year — roughly January into April, then July through November — so the window to see them here is unusually generous, with the weeks around late August and September the most dependable. The national park dates to 1989 and shelters one of the larger coral reefs on this side of the Pacific; it opens daily, and the whale-and-dolphin and snorkeling boats set out from the Uvita beach.
Is There Nightlife?
Some, but gently. This is a coast of sunset drinks, long dinners, and live music in Dominical — not clubs and late nights.
If you're picturing the party scene of Jaco or Tamarindo, this isn't it, and most guests choose Costa Ballena precisely because it isn't. Evenings here tend to belong to the villa: the pool, the grill, the sound of the forest, and the stars. Dominical has the liveliest after-dark scene of the three towns, and it's still relaxed.
How It Fits With Jaco, Quepos & Manuel Antonio
They're all to the north, and reachable as day trips — but you don't stay in them. Costa Ballena is the quieter coast below them.
Manuel Antonio National Park, near Quepos, is the famous one and a doable day trip north for its wildlife and beaches, though it's busier than anything around Uvita. Jaco, further north again, is the lively beach town. Knowing they're up the road is useful; most guests find they rarely leave Costa Ballena once they've settled in.
The Honest Trade-Off
Almost everything guests love about staying here — the ocean view, the birdsong, the privacy, the quiet — comes from being a little up in the green hills rather than down on a busy beachfront. The cost of that is simple and worth knowing in advance: the beach is usually a drive, the roads are honest, and the pace is slow. For most people, within a day, that stops being a trade-off and starts being the reason they came.
And if you're ever unsure which side of that trade a given home falls on, just ask. Shannon grew up on this coast and the team lives here year-round — pointing you to the home and the rhythm that actually fit how you want to spend your days is the whole point of booking through people who know the place.
“Stunning home dropped into pristine natural beauty. Absolutely private, but near all the amenities you could ask for — good restaurants, beautiful beaches.”
From a guest review