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The 7 Best Cenotes Near Tulum

  • Writer: Joep van de Burgt
    Joep van de Burgt
  • Apr 15
  • 12 min read

costacaribe-tulum.com  ·  Published 2026

 


COSTA CARIBE TULUM  ·  WEEKLY TRAVEL SERIES  ·  WEEK 3

The 7 Best Cenotes Near Tulum Ranked honestly — with 2026 prices, hours, and the one tip that changes every visit.

By the owners of Costa Caribe C002, Aldea Zama

There is a moment that happens to almost every visitor to Tulum. They are sitting at a beach club, sipping something cold, watching the Caribbean go by, and they think: this is beautiful. And it is. But two days later, they visit a cenote for the first time — and everything changes.

Tulum’s cenotes are the Yucatan’s greatest natural secret. The entire peninsula sits on a vast limestone shelf riddled with underground rivers — the largest cave system on earth. When the limestone ceiling collapses, it creates a cenote: a natural pool of prehistoric freshwater, sometimes inside a cavern of stalactites, sometimes open to the sky, always 77°F (25°C) year-round, always crystal clear, and entirely unaffected by the sargassum seaweed that sometimes affects the beaches in summer. They are, without question, the single experience that makes Tulum irreplaceable.

The challenge is choosing. There are thousands of cenotes in the Yucatan and dozens within easy reach of Tulum. This guide cuts through the noise. seven on this list. What follows is what we like to tell our guests — not the tourist-brochure version.

One practical note before you dive in: bring cash in pesos. Most cenotes do not accept cards. An ATM in Tulum Pueblo before you set out will save you a wasted trip. And bring your own snorkel — it is cheaper, more hygienic, and most cenotes allow it.

 

At a Glance — All 7 Cenotes

Use this table to plan your day before reading the full reviews.

 

Cenote

Distance

Price (USD)

Type

Best for

Gran Cenote

10 min car 20 min bike

~$25

Semi-open

Families, turtles, first-timers

Atik Cenote

20 min car 50 min bike

~$22

Open-air / art

Unique experience, photography

Cenote Calavera

10 min car 15 min bike

~$12

Cave / jump

Adventure, cliff jumping

Dos Ojos

30 min car

~$20

Cave / cavern

Cave snorkeling, divers

Cenote Sac Actun

40 min car

$35 snorkel

Cave

The ultimate cave experience

Zacil Ha

15 min car 45 min bike

~$2

Open-air

Budget, families, rope swing

Cenote Nicte-Ha

30 min car

~$10

Open-air

Quiet, water lilies, snorkeling

 

The single most important cenote tip

Go early. Arrive at 8 AM when cenotes open. By 10 AM, tour buses from Cancun and cruise ships begin arriving and the experience changes completely. The difference between Gran Cenote at 8 AM — turtles, silence, light shafting through the water — and Gran Cenote at noon with 200 people is extraordinary. This applies to every cenote on this list. Set the alarm.

 

#1  Gran Cenote

Semi-open cenote · Cave + open water + turtles

Distance from Aldea Zama:  4km west of Tulum Pueblo — 20 minutes by bike, 10 minutes by taxi

Entry fee (2026):  ~500 MXN (~$25 USD) per adult · Children under 5 free · Snorkel rental: 50 MXN

Hours:  8:00 AM – 4:30 PM daily · Last entry 4:00 PM

Crowds:  Very crowded 10 AM – 2 PM · Arrive at 8 AM for best experience

Best for:  Families, first-time cenote visitors, turtle spotters, snorkelers

If you visit only one cenote in Tulum, make it this one. Gran Cenote earns its reputation. Four kilometers west of Tulum Pueblo on the road to Coba — easy by bike, easy by taxi — it offers something that almost no other cenote near Tulum manages: both an open-sky swimming area and a cave section in the same visit. Freshwater turtles rest on submerged ledges and glide through the cave tunnels. The water is a vivid turquoise-green, clear enough to see the limestone floor four meters down. Stalactites hang at eye level in the cave passage. Children can wade in the shallow sections while confident swimmers explore deeper.  The cave section is where the magic concentrates. Float through a low passage from the open pool and the light drops. Your eyes adjust. Turtles appear. Light angles through the ceiling opening. It is the experience that most guests describe as the highlight of their entire Tulum trip.

