The Tulum ruins are the Mayan postcard image — a cliffside ceremonial complex perched 40 ft above the Caribbean, with white limestone temples on a manicured clifftop and a turquoise-water beach directly below. It was the only Mayan walled city on the coast. The site is small but spectacular, and easy to combine with Tulum Pueblo, beach time or a cenote stop. This 2026 guide covers tickets, timing and how to actually do it well.
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Tulum was a late-Postclassic Mayan trading port, occupied roughly 1200–1521 AD. Unlike older inland Mayan cities, Tulum was active when the Spanish arrived — the first European description (by Juan de Grijalva's expedition in 1518) called it "as large as Sevilla." It was a hub for sea trade in jade, obsidian and turquoise. The original Mayan name was Zama ("dawn") referring to its position on the eastern coast where the sun rises over the sea. "Tulum" (Yucatec for "wall") is a later name describing the defensive wall on the landward side.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Daily |
| Hours | 8:00am–5:00pm (last entry 3:30pm) |
| Federal entry | ~$5 USD |
| Parking | $4 |
| Shuttle (parking to gate, optional) | $3 |
| Camera/video permit | Free for personal use |
| Mexican residents | Free Sundays |
Getting There
- From Tulum Pueblo: 5 minutes by car or taxi ($4–$6). Bike from Pueblo: 25 minutes.
- From Tulum Beach: 8 minutes by car ($5–$8). Walking from north end of the beach road, ~25 minutes.
- From Playa del Carmen: 45 minutes by car or ADO bus ($5).
- From Cancun: 1.5 hours by car or 2 hours ADO bus ($18 RT).
- Tour packages: Tulum Ruins + Cenote + Xel-Ha combos run $90–$140 with hotel pickup.
What to See
- El Castillo: The clifftop pyramid that dominates every photograph. 25 ft tall, with two doorways leading to inner sanctuaries.
- Temple of the Frescoes: Two-story with the best preserved murals on-site, depicting Mayan deities and astronomical scenes.
- Temple of the Descending God: Named for the carved figure of a diving god above the entry — possibly the Mayan god Ah Muzen Cab (the bee god) or a representation of Venus.
- House of the Halach Uinik: The "great lord" residence on the south end.
- The Wall: A 12-foot stone defensive wall on the landward sides — unique among Mayan cities and what gives Tulum its modern name.
- The beach below: A small white-sand cove accessed by wooden staircase.
The Beach Below the Ruins
Playa Ruinas is the small beach at the bottom of the cliff, reached by a wooden staircase from inside the archaeological zone. The water is turquoise, calm enough to swim, and the photographic angle looking up at El Castillo on the cliff is the iconic shot. Bring swimwear under your clothes; the changing facilities are minimal. Closed during heavy surf or hurricane warnings.
Stairway access has been temporarily closed multiple times in 2023–25 due to erosion. Check at the entrance before counting on the swim.
Best Time to Visit
The single highest-leverage decision: arrive at the 8:00am opening or after 2:30pm. Tour buses from Cancun, Playa del Carmen and the Riviera Maya cruise terminal flood the site between 10:00am and noon. By 11am, the Castillo platform has 200+ people on it; by 8:30am, a dozen. Afternoon light is also softer for photography than harsh midday.
Photographer Tips
- Arrive 8am for sunrise side-light on El Castillo.
- The "iconic" photo is from the south path, looking northeast at El Castillo on the cliff with sea behind.
- For the beach-below shot, descend the staircase; shoot looking up.
- Drone use prohibited inside the archaeological zone. Penalty up to $1,000.
- Iguanas everywhere — they're used to humans and pose well.
Common Mistakes
- Arriving at 11am. Worst possible time: hot, crowded, harsh light.
- Skipping water. No shade on the cliff platforms.
- Trying to climb El Castillo. Not allowed.
- Forgetting swimwear. Many travelers regret missing the beach swim.
- Booking a 3-park combo tour that gives only 45 min on-site. Tulum ruins deserves 90+ minutes; pick a tour that allots that.
Best half-day: 8am at Tulum ruins (90 min + beach swim), drive 10 min to Gran Cenote at 11am for a snorkel ($25), lunch in Tulum Pueblo at El Camello Jr. ($14), back at hotel by 3pm.
