TripPick Mexico Mexico

Playa del Carmen + Cozumel + Chichén Itzá 5-Day Riviera Maya

The town, a cenote day, and the Tulum ruins — plus Cozumel diving/snorkeling and the Chichén Itzá pyramid

Playa del Carmen 5-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
5 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$505
Budget–luxury
$224–$1,255

As of 2026, the recommended Playa del Carmen 5-day route runs Day1 Quinta Avenida (5th Avenue) + the town beach + a beach club · Day2 Cenote day — the Maya's sacred sinkholes · Day3 Tulum day trip — cliffside Mayan ruins + beach · Day4 Cozumel — diving & snorkeling on the Mesoamerican Reef · Day5 Chichén Itzá day trip — El Castillo + Cenote Ik Kil, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $505 on a mid-range budget. Five days is the sweet spot for the Riviera Maya from a Playa base. Days 1-3 cover the town and 5th Avenue, a cenote day, and the Tulum ruins; Day 4 takes the ferry to Cozumel for diving or snorkeling on the Mesoamerican Reef; Day 5 is a long day trip west to Chichén Itzá — the UNESCO pyramid El Castillo, one of the New Seven Wonders — usually paired with Cenote Ik Kil. The town stays walkable; the ferry, ADO buses, and guided tours handle the rest. Pace the long day trips with the easy beach and town days, and keep hydrating in the tropical heat.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$224

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$505

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,255

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Playa del Carmen hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Quinta Avenida (5th Avenue) + the town beach + a beach club

5th Avenue stroll - Playa del Carmen beach - beach club - Portal Maya pier - taco-and-mezcal evening

Activities

  1. 09:30 Breakfast + Quinta Avenida (5th Avenue) stroll 2h

    Start with breakfast at a 5th Avenue café (Chez Céline's pastries, or La Cueva del Chango's chilaquiles up north), then walk Quinta Avenida — the long pedestrian boulevard of shops, restaurants, and bars running parallel to the beach. It's the heart of town and the best orientation walk.

    Cost: $8-16 breakfast TIP: Politely brush off the timeshare and restaurant touts — keep walking. The northern stretch (Calle 30+) is calmer and more local than the busy central blocks. Morning is cooler and less crowded for the walk.
  2. 11:30 Playa del Carmen town beach 1h30

    Drop down to the white-sand town beach for a first swim in the turquoise Caribbean. The free public sand is easy to reach off 5th Avenue; the prettier, quieter stretches are toward the north (Calle 32-40).

    Cost: Free TIP: Use reef-safe sunscreen — the tropical sun is strong. Watch your belongings on the busy central beach. If sargassum seaweed is bad that week (mainly Apr-Aug), pivot to a beach club's raked section or save the swimming for a cenote.
  3. 13:30 Lunch — tacos al pastor at El Fogón 1h

    Lunch at El Fogón, Playa's famous taqueria, where the al pastor is shaved off the turning spit and crisped on the plancha — the local taco institution, recognized in the Michelin Guide.

    Cost: $5-12 per person TIP: Order several tacos al pastor with grilled pineapple and the table salsas — one is never enough. It's fast and casual. The Constituyentes/30th Ave branch is the easiest from 5th Avenue. Cash is simplest.
  4. 15:00 Beach club afternoon (Mamita's or Coralina) 3h

    Spend the hot afternoon at a beach club — Mamita's or Coralina Daylight Club — with loungers, a pool or sea swimming, food, and a DJ. Most run on a minimum spend rather than a flat entry.

    Cost: MX$150-400 min. spend TIP: Confirm whether it's a minimum spend or a cover, and what loungers cost, before settling in. Weekends and spring break get loud and busy. A relaxed alternative is simply renting a beach lounger on the public sand.
  5. 18:30 Portal Maya sculpture + sunset at the pier 1h

    Walk to the Portal Maya, the large sculpture by the Cozumel ferry pier, for sunset and photos, then ease into the evening along the southern end of 5th Avenue.

    Cost: Free TIP: The pier area is a good sunset and photo spot and the embarkation point for tomorrow's-or-later Cozumel trips. From here it's a short walk back into the 5th Avenue dining and nightlife.
  6. 20:00 Dinner + mezcal — contemporary Mexican (Aldea Corazón) 2h

    Dinner at Aldea Corazón, a contemporary Mexican restaurant in a garden built around a small cenote just off 5th Avenue — ceviche, mole, and a mezcal-and-passion-fruit cocktail in a calm, lamp-lit setting.

    Cost: $20-40 per person TIP: Ask to sit by the cenote/garden. It's a 5th Avenue spot that earns its prices on setting and food both. Reservations help in high season. For a cheaper night, do a taqueria crawl and a michelada instead.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Chez Céline or La Cueva del Chango

5th Avenue / north · $8-16

French pastries and coffee, or chilaquiles in a jungle garden.

Lunch

El Fogón

Constituyentes / 30th Ave · $5-12

Tacos al pastor off the spit at Playa's famous taqueria.

Dinner

Aldea Corazón

5th Avenue (Calle 14-16) · $20-40

Contemporary Mexican in a cenote garden — ceviche and mezcal.

Transit:

Entirely on foot — 5th Avenue, the beach, the ferry pier, and the restaurants are all within the walkable downtown grid. No transit needed today.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $34 Mid $80 Luxury $215
DAY 2

Cenote day — the Maya's sacred sinkholes

Cenote Azul (open) - Cenote Cristalino - Dos Ojos or Gran Cenote (cave snorkeling) - return for tacos

Activities

  1. 08:30 Head out to the cenotes (tour, colectivo, or car) 1h

    Set off early for a cenote day. A guided 3-cenote tour (~$50-70) handles transport and gear; independently, a southbound colectivo (MX$45-60) drops you at Cenote Azul/Cristalino or further toward Tulum for the cave cenotes.

    Cost: Tour $50-70 / colectivo MX$45-60 TIP: Go early (arrive 9-10am) to beat the tour buses. Bring a swimsuit, quick-dry towel, water shoes for slippery rocks, cash for entry, and reef-safe/biodegradable sunscreen only — regular sunscreen and bug spray are banned and you rinse off before entering.
  2. 09:30 Cenote Azul + Cenote Cristalino (open cenotes) 2h

    Start at the open-air cenotes just south of Playa — Cenote Azul (shallow areas, a jumping platform, family-friendly) and the quieter Cenote Cristalino next door. Clear, cool freshwater in a jungle setting, easy for all swimmers.

    Cost: MX$200-350 entry each TIP: Cenote Azul's jumping platform is the fun part; the shallows suit kids and non-swimmers. Little fish nibble harmlessly. These open cenotes are the gentlest introduction before the cave ones.
  3. 12:30 Lunch near the cenotes 1h

    A simple lunch at one of the roadside cenote-area eateries or back in Playa, refueling between swims — tacos, ceviche, or a torta.

    Cost: $6-14 per person TIP: Cenote-area food is basic and cash-based; carry pesos. Hydrate — cenote days plus tropical heat are dehydrating even though you're in water.
  4. 14:00 Dos Ojos or Gran Cenote — cave snorkeling 2h30

    Move on to a cave cenote near Tulum: Dos Ojos (a famous, crystal-clear cavern system, a top cave-snorkel and cave-dive site) or Gran Cenote (turtles, stalactites, easy snorkeling). The light beams and rock formations are the highlight.

    Cost: MX$350-500 entry TIP: A mask and snorkel reveal the underwater caverns; gear rents for a few dollars. Certified divers can do cavern dives at Dos Ojos. Go with a guide for the cave sections. These are the postcard cenotes — worth the higher entry.
  5. 19:30 Back in Playa — taqueria dinner + michelada 1h30

    Return to Playa and round off the day with a casual taqueria dinner — sirloin tacos at Don Sirloin or seafood at Los Aguachiles — and a cold michelada.