Owner's tip: Rent a bike from Tulum Pueblo (50–80 MXN/day) and ride west on the Coba road — it is completely flat, 20 minutes, and there is a dedicated bike path. Gran Cenote is on the left with a large sign. This is exactly how guests from Aldea Zama do it. You arrive before the tour buses, you lock your bike at the entrance, and you have it almost to yourself for the first hour.

 

#2  Atik Cenote

Open-air cenote · Art park · One of Tulum’s most distinctive experiences

Distance from Aldea Zama:  Approximately 50 minutes by bike or 20 min by car from Aldea Zama

Entry fee (2026):  From ~400 MXN (~$22 USD) · Full-day packages available

Hours:  Open daily · Check current hours at Atik Park

Crowds:  Less crowded than major cenotes · Excellent for photography

Best for:  Couples, art lovers, photographers, travelers seeking something genuinely different

Atik is not simply a cenote. It is an open-air art park built around a natural freshwater cenote in the jungle — and it is one of the most surprising and beautiful places in the entire Tulum area. Enormous sculptural stone faces, half-buried in the jungle floor and draped in tropical greenery, line the paths between the water. The cenote itself is a gem: emerald-green water fed by an underground spring, with a natural waterfall cascading from the limestone walls into the pool. The jungle canopy forms a living ceiling above you. It feels discovered rather than managed.  What makes Atik special in the context of this guide is that it is genuinely unlike any other cenote near Tulum. It is not trying to be Gran Cenote or Dos Ojos. It has its own identity, its own atmosphere, and its own reason to exist. For travelers who want an experience that is impossible to replicate anywhere else, this is it. For children not so much.

Owner's tip: We have visited Atik with guests and it consistently produces the most ‘I can’t believe this exists’ reactions of any cenote near Aldea Zama. Go in the morning for the best light on the water.

 

#3  Cenote Calavera

Cave cenote · Jump holes · The Skull

Distance from Aldea Zama:  5km from Tulum Pueblo — 15 minutes by bike

Entry fee (2026):  ~250 MXN (~$12 USD) · Cash only · GoPro fee: 50 MXN

Hours:  9:00 AM – 5:00 PM daily

Crowds:  Moderately busy · Worst 11 AM–2 PM when tour buses arrive

Best for:  Adventure seekers, cliff jumpers, families with older children, divers

Calavera means ‘skull’ in Spanish, and the name is perfect. Three circular openings in the limestone ceiling look down into the pool below — two eye sockets and a nasal cavity, viewed from above. The largest opening (about two meters across) is used for jumping, with drops ranging from two to six meters depending on where you leap from. The smaller holes have ladders for those who prefer to climb down rather than jump.  The cenote pool itself is a cave — relatively compact, with decent visibility and a peaceful atmosphere once you are in the water. There is also a rope swing and a submerged swing that makes for brilliant underwater photography. Do not let the jump theatrics mislead you: Calavera is perfectly suitable for non-jumpers too. You can climb down the ladder, swim around, and enjoy the cave pool without the adrenaline.  For certified cave divers, Calavera connects to an extensive underground system and is considered one of the more technically interesting dive sites in the region. Interested in cave bats and fish? You got it.

Owner's tip: Avoid visiting between 11 AM and 2 PM — this is when tour buses from Cancun make a stop here and it becomes extremely crowded and noisy. An 8–9 AM visit gives you almost the whole place to yourself, which is when the skull opening and the light through the cave ceiling is at its most atmospheric.

 

#4  Cenote Dos Ojos

Twin-cave cenote · Stalactites · World-class cave snorkeling

Distance from Aldea Zama:  25 km north on Highway 307 — 25 minutes by car or taxi

Entry fee (2026):  ~400 MXN (~$20 USD) snorkeling · Cave diving from ~1,800 MXN · Life jacket included

Hours:  8:00 AM – 5:00 PM daily

Crowds:  Very crowded · Arrive at opening or pre-book a guided tour

Best for:  Cave snorkelers, divers, experienced swimmers, anyone seeking a world-class cave experience

Dos Ojos means ‘Two Eyes’ — named for the two large cavern entrances viewed from above, connected by an underground tunnel. This is the cenote that converts people who thought they were not interested in caves. The stalactites hang at eye level as you float through. The water is a shade of blue that seems impossible for something underground. Some guests describe their first five minutes in Dos Ojos as the single most extraordinary natural experience of their lives.  The cave system here is part of the Sistema Sac Actun — the longest underwater cave network on earth. Even on the surface snorkel tour, you pass through caverns large enough to lose sight of the walls, with rock formations that took 100,000 years to grow within arm’s reach. The bat cave section, where the tour surfaces mid-dive in a cavern full of bats hanging from the ceiling, is an experience that requires no embellishment.  Dos Ojos requires a car or taxi — it is about 25 km north of Tulum on Highway 307. It is not reachable by bike from Aldea Zama.

