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Getting Around
Highway 1 is the only road through Big Sur and it is frequently closed by landslides and storm damage, so checking Caltrans road conditions before any visit is essential. There is no public bus service into the core of Big Sur, making a rental car the only practical way to explore the coastline at any meaningful depth.
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Cash or Card
Most established restaurants, inns, and shops along Highway 1 accept major credit cards, but a modest amount of cash is worth carrying for campground fees, farm stands, and the occasional roadside vendor. Connectivity is unreliable throughout much of the corridor, which can cause card terminals to fail even at businesses that normally accept them.
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Good to Know
Cell service is nearly nonexistent for most of the Big Sur stretch, and that is widely considered a feature rather than a flaw by locals and regular visitors alike. Pulling over to watch the light change or letting a conversation run long over dinner is the unspoken social contract here, and anyone visibly rushing tends to miss the entire point of the place.
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ATMs
There are no dedicated ATM facilities within the core of Big Sur itself, making it important to withdraw cash before leaving Carmel or Monterey to the north. The Fernwood Resort general store occasionally has a cash-back option at the register, but availability is not guaranteed and the amounts are limited.
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Currency
The United States Dollar (USD) is the currency used throughout Big Sur and all of California, with no exchange considerations needed for domestic travelers. International visitors will find that USD is straightforward to obtain before arrival, and most major currencies can be exchanged at banks and airports in nearby Monterey or San Francisco.
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Plugs
Type A and B outlets (120V, 60Hz), standard throughout the United States. No adapter needed for US-purchased devices.
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Safety
Highway 1 through Big Sur is a genuinely narrow, winding two-lane road with sheer drop-offs and no guardrail on many sections, so driving at a measured pace and pulling fully off the road before looking at any view is important. Coastal trails can be deceptively slippery, especially in the morning fog, and conditions can change quickly enough that telling someone the planned route before setting out is a sensible habit.
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Airports
Monterey Regional Airport (MRY) is the closest commercial airport, roughly 45 minutes north of the Big Sur gateway, with connections to Los Angeles, San Francisco, and a handful of other West Coast hubs. San Francisco International (SFO) and San Jose International (SJC) are the major regional gateways, each approximately two and a half to three hours away by car along Highway 1 or the faster inland route via US-101.