    Cost: $8-18 per person TIP: After a long water day, a peso-priced taqueria beats a fancy dinner. Los Aguachiles' aguachile or Don Sirloin's late-opening tacos both work. Cash for the taquerias.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café or hotel breakfast

5th Avenue / hotel · $5-10

Eggs, fruit, and coffee before an early cenote start.

Lunch

Cenote-area or roadside eatery

Riviera Maya highway · $6-14

Tacos or a torta between swims — cash only.

Dinner

Don Sirloin or Los Aguachiles

Centro · $8-18

Sirloin tacos or aguachile and a michelada after the cenotes.

Transit:

Cenotes are 10-40 min south by guided tour, colectivo (MX$45-60), or rental car. A 3-cenote tour bundles transport and gear; colectivos are cheapest but require flagging from the highway.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $95 Luxury $230
DAY 3

Tulum day trip — cliffside Mayan ruins + beach

ADO bus to Tulum - Tulum Mayan ruins over the Caribbean - Tulum beach afternoon - return to Playa

Activities

  1. 08:00 ADO bus or colectivo to Tulum 1h

    Head an hour south to Tulum by ADO bus (MX$60-120) or colectivo (MX$45-60) from the central station/Calle 2. Tulum's Mayan ruins sit on a cliff above the turquoise Caribbean — go early to beat heat and crowds.

    Cost: MX$45-120 TIP: Catch an early bus — the ruins open around 8am and the site bakes and fills by late morning. From Tulum town/the highway it's a short taxi or shuttle to the ruins entrance. Bring water, a hat, and sunscreen.
  2. 09:30 Tulum Mayan ruins (clifftop archaeological site) 2h

    Explore the walled Mayan city of Tulum — a Postclassic trading port perched on cliffs over the sea, with El Castillo and the Temple of the Frescoes, plus iguanas everywhere and a small beach below the cliff.

    Cost: ~MX$95 entry (+ fees) TIP: Go right at opening — there's almost no shade and it gets crowded and very hot. The clifftop sea views are the highlight. Check whether the cliff beach below is open for a swim. A guide (optional) adds the history.
  3. 12:30 Lunch in Tulum 1h30

    Lunch in Tulum town or along the beach road — tacos and Yucatán dishes in town for value, or a beach-club table (pricier) if you want to stay by the sand.

    Cost: $10-30 per person TIP: Tulum is noticeably pricier than Playa, especially on the boho beach road. Eat in Tulum town for far better value. The beach-road restaurants charge for the scene.
  4. 14:30 Tulum beach afternoon 2h30

    Spend the afternoon on Tulum's famous beach — soft white sand and clear water, with beach clubs offering loungers on a minimum spend. A more scenic, boho stretch of coast than Playa's town beach.

    Cost: Beach free / club min. spend TIP: Public beach access points exist, or pay a beach club's minimum for loungers. Tulum can get sargassum too — check before committing. Reef-safe sunscreen. Keep an eye on the time for the bus back.
  5. 18:30 Return to Playa + farewell dinner 2h30

    Take the ADO bus or colectivo back to Playa (1 hour) for a final dinner — Yucatán classics at Carboncitos (cochinita pibil, tikin xic) or a last seafood ceviche.

    Cost: Bus + $12-28 dinner TIP: Confirm the last convenient bus time before settling onto the beach. Back in Playa, Carboncitos' cochinita pibil is a fitting Yucatán send-off. A relaxed last evening on 5th Avenue rounds it out.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early café breakfast

5th Avenue · $5-10

A quick coffee and bite before the Tulum bus.

Lunch

Tulum town taqueria

Tulum · $10-30

Tacos and Yucatán dishes in town — far better value than the beach road.

Dinner

Carboncitos

Centro (Calle 4) · $12-28

Cochinita pibil and tikin xic — a Yucatán farewell back in Playa.

