Valladolid to Tulum 2026: 5 Ways to Get There (Prices, Times & the Cobá Route)
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Valladolid to Tulum 2026: 5 Ways to Get There (Prices, Times & the Cobá Route)

Valladolid to Tulum is 100km — south on Highway 109 through Cobá, then east to Tulum on the coast. By rental car: 1.5 hours. By colectivo in two stages (Valladolid→Cobá, then Cobