The clifftop Maya Tulum Ruins · Gran Cenote and Dos Ojos cave pools · the Sian Ka'an biosphere · gorgeous Playa Paraiso · the jungle pyramids of Coba — the top Tulum attractions in one place, with real photos, directions and tips.
If Cancun is the party-resort, Tulum is its slower, more natural, bohemian cousin — a small Riviera Maya town with Maya ruins on a Caribbean cliff, clear cave cenotes all around, and white-sand beaches lined with eco-chic boutique hotels. Visa note: it's not visa-free for everyone — you may need a Mexican visa, or a valid US visa to enter (always check before flying). Since late 2023 the new Tulum Airport (TQO) allows direct flights, closer than Cancun. We've picked 10 top attractions mixing Maya ruins, cenotes, a nature reserve, beaches and jungle cycling, each with location, directions and tips.
Ranked by popularity and logistics — from the clifftop Tulum Ruins to cycling the jungle ruins of Coba. Each entry includes location, directions and tips from real reviews.
🏛️ Clifftop Maya1
The only Maya ruins set on a cliff above the Caribbean — the El Castillo temple looks down over white sand and turquoise water, one of Mexico's iconic images. Tulum was a late-period Maya trading port (1200-1500) ringed by a wall ("Tulum" means "wall"). Below, Playa Ruinas lets you swim. Everyone comes to photograph it, and iguanas roam the whole site.
Full Tulum Guide →
💧 Famous Cenote2
Tulum's most popular cenote — water so clear you can see the bottom, with stalactite caves and underwater tunnels to snorkel. Freshwater turtles swim in the pool and bats cling to the cave ceiling. Its shallow water and boardwalk make it a great beginner cenote, while pro cave divers come here too. It's on the Tulum-Coba road, 4 km from town.
Full Tulum Guide →
🤿 Cave Diving3
One of the largest and most beautiful underwater cave systems on Earth — "Dos Ojos" (two eyes) for its two pools linked by an underwater tunnel. It's a world-class cave-diving site, but beginners can snorkel the shallow sections in crystal water past underwater stalactites. Light beams stream into the cave beautifully. It sits between Tulum and Playa del Carmen — great for cave lovers.
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🌿 Nature Reserve4
A 5,280 km² UNESCO World Heritage biosphere reserve south of Tulum — mangroves, brackish lagoons, reefs and ancient Maya canals. Tours boat you out to spot crocodiles, dolphins, sea turtles and birds, then let you float down a natural canal current (a float tour) — wonderfully refreshing. "Sian Ka'an" is Maya for "where the sky is born." You can only enter with a licensed tour.
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🏖️ Beautiful Beach5
A beach repeatedly ranked among Mexico's most beautiful — soft white sand and turquoise water, right by the Tulum Ruins. It's a public beach (many Tulum beaches require going through a beach club) with umbrellas and loungers to rent. The name means "paradise beach." It's at its best when the seaweed is gone — ideal for a swim after the morning ruins.
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🏛️ Jungle Pyramid6
An ancient Maya city deep in dense jungle ~45 minutes from Tulum — once one of the largest Maya cities, with the 42 m Nohoch Mul, the tallest pyramid in the Yucatán. The ruins spread across a wide forest linked by ancient Maya stone roads (sacbé). Unlike open, exposed sites, Coba is shady jungle with monkeys and birds. ⚠️ You can no longer climb the pyramid, but cycling the site is great fun.
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💀 Skull Cenote7
A small but distinctive cenote — "Calavera" means skull, because the cave mouth has three openings (one big, two small) that look like a skull face from above. The highlight is jumping in from the ~3 m opening (a jump-in cenote), or descending by ladder. There's also a rope swing into the water, and light beams stream down through clear water. Smaller and less crowded than Gran Cenote, on the Tulum-Coba road near town.
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🍹 Beach Clubs8
Tulum's famous signature — a strip of beachfront eco-chic/bohemian beach clubs and boutique hotels styled in wood, thatch and sculpture. Famous clubs: Mia, Ziggy's, Taboo, Vagalume. Sip a cocktail by the sea with DJ music and good food (at Tulum prices). Some require a minimum spend or advance lounger booking. It's the source of those pretty Tulum Instagram shots — great at sunset.
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🦇 Jungle Cave9
A jungle nature park with a dry stalactite cave to explore (not a typical cenote) plus an underground cenote to snorkel. "Aktun Chen" is Maya for "cave with a cenote inside." There's a jungle zipline, a walk-in aviary and spider monkeys. It's great for families because it bundles varied activities in one shady spot. It sits between Tulum and Akumal.
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🚲 Jungle Cycling10
The best way to see Coba — because its ruins spread across 70 km² of jungle, walking is hot and tiring, so most people rent a bike (~MXN 60) or take a pedi-cab (bici-taxi) and ride the forest paths between ruin clusters. Cool breeze under the tree canopy, past a lagoon, with chances to spot monkeys and birds. It's an experience unlike any other Maya site — do it alongside the Coba Ruins (#6).
Full Tulum Guide →Open the full city guide, see Cancun, or compare beachfront boutique hotels in the Beach Zone.
Complete Tulum overview — hotels, food, attractions, itineraries, and prep tips.
Open Tulum Guide →Tulum pairs perfectly with Cancun — Hotel Zone beaches, Isla Mujeres, Chichen Itza and Xcaret.
See Cancun attractions →Beachfront boutique hotels in the Beach Zone · budget stays in Tulum Pueblo — compare rates.
Search Tulum hotels →Many nationalities (including Thai passport holders) need a Mexican visa, but if you hold a valid, unexpired US visa you can enter Mexico without a separate Mexican visa (Mexico also accepts valid Canada/UK/Schengen/Japan visas). It is not visa-free — always check the current conditions before you fly.
Tulum is ~130 km from Cancun (~2 hrs) by ADO bus, rental car or private transfer. Since late 2023 the new Tulum Airport (TQO) allows direct flights, much closer than flying into Cancun — check flight options before booking.
Tulum splits into Tulum Pueblo (the town — cheaper, with local restaurants) and the Tulum Beach/Hotel Zone (beachfront boutique hotels, pricier, bohemian). On a budget, stay in the Pueblo and cycle/taxi to the beach; for the beach vibe, stay in the Beach Zone.
November-April is dry, sunny and clear — peak season. July-October is rainy/hurricane season. From May to October sargassum seaweed often washes ashore (cenotes are unaffected). Cenotes are good year-round since they're in caves.
No need to choose — do both. Cenotes are Tulum's unique draw, found nowhere else (clear cave water you can swim/dive in), while the beaches are beautiful but can be affected by seaweed. We suggest cenotes in the morning and the beach/a beach club in the afternoon.
Three to four days is ideal — one for the Tulum ruins + beach, one for cenotes (Gran Cenote/Dos Ojos/Calavera), one for the Coba ruins + cycling, and an optional fourth for a Sian Ka'an biosphere tour.
Open the full Tulum guide for hotels, food, and itineraries, or jump straight into booking a beachfront boutique hotel in the Beach Zone near the sights on this list.