Tulum: Chichén Itzá & Cobá Day Trip with Cenote

Nohoch Mul pyramid at Cobá rising above the jungle canopy

The Chichén Itzá & Cobá Day Trip with Cenote Swim from Tulum is a dual-archaeological-site tour that combines the iconic Chichén Itzá (the New Seven Wonders site) with Cobá, a vast jungle archaeological site best known for the Nohoch Mul pyramid — a 42-meter (137-foot) structure that officially reopened for climbing on December 8, 2025 after nearly five years of closure. A new wooden staircase now allows visitors to safely ascend the tallest Maya pyramid in the Yucatán Peninsula. The tour includes a cenote swim, a buffet lunch, and both sites in a single day from Tulum. Pickup is typically 6:30–7:30 AM, with a total day of around 13–14 hours door-to-door given the significant driving distances. Price in 2026 runs $120–180 USD per person (+ Chichén Itzá admission fee on some variants, ~$44 USD cash on arrival). This is the right pick for archaeology enthusiasts who want to physically climb the tallest pyramid in the region — unavailable at Chichén Itzá (El Castillo banned since 2006), and taller than Ek Balam’s Acropolis (30 m).

Cobá’s Nohoch Mul pyramid was closed to climbers since the 2020 Covid-era shutdown — a disappointment for adventure-minded visitors. That changed on December 8, 2025, when INAH (Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History) officially reopened the pyramid using a newly installed wooden staircase designed to protect the original stone structure while allowing climbers to ascend safely. For 2026 visitors, this is the standout Yucatán experience: you can now climb a 42-meter pyramid, stand above the jungle canopy, and see a perspective that had been off-limits for years. Paired with a visit to Chichén Itzá (where climbing is prohibited), this tour gives you the complete spectrum — from observing the most iconic Maya pyramid from the ground to standing atop the tallest one.

What’s Included

  • Round-trip hotel pickup and drop-off from Tulum hotels
  • Air-conditioned transport (minibus or small coach)
  • Bilingual guide (English + Spanish standard)
  • Chichén Itzá guided tour (~2 hours)
  • Cobá guided tour + free time for the Nohoch Mul pyramid climb
  • Cobá site admission (~80 MXN, usually bundled)
  • Cenote visit — typically a cave cenote near Cobá (Tankach Ha, Choo Ha, or Multun Ha) or a cenote en route to Chichén Itzá
  • Buffet lunch at a traditional Yucatecan restaurant
  • Bottled water on the bus
  • Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
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What’s Not Included

  • Chichén Itzá admission fee on most variants — ~$44 USD per adult paid in cash on arrival (verify before booking)
  • Bicycle rental at Cobá — ~50 MXN (~$3 USD); nearly essential given the 6.5 km² site size
  • Pedal taxi (“Mayan Uber”) — ~150–250 MXN alternative if you prefer not to cycle
  • Cenote locker rental — ~30–60 MXN
  • Life jacket rental — ~50 MXN if not bundled
  • Drinks at lunch — sodas, beer, margaritas extra
  • Guide and driver tips — $10–15 USD per person customary
  • Personal expenses and souvenirs

How Much Does It Cost?

Variant Typical Price
Standard dual-site (+ CULTUR tax on arrival) $120–160 USD + ~$44 USD at gate = ~$164–204 total
Fully-bundled variant $150–200 USD per person
Small-group variant $180–240 USD per person
Private variant $500–900 USD total for 2–8 travelers
Children (4–12) Reduced rates; verify per listing
Cobá bike rental ~50 MXN on top of tour price

The dual-site structure costs $30–50 more per person than single-site Tulum tours. In exchange you get two distinct archaeological experiences and the genuine highlight of climbing Nohoch Mul.

Nohoch Mul: What the Climb Is Actually Like

Nohoch Mul stands 42 meters (137 feet) tall — making it the tallest Maya pyramid in the Yucatán Peninsula and one of the tallest in all of Mexico. The structure has approximately 120 steps to the summit. Since December 8, 2025, a new wooden staircase built over the original stone steps allows safe climbing. The ascent takes 10–20 minutes at a moderate pace. At the summit, you’re above the jungle canopy with 360-degree views extending 30–40 kilometers across the Yucatán lowlands. Climbing hours are 8:00 AM to 3:30 PM, with groups of up to 15 people allowed at a time and a 15-minute maximum at the summit to manage visitor flow. Climbing is optional — the site is rewarding even without the climb.