Owner's tip: Book a guided snorkel tour in advance during high season (December–April) — the site fills up and the best tours sell out early. Ask specifically for the Barbie Line route if you are a diver — the formations there are exceptional. The colectivo from Tulum toward Playa del Carmen can drop you at the Dos Ojos entrance on the highway, from where it is a short walk.

 

#5  Cenote Sac Actun (Pet Cemetery or White Cave)

Cave cenote · The ultimate underground experience

Distance from Aldea Zama:  22 km north on Highway 307, near Dos Ojos — 40 minutes by car

Entry fee (2026):  Snorkeling from ~$35 USD · Cave diving from ~$90 USD · Guided tour only

Hours:  9:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Mon–Sat) · 10:00 AM Sunday

Crowds:  Less crowded than Dos Ojos · Guide required · More remote feel

Best for:  Those who want the most otherworldly cenote experience near Tulum · Divers · Travelers who want to feel like they are discovering something

Sac Actun is where hyperbole becomes inadequate. This is part of the longest mapped underwater cave system on earth — over 350 kilometers of passages beneath the Yucatan. The cenote itself is remarkable: crystal-clear water, stalactites, ancient rock formations, and the bones of prehistoric animals visible through the water (hence the nickname ‘Pet Cemetery’, given by early cave divers who found animal remains from Mayan rituals). You can only enter with a certified guide, which keeps crowds genuinely thin and the experience intimate.  The snorkel tour takes approximately 45–70 minutes floating through cavern sections lit by a combination of natural light and guide torches. The cave is large enough that you can surface and stand in sections. The darkness in between is absolute and completely arresting. Most guests come out describing it as the most profound natural experience of their trip — more than the ruins, more than the beaches.  Sac Actun is the cenote for people who want something beyond Instagram. It is harder to reach, more expensive, and requires a guide. Every one of those things makes it better.

Owner's tip: Unlike most cenotes, Sac Actun is worth combining with Dos Ojos in the same day trip by car — they share an entrance road off Highway 307. Book your Sac Actun guide slot in advance, arrive at Dos Ojos first thing in the morning, then continue to Sac Actun mid-morning before tour groups arrive.

 

#6  Zacil Ha

Open-air cenote · Rope swing · Best value near Tulum

Distance from Aldea Zama:  4km west of Tulum Pueblo, 200m past Gran Cenote — 15 minutes by car 50 min by bike

Entry fee (2026):  ~35 MXN (~$1.75 USD) · Cheapest quality cenote near Tulum

Hours:  8:00 AM – 5:00 PM daily

Crowds:  Light crowds · Most tourists stop at Gran Cenote and never notice Zacil Ha is nearby

Best for:  Budget travelers, families with young children, anyone wanting a relaxed swim without adventure pressure

Zacil Ha is Tulum’s best-kept cenote secret, hidden in plain sight 200 meters past Gran Cenote on the same road. Almost nobody knows it is there because everyone stops at the famous neighbour. The result is a wide, calm open-air cenote with a rope swing, relatively shallow water, turquoise clarity, and a fraction of the visitors at a fraction of the price. At roughly $1.75 USD per person, Zacil Ha is the cheapest quality cenote near Tulum by a significant margin. The water is clear, the setting is peaceful, and the rope swing provides entertainment for children and adults alike without the intensity of Cenote Calavera’s cliff jumps. There are no stalactites or cave formations here — this is an open-sky experience, pure and simple. But for a family that wants a beautiful, relaxed cenote swim without paying resort prices, Zacil Ha is the correct answer.

Owner's tip: Combine Zacil Ha with Gran Cenote in the same bike trip — they are 200m apart. Do Gran Cenote first at 8 AM, then continue to Zacil Ha when Gran Cenote starts to fill up around 10 AM. You get both experiences in a single morning for under $30 USD total for two people.

