Airport & the Drive, in Brief
Fly into San José (SJO) and plan about a three-and-a-half-hour drive south to Costa Ballena.
The full arrival picture — the airport timeline, the short Quepos (XQP) flight option, and what to do if you land late at night — lives in the Getting Here guide. This guide is about the part that trips people up once you are on the road: the vehicle, the 4x4 question, and how villa access actually works.
Do You Need a 4x4?
For many Pura Villas homes, yes — a real 4x4 SUV is the right choice, and for some homes it's genuinely required.
The main coastal highway is smooth and easy. But many of the best villas sit a little above town, and the final stretch can be steep, gravel, gated, or simply harder after an afternoon of rain. It varies by home: some are paved right to the door, others truly need four-wheel drive. Your villa page gives the final word for that house.
This isn't a rental upsell. One particular section of road near several homes — a sharp turn on an uphill stretch — was converted to 4x4-only after too many regular cars struggled on it. The team is direct about it because the alternative isn't fun:
"A non-4x4 won't make it up and could damage the road. A couple of weeks ago a group chose not to follow the instructions and nearly ended up in the trenches — they couldn't make the hill and had to call a 4x4 taxi. Not the start to a vacation anyone wants."
None of which is meant to worry you — it's the opposite. Once you tell us your dates, your group, and how you like to travel, the team will tell you exactly what works for your home, point you to the right vehicle and the smoothest way in, and quietly handle the details so the road is the last thing on your mind. With a little guidance up front, getting here becomes part of the adventure rather than a hurdle — and we'll make sure you spend your time on the good parts.
"Can a Van Make It? Can We Just Park Below and Walk Up?"
"We rented a full-size passenger van for the group — will that reach the villa?"
Often not, for hillside homes. A large van is not a substitute for a 4x4. The team has watched a Hyundai H1 van fail at exactly that sharp uphill turn. For some villas a Sprinter-style shuttle can bring the whole group close, but the final climb may still need a true 4x4 to finish.
"Then can we leave the van at the bottom and walk up?"
It's not the plan we'd suggest. Beyond the luggage and the hill, the team's honest take: "I wouldn't recommend leaving a van on the side of the road for a few days — it can look sketchy." Better to arrive in the right vehicle, or let us coordinate one that fits the road.
What Kind of Car Should You Rent?
For a hillside villa, rent a genuine 4x4 SUV — not the cheapest "SUV" category online.
Good examples are a Toyota Prado, Toyota Fortuner, Ford Everest, or a similar high-clearance four-wheel drive. The team will often point you toward something like a RAV4 with proper dirt-and-mud settings: not flashy, just the kind of car that climbs a wet hill without drama. If you're booking a paved-access home and won't venture onto rough roads, a smaller car can be fine — the villa page tells you which world you're in.
Which Rental Car Companies Do We Recommend?
We most often work with Alamo and National, and we keep a local contact there.
The value isn't only the car — it's having someone who already knows the villa's access, the right vehicle, the insurance, and whether the car can be delivered to you. The cheapest airport quote is rarely the best Costa Rica rental; a good local setup matters far more when you have luggage, more than one vehicle, a late arrival, or a home with steep access.
"Can the car be delivered to us, or to the villa?"
Often, yes — depending on timing and agency, Alamo or National can sometimes coordinate delivery to the villa or near Quepos Airport, so you skip the desk altogether. Share your flight details early and we'll see what's possible.
Rental-Car Insurance
It comes down to two choices: basic — the legal minimum, usually with a deductible — or full coverage, which costs a bit more but removes the deductible and the worry. Most villa guests take full coverage.
If you plan to lean on credit-card coverage, confirm it actually applies in Costa Rica and bring the proof you'll need. The point that matters most isn't the policy — it's renting from a company that can genuinely help, in person, if something goes sideways mid-trip.
Private Airport Transfers & Shuttles
Yes, we can arrange a private transfer or shuttle from San José, and it's often the gentlest way to begin after a long flight.
Many of our arrivals come through trusted local shuttle drivers. Here's how it actually feels: your driver waits just past the doors with a little sign and your name on it, helps with the bags, and stops with you for lunch somewhere along the way — so the four hours become part of the trip rather than something to endure. We quote it for your group size and luggage; larger groups or all-day drivers cost more.
"We're a big group — will one shuttle cover all of us?"
