Beaches & Things to Do

What's the best beach in Tulum?

Verification in progressLast reviewed May 30, 20263 min readTulum
Chris, PlayaStays founder, photographed in Playa del Carmen
Written by
& the PlayaStays local team
Founder, PlayaStaysOperating in Tulum since 2018

Playa Paraíso is the best public-access beach with classic Caribbean white sand. Playa Pescadores is the local move (free, fishermen-village feel). The Hotel Zone beach clubs (Ahau, Mia, Be Tulum) charge a day-use fee but include sunbeds. Skip the beach south of the National Park entrance — sargassum traps there.

Tulum's beach is one continuous strip, but access points and crowd levels vary. Playa Paraíso (just outside the ruins) is the best public-access spot. Playa Pescadores in the Pueblo-adjacent fishing area is the locals' free beach. Hotel Zone beach clubs (Ahau, Coco Tulum, Mia) charge 800–1,500 pesos for a sunbed with minimum spend. Sargassum (seaweed) is real and varies by week.

Follow these steps

  1. If it's your first time, Playa Paraíso is the easiest move — drive or taxi to the lot just outside the Tulum Ruins parking, walk 5 min south.
  2. Get there by 9am for the best experience.
  3. If you want a sunbed and food, pick a beach club based on vibe (Ahau for yoga + Instagram, Mia for a real lunch, Be Tulum for high-end).
  4. Check Sargassum Monitoring on the morning of — some weeks the south end of the strip is unusable.
  5. Bring water (no facilities on the public beaches).

Tulum's beach is on the Sian Ka'an side — south-facing, which means it has different sand and water dynamics than Playa or Puerto Morelos. The water is famously turquoise; the sand is finer and lighter. The whole 10km strip is technically public (Mexican beaches are all public), but most access points are gated by beach clubs or hotels.

Public-access beaches:

  • Playa Paraíso — the most photographed Tulum beach, just outside the Tulum Ruins entrance. Public access through a small parking area. Soft white sand, gorgeous water, no facilities (bring your own everything). Free entry. Best 9am–noon before crowds.
  • Playa Pescadores — the local fishing-village beach, north end of the Hotel Zone. Free, lower-key, fishermen still launch boats from here. No sunbeds — bring a towel.
  • Playa Las Palmas — between Playa Paraíso and the Hotel Zone restaurants. Quieter, somewhat hidden. Small parking lot.

Beach clubs (paid access):

  • Ahau Tulum — long-running beach club, day-use ~1,200 pesos minimum spend. Yoga decks, swing-bar Instagram setup.
  • Coco Tulum — vibey beach club, beanbag-style seating. Day-use ~1,000 pesos.
  • Mia Restaurant Beach Club — restaurant-driven, food-focused, smaller crowd. Lunch + beach combo.
  • Be Tulum — the high-end play. Hotel beach club, ~$50+ USD/person minimum, beautiful setting.

The sargassum reality: April–August is peak sargassum (brown seaweed). Some weeks the beach is pristine; other weeks it's piled up. The current breaks differently along the strip — north end (Playa Pescadores, near the ruins) typically clears faster than the south end. Check the live cam on Sargassum Monitoring before you go. The hotels rake their patches daily; public beaches don't.

Logistics: - Parking at Playa Paraíso: 100–150 pesos at the small lot. - Taxi Pueblo → beach: 150–250 pesos. - Bike: 150 pesos/day rental, ~15 min ride. - No street parking is reliable on the Hotel Zone strip — always pay a lot.

Tulum's beach status is contentious. The Mexican government cleared encroaching Hotel Zone businesses in 2023–2024 to enforce the federal zone (the 20m strip from the high-tide line is always public by law). Some restaurants got demolished; new ones rose. The net effect for visitors: more public-access points exist than the Hotel Zone wants you to know, but they're poorly signposted. Most tourists default to whichever beach club their hotel partners with — Locals know to head to Playa Paraíso or Pescadores for free access.

Driving into the Hotel Zone without a plan and trying to park on the street. Parking is enforced and street spots disappear by 10am. Pay a lot (100–150 pesos) — way easier than getting towed.

Specific picks

We recommend these because we know them — not because anyone paid us. Hours and prices change; verify before you go.

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Chris, PlayaStays founder

Hi, I'm Chris — founder of PlayaStays.

I've stayed in Airbnbs across more than 35 countries — from design-led glamping in Patagonia to penthouse condos in major cities. I've learned what makes a property great: photography that earns the click, messaging that holds Superhost standards, and pricing that reads the local market instead of a template. We bring that same eye to every PlayaStays Airbnb in Quintana Roo.

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