Home Travel Guide Xel-Ha — Visitor Guide for 2026
Travel Guide Updated April 2026 ⏱ 3 min read

Xel-Ha — Visitor Guide for 2026

How to do Xel-Ha: snorkeling the natural inlet, the underground rivers, the all-inclusive food and drinks, and how it compares to Xcaret in 2026.

InfoMexico.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Xel-Ha (pronounced "shell-HA") is the snorkeling-and-chill member of the Grupo Xcaret family — a 200-acre park built around a natural inlet where the cool water of the Yucatán's underground river system meets the salty Caribbean. The brackish mix attracts hundreds of fish species, and the all-inclusive day pass means once you're in, everything is paid for. This 2026 guide breaks down the ticket structure, the activities and how Xel-Ha compares to Xcaret.

🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Adding Xel-Ha to your Riviera Maya plan? Build it into a full trip budget.
Calculate now →

What Xel-Ha Is

Xel-Ha is centered on a natural caleta (inlet) where freshwater cenote outflows meet the Caribbean. The water clarity is exceptional and the fish density rivals reef diving spots — parrotfish, angelfish, sergeant majors, occasional barracuda, and green sea turtles graze the seagrass along the bottom. Around the inlet are zip lines, lazy rivers, hammock zones, four restaurants, and family-friendly add-ons. The vibe is "tropical resort day" rather than "theme park."

Ticket Prices and What's Included

Tier2026 Online PriceWhat's Included
Standard All-Inclusive~$90Entry, snorkel gear, life vest, locker, towel, all food, all drinks (beer/soft/cocktails)
Plus~$110Above + bike rental + tube floats + zip lines
Total~$130Above + Sea Trek or stingray encounter add-on
Children 5–11~$45–$65Half price across tiers
Children under 5Free
With transport (Cancun/Playa)+$25–$35Hotel pickup
Buying online 7+ days ahead is typically 10–15% cheaper than gate.

Snorkeling the Inlet

The main inlet is a 1,000-ft body of water that you can swim end-to-end in 30–40 minutes. Lifeguard-marked snorkel routes have buoys and rope handrails for non-swimmers. Best fish density is at the seaward end where freshwater meets salt. The cenote-cave entrance at the inland end has its own small fish population and dramatic clarity. Bring (or rent for $5) underwater shoes — the bottom has rocks.

Underground Rivers

A short network of underground river channels runs through the inland side of the park. You float them with a life vest and snorkel. Less elaborate than Xcaret's underground rivers (which are 2 miles vs. Xel-Ha's ~30 minutes total) but enough to be a worthwhile change-of-pace activity for an hour.

Activities

The all-inclusive day pass includes:

  • Snorkeling the inlet, with included gear.
  • Lazy-river tube float through jungle channels.
  • Bike rental for jungle paths.
  • Cliff jumping platforms (4–10 ft) into the inlet.
  • Adventure trail with rope bridges.
  • Multiple kid-zones with calm pools.
  • Hammock groves and shaded chairs.
  • Four restaurants with full buffets.

Premium add-ons (extra cost): Sea Trek underwater helmet walk ($55), Snuba ($65), stingray encounter ($55), zip lines (Plus pass).

Food and Drinks

Four restaurants spread around the park: La Cocina (Mexican buffet), El Pueblito (Mediterranean), El Manglar (seafood and grilled meats), Las Caletas (lighter fare and salads). All buffet-style. Open bar covers beer (Corona, Negra Modelo), basic cocktails (margaritas, piña coladas), wine, soft drinks, water and coffee. Premium liquors extra. Snack carts throughout the park sell snacks and drinks.

Xel-Ha vs Xcaret

FactorXel-HaXcaret
Best forSnorkelers, chill couplesVariety seekers, families, culture
Day pass$90 all-inclusive$120 (no food) / $160 with food
Underground riversShort (~30 min)Extensive (2 miles)
Cultural showNone90-min Mexico Espectacular
Best snorkelingYes — natural inletLimited
Animal exhibitsFewMany
Park hours8:30am–6:00pm8:30am–10:30pm

Getting There

Xel-Ha is 80 miles south of Cancun, just north of Tulum on Highway 307. Options:

  • Round-trip transport package: Hotel pickup + park admission, $115–$140 total.
  • Rental car: 1 hr from Playa del Carmen, 1.75 hrs from Cancun. Parking $8.
  • ADO bus: Cancun → Tulum, ask driver to drop at "Xel-Ha" stop ($14 each way).
  • Combined Tulum ruins + Xel-Ha tour: $130–$170 with pickup, the most popular combo.