Practical climb details:

  • Height: 42 m (137 ft) — taller than Ek Balam’s Acropolis (30 m) and El Castillo (30 m to the top platform)
  • Steps: ~120 steps
  • New wooden staircase installed December 2025; handrails present
  • Difficulty: Moderate — the wooden structure is more stable than the original stone, but still physically demanding
  • Descent: Many climbers find the descent trickier than the ascent; take your time
  • Shoes: Sneakers or hiking shoes with grip
  • Water: Critical — you’ll sweat through the climb
  • Shade at the top: Limited — bring a hat

Climbing Hours and Capacity

INAH implemented specific rules to protect the structure:

Rule Detail
Climbing hours 8:00 AM – 3:30 PM
Group capacity Up to 15 people at a time
Summit time 15-minute maximum
Shoes Closed-toe required
Backpacks Small only; no large bags

Tours typically time the Cobá visit so your group arrives at Nohoch Mul within the climbing window. If you arrive after 3:30 PM, you cannot climb.

Why Pair Cobá with Chichén Itzá

Cobá and Chichén Itzá offer genuinely complementary experiences. Chichén Itzá is the architectural masterpiece — the perfectly restored El Castillo pyramid, the massive Great Ball Court, the famous equinox shadow phenomenon. It’s grand, ceremonial, and polished. Cobá is the jungle experience — a vast, partially unexcavated site scattered through forest, where you bike or take a pedal taxi between structures, and where you can physically climb the tallest pyramid in the region. Seeing both in one day gives you the complete Maya archaeological spectrum: the celebrated (Chichén Itzá) and the hands-on (Cobá). The experiences feel completely different despite both being Maya sites, which is why this pairing works better than visiting two similar sites.

A side-by-side comparison:

Chichén Itzá Cobá
Size ~5 km² archaeological zone 6.5 km² archaeological zone, 80 km² total site
Structures Highly restored, polished Partially excavated, jungle setting
Climbable pyramid No (banned 2006) Yes — Nohoch Mul
Site navigation Walking Bike or pedal taxi essential
Crowd level High (tour buses) Moderate
Typical visit time 2–3 hours 1.5–2.5 hours
Admission (foreigner) ~$44 USD ~$5 USD
Ambiance Ceremonial, grand Jungle, adventurous

Cobá: How to Navigate the Site

Cobá is much larger than Chichén Itzá — 6.5 km² of excavated archaeological zone compared to Chichén Itzá’s ~5 km². The distances between structures are significant enough that walking the entire site is impractical for most visitors. Three options:

  • Rent a bicycle (~50 MXN / $3 USD) — the most popular choice; allows self-paced exploration
  • Hire a pedal taxi (“Mayan Uber” or “Mayan Limousine”) — ~150–250 MXN for a driver-pedaled tricycle carrying 2 passengers; good for mobility-limited travelers
  • Walk — possible but not recommended; covering the main structures on foot takes 3+ hours in jungle heat

The bike option is the sweet spot for most travelers. Bike paths are paved, the jungle provides partial shade, and you can stop at each structure for as long as you want. Don’t wear flip-flops — enclosed shoes are mandatory for both biking and the Nohoch Mul climb.

Who This Tour Is Right For

This dual-site Cobá + Chichén Itzá tour is right for archaeology enthusiasts who want to experience two distinct Maya sites, adventure travelers who want to physically climb a major Maya pyramid (now available again at Cobá), photographers seeking both the iconic Chichén Itzá shots and the jungle perspective from atop Nohoch Mul, Tulum-based travelers who can take advantage of Cobá’s proximity (45 minutes), and repeat Yucatán visitors who’ve already done a standard Chichén Itzá tour and want a fresh angle. It’s not the right pick for casual first-time visitors who would benefit from more time at Chichén Itzá alone, mobility-limited travelers, or those averse to physical activity.

Book this if you are:

  • An archaeology enthusiast — two genuinely different Maya sites in one day
  • Adventure-oriented — the Nohoch Mul climb is a legitimate physical challenge
  • Based in Tulum — Cobá is only 45 minutes away, making the dual-site day feasible
  • A repeat visitor — you’ve done the standard Chichén Itzá tour; Cobá is fresh content
  • Physically fit — the Cobá biking + pyramid climb requires real energy
  • A photographer — jungle views from Nohoch Mul are unique in the Yucatán
  • Keen on the 2025–26 reopening — the first season since 2020 that this experience is available

Who This Tour Is NOT Right For

Consider a different option if you are:

  • A casual first-time visitor — the standard Tulum Chichén Itzá tour gives you more time at Chichén Itzá
  • Mobility-limited — Cobá’s biking and climbing requirements are genuinely demanding
  • Traveling with very young children — the climb isn’t suitable under age 8, and the 13-hour day is long
  • Averse to physical activity — if you don’t want to climb or bike, you’re paying for features you won’t use
  • Budget-conscious — $30–50 per person premium over single-site tours
  • Heat-sensitive — the Nohoch Mul climb is outdoors in full midday sun

How the Day Works

A typical dual-site Tulum day:

Time Activity
6:30–7:30 AM Hotel pickup in Tulum (Pueblo or Hotel Zone)
7:30–8:15 AM Short pickup loop + depart for first stop
8:15–9:00 AM Drive to Cobá (~45 minutes from Tulum)
9:00–11:30 AM Cobá visit — bike tour + Nohoch Mul climb
11:30 AM – 12:15 PM Drive to cenote
12:15–1:00 PM Cenote swim + change
1:00–2:00 PM Buffet lunch
2:00–3:30 PM Drive to Chichén Itzá
3:30–5:00 PM Chichén Itzá guided tour
5:00 PM Depart for Tulum
7:30–8:30 PM Arrive back at Tulum hotel

Why Cobá Comes First

The logic: Cobá’s climbing hours end at 3:30 PM, so you must visit before then. Chichén Itzá’s last entry is 4:00 PM (gates close at 5:00 PM). Most tours do Cobá in the morning to ensure the climb happens, then work Chichén Itzá into the afternoon. This has a side benefit — you arrive at Chichén Itzá when the mid-morning tour-bus wave is starting to leave, so crowd levels may be slightly better than a standard 10:30 AM arrival.

Some operators reverse the order (Chichén Itzá morning, Cobá afternoon), which works but risks missing the 3:30 PM climbing cutoff if traffic or timing goes wrong. Verify the specific order when you book.

Nohoch Mul vs. Ek Balam Acropolis

For archaeology enthusiasts comparing climbable pyramids in the Yucatán:

Nohoch Mul (Cobá) Acropolis (Ek Balam)
Height 42 m (137 ft) ~30 m (98 ft)
Steps ~120 ~130
New staircase Yes, Dec 2025 No (original stone)
View from top Jungle canopy, 30–40 km visibility Jungle, sweeping views
Climb difficulty Moderate (with wooden stairs) Moderate-high (steep stone)
Climb capacity Max 15 at a time Open flow
Reopened December 2025 Always open

Nohoch Mul is taller and now has better safety infrastructure. Ek Balam’s Acropolis has been continuously climbable and offers better-preserved stucco carvings at the top. Both are worthwhile — but if you’re choosing one tour, the Cobá variant is the fresher experience given the 2025–26 reopening.

Honest Trade-offs

What you gain:

  • Ability to climb a major Maya pyramid — genuinely unavailable at Chichén Itzá
  • Two distinct archaeological experiences in one day
  • Cenote swim as a midday cool-down
  • Reopened-in-2025 angle — one of the freshest experiences in the Yucatán
  • Jungle setting at Cobá vs. the ceremonial setting at Chichén Itzá
  • Cycling through Maya ruins — memorable and photogenic

What you trade off:

  • Rushed Chichén Itzá visit — 1.5 hours vs. 2.5 on single-site tours
  • Physical demands — bike + climb + ruins walking
  • Longer day — 13–14 hours vs. 12 for standard Tulum tours
  • Admission fees sometimes separate — check listing carefully
  • Not wheelchair-accessible — Cobá’s jungle paths are unpaved

Cancellation Policy

  • Free cancellation up to 24 hours before departure
  • Within 24 hours — no refund
  • Weather — tours run rain or shine; heavy rain can make Nohoch Mul climbing dangerous and the guide may defer
  • Date changes — usually allowed 24+ hours before, subject to availability

Booking Timing

  • Low season weekdays: Book 1 week ahead
  • High season weekdays (December–April): Book 2–3 weeks ahead
  • High season weekends: Book 3–4 weeks ahead
  • Post-reopening peak demand (Dec 2025 – March 2026): Book 1 month ahead — Cobá tours are in high demand since the climb reopened
  • Equinox dates (March 19–21, September 22–23): Book 2–3 months ahead
  • Christmas, New Year, Semana Santa: Book 1–2 months ahead

The December 2025 reopening is creating elevated demand through 2026 — book earlier than you would have historically.

Quick Reference

Detail Value
Price (2026) $120–200 USD per person (+CULTUR tax on some variants)
Duration 13–14 hours door-to-door
Pickup 6:30–7:30 AM from Tulum
Return 7:30–8:30 PM
Transport Minibus or small coach (12–25 passengers)
Guide Bilingual (English + Spanish)
Sites Chichén Itzá + Cobá
Climbable pyramid Nohoch Mul at Cobá (42 m / 137 ft) — reopened Dec 2025
Site navigation at Cobá Bike rental (~50 MXN) or pedal taxi
Cenote Varies (often a Cobá-area cave cenote)
Lunch Buffet
Cancellation Free up to 24 hours before
Best for Archaeology + adventure enthusiasts, Tulum-based travelers

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you actually climb the Cobá pyramid in 2026?

Yes. Nohoch Mul pyramid officially reopened for climbing on December 8, 2025, after being closed since 2020. A new wooden staircase was installed over the original stone steps to protect the structure while allowing safe climbing. Climbing hours are 8:00 AM – 3:30 PM with groups of up to 15 people allowed at a time.

How tall is the Cobá pyramid?

Nohoch Mul is 42 meters (137 feet) tall — the tallest Maya pyramid in the Yucatán Peninsula. For comparison, Chichén Itzá’s El Castillo is ~30 meters to its upper platform, and Ek Balam’s Acropolis is ~30 meters.

Is the Cobá climb difficult?

Moderately. The new wooden staircase makes the ascent safer and more stable than the old stone steps, but it’s still physically demanding — approximately 120 steps in tropical heat. Most reasonably fit adults can do it in 10–20 minutes with shade breaks. The descent is trickier than the ascent due to the steep angle. The climb is optional.

Is it worth visiting Cobá AND Chichén Itzá in one day?

Yes for archaeology enthusiasts, adventure travelers, and repeat Yucatán visitors. The two sites offer completely different experiences: Chichén Itzá is the polished ceremonial site; Cobá is the jungle-adventure site where you bike and climb. For casual first-timers who want to focus on “the famous one,” a single-site Chichén Itzá tour gives you more time there.

How far is Cobá from Tulum?

Approximately 45 minutes by road (~44 km). This is why Tulum is the ideal base for a Cobá + Chichén Itzá dual-site tour — Cobá is right next door, while the Chichén Itzá drive is manageable at 2.5 hours.

How far is Cobá from Chichén Itzá?

About 2 hours by road (~130 km). The dual-site tour drives from Cobá to Chichén Itzá (or reverse) in between, covering significant distance.

Do I need to rent a bike at Cobá?

Strongly recommended. The site is 6.5 km² and walking the entire archaeological zone takes 3+ hours in jungle heat. Bike rental is ~50 MXN ($3 USD). A pedal taxi with a driver costs ~150–250 MXN for 2 passengers — a good alternative for mobility-limited visitors.

How much does the Cobá + Chichén Itzá tour cost?

$120–200 USD per person depending on variant and whether the Chichén Itzá admission fee (~$44 USD) is bundled or paid on arrival. Private variants for 2–8 travelers run $500–900 USD total flat rate. Budget ~50 MXN extra for Cobá bike rental (optional but recommended).

Can I skip the climb if I don’t want to do it?

Yes. Cobá is rewarding even without the pyramid climb — the jungle setting, the extensive bike paths, other smaller pyramids, the ball court, and the stelae (carved stone monuments) are all worth exploring. You can wait at the base while other group members ascend.

What should I wear for the Cobá climb?

Closed-toe shoes (sneakers or hiking shoes) are required — no flip-flops or sandals. Comfortable active clothing (shorts or light pants, a breathable top). A hat for sun protection at the summit. Bring ~1 liter of water per person minimum.

Is this tour suitable for kids?

For kids 10+ who can handle stairs and long days. Younger children may struggle with the 120-step climb, the 6.5 km² bike navigation at Cobá, and the 13–14 hour total day. Private variants offer more flexibility for families — you can pace Cobá, skip the climb, and adjust timing.

Does the tour include Chichén Itzá admission?

Varies by variant. Some tours bundle all admission fees; many include Cobá admission but require the ~$44 USD Chichén Itzá CULTUR tax paid in cash on arrival. Read the listing carefully for the “cash on arrival” note, common on Tulum small-group tours.

How long has Cobá’s pyramid been reopened?

Since December 8, 2025. The reopening was announced by INAH after approximately 5 years of closure following the 2020 Covid-era archaeological site shutdown. The new wooden staircase is part of a broader conservation effort to protect the original stone structure while maintaining visitor access.

What’s the view like from the top of Nohoch Mul?

Spectacular. You’re at 42 meters (137 feet) above the jungle canopy — above the treeline in most directions. Visibility extends 30–40 kilometers on clear days across the flat Yucatán landscape. You can see the Maya sacbeob (ancient white roads) connecting Cobá to distant settlements. Bring a camera.

Can I visit Cobá independently without a tour?

Yes. Colectivos (shared vans) run from Tulum to Cobá for ~$15–25 USD round-trip. Site admission is ~80 MXN. Bike rental is ~50 MXN. Total DIY cost is far lower than a tour, though you handle all the logistics and won’t visit Chichén Itzá the same day. For visitors comfortable with independent Mexican travel, DIY Cobá is very feasible; combining both sites in one day is much harder without a tour.

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Researched & Written by
Jamshed is a versatile traveler, equally drawn to the vibrant energy of city escapes and the peaceful solitude of remote getaways. On some trips, he indulges in resort hopping, while on others, he spends little time in his accommodation, fully immersing himself in the destination. A passionate foodie, Jamshed delights in exploring local cuisines, with a particular love for flavorful non-vegetarian dishes. Favourite Cities: Amsterdam, Las Vegas, Dublin, Prague, Vienna

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