The Wedding Unicorn
👯

Group Travel to Tulum

✈️ 4 hours from NYC🗓 Best: November–April🌍 Mexico

Tulum is an outstanding group travel destination — offering the variety and scale to satisfy every member of your group while delivering shared experiences that become stories you tell for decades. Tulum has become one of the world's most sought-after destinations for good reason — ancient Mayan ruins perched on Caribbean cliffs, underground cenote swimming holes, and an internationally sophisticated boutique hotel scene that prioritizes sustainability and soul.

The Wedding Unicorn specializes in group travel logistics that make the impossible feel easy. We negotiate room blocks at the right properties, coordinate group airport transfers, plan shared excursions and private group dining events, and manage the payment and communication complexity that comes with traveling with 10, 20, or 50+ people.

Mayan ruins on sea cliffs, cenotes, boutique eco-hotels, wellness scene — all of it accessible to your group through coordinated planning that ensures nobody is left managing their own arrangements. Tulum is where ancient mystery and modern bohemian luxury collide — nowhere else do Mayan ruins overlook a Caribbean beach.

Best time to travel to Tulum as a group: November–April. We recommend booking group travel at least 6–9 months in advance to secure the best room inventory and pricing.

What's Included
  • Best time to visit: November–April
  • 4 hours from New York City
  • Language: Spanish / English widely spoken
  • Visa: No visa required for US citizens
  • Currency: Mexican Peso / USD accepted
  • Room block negotiation and management
  • Group airport transfer coordination
  • Shared excursion planning
  • Private group dining reservations
  • Payment coordination across the group
  • Dedicated group contact throughout
Sample Itinerary

Tulum Honeymoon: Maya Ruins, Cenotes & Bohemian Caribbean Paradise

Clifftop ruins above turquoise water, crystal cenotes, and the world's most stylish eco-retreats

7 nightsfrom $6,500/couple per couple

Tulum is unlike anywhere else in the Caribbean — the site of the only Maya city built directly on a cliff above the sea, with turquoise water visible through the arched doorways of 800-year-old temples. The town has evolved into the world center of eco-chic bohemian luxury: thatched-roof jungle villas, cenote swim clubs, rooftop yoga at sunrise, and some of the world's most beautiful restaurants built around open kitchen fires in the jungle. A seven-night honeymoon here covers the ancient Maya, the underwater world of the Riviera Maya cenotes, and the specific mood that Tulum alone delivers.

1Arrival in Tulum — Enter the Jungle

Land in Cancún and ride the private transfer south along the Riviera Maya coast road — 2 hours through Playa del Carmen and the coconut palms that line Mexico's Yucatan coast. Your Tulum Beach Road hotel is accessed by a sand track through mangrove forest, and when your eco-villa or cabana key is pressed into your hand, the jungle closes around you. There is no check-in desk, no lobby, no air conditioning — instead there is a hammock, a candlelit palapa roof above you, the sound of the Caribbean twenty meters away, and the specific quality of the Tulum atmosphere that has been drawing the world's most aesthetically serious travelers for a decade. Tonight: dinner in the jungle at your hotel's open-air restaurant.

  • Cancún arrival and Tulum transfer
  • Eco-hotel check-in and jungle orientation
  • First beach walk at the Tulum strip
  • Jungle candlelit dinner at hotel
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
2Maya Ruins at Dawn — Temples Above the Sea

Arrive at the Tulum archaeological site at 8am (when it opens) before the tour buses arrive — the ruins are dramatically beautiful at dawn with mist rising from the jungle below and the turquoise Caribbean stretching out behind the Castillo pyramid in an extraordinary tableau that has inspired travelers since John Lloyd Stephens published his Incidents of Travel in Yucatan in 1843. Your guide explains the site's extraordinary history as a trading port and sacred Maya city for 200+ years until the Spanish arrived, and points out the astronomical alignments of the buildings with solstice and equinox sunrise. After the ruins, walk down the cliff path to the beach below for a swim directly in front of the ancient city.

  • Tulum ruins at dawn — temples above turquoise water
  • Castillo pyramid viewing with archaeologist guide
  • Cliff path swim below the ancient city
  • Morning coffee at a Tulum town café
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
3Cenote Day — Swimming in Ancient Underground Cathedrals

The Yucatan Peninsula is hollow — beneath the flat jungle lies the world's longest underground river system, accessible through thousands of sinkholes called cenotes that the ancient Maya considered sacred portals to the underworld. Gran Cenote, 4km from Tulum, is one of the most beautiful: a collapsed cave cathedral with stalactites hanging over gin-clear turquoise water where freshwater turtles and fish cruise beneath you as you swim. In the afternoon, Dos Ojos (Two Eyes) cenote system offers snorkeling in crystal underground rivers through narrow cave passages lined with 10,000-year-old stalactites and stalagmites — some of the most visually extraordinary swimming on earth. Bring an underwater camera.