 

#7  Cenote Nicte-Ha

Open-air cenote · Water lilies · The peaceful one

Distance from Aldea Zama:  Adjacent to Dos Ojos, ~25 km north — 30 minutes by car

Entry fee (2026):  ~200 MXN (~$10 USD) · Snorkel rental available on-site

Hours:  8:00 AM – 5:00 PM daily

Crowds:  Quiet · One of the least crowded quality cenotes near Tulum

Best for:  Couples, solo travelers, snorkelers, anyone wanting a peaceful uncrowded swim with exceptional natural beauty

Nicte-Ha means ‘water lily’ in Maya, and the name tells you exactly what to expect. This is the most quietly beautiful cenote on this list: a wide open-air pool bordered by jungle, with water lilies floating on the edges and crystal-clear water in the center that lets you snorkel over fish and see the limestone floor below. There is a cave section on the edge of the cenote for those who want a brief experience of the underground world.  What distinguishes Nicte-Ha from the other open-air cenotes on this list is the atmosphere. It is genuinely peaceful in a way that larger cenotes no longer are. Located next to the entrance road for Dos Ojos, it receives a fraction of the visitors of its famous neighbour. Our guests who value quiet, beauty, and the feeling of having found something slightly off the beaten path consistently name Nicte-Ha as the cenote that surprised them most.  On a sunny day, the sunlight plays through the clear water in patterns that make underwater photography effortless and spectacular.

Owner's tip: Nicte-Ha pairs perfectly with Dos Ojos as part of the same day trip by car. Visit Nicte-Ha in the afternoon when the light is best and Dos Ojos crowds have thinned. The two are accessed from the same entrance road north of Tulum.

 

How to Plan Your Cenote Day from Aldea Zama

From Costa Caribe in Aldea Zama, you have one of the best bases in Tulum for cenote access. Here is how to organize your visits for maximum enjoyment and minimum hassle.

 

 

Pack this every time

Cash in pesos (most cenotes are cash only · ATMs in Tulum Pueblo before you go) · Your own snorkel mask and fins (saves 50–100 MXN per visit and is more hygienic) · Reef-safe biodegradable sunscreen applied 20 minutes before arriving — chemical sunscreens are banned in all cenotes · Quick-dry towel · Waterproof phone pouch · Water and snacks · Change of clothes

 

What NOT to bring

Regular sunscreen or insect repellent — these are banned and damage the fragile cenote ecosystems. Apply only reef-safe biodegradable sunscreen and do so 20 minutes before entering, never at the cenote edge. Many cenotes have shower stations at the entrance precisely for this reason. Rinse off before swimming.

 

The Bottom Line

Tulum has many extraordinary things to offer. Its cenotes are not one of them — they are the extraordinary thing. The ruins are magnificent, the beaches are beautiful, the food scene is genuinely excellent. But the cenotes are impossible to replicate anywhere else on earth. People come to Tulum for the aesthetic. They leave having swum through a 100,000-year-old stalactite cave and floated next to a freshwater turtle in a pool of prehistoric water. That is the experience that brings them back.

From Costa Caribe in Aldea Zama, you are as well-placed as it is possible to be. The best cenotes are 15 minutes away. The northern cave cenotes are 40 minutes by car. And when you come home, your own four-pool complex is waiting.

Two or three cenotes in a single morning, then back to the pool by noon. That is Tulum doing exactly what it does best — and there is nowhere on earth that offers the same combination.

 

Planning a cenote trip from Tulum?

Costa Caribe C002 is perfectly situated to visit these wonderful cenotes. A 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom condo in Aldea Zama with four pools, full kitchen, and 24-hour security. Book direct for the best available rate.

costacaribe-tulum.com  ·  WhatsApp: +1 720 980 0799

 

 

Costa Caribe Tulum Weekly Travel Series  ·  Week 3 of 52  ·  Published on costacaribe-tulum.com  ·  © 2026 Harmoniously Connected

Subscribe at costacaribe-tulum.com/blog  ·  Instagram: @costacaribe.tulum  ·  WhatsApp: +1 720 980 0799

 
 
 

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Located in the heart of Aldea Zama, Costa Caribe is a thoughtfully designed vacation rental in Tulum offering easy access to beaches, restaurants, cenotes, and downtown Tulum.

+1 720 980 0799

Callle Coba, Aldea Zama, 77760 Tulum, Q.R., Mexico

 

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