Transit:

Playa ↔ Tulum about 1 hour each way by ADO bus (MX$60-120) or colectivo (MX$45-60), frequent departures from the central station / Calle 2. A short taxi connects Tulum town to the ruins.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $40 Mid $90 Luxury $220
DAY 4

Cozumel — diving & snorkeling on the Mesoamerican Reef

Ferry to Cozumel - reef diving or snorkeling (Palancar/Columbia) - island lunch - ferry back

Activities

  1. 08:30 Ferry to Cozumel 1h

    Take the passenger ferry from the Playa pier to Cozumel (35-45 min, MX$200-300 each way, Winjet or Ultramar, roughly hourly). Cozumel is the diving and snorkeling hub of the coast, fronting the Mesoamerican Reef.

    Cost: MX$200-300 each way TIP: Buy tickets at the pier; crossings can be choppy in wind (motion-sickness tablets help). Note the last return ferry time. Pre-book your dive/snorkel operator so a boat is waiting on arrival.
  2. 10:00 Reef diving or snorkeling (Palancar, Columbia) 3h30

    Spend the morning on the reef — a 2-tank dive day for certified divers (drift dives over Palancar and Columbia, clear water, walls and coral) or a guided snorkel trip for everyone else. Among the Caribbean's best reef sites.

    Cost: Dive $90-130 / snorkel $40-60 TIP: Diving is beginner-friendly with operators running drift dives. Non-divers can do an excellent guided snorkel from a boat. Use reef-safe sunscreen only. Book a reputable operator ahead. Bring your certification card if diving.
  3. 14:00 Lunch + Cozumel town (San Miguel) 2h

    Lunch in San Miguel, Cozumel's town — fresh seafood and Yucatán dishes near the malecón — and a wander past the waterfront and shops before the ferry back.

    Cost: $12-28 per person TIP: San Miguel's town restaurants beat the cruise-pier spots for value. If you have time and a rental scooter/car, the island's wilder east coast is scenic. Otherwise keep it relaxed near the ferry.
  4. 17:00 Ferry back to Playa + evening on 5th Avenue 1h30

    Take the ferry back to Playa and spend a relaxed evening on 5th Avenue — tacos, a rooftop bar, or a beachfront drink.

    Cost: Ferry + $10-25 dinner TIP: Confirm the last ferry time before lunch. Back in Playa, an easy taqueria dinner suits a day on the water. Save energy — tomorrow's Chichén Itzá day is long.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early café breakfast

5th Avenue / pier · $5-10

A quick bite before the morning ferry.

Lunch

San Miguel (Cozumel) seafood

Cozumel town · $12-28

Fresh seafood near the malecón, away from the cruise pier.

Dinner

Don Sirloin or a 5th Avenue spot

Centro · $10-25

An easy taco-and-michelada evening after the water.

Transit:

Passenger ferry Playa pier ↔ Cozumel, 35-45 min each way (MX$200-300, roughly hourly, Winjet/Ultramar). On the island, taxis, rental scooters, or your dive operator's boat.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $130 Luxury $320
DAY 5

Chichén Itzá day trip — El Castillo + Cenote Ik Kil

Early tour west - Chichén Itzá (El Castillo, ball court, sacred cenote) - Cenote Ik Kil swim - Valladolid - return

Activities

  1. 07:00 Early departure west to Chichén Itzá 3h

    Set off early on a guided day tour (~$80-110 with transport, entry, and lunch) for the 2.5-3 hour drive west to Chichén Itzá, the great Maya city and UNESCO World Heritage Site in the Yucatán interior.

    Cost: Tour $80-110 (all-in) TIP: A guided tour is by far the easiest way — the drive is long and the guide adds the history. Self-driving is possible (toll road) but it's a big day. Bring water, a hat, and sunscreen; the site is hot and shadeless.
  2. 10:00 Chichén Itzá — El Castillo, ball court & sacred cenote 2h30

    Tour the archaeological zone — El Castillo (the Kukulcán pyramid, one of the New Seven Wonders of the World), the Great Ball Court, the Temple of the Warriors, and the sacred cenote. Vast, monumental, and central to Maya history.