Tell us the headcount and we'll size it right, sometimes across more than one vehicle. For a steep-access home, the transfer has to match the road, not just the number of seats — a comfortable highway van isn't always the vehicle that finishes the last hill.
Quepos Airport and Domestic Flights
If you'd rather not drive the whole way, a short domestic flight from San José to Quepos (XQP) replaces most of the road — and gives you a genuinely beautiful first look at the country from above.
From Quepos, guests carry on by rental car, shuttle, or local driver for the shorter remaining stretch. Flights can leave early — useful if you want to start the day at the coast. Alamo and National can sometimes have a vehicle waiting near Quepos or at the villa. As with everything here, it works best when flight details are shared early.
Uber, Taxis, and Local Drivers
Uber is not a plan in Costa Ballena. It may appear now and then, but availability is unreliable — you can get a ride down a hill and find none waiting to bring you back up. It can be useful around San José; it is not the way to move around Uvita, Dominical, or Ojochal.
"Are Ubers reliable for airport pickup and drop-off?"
No — don't build your arrival around one. Use a pre-arranged shuttle, private driver, or rental car instead.
"How do taxis work here?"
Taxis and local drivers exist, but they're arranged, not hailed — many are reached by WhatsApp rather than a dispatch line. For a hillside villa, use a driver who knows the access. This simply isn't a place to count on last-minute, city-style rides.
Should You Rent a Car or Use Drivers?
Rent a car if you want freedom; use drivers if you'd rather not drive and will plan ahead.
A rental is the better choice for longer stays, beach days, restaurants, waterfalls, grocery runs, and groups that like to move on their own clock. Drivers work beautifully if you plan to stay close to the villa or book organized tours — just arrange rides in advance, especially for dinners out and hillside homes, since you can't reliably summon one on the spot.
Arrival, the Meeting Point & Check-In
For many villas, Adrian or Jordan meets you right off the main road and leads you up — you'll spot them easily in a white Toyota Prado.
It's not that the house is hard to reach; it's that map pins, gates, private lanes, and a ten-minute mountain climb are simply easier the first time with someone in front of you. The meeting point is usually something concrete and easy to find — for some homes, the bridge just outside the community at the end of the main downhill road, by the river. From there it's a short, led drive to the door. Keep the team posted on your ETA, your vehicle, and whether you're stopping for groceries, and they'll time the meeting to your arrival.
"What time is check-in?"
In-person check-in is usually planned between 3:00 and 8:00 pm — never later. Earlier can sometimes be arranged depending on the home and the day — just ask.
"Is the villa gated? Is it safe?"
Most homes sit in quiet, often gated communities or on private land, and arrival is personally guided — part of why that first meeting exists. The specifics for your home are on its villa page.
Late Arrivals & Driving After Dark
Two firm rules: check-in is always in person, and never after 8:00 pm. For a late flight, the safest start is to stay near the airport or in Jacó and drive down fresh the next morning.
We won't put guests — or our own hosts — on Costa Rica's unlit, uneven coastal roads after dark; it's simply not advice we'd give our own family. If you do need to reach the villa the same night, we'll arrange a certified driver we know and trust who has been to your villa before, give you all the access codes to let yourself in, and do the in-person check-in the next morning. The Getting Here guide covers this in full.
Groceries Before Arrival
If you don't plan to leave again after check-in, stop for groceries first — BM Supermarket in Dominical or Uvita is the usual recommendation, and for some homes it's only about five minutes before the meeting point.
We can also pre-stock the house before you arrive: send a list, and the team shops it for you for a set service fee plus whatever the groceries come to. Many families love walking into a kitchen that's already ready after a long travel day.
The Honest Trade-Off
The views and the privacy almost always come from a little elevation — which is the same elevation that gives you the steeper lane, the gate, or the short 4x4-only section near the top. It's not a problem when it's planned for. It only turns stressful when the car, the timing, or the driver doesn't match the house.
So we'd rather over-prepare you than let you meet the hill by surprise. Tell us your plans and your group, and we'll make sure the vehicle, the timing, and the meeting point all fit your particular home — that small bit of forethought is the whole difference between a rough start and an easy one.
“The road up to the property can be a bit rugged, especially at night — but the view is amazing, and we loved watching the sunset from the infinity pool.”
From a guest review