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Latin America is an irresistible part of the world. Colonial streets, volcanoes and coastlines, warm and open people, food that's cheap and delicious. I lived in Costa Rica for two years and have walked through Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, El Salvador and Belize, and they are all places I'd happily go back to.

But it's also true that walking around with a Japanese sense of safety can get you into trouble. Pickpocketing, bag-snatching, muggings and taxi scams can happen even in tourist areas. No place is perfectly safe, and there's an element of luck. Even so, a handful of small habits will reliably lower the odds of being targeted—that's the feeling I came away with after several stays.

This article is a summary of what I actually do when I walk around Latin America. It isn't professional risk management; please read it as one traveler's set of self-protection habits.

The golden rule: if you're mugged, don't resist

Before the specific habits, the single most important mindset.

If you're mugged, don't resist—hand over everything they ask for. A wallet, a phone, a camera: none of it is worth anything next to your life. Not provoking the other person is the safest move you can make.

In Latin America there is a non-zero chance of facing someone armed. The worst-case scenario is getting badly hurt—or killed—because you tried to hold on to your belongings. So don't carry anything you can't afford to lose, and split up what you do carry. Then, when the moment comes, you can simply hold it out and say "here." This act of letting go in advance is the foundation of every habit below.

As I'll explain, I split my money into two wallets. Even if I hand over the one I walk around with, there's another back at the hotel, so the trip goes on. Building a "I can hand over everything and still be fine" state in advance also gives you peace of mind.

Split your money into two (or more)

The most basic habit, and the one with the biggest payoff, is splitting your wallet. I divide mine into at least two.

The trick is not making the walking-around wallet so shabby it looks like a decoy. I keep it as a wallet I wouldn't mind losing, but that still looks like a real one. Handing over a beat-up or empty wallet can irritate a mugger and make them press you—"you've got more, don't you?" A wallet with a little real cash in it is something you can hand over naturally.

The main card and passport stay at the hotel. If you're robbed and the damage is one card and a little cash, you can keep traveling. A lockable suitcase, or securing your bag inside the room with a wire lock, adds another layer against trouble in the room.

ZHEGE TSA-Approved Padlock with Cable (2-pack)

ZHEGE / TSA-approved / 4-dial combination / flexible cable (80 cm) / 2 pieces

Beyond locking a suitcase zipper, the cable lets you tie your bag to a fixed object in the room, or lock a backpack's zipper pulls together so it can't be opened easily. It's a combination lock, so there's no key to lose, and the TSA approval means customs on US-routed flights won't cut it off. The 2-pack lets you put one on your suitcase and one on your day bag.

View on Amazon

Keep valuables hidden and held close

Whether you get targeted depends a lot on whether you look like you're carrying money. So show as little as possible.

Making the bag itself anti-theft helps too. In an environment like Latin America, an anti-theft bag—one with lockable zippers and slash-proof fabric—is reassuring. I use bags from a brand called Pacsafe, which has become the standard in this category.

Pacsafe Metrosafe X Anti-Theft 25L Backpack

Pacsafe / 25L / 16" laptop sleeve / slash-proof fabric (stainless mesh) / lockable zippers / RFID-blocking pocket

The body fabric has a steel mesh woven in to resist being slashed open, the main zipper locks, and there's a wire running through the strap. An RFID-blocking pocket guards your cards and passport against skimming. It's a good size to hold on your front, ideal for city walking and a day of sightseeing. It looks like an ordinary backpack rather than "obviously security gear," which actually helps it not stand out.

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Pacsafe Anti-Theft Crossbody (small shoulder bag)

Pacsafe / Metrosafe & Vibe series / slash-proof fabric / lockable zippers / RFID-blocking / crossbody

For lighter days when you don't need a backpack, a small crossbody (shoulder) bag is handy. Worn crossbody and held against your front, it's resistant to snatching. Great for days when you head out light with just a wallet, phone and passport. Pacsafe makes several crossbody models (Metrosafe, Vibe and others), so pick the capacity and color that fit your style.

See Pacsafe crossbody bags on Amazon

Don't walk while looking at your phone

This one really matters. Don't look at your phone while walking. When you need to check the map, stop—ideally step into a shop or café first.

Standing on the street fiddling with your phone broadcasts two things at once: "a foreigner unsure of the way" and "someone carrying an expensive phone." The trick of snatching a phone from a passing motorbike is not rare in Latin American cities. Get the route into your head beforehand, or check it on an offline map (more below) before you set off.

Learn the "warning signs" of a bad street

Whether you should step onto a given street is something you start to sense in the air as you walk. Putting the signs into words makes the call faster.

If you pick up on these signs, don't go in. If you're already in, don't stop—walk through quickly. The courage to turn back matters too. Don't push on just because "there's a sight a bit further ahead." Even on tourist routes, plenty of cities change character the moment you step one block off it. Simply choosing bright main streets with lots of people cuts the risk a lot.

Be back at the hotel before dark

The same street is a different place by day and by night. I make "be back at the hotel before sundown" a basic rule. If I absolutely have to go out at night, I skip walking and go door-to-door by Uber (below), or head straight there and straight back to a place I trust.

Latin America sits at low latitudes, and in many places it gets dark fast after sunset. "Just a little more wandering" is what tends to lead to danger, so it helps to build the habit of calling it a day early in the evening.

Move by Uber. Avoid taxis where you can

For getting around cities, I use Uber (or a similar ride-hailing app) whenever I can. This may be the single habit I'm most glad I changed about traveling in Latin America.

Ride-hailing apps are safer because the system itself has these advantages:

By contrast, I never use a street taxi you flag down on the road. Neither the fare nor the driver is on record, and you're exposed to overcharging, the long way around, and—worst case—getting caught up in a crime. And even so-called official (licensed) taxis are not automatically "safe just because they have the markings"—overcharging and detours happen routinely. So avoid official taxis too where you can. Only when you genuinely have no choice—an area Uber doesn't cover, or the ride from the airport—skip flagging one down: have your hotel or restaurant call it, or use the airport's official taxi desk with set fares.

In countries you don't know well, avoid buses and trains too, as much as you can. Cheaper transport, unfortunately, also tends to attract higher-risk people. Until you've built up a feel for the place, centering your travel on Uber—even if it costs a bit more—is safer in the end, and it pays off once you weigh the time and money you'd lose to trouble.

Apps worth having

While you shouldn't look at your phone while walking, it's the strongest tool you have for preparation and for emergencies. Here are the apps worth installing for Latin America.

And the quietly crucial piece: securing connectivity. Maps, Uber and Translate are all useless without a connection. Set yourself up to be online at all times on the ground with a travel SIM, eSIM or mobile Wi-Fi router. With an "unlimited" plan or a pocket Wi-Fi device, you won't hesitate to check the map or call a car, so treat it as an investment in safety.

Conclusion: lower the odds with habits

No trip is perfectly safe, and you can still get unlucky. That's exactly why it's worth steadily chipping away at the odds of being targeted through small daily habits. Here's the checklist to finish.

You don't travel in order to spend all your time on security. None of this is about bracing yourself in fear—it's the foundation that lets you enjoy a city with peace of mind. Let go of what you can let go of, and use the headspace it frees up to savor the streets and the people of Latin America to the fullest.

References

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