    Cost: Entry included in tour TIP: You can't climb El Castillo (protected). Go early in the day before peak heat and the biggest crowds. The acoustics at the ball court and pyramid are famous. Vendors line the paths. Stay hydrated.
  3. 13:30 Cenote Ik Kil swim + lunch 2h

    Cool off at Cenote Ik Kil near the ruins — a dramatic open cenote with vines and waterfalls cascading from the rim, a classic post-Chichén-Itzá swim — usually with a buffet lunch included on tours.

    Cost: Included in tour TIP: Ik Kil is one of the most photographed cenotes — reef-safe sunscreen and shower-before-swimming rules apply. There's a jumping platform. The swim is a welcome relief after the heat of the ruins.
  4. 15:30 Valladolid colonial town (on some tours) 1h

    Many tours stop in Valladolid, a pretty colonial town with pastel streets, a central plaza, and the Convent of San Bernardino — a quick, atmospheric break on the long drive back.

    Cost: Free (shopping extra) TIP: If your tour stops here, it's a nice contrast to the ruins — colonial Mexico rather than Maya. Good for a coffee, a snack, or local crafts. Tour-dependent; confirm when booking.
  5. 19:30 Return to Playa + relaxed dinner 2h

    Arrive back in Playa in the evening after a long day, and keep dinner relaxed — Yucatán cochinita pibil at Carboncitos or a casual taqueria close to your hotel.

    Cost: $12-28 per person TIP: It's a 10-12 hour round-trip day, so plan a low-key evening. A nearby taqueria beats trekking across town. A michelada and an early night suit it.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel/tour breakfast or grab-and-go

5th Avenue / hotel · $4-9

Coffee and a pastry before the early pickup.

Lunch

Buffet at Cenote Ik Kil (tour)

Near Chichén Itzá · Included

Tour buffet lunch beside the cenote.

Dinner

Carboncitos or local taqueria

Centro · $12-28

Cochinita pibil close to the hotel after a long day.

Transit:

Chichén Itzá is 2.5-3 hours west each way — a guided day tour ($80-110, transport + entry + lunch) is the practical option; self-driving the toll road is possible but makes for a very long day.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $110 Luxury $270

Book Playa del Carmen Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Playa del Carmen 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is Cozumel worth a full day from Playa?
Yes, especially for divers and snorkelers — it fronts the Mesoamerican Reef, the world's second-largest, and the drift dives over Palancar and Columbia are among the Caribbean's best, with clear, beginner-friendly water. Non-divers can do an excellent guided boat snorkel. The 35-45 minute ferry makes it an easy day trip; just watch the last return ferry.
Should I do Chichén Itzá as a tour or independently?
A guided day tour ($80-110, with transport, entry, lunch, and usually Cenote Ik Kil) is the practical choice — it's a 2.5-3 hour drive each way and the guide supplies the history. Self-driving the toll road is doable for flexibility but turns it into a 10-12 hour day. Either way, start early to beat the heat and crowds; you cannot climb the pyramid.
Can I swap Chichén Itzá or Cozumel for something closer?
Yes. If the long Chichén Itzá day doesn't appeal, swap in Cobá (a climbable jungle pyramid area near Tulum), Akumal (snorkel with sea turtles, 25 min south), or Isla Mujeres/Holbox (laid-back island beach days). Cozumel can be swapped for an Akumal turtle snorkel if you'd rather not dive. Build the 5 days around what you most want.
How do I avoid burning out on day trips?
Alternate. The cenote day, Cozumel, and Chichén Itzá are all active and the heat is draining, so keep Day 1 (town and beach) easy and don't chain the long trips. If you're tired, a beach-club afternoon or an Akumal half-day is a gentler substitute. You're in a beach town — leave room to actually relax on the sand.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 5-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
📅 Published: