Quintana Roo (Riviera Maya)
Quinta Avenida (Fifth Avenue)
Playa del Carmen's 4km pedestrian spine and the reason to stay in town โ great for an evening stroll, but eat a street back from the tourist-priced restaurants right on it.
Where
Playa del Carmen, Mexico
Opening hours
Open access at all hours as a public pedestrian street, though it is liveliest from late afternoon into the evening; many shops and restaurants run roughly mid-morning until late. It is at its busiest after dark.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed; Quinta Avenida is a public pedestrian street you can walk any time. You only spend on the shops, bars, restaurants and the touts' tours and excursions along it, which range from cheap street snacks to firmly tourist-priced sit-down meals.
Time needed
An hour or two for an evening stroll and a bite; longer if you shop or settle into a bar. It is more a backdrop to your stay than a fixed sight.
In short
Visiting Quinta Avenida (Fifth Avenue)
Quinta Avenida โ Fifth Avenue โ is the 4km pedestrian spine of Playa del Carmen and the main reason to base yourself in town. It is free to wander and good for an evening stroll, ice cream and people-watching, but the restaurants fronting directly onto it are tourist-priced; eat a street back. The blocks north of Calle 28 are calmer and more local; the southern stretch is busier and bar-heavy. No ticket, no opening hours โ just turn up.
The townโs pedestrian spine
Quinta Avenida โ Fifth Avenue โ is the long pedestrian street running parallel to the beach, and it is essentially the reason Playa del Carmen exists as a resort town rather than a ferry stop. Around four kilometres of car-free paving lined with shops, bars, restaurants, ice-cream stands and tour touts, it is free to wander and best treated as the backdrop to your stay rather than a sight to โdoโ.
It comes alive from late afternoon into the evening, which is when to walk it: lights on, music drifting out of the bars, families and couples drifting past. By day it is fairly ordinary and the constant patter of people selling tours and tables can wear thin. Go in with the right expectations โ it is atmosphere and people-watching, not architecture.
Eating, and which end to pick
The one piece of practical advice that matters: eat a street back. The restaurants fronting directly onto Quinta are convenient but firmly tourist-priced and built for passing trade. Walk a single block off the avenue and you tend to find better food at fairer prices โ the taquerรญas and local spots a street or two away are where to head when you are actually hungry rather than just snacking.
The avenue also has a clear split. The blocks north of around Calle 28 are calmer, smarter and more relaxed, with the boutique-hotel and decent-dining end of things. The southern stretch is busier and bar-heavy, getting loud after dark. If you want the stroll without the late-night noise, base yourself towards the north and wander down only as far as suits you. There is no ticket and no closing time โ just pick your hour and your end of the street.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Playa del Carmen city guide.