The Indian Palms neighborhood in Indio. Quiet, gated, and 10 minutes from everything worth doing in the valley.
I watched a couple walk into a chain restaurant in Palm Desert last week. They were 400 yards from one of the best taco spots in the valley.
That hurt my soul.
So here's the guide I wish someone had handed me when I first started spending real time out here. I own vacation rentals in Indio. I've been coming out here long enough to know which taco spot to go to, which hike to skip, and why you should never book a hotel on the Palm Springs strip if the polo grounds are your destination. No affiliate links. No "top 10 lists" recycled from a content farm. Just the spots I go and the things I do.
The Food Situation (It's Better Than You Think)
Let's get this out of the way: the Coachella Valley has good food. Not "good for the desert" good. Good.
Shields Date Garden in Indio is the move everyone skips because it sounds like a tourist trap. It's not. Go for the date shake (obviously), but stay for the date crystals and the weirdly charming film about date pollination from the 1950s. You'll leave with a bag of Medjools and zero regrets.
For Mexican food, you're spoiled. The valley is full of family-run spots where the salsa is made that morning and the tortillas are pressed while you wait. Ask any local and they'll give you a different answer. That's because there are dozens of right answers.
Downtown Palm Springs has the upscale dining scene if that's your thing. El Jefe for tacos and mezcal. Workshop Kitchen + Bar if you want to feel fancy. Some of the best meals I've had out here cost under $12.
A few specific picks near The Cozy Cactus in Indio: Gambino's for savory crepes, Papa Headz for smash burgers, Everbloom for matcha that rivals anything in LA, and L&G Desert Store for fresh tamales and Medjool dates grown a few miles away.
Joshua Tree (Yes, It's Worth the Drive)
About 45 minutes from Indio. People treat it like a day trip. It should be. Joshua Tree National Park is one of the most accessible wilderness experiences in Southern California.
Get there early. Like, sunrise early. The park is a completely different place at 6 AM versus noon. The light hits those rock formations and you'll understand why every photographer in California makes the pilgrimage.
Do the Cholla Cactus Garden trail. It's short (under a mile), flat, and the cacti glow gold at golden hour. Bring a wide-angle lens or just your eyes. Either works.
After the park, hit up the town of Joshua Tree for coffee and weird art galleries. Pie for the People does exactly what it says.
Downtown Palm Springs
You've arrived. Now skip the resort lobby and go find the good stuff.
Palm Springs proper is about 30 minutes west of Indio, and it's worth exploring beyond the Instagram spots.
The Palm Springs Art Museum is worth your time. Small enough to see in a couple hours, big enough to surprise you. The architecture alone is worth the visit.
Palm Canyon Drive is the main drag. Wander it. Pop into the vintage shops. Get an overpriced cocktail at a mid-century modern hotel bar. That's the Palm Springs experience and it delivers.
Palm Springs has always had this energy. Some things don't change.
The Aerial Tramway takes you from desert floor to 8,500 feet in ten minutes. The temperature drops 30 degrees. In summer, that's the whole selling point. In winter, there's actual snow up there while it's 70 degrees below.
The mid-century architecture neighborhoods are worth an afternoon just walking and looking.
The Coachella Polo Fields (When There's No Festival)
The Empire Polo Club in Indio hosts polo matches from January through March. Real polo. Horses and mallets and everything. It's surprisingly accessible and fun to watch even if you don't know the rules (I still don't, fully).
And yes, these are the same grounds where Coachella and Stagecoach happen. During off-season, the fields are quiet. There's something cool about standing on the same grass where Beyoncé performed, hearing nothing but wind.
If you're staying at The Cozy Cactus, you're about 10 minutes from the polo grounds. Close enough to hear the bass during festival weekends if the wind's right.
The Salton Sea
This one's polarizing. The Salton Sea is about 30 minutes south of Indio and it's... a lot.
California's largest lake. Created by accident in 1905 when an irrigation canal breached. Now it's shrinking, the shoreline is crusted with barnacle shells, and Salvation Mountain, a folk art hill covered in paint and Bible verses, sits on its eastern shore.
Is it beautiful? In a haunting, post-apocalyptic way, absolutely. Is it Instagram-pretty? No. Should you go? Yes. Once.
Bombay Beach, the tiny community on the shore, has become an art installation of sorts. Rusted cars turned into sculptures. An abandoned drive-in. It's the kind of place that makes you feel something, even if you can't name what.
The Hiking Nobody Talks About
The valley from above. Joshua Tree to the north, Salton Sea to the south, everything in between.
Indian Canyons in Palm Springs. Ancient Cahuilla trading routes lined with California fan palms. The Andreas Canyon trail follows a stream through a palm oasis. It feels like you walked through a portal into somewhere tropical.
Painted Canyon near Mecca (yes, there's a Mecca in California). Slot canyon. Ladder Canyon trail. You're literally climbing ladders bolted into canyon walls. It's free and it's one of the best hikes in Southern California. Not an exaggeration.
Thousand Palms Oasis is exactly what it sounds like. A short, flat walk to a natural palm oasis in the middle of the desert. Good for when you want nature without the cardio.
The Stuff Only Locals Know
The Coachella Valley on a clear evening. The sky out here does things cities don't allow. So do the backyards.
The wind comes up almost every afternoon. Plan outdoor activities for morning.
Thursday nights in Palm Springs is VillageFest. They close down Palm Canyon Drive for a street fair. Worth going at least once: it's the real Palm Springs, not the resort version.
The best sunsets are looking west from Indio toward the San Jacinto mountains. The alpenglow on those peaks is unreal.
Summer is hot. Obviously. But the valley is empty, everything is cheap, and the pool is all yours. Some of us prefer it. More on that in our year-round desert escape guide.
Where to Base Yourself
Palm Springs has the look. Indio has the price point and the proximity to everything.
I'm biased, but Indio is the sweet spot. Central to everything. Joshua Tree to the north, Salton Sea to the south, Palm Springs to the west. You're 10-15 minutes from the polo grounds, close to the best date farms, and away from the Palm Springs markup.
The living room at The Cozy Cactus: foosball, a kilim rug, and light that makes you want to stay in.
The Cozy Cactus is our place in Indio. Three bedrooms, community pool across the street, private hot tub, and a covered patio that makes you want to stay in as much as go out. But wherever you stay, stay in the valley long enough to get past the tourist layer. The real stuff is underneath.
The hot tub at golden hour. Palm trees. String lights. This is why you stay in Indio.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Coachella Valley known for besides the music festival?
Joshua Tree National Park is 45 minutes from Indio and draws its own serious crowd for hiking, rock climbing, and stargazing. The Indian Canyons in Palm Springs offer ancient Cahuilla trails through native fan palm oases. The valley has some of the best date farms in the country, including Shields Date Garden (since 1924) and Arriola's Tortilleria (since 1927). The Salton Sea, 30 minutes south, is a singular California experience that has nothing to do with festivals.
Is Indio worth staying in if you're not going to Coachella?
Yes. Indio is the most affordable base in the Coachella Valley for groups and families, and it sits in the middle of everything: Palm Springs is 30 minutes west, Joshua Tree is 45 minutes north, and the Salton Sea is 30 minutes south. The local food scene, particularly the birria and taqueria spots, is worth visiting independent of any festival. The polo fields at the Empire Polo Club host matches from January through March, open to the public.
What is VillageFest in Palm Springs?
VillageFest is a weekly street fair that closes Palm Canyon Drive every Thursday evening. Local vendors, live music, produce, and a version of Palm Springs that's more neighborhood than resort. It runs year-round and is worth attending at least once. Get there around 6pm before it fills up.
What is the best day trip from the Coachella Valley?
Joshua Tree for most people. Go for sunrise, hit the Cholla Cactus Garden trail, stop in the town of Joshua Tree for coffee and the weird art galleries, and be back at the pool by noon. If you've done Joshua Tree already, the Salton Sea offers a completely different experience: quieter, stranger, and more memorable than most California day trips.