The Tulum ruins are the Mayan postcard image — a cliffside ceremonial complex perched 40 ft above the Caribbean, with white limestone temples on a manicured clifftop and a turquoise-water beach directly below. It was the only Mayan walled city on the coast. The site is small but spectacular, and easy to combine with Tulum Pueblo, beach time or a cenote stop. This 2026 guide covers tickets, timing and how to actually do it well.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Add Tulum ruins to your trip plan and see the day-by-day budget.
Calculate now →History and Significance
Tulum was a late-Postclassic Mayan trading port, occupied roughly 1200–1521 AD. Unlike older inland Mayan cities, Tulum was active when the Spanish arrived — the first European description (by Juan de Grijalva's expedition in 1518) called it "as large as Sevilla." It was a hub for sea trade in jade, obsidian and turquoise. The original Mayan name was Zama ("dawn") referring to its position on the eastern coast where the sun rises over the sea. "Tulum" (Yucatec for "wall") is a later name describing the defensive wall on the landward side.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Daily |
| Hours | 8:00am–5:00pm (last entry 3:30pm) |
| Federal entry | ~$5 USD |
| Parking | $4 |
| Shuttle (parking to gate, optional) | $3 |
| Camera/video permit | Free for personal use |
| Mexican residents | Free Sundays |
Getting There
- From Tulum Pueblo: 5 minutes by car or taxi ($4–$6). Bike from Pueblo: 25 minutes.
- From Tulum Beach: 8 minutes by car ($5–$8). Walking from north end of the beach road, ~25 minutes.
- From Playa del Carmen: 45 minutes by car or ADO bus ($5).
- From Cancun: 1.5 hours by car or 2 hours ADO bus ($18 RT).
- Tour packages: Tulum Ruins + Cenote + Xel-Ha combos run $90–$140 with hotel pickup.
What to See
- El Castillo: The clifftop pyramid that dominates every photograph. 25 ft tall, with two doorways leading to inner sanctuaries.
- Temple of the Frescoes: Two-story with the best preserved murals on-site, depicting Mayan deities and astronomical scenes.
- Temple of the Descending God: Named for the carved figure of a diving god above the entry — possibly the Mayan god Ah Muzen Cab (the bee god) or a representation of Venus.
- House of the Halach Uinik: The "great lord" residence on the south end.
- The Wall: A 12-foot stone defensive wall on the landward sides — unique among Mayan cities and what gives Tulum its modern name.
- The beach below: A small white-sand cove accessed by wooden staircase.
The Beach Below the Ruins
Playa Ruinas is the small beach at the bottom of the cliff, reached by a wooden staircase from inside the archaeological zone. The water is turquoise, calm enough to swim, and the photographic angle looking up at El Castillo on the cliff is the iconic shot. Bring swimwear under your clothes; the changing facilities are minimal. Closed during heavy surf or hurricane warnings.
Stairway access has been temporarily closed multiple times in 2023–25 due to erosion. Check at the entrance before counting on the swim.
Best Time to Visit
The single highest-leverage decision: arrive at the 8:00am opening or after 2:30pm. Tour buses from Cancun, Playa del Carmen and the Riviera Maya cruise terminal flood the site between 10:00am and noon. By 11am, the Castillo platform has 200+ people on it; by 8:30am, a dozen. Afternoon light is also softer for photography than harsh midday.
Photographer Tips
- Arrive 8am for sunrise side-light on El Castillo.
- The "iconic" photo is from the south path, looking northeast at El Castillo on the cliff with sea behind.
- For the beach-below shot, descend the staircase; shoot looking up.
- Drone use prohibited inside the archaeological zone. Penalty up to $1,000.
- Iguanas everywhere — they're used to humans and pose well.
Common Mistakes
- Arriving at 11am. Worst possible time: hot, crowded, harsh light.
- Skipping water. No shade on the cliff platforms.
- Trying to climb El Castillo. Not allowed.
- Forgetting swimwear. Many travelers regret missing the beach swim.
- Booking a 3-park combo tour that gives only 45 min on-site. Tulum ruins deserves 90+ minutes; pick a tour that allots that.
Best half-day: 8am at Tulum ruins (90 min + beach swim), drive 10 min to Gran Cenote at 11am for a snorkel ($25), lunch in Tulum Pueblo at El Camello Jr. ($14), back at hotel by 3pm.