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🏝️ Complete Itinerary · Updated 2026

Tulum in 3 Days, 2 Nights

An hour-by-hour plan — Tulum Ruins · Playa Paraíso · Gran Cenote · Dos Ojos · Coba · Sian Ka'an — a boho-eco beach town, clifftop Maya ruins and crystal cenotes, with an MXN budget.

3
Days / 2 Nights
10+
Stops
~MXN 19K
Budget/person*
100%
Self-guided
What this trip is like

A Tulum plan covering Maya + beach + cenotes

Tulum isn't a high-rise resort like Cancun — it's a boho-eco beach town with boutique hotels, yoga and wellness cafés. Day 1 is the Tulum Ruins, the only Maya site in Mexico set on a sea cliff, plus the beach at Playa Paraíso. Day 2 is cenote day — Gran Cenote (turtles) and Dos Ojos (cave diving). Day 3 climbs the Coba pyramid or cruises the Sian Ka'an reserve. A chiller pace than Cancun, made for slow travel.

📅
Duration
3 Days / 2 Nights
💰
Budget/person
~MXN 15,000–24,000
🌤️
Best season
Dec–Apr · clear seas, little rain
🎯
Best for
Couples · nature lovers · divers
Daily schedule

The hour-by-hour plan for all 3 days

Each stop lists how to get there and rough costs. Prices are in MXN (MXN 1 ≈ THB 1.9). In Tulum, renting a bike/scooter or using colectivos + taxis works best, since the beach is far from town.

1
DAY ONE
Tulum Ruins + Playa Paraíso
Tulum Ruins · Playa Paraíso · Tulum Beach Road · sunset
Morning · 08:30
Check in + rent a bike/scooter

Drop your bags (pick the Beach zone or Pueblo/town) and rent a bike or scooter — Tulum is easiest on two wheels since the Beach Road is long and the beach is ~4 km from town.

🚲 Rent bike/scooter 💰 Bike MXN 150/day
Late AM · 09:30
Tulum Ruins — clifftop Maya site

The only Maya city in Mexico perched on a cliff above the Caribbean. The El Castillo temple stands over turquoise water, with iguanas roaming the grounds — go early to beat the heat and crowds.

🛕 Maya by the sea 💰 Entry ~MXN 100
Midday · 12:00
Playa Paraíso — paradise beach

Fine white sand and turquoise water just below the Tulum Ruins, regularly ranked among Mexico's best beaches. Swim and sunbathe — beach clubs rent loungers and serve lunch by the sea.

🏖️ Paradise beach 💰 Lounger MXN 200+
Afternoon · 15:00
Cycle along Tulum Beach Road

Cycle the beach road past boutique hotels, beach clubs, art shops and wellness cafés — the boho-jungle vibe that defines Tulum. Stop for photos at the wooden "Ven a la Luz" art sculpture.

🚲 Cruise the strip 💰 Free
Dinner · 18:30
Dinner — Tulum Town / beach restaurant

Dinner in town (Tulum Pueblo is cheaper) — try tacos al pastor, fresh ceviche or one of Tulum's famous farm-to-table spots, all candlelight and jungle lanterns.

🌮 Local food 💰 Town MXN 250 · Beach MXN 600+
🏨 Stay in Tulum tonight (Beach or Town) — Beach is upscale and quiet, Town is cheaper and central · See recommended Tulum hotels
2
DAY TWO
Cenote day — Gran Cenote + Dos Ojos
Gran Cenote · Dos Ojos · Cenote Calavera
Morning · 09:00
Gran Cenote — swim with turtles

Tulum's most popular cenote, clear enough to see turtles and fish swimming around you, with caves to snorkel through. Bring your own snorkel or rent on site — go early before the crowds (~5 km from town).

🐢 Swim with turtles 💰 ~MXN 500
🎟️ Book a Tulum cenote tour →
Lunch · 12:00
Lunch — on the way / back in town

Grab lunch at a local spot on the way, or head back to town before the second cenote — try cochinita pibil or panucho, Yucatán specialties.

🍴 Yucatán food 💰 MXN 200–350
Afternoon · 14:00
Dos Ojos — dive in crystal caves

One of the world's longest underwater cave systems with world-class clarity — a legendary cave-diving spot, though even snorkeling reveals stunning underwater stalactites (~20 min from Tulum).

🤿 Cave dive / snorkel 💰 ~MXN 350 (snorkel)
Afternoon · 16:30
Cenote Calavera (optional) — the skull cenote

A small skull-faced cenote (three openings) near town, with a rope swing to jump in. Quieter and cheaper — a good way to cap the day if you're not too tired.

💀 Quieter cenote 💰 ~MXN 250
Evening · 19:00
Dinner + jungle bar vibes

Dinner in town, then a mezcal or margarita at a Tulum jungle bar — amber lights, greenery and mellow music, the calmer night scene that sets Tulum apart from Cancun's party strip.

🍹 Jungle bar 💰 MXN 300–500
🏨 Stay in Tulum again tonight — no need to switch hotels
3
DAY THREE
Coba / Sian Ka'an
Coba Ruins · climb Nohoch Mul pyramid · (or Sian Ka'an cruise)
Morning · 08:30
Depart for Coba (or Sian Ka'an)

Check out, leave bags at the hotel, then drive or tour to Coba (~45 min), a Maya city deep in the jungle — or choose a Sian Ka'an Biosphere (UNESCO) boat tour to see mangroves, birds and dolphins.

