Post review
To increase honesty, reviews are anonymous. You can only add one review per city or it replaces/edits your old one. Reviews with URLs or emails are removed. If you're writing about data being wrong, please don't do it here as it'll be removed here.beach
seaweed
great
expensive
town
nice
beaches
prices
term
restaurants
check
stay
food
zone
ruins
full
cenotes
summer
Just spent three nights here. Tulum is a triangle: the ruins, the zona hotelera, and Tulum Pueblo. Zona Hotelera is expensive and far from services. Tulum Pueblo is ugly, noisy, and full of development. A boom town where everyone seems out to fleece the gringo. It's also an ecological disaster. Watch the Dark Side of Tulum. And think twice before swimming in some of the local cenotes: they're full of E Coli.
The public beach in winter was nice. But this is a shitty place to work from, unless you want to drop a lot of money, and even then, it's a party atmosphere.
1 year ago
Seaweed - Summer is seaweed season and it stinks which ruins the awesome beaches. Town center is very hip and trendy now and prices are going up. My tip, winter is best, the weather in summer is scorching. Oh, and find a place with AC, you'll need it
1 year ago
Stayed for 5 days in Tulum in March 2023, here are a few things to consider.
-The Pros are: there a ton of very solid accommodations for ~$50 per night on a short term basis (1BR apartment, pool, etc.). You can get it down even further with a longer term commitment. It feels like there is a growing nomad community, but it's more of NYC/LA types than down to earth vagabonds. There are a bunch of great restaurants that cater to the health conscious and gyms to check out. There are some very posh NYC/LA type bars and clubs with good DJs if that's your thing.
-The Cons: the taxis are THE MOST EXPENSIVE IN THE WORLD-they banded together to chase out all competition (no Uber) and each ride is $15-$40. You have to get a scooter or other mode of transportation in order to get around comfortably unless you live right in the middle of everything. The people that go to Tulum are heavily into Drugs and Alcohol (a plus for some but not for me) and very superficial. The beaches are difficult to get to and are often swamped with seaweed. It feels dangerous from a traffic perspective trying to get around (horrible roads and crazy drivers). Overall, it is expensive for Mexico and most prices are comparable to the US.
-Overall, Tulum is great for some people but wasn't a fit for me long term. Although many settle there as nomads, I'd personally only go back on a short term basis to stay at Tulum Beach if I was in a party mode. If you want a LA/NYC feel in Mexico and are into partying/drugs/alcohol, Tulum could be a good fit for you
2 years ago
Been there for a day as a day-trip from Cancun. It has some serious Canggu vibes, not gonna lie. Is a great spot to hang out for a couple of days, enjoy some parties and nice food. However you should bring some money as everything is tailored towards American tourists.
Pros:
- many food options
- nice, chill vibe
- obviously greata weather
- nice beaches
- great archaelogical zone
Cons:
- traffic is bad
- super expensive
- touristy
3 years ago
Everything is for American tourists. Prices are sometimes even higher than in the US. Beach is beautiful, there's nothing to do downtown. Cenotes, archaeological zone are cool, worth a visit. Covid is like it doesn't exist. Internet was cool in Selina. Cool to stay for a couple of nights of chilling, but not for living.
3 years ago
This place is a lot of fun, has beautiful beaches, and gives easy access to amazing cavern diving. That said I wouldn't recommend it, overall. You have two parts, centro and hotel zone. Hotel zone is essentially as if Bali existed in the US, but inexplicably is somehow in Mexico. Roughly 3-4x the price of Bali and the rest of Mexico, almost no real mexican food (the best reason to go to Mexico) in the hotel zone, a bunch of beach hipsters (Tuluminati), relatively terrible internet (some 10Mbps+ spots tho), and "eco" branding everywhere yet power provided by huge, loud generators. Tulum centro actually has some solid restaurants and gives you a bit of the nature vibe mixed in with a small mexican town, but unfortunately no beach. If you're looking for a month or longer stay in the mexican caribbean, Playa del Carmen is the far more livable city and it's only like 45mins by car, so you can still do the nature stuff very easily without having to deal with actual Tulum.
4 years ago
Coming from Bali, Tulum is probably 7 years behind. Wifi and cell signal isn't great everywhere. Not many co-working spaces. Similar prices to what you would find in USA. Covid restrictions don't really exisit.
4 years ago
Tulum is loaded with cenotes for exploring and cooling off, beautiful and unique! Find local Maya and listen to their dialect. Learn a few words in Maya, they love to share it! The only beachfront Mayan Ruins are here! Iguanas galore and photo opps! Get a guide, it's worth the history lesson, wear your suit under clothes for a refreshing swim afterwards. Most hotels offer beach clubs, low cost or cost of lunch/drinks, plus they have free wi-fi. Happy hours 2/1 with live music and the recently opened museum are diverse options. In town, restaurants abound and the food is a gastronomic delight! Local taco stops are the best value for a full stomach , happy tastebuds and a light wallet. Fresh sugar cane squeezed by a hank-cranked press offers a variety of Mojitos with live variety shows and music! Other night life, that I love, is watching sea turtles lay their eggs! Fun activities near by are: numerous parks with zip-lines, animal sanctuaries, cultural shows, snorkeling, scuba diving, fishing..... I would describe Tulum as bohemian / hippie/ ish, more relaxed than resorts. It has changed quickly in the last few years to accommodate not only the backpacker but the upscale tourist as well. It's a small but growing community with friendly people and a safe environment.
7 years ago
Most of the cafes do not have aircons, so during summer time you won't be able to work here comfortably. Better rent a place or use one of the coworking spaces listed here (didn't check them myself yet).
Make sure to check the seaweed situation in Tulum before coming here. Seaweed is covering all of the shore in the moment :( ruined my beach experience for the whole trip.
Check Central Park condo residence. It's kind of pricey, but has good internet connection, restaurant, gym.. everything you'll need to stay productive and still enjoying your time here.
I wouldn't trust 4sq ratings for restaurants and other venues. Better ask locals.
7 years ago