  • Gran Cenote swimming with turtles
  • Dos Ojos cave snorkel system
  • Underground river passage exploration
  • Cenote picnic and hammock afternoon
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
4Cobá — Jungle Pyramid and Maya Village

Cobá's massive Nohoch Mul pyramid at 45 meters is one of the tallest Maya structures in the Yucatan — still climbable (with a rope) for views over an unbroken canopy that stretches in every direction as far as visibility allows, encompassing dozens of smaller ruins emerging from the tree line below. Rent bikes at the site entrance to cover the 6km of jungle paths connecting the main groups of ruins — the flat limestone roads are perfect cycling and far more enjoyable than walking in the heat. Return to Tulum for a quiet beach afternoon and sunset at Casa Jaguar or Batey, the rum bar known for freshly pressed sugarcane mojitos on the beach.

  • Cobá Nohoch Mul pyramid climb
  • Jungle bike tour between ruin groups
  • View over endless Maya jungle canopy
  • Batey rum bar sunset mojitos
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
5Akumal Turtles & Reef Snorkeling

Akumal Bay, 30 minutes north of Tulum on the Riviera Maya coast, is home to a permanent colony of green sea turtles that graze the seagrass beds in the shallow bay — snorkeling with them in the wild (early morning, before 9am, before tour groups arrive) is one of the Riviera Maya's finest experiences. Book an early guide session through the Akumal Dive Center and enter the water at sunrise with a certified guide who ensures respectful wildlife encounters. The afternoon is for the barrier reef just offshore — the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef is the second largest in the world, and the Tulum section has excellent snorkeling with vibrant coral, spotted eagle rays, and the occasional bull shark visible at depth.

  • Wild sea turtle snorkeling at Akumal Bay
  • Mesoamerican Barrier Reef snorkel
  • Eagle ray and nurse shark encounters
  • Playa del Carmen afternoon for shopping
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
6Sian Ka'an Biosphere & Lagoon Float

Sian Ka'an UNESCO Biosphere Reserve covers half a million hectares south of Tulum — a vast wilderness of tropical forest, wetlands, lagoons, and barrier reef that is home to jaguars, crocodiles, tapirs, and 350 species of birds. A guided boat tour through the ancient Maya canal system in the reserve leads to the floating section: you enter a freshwater lagoon channel and let the current carry you downstream through the mangroves for 40 minutes, lying on your back watching the jungle canopy pass above. This gentle experience is as peaceful as anything in travel. Return to Tulum for your final evening — one last Hartwood or Arca dinner under the stars.

  • Sian Ka'an UNESCO Biosphere Reserve boat tour
  • Ancient Maya canal system exploration
  • Biosphere lagoon float through mangroves
  • Farewell dinner at Arca restaurant
🏨 Stay: Nomade Tulum
7Final Beach Morning & Departure to Cancún

A final Tulum morning exactly as it should be: yoga at sunrise on the terrace, breakfast in the jungle garden, one last swim in the Caribbean before packing. Your driver collects you at noon for the 2-hour return to Cancún International — a reverse journey that feels completely different from the arrival, this time with the full context of what lies behind every mangrove and coconut grove along the road. Take home Tulum honey (wild Yucatan native bee honey with no stinger is sold at the cenotes), locally made chocolate from the market, and the specific Tulum aesthetic that tends to influence how people dress for the next six months.

  • Sunrise yoga and jungle breakfast
  • Final Caribbean swim from the beach
  • Hotel checkout and farewell rituals
  • Cancún airport transfer
🏨 Stay: Check-out

Where to Stay

ultraTulum Beach Road
Azulik

The most photographed resort in Latin America — tree house villas suspended in the jungle canopy above the sea, built entirely from wood, stone, and organic materials with no electricity (candlelit), no mirrors, and a profound integration with the surrounding jungle and ocean.

luxuryTulum Beach Road
Nomade Tulum

Tulum's most complete spiritual-wellness experience — jungle casitas with private hammock gardens, a world-class spa, sunrise yoga platform above the mangroves, and a dinner reservation that is the hardest ticket in Mexico.

midTulum Beach Road
Papaya Playa Project

The original Tulum beach-party eco-hotel — beloved for its barefoot beach bar, sustainable chic cabanas, and full moon parties that have defined the Tulum scene since it was still a secret; great value for the beach access and atmosphere.

This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.

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