🚗 45-min drive / tour 💰 Tour MXN 800–1,800
🎟️ Book a Coba / Sian Ka'an tour →
Late AM · 10:00
Coba Ruins — Maya city in the jungle

Maya ruins spread through the forest — rent a bike or hire a bici-taxi to get around. Nohoch Mul, at 42 m, is the tallest pyramid on the Yucatán Peninsula. A deep-jungle feel, distinct from Tulum or Chichen Itza.

🛕 Maya in the jungle 💰 Entry ~MXN 100
Lunch · 12:30
Lunch + cenote near Coba

There are gorgeous, near-empty cenotes around Coba (Choo-Ha, Tamcach-Ha) — swim after the ruins, plus lunch at a local restaurant near Coba village.

💧 Quiet cenote 💰 Cenote ~MXN 100
Afternoon · 15:00
Back to Tulum — grab bags + last beach

Return to Tulum, collect your bags, and if time allows, squeeze in one last beach lounge or stroll Tulum Town for souvenirs — artisan crafts, mezcal, woven Maya textiles.

🏖️ Last beach 💰 Free
Evening · 17:30
Final dinner before you move on

A farewell dinner in Tulum — finish with a dessert or a smoothie bowl from a wellness café before moving on (ADO bus to Cancun/CUN airport ~2 hrs, or the new Tulum TQO airport is closer).

🥗 Farewell dinner 💰 MXN 300–500
Trip budget

Estimated cost for 3 days, 2 nights (per person)

Based on the plan above — excluding flights and personal shopping. Hotel cost assumes a double room split two ways · MXN 1 ≈ THB 1.9

🏨2 nights' accommodation Tulum Beach/Town · double room ÷ 2MXN 5,500–11,000
🌮Food, 3 days ~MXN 950/dayMXN 2,850
🚲Bike/scooter + colectivo + taxi 3 days + to cenotes/CobaMXN 1,500
🎟️Entries + cenotes + tours Ruins · Gran Cenote · Dos Ojos · CobaMXN 2,500
Estimated totalMXN 15,000–24,000

* MXN 15,000–24,000 ≈ THB 28,000–46,000/person — varies with hotel choice. Beach Road hotels run ~2–3x town prices (boutique eco-resorts are pricey). High season (Dec–Apr) is most expensive. Budget travelers can stay in Tulum Pueblo (town) and take colectivos to the beach for far less. Excludes flights and souvenirs · MXN 1 ≈ THB 1.9 (May 2026).

Tips for this trip

7 things to know before you go

🛂
Mexico visa — not unconditionally free
Thai citizens holding a valid US, Canadian, Schengen, UK or Japanese visa can enter without a separate Mexican visa; otherwise apply in advance — see the Mexico visa guide →
🚲
A bike/scooter is the most flexible
Tulum's beach is ~4 km from town and the Beach Road is long — a bike/scooter is more flexible and cheaper than taxis (Tulum taxis are pricey; agree a fare first).
💵
Carry cash pesos — some places don't take cards
Small cenotes and local eateries are cash-only, and Tulum ATMs charge high fees — withdraw pesos in advance in Cancun or at the airport.
🌊
Cenotes year-round — check beach sargassum
Tulum's beach gets sargassum seaweed at times from Jul–Oct, but inland cenotes stay clear all year — if the beach is weedy, lean into the cenotes instead.
🧴
Reef-safe sunscreen only
Every cenote bans chemical sunscreen (it pollutes the groundwater) — use reef-safe biodegradable or rinse off before entering. Bring your own.
💧
Drink bottled water
Mexican tap water isn't drinkable — stick to bottled. Many eco-hotels have filtered refill stations, so a reusable bottle cuts waste.
🛡️
Get travel insurance first
Tourist healthcare in Mexico is expensive, especially for cave-diving accidents. Insurance is cheap peace of mind — see plans →
Trip route

All 3 days' stops on the map

Click a pin to see which day each stop falls on

Frequently asked

FAQ — Tulum in 3 Days, 2 Nights

Is 3 days enough for Tulum?

Enough for the main highlights — the cliffside Tulum Ruins, Playa Paraíso beach, swimming in cenotes (Gran Cenote + Dos Ojos), the Coba pyramid and the Sian Ka'an reserve. Tulum suits a slower pace than Cancun.

How do you get to Tulum from Cancun?

Take an ADO bus from Cancun/CUN airport (~2 hrs) or drive (~1.5–2 hrs) on Highway 307, or use a shuttle/colectivo. In Tulum itself, renting a bike or scooter is popular since the beach is far from town.

How is Tulum different from Cancun?

Tulum is a boho-eco beach town with boutique hotels, yoga, wellness cafés and clifftop Maya ruins — a chiller vibe than Cancun's high-rise resorts. It suits travelers who want nature and calm.

Which cenotes in Tulum are best?

Gran Cenote (swim with turtles) and Dos Ojos (cave diving in crystal water) are the most popular. Cenote Calavera and Car Wash are also beautiful and quieter — all clear enough to swim and dive.

When is the best time to visit Tulum?

December–April for great weather, little rain and clear seas (high season). May–June is cheaper and still good. July–October is storm season with sargassum seaweed, but cenotes are visitable year-round since they're inland.

Start planning your trip

Ready to go?
Start by booking a boho Tulum stay

This plan stays in Tulum both nights — pick the Beach zone (upscale, quiet, beachfront) or Town (cheaper, central). Cycling makes getting around easy. Compare prices across 3 sites.

🔵 Book Tulum hotels Tulum travel guide