Cozumel is the largest inhabited island in Mexico — 30 miles long, 10 miles wide, with the Mesoamerican Reef (the second-largest barrier reef in the world) running along its western coast. World-class diving made the island famous in the 1970s when Jacques Cousteau named it one of the top dive spots in the world. Today it's a mix of cruise port, dive base and Caribbean beach destination. This 2026 guide covers ferry logistics, diving, beach clubs and how to plan your time.
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Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Add Cozumel to your Riviera Maya plan and budget the ferry, beach clubs and dives.
Calculate now →Ferry from Playa del Carmen
The Cozumel ferry runs from the pier at Calle 1 Sur in Playa del Carmen across the channel to San Miguel de Cozumel. Two operators (Ultramar, Winjet) run nearly identical schedules.
- Cost: $25 round trip per adult, $19 child.
- Crossing: 45 minutes.
- Schedule: Every 30–60 minutes from 6am to 11pm.
- Tickets: At the pier or online via ultramarferry.com / winjet.com.mx.
- Bags: Carry-on free; large luggage $5 extra each way.
- Seasickness: Real on rough days — pick the upper outdoor deck and look at horizon.
Cozumel Diving
Cozumel's diving is wall and drift diving — strong north-south currents carry you along reef walls. Most dives are guided drift dives starting at 50 ft and working up to 30 ft. Visibility commonly 100+ ft. Water temperature 79–84°F year-round.
- Two-tank boat dive: $90–$130 with rental gear.
- Dive certifications: PADI Open Water $440–$520, Advanced $340–$420.
- Top sites: Palancar Gardens (open water), Santa Rosa Wall (advanced), Columbia Deep (advanced), Punta Sur Cathedral.
- Recommended shops: Aldora Divers, Dive Paradise, Scuba Gamma, Aqua Safari.
- Best months: March–June for visibility; September–November for marine life.
Snorkeling for Non-Divers
Boat snorkel tours from San Miguel marina run $35–$55 for 3 hours, two reef stops plus an "El Cielo" sandbar where starfish gather in shallow water. Many include lunch and drinks. Reliable operators bookable via GetYourGuide.
Shore snorkeling: Dzul-Ha beach (free shore reef, easy entry) and Money Bar (small entry fee, restaurant on-site). Both have fish schools and small reef structures, less spectacular than boat trips.
Beach Clubs
Cozumel beach clubs charge $20–$50 entry that's usually credited to food and drinks. The major ones along the south-west coast:
- Mr. Sancho's: Family-friendly, big pool, $50 all-you-can-eat-and-drink package.
- Paradise Beach: Inflatable water park, $20 entry.
- Money Bar: Smaller, snorkel reef out front, no entry fee.
- Nachi-Cocom: Adults-only, capped attendance, $79 AI day pass.
- Playa Mia: Cruise-tourist heavy, water inflatables.
East Coast Drive
The east (windward) coast of Cozumel is undeveloped, wave-pounded and dramatic — a single road runs the length of the island past abandoned beaches, blowholes and the seafood shack at Coconuts. Rent a Jeep or scooter for $50–$80/day and do the loop in 2–3 hours. Don't swim on the east coast — strong currents.
San Miguel and Food
San Miguel is the only town on Cozumel — small, walkable, cruise-tourist-tilted on ship days. Best restaurants:
- Kondesa: Modern Mexican, garden setting. $14–$28.
- El Pique: Tacos al pastor since 1972. $1.50 each.
- La Choza: Authentic Yucatecan. $10–$18.
- Buccanos at Night: Beachfront, dinner-only. $24–$36.
- Coconuts (east coast): Fish, sunset views, beer. $14–$22.
Cruise Ship Days
Cozumel hosts 4–6 cruise ships on peak days, dropping 6,000–14,000 day passengers. Avoid San Miguel's waterfront 10am–3pm on those days. Beach clubs absorb crowds well; dive boats run normal capacity. Check cruisetimetables.com to see how many ships are in port the day you visit.
Best Time to Visit
November–April: dry season, calm seas, 80°F average. May–October: warmer water, occasional tropical waves and brief storms; September peak hurricane risk. The best diving months are March–June; the cheapest hotel rates are September–early November.
Common Mistakes
- Doing Cozumel as a 6-hour cruise day. You barely sample it. Stay overnight if possible.
- Buying a "ferry + beach club" combo at the Playa del Carmen pier. Markup vs buying separately.
- Swimming on the east coast. Strong currents and undertow; locals don't swim there.
- Renting from a no-name jeep place. Damage scams happen — book through your hotel or an established operator.
- Skipping reef-safe sunscreen. Mandated by local regulations and reef-friendly dive shops will turn you away.
For divers: book a 4-night Cozumel-only trip rather than day-tripping from Playa. Two days = 4 dives, plus rest days. Hotels with on-site dive shops (Scuba Club Cozumel, Casa del Mar) include nitrox at no extra charge.