Common Mistakes

  • Eating breakfast before arrival. Buffet breakfast is included; don't double-pay.
  • Bringing non-reef-safe sunscreen. Confiscated at the entry; biodegradable sold for $14.
  • Visiting the same week as Xcaret without spacing. Both pool-time-heavy; alternate with culture days.
  • Renting an underwater camera you didn't need. Phones in waterproof pouches work fine for inlet snorkeling.
  • Drinking too aggressively in the morning. The open bar tempts; the sun, water and snorkeling do not pair with 5 cocktails before noon.
Smartest combo for couples: Tulum ruins at 8:30am opening (1.5 hours), drive 5 minutes to Xel-Ha for 10:30am, do snorkeling and lunch through 4:00pm, drive back to your hotel relaxed.
Back to Travel Guide

Related Guides

Mexico Trip Cost Calculator 2026
Enter your trip details and get an instant personalised cost estimate for accommodation, food, transport and activities across Mexico. Updated monthly with real 2026 pricing data from Booking.com, Numbeo and INEGI.
Read guide →
Mexico Trip Planning — The Complete 2026 Guide
Eight steps to plan your Mexico trip from scratch — when to go, FMM and visas, how much it costs, where to go, how to move between cities, what to pack, how to stay safe, and the booking sequence that saves you the most money.
Read guide →
Cancun & Riviera Maya Neighborhoods Guide (2026)
Where to stay along Mexico's Caribbean coast: Cancun Hotel Zone, Centro, Playa del Carmen, Akumal, Tulum, Puerto Aventuras and Holbox — vibe, prices, beaches and safety in 2026.
Read guide →
Xcaret Park — Visitor Guide for 2026
How to do Xcaret right: which ticket tier to buy, the underground rivers, the evening Mexico Espectacular show, and the order to attack the park in 2026.
Read guide →
Tulum Ruins — Visitor Guide for 2026
How to visit the cliffside Mayan ruins of Tulum: tickets, the right arrival time, the beach below the ruins, and how to combine with cenotes or Xel-Ha in 2026.
Read guide →
Gran Cenote Tulum — Visitor Guide for 2026
How to visit Gran Cenote near Tulum: 2026 entry prices, what to bring, the best time to swim with turtles, and how it compares to Cenote Dos Ojos and Cenote Calavera.
Read guide →
Cenote Dos Ojos — Visitor Guide for 2026
How to visit Cenote Dos Ojos: 2026 entry prices, the two-cenote system, snorkel and dive options, and how it compares to Gran Cenote and Cenote Calavera.
Read guide →

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is Xel-Ha in 2026?

About $90 USD all-inclusive day pass — covers entry, snorkel gear, locker, towel, all food and unlimited drinks. Plus passes with extras (zip line, bike) run $110–$130.

Is Xel-Ha worth it?

Yes for snorkelers and travelers who want an all-in price (no nickle-and-diming). The natural inlet is one of the best easy snorkel spots in the Riviera Maya.

Is Xel-Ha or Xcaret better?

Xel-Ha for snorkeling and chill all-inclusive. Xcaret for variety (rivers, shows, culture). Many couples do both — they're different parks.

How long does Xel-Ha take?

6–8 hours is comfortable. Open 8:30am to 6:00pm.

Is Xel-Ha kid-friendly?

Very — calm water, life vests included for all ages, lazy river floats, kid pools, and roped-off shallow snorkel zones.

Can you snorkel with sea turtles at Xel-Ha?

Yes — green turtles graze in the inlet seagrass year-round. Sightings are common but not guaranteed.

Do I need to bring my own snorkel gear?

No — snorkel mask, fins and life vest are included. Underwater camera optional ($30 rental on-site).