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Tulum Ruins
How to visit the Tulum Maya ruins: the 515-peso cash-only ticket maths, the new Jaguar Park entrance, why you go at 8am, and whether a small clifftop site is worth the heat.
Where
Tulum, Mexico
Opening hours
Open daily 08:00–17:00, but last entry is 15:30 and the ticket booths start winding down around 15:00. The trenecito shuttle from the Jaguar Park centro to the ruins runs roughly 08:00 to late afternoon. Confirm before you go, as the new park's hours are still settling.
Tickets
About 515 pesos total per adult (~£22): a 210-peso INAH ruins ticket (~£9), a 125-peso Tulum National Park CONANP bracelet (~£5.50), and a 180-peso Jaguar Park fee (~£7.70). Under-12s are free on all three. Cash in pesos — the booths take cards unreliably.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours inside the walled site (12–13 structures), plus the short walk or trenecito from the Jaguar Park entrance and any queue at the booths.
In short
Visiting Tulum Ruins
Go at the 8am opening and carry pesos in cash: the combined entry is roughly 515 pesos and the gates are unreliable for cards. Since 2025 you enter through the new Parque del Jaguar by the Tren Maya station, not the old roadside gate. The site itself is small — a walled Maya city on a low cliff over the Caribbean — so allow 1.5–2 hours, and treat it as a 90-minute photo stop rather than a half-day, ideally before the 10am–1pm cruise and tour-group crush.
How to visit without wasting the morning
The Tulum ruins are a small walled Maya city sat on a low cliff above the Caribbean — about a dozen roped-off stone buildings, dominated by the squat clifftop pyramid El Castillo, with turquoise water as the backdrop. That setting is the entire draw. The buildings themselves are modest next to Chichén Itzá or Cobá, and you walk a fixed path around them rather than climbing on anything, so set your expectations to “photogenic 90-minute stop”, not “ancient-wonder day out”.
Two practical things trip people up. First, the entrance moved: since 2025 you go in through the new Parque del Jaguar next to the Tulum Tren Maya station, not the old roadside gate. Set your GPS to Parque del Jaguar rather than Tulum ruins, then take the short walk or the little shuttle train (the trenecito) from the park centro to the archaeological site. Second, carry pesos in cash. The combined ticket comes to roughly 515 pesos per adult (about £22) — a 210-peso INAH ruins ticket, a mandatory 125-peso Tulum National Park (CONANP) bracelet, and a mandatory 180-peso Jaguar Park fee — and the booths take cards unreliably. Under-12s are free on all three.
Beat the heat, and is it worth it?
Be at the Jaguar Park entrance for the 8am opening — aim to arrive 07:45–08:15. There is almost no shade on the site, so early means cooler and clearer; from about 10am to 1pm the tour coaches and cruise day-trippers from the Riviera Maya pour in and the narrow paths clog with groups of thirty or forty. The other quiet pocket is 1–2pm, but note last entry is 15:30 and the booths start closing around 15:00. The beach directly below the cliff (Playa Ruinas) has been closed to swimming, so don’t plan the visit around a dip there.
Getting there from Tulum Pueblo is easy and cheap: a colectivo along the highway is about 25 pesos (£1–£2) and takes 10–15 minutes, a bike 20–30 minutes, or a taxi 100–150 pesos if you agree the fare first.
Go, but treat it as a sharp early stop rather than the centrepiece of your day. The cliff-and-sea composition is genuinely worth the photo and the small ticket; the ruins on their own are not. The smart move is to pair the 8am ruins with a nearby cenote like Gran Cenote the same morning, so the early alarm buys you two good things before the heat and the crowds arrive.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Tulum city guide.
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