Cozumel is the largest inhabited island in Mexico — 30 miles long, 10 miles wide, with the Mesoamerican Reef (the second-largest barrier reef in the world) running along its western coast. World-class diving made the island famous in the 1970s when Jacques Cousteau named it one of the top dive spots in the world. Today it's a mix of cruise port, dive base and Caribbean beach destination. This 2026 guide covers ferry logistics, diving, beach clubs and how to plan your time.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Add Cozumel to your Riviera Maya plan and budget the ferry, beach clubs and dives.
Calculate now →Ferry from Playa del Carmen
The Cozumel ferry runs from the pier at Calle 1 Sur in Playa del Carmen across the channel to San Miguel de Cozumel. Two operators (Ultramar, Winjet) run nearly identical schedules.
- Cost: $25 round trip per adult, $19 child.
- Crossing: 45 minutes.
- Schedule: Every 30–60 minutes from 6am to 11pm.
- Tickets: At the pier or online via ultramarferry.com / winjet.com.mx.
- Bags: Carry-on free; large luggage $5 extra each way.
- Seasickness: Real on rough days — pick the upper outdoor deck and look at horizon.
Cozumel Diving
Cozumel's diving is wall and drift diving — strong north-south currents carry you along reef walls. Most dives are guided drift dives starting at 50 ft and working up to 30 ft. Visibility commonly 100+ ft. Water temperature 79–84°F year-round.
- Two-tank boat dive: $90–$130 with rental gear.
- Dive certifications: PADI Open Water $440–$520, Advanced $340–$420.
- Top sites: Palancar Gardens (open water), Santa Rosa Wall (advanced), Columbia Deep (advanced), Punta Sur Cathedral.
- Recommended shops: Aldora Divers, Dive Paradise, Scuba Gamma, Aqua Safari.
- Best months: March–June for visibility; September–November for marine life.
Snorkeling for Non-Divers
Boat snorkel tours from San Miguel marina run $35–$55 for 3 hours, two reef stops plus an "El Cielo" sandbar where starfish gather in shallow water. Many include lunch and drinks. Reliable operators bookable via GetYourGuide.
Shore snorkeling: Dzul-Ha beach (free shore reef, easy entry) and Money Bar (small entry fee, restaurant on-site). Both have fish schools and small reef structures, less spectacular than boat trips.
Beach Clubs
Cozumel beach clubs charge $20–$50 entry that's usually credited to food and drinks. The major ones along the south-west coast:
- Mr. Sancho's: Family-friendly, big pool, $50 all-you-can-eat-and-drink package.
- Paradise Beach: Inflatable water park, $20 entry.
- Money Bar: Smaller, snorkel reef out front, no entry fee.
- Nachi-Cocom: Adults-only, capped attendance, $79 AI day pass.
- Playa Mia: Cruise-tourist heavy, water inflatables.
East Coast Drive
The east (windward) coast of Cozumel is undeveloped, wave-pounded and dramatic — a single road runs the length of the island past abandoned beaches, blowholes and the seafood shack at Coconuts. Rent a Jeep or scooter for $50–$80/day and do the loop in 2–3 hours. Don't swim on the east coast — strong currents.
San Miguel and Food
San Miguel is the only town on Cozumel — small, walkable, cruise-tourist-tilted on ship days. Best restaurants:
- Kondesa: Modern Mexican, garden setting. $14–$28.
- El Pique: Tacos al pastor since 1972. $1.50 each.
- La Choza: Authentic Yucatecan. $10–$18.
- Buccanos at Night: Beachfront, dinner-only. $24–$36.
- Coconuts (east coast): Fish, sunset views, beer. $14–$22.
Cruise Ship Days
Cozumel hosts 4–6 cruise ships on peak days, dropping 6,000–14,000 day passengers. Avoid San Miguel's waterfront 10am–3pm on those days. Beach clubs absorb crowds well; dive boats run normal capacity. Check cruisetimetables.com to see how many ships are in port the day you visit.
Best Time to Visit
November–April: dry season, calm seas, 80°F average. May–October: warmer water, occasional tropical waves and brief storms; September peak hurricane risk. The best diving months are March–June; the cheapest hotel rates are September–early November.
Common Mistakes
- Doing Cozumel as a 6-hour cruise day. You barely sample it. Stay overnight if possible.
- Buying a "ferry + beach club" combo at the Playa del Carmen pier. Markup vs buying separately.
- Swimming on the east coast. Strong currents and undertow; locals don't swim there.
- Renting from a no-name jeep place. Damage scams happen — book through your hotel or an established operator.
- Skipping reef-safe sunscreen. Mandated by local regulations and reef-friendly dive shops will turn you away.
For divers: book a 4-night Cozumel-only trip rather than day-tripping from Playa. Two days = 4 dives, plus rest days. Hotels with on-site dive shops (Scuba Club Cozumel, Casa del Mar) include nitrox at no extra charge.