Palm Desert sits roughly in the middle of the Coachella Valley, about 15 minutes east of Palm Springs and 20 minutes west of Indio. It's where people go when they want a more low-key version of the valley, less nightlife-focused than Palm Springs, less festival-adjacent than Indio. It earns that reputation.

The city has two things the others don't: El Paseo, the valley's best shopping street, and the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, which is genuinely one of the better small zoos in California. Here's what's worth your time.

Palm-lined boulevard in Palm Desert California with desert mountains in the background

The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens

This is the one thing in Palm Desert that's hard to replicate anywhere else in the valley. The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens is a 1,200-acre zoo and botanical garden focused entirely on desert ecosystems. You'll see African and North American desert animals: cheetahs, meerkats, mountain lions, a giraffe feeding station, desert tortoises, and a walk-through African village area. The botanical sections cover cacti and succulents from around the world.

The scale is intimate enough to do in half a day without feeling rushed. Tickets run about $32 for adults, $22 for children. Worth it, especially in cooler months. In summer, get there when it opens (8am) and leave by noon before the heat spikes.

El Paseo Shopping District

El Paseo runs about a mile through central Palm Desert and is the main upscale shopping street in the Coachella Valley. It has a mix of independent boutiques, galleries, jewelry stores, and national brands, all organized in a walkable corridor with good restaurants in between. It's a pleasant street to walk even if you're not shopping.

The Desert Art Walk happens on Thursdays from October through May: galleries stay open late, music plays on the street, and the whole area has more energy than usual. If your visit overlaps with a Thursday, it's worth timing dinner around it.

Mid-century modern neighborhood street in the Coachella Valley with palm trees and mountain backdrop

McCallum Theatre

The valley's main performing arts venue seats about 1,100 and books a solid season: touring Broadway shows, jazz and classical, comedy acts, and international performers. It's on Bob Hope Drive in the center of Palm Desert. If you're staying in the valley for more than a few days, checking the calendar is worth it. Shows sell out during peak season.

Shields Date Garden

Technically in Indio (20 minutes east), but worth mentioning because most people hear about it in the Palm Desert context. Shields has been growing and selling Medjool dates since 1924. The retail shop sells date shakes, date bread, and dates in every variety. There's also a short but genuinely charming film about the sex life of the date palm that's been screening there since the 1950s. Go, buy a date shake, watch the film.

Shields Date Garden sign and palm trees in Indio California

Indian Wells Tennis Garden

The Indian Wells Tennis Garden, just east of Palm Desert, hosts the BNP Paribas Open every March, one of the largest tennis tournaments in the world. Outside of tournament weeks, the facility is open for public play on its courts. The grounds are well-maintained and the views of the mountains make it one of the more scenic places to play tennis in California.

Golf

Palm Desert has over a dozen courses and is part of the broader Coachella Valley golf scene with more than 100 courses total. The Desert Willow Golf Resort is the city's own municipal course, a public option with two well-designed 18-hole layouts. Indian Wells Country Club and Big Horn Golf Club are private but relevant if you have member access. Greens fees at public courses run $50 to $150 depending on season and time of day.

Where to Eat

The short version: Kitchen 86 on El Paseo for lunch (sandwiches and salads in a small, casual space), Tía Carmen at the JW Marriott in Indian Wells for upscale Southwestern, and Café des Beaux-Arts on El Paseo, which has been on the same block for 30 years and still earns it. For the full restaurant breakdown on this stretch of the valley, read our Palm Desert restaurant guide.

Desert street in the Coachella Valley with mountain views and palm trees

Day Trips from Palm Desert

Aerial view of Indian Wells Tennis Garden with multiple courts and mountain backdrop in the Coachella Valley

Indian Wells Tennis Garden from above. 29 courts, including a 16,000-seat stadium that hosts the BNP Paribas Open every March.

Palm Desert is a good base for the valley. From here: Palm Springs is 15 minutes west (aerial tram, downtown, mid-century architecture). Coachella and Stagecoach festival grounds are 25 minutes east. Joshua Tree's south entrance is about 50 minutes. Salton Sea is an hour southeast. Read our Indio guide for what's on the eastern side of the valley.

When to Visit

October through May is the season. The valley is genuinely pleasant: daytime highs in the 70s and 80s, cool evenings, green courses. June through September, highs regularly exceed 110 degrees. The Living Desert reduces its hours. El Paseo is quieter. Prices drop 30 to 50 percent. Some restaurants reduce days. If you're going in summer, read our summer guide first.

If you're spending more than a day in the valley, our properties in Indio give you a useful base: The Cozy Cactus (3BR, private hot tub, community pool) and Terra Luz (3BR, private saltwater pool, Latin/Cuban design) are both 20 minutes east of Palm Desert in Indian Palms. Either makes a comfortable home base for a valley trip that includes Palm Desert, Palm Springs, and Indio.

FAQ: Things to Do in Palm Desert

What is the most popular attraction in Palm Desert?

The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens. It's the one attraction in Palm Desert with no equivalent elsewhere in the valley: 1,200 acres of desert zoo and botanical garden, with African and North American desert animals in an intimate format. Half a day is enough, and it earns the admission price in cooler months.

Is El Paseo in Palm Desert worth visiting?

Yes, particularly if your visit overlaps with a Thursday from October through May. The Desert Art Walk keeps galleries open late and puts music on the street, which makes El Paseo genuinely lively rather than just a shopping district. Even outside of Art Walk evenings, it's a pleasant mile-long stretch to walk with good dining options built in.

How far is Palm Desert from Palm Springs?

About 15 miles, or 20 minutes on Highway 111. From Indio, Palm Desert is roughly 20 minutes west. Most Coachella Valley visitors end up driving this corridor at some point, and Palm Desert makes a natural midday stop between the two ends of the valley.

What is the best time of year to visit Palm Desert?

November through April is the reliable window. March brings the BNP Paribas Open at nearby Indian Wells, which fills hotels but keeps the valley energized. January and February are quieter and cooler, with the occasional cold morning offset by clear skies and uncrowded courses and trails.