Mr. PlayasMexico's Honest Beach Guide
    Cancún · Activities

    Things to Do in Cancún: Everything Worth Leaving the Resort For

    By Mr. Playas · Updated 2026

    Cenotes — The Non-Negotiable

    The Yucatán has an estimated 6,000+ cenotes — freshwater sinkholes connected to the world's largest underground river system. The water is crystal clear, fresh, cold (~75°F year-round). The cenotes closest to Cancún range from 30 minutes to 2 hours away. See the dedicated cenotes guide for the full breakdown.

    Isla Mujeres — Day Trip or Overnight

    13 km offshore. Ferry from Puerto Juárez ($8 USD round trip, 20 min, every 30 min). Golf carts are the main transport. Playa Norte is the beach benchmark. A full day is right. An overnight lets you experience the island after day-trippers leave.

    Whale Shark Swimming — Jun Through Sep

    One of the largest known aggregations of the world's largest fish between Cancún and Holbox. Licensed tours include swimming (snorkeling) alongside the animals. Sightings approach 100% in season. Cost: $100–150 USD per person.

    Snorkeling the Mesoamerican Reef

    The second-largest coral reef in the world. Day trips visit reef sections near Isla Mujeres, Puerto Morelos National Reef, and the underwater museum MUSA with 500+ sculptures. Cost: $40–80 USD.

    Chichén Itzá — 2.5 Hours Inland

    One of the New Seven Wonders of the World. Go early — opens at 8 AM, tour buses arrive at 10 AM. Bring water and a hat. The town of Valladolid (midpoint on the return) has Cenote Zaci and lunch options that improve the drive.

    Xcaret, Xel-Há, and the Eco-Parks

    Xcaret ($120–150 USD) — snorkeling in underground rivers, bird sanctuary, cultural shows. Xel-Há is a natural inlet snorkeling park. Both work as single-day family experiences.

    Downtown Cancún — Mercado 28

    The section most Hotel Zone visitors never reach. Handicrafts, Yucatecan food, freshly made tortillas, and prices that are a fraction of the Hotel Zone. A $10 taxi from the Hotel Zone that most guests never take.

    The cenote-first itinerary

    Most Cancún visitors spend day one at the beach and then wonder what to do with days two and three. Mr. Playas' suggestion: cenotes on day two, Isla Mujeres on day three, and the beach every morning before the heat peaks. This produces a dramatically more interesting trip than three straight days of the Hotel Zone pool. .

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the best day trip from Cancún?

    Isla Mujeres for the beach. Cenotes for the natural wonder. Chichén Itzá for cultural depth. Whale shark swimming (June–September) for the most extraordinary wildlife experience.

    Is Chichén Itzá worth the trip from Cancún?

    Yes. Depart by 7 AM, arrive when the site opens at 8 AM, spend 3–4 hours, lunch in Valladolid, return by late afternoon.

    When is whale shark season near Cancún?

    June through September, peaking July–August. Sightings on licensed tours are near-guaranteed. Cost: $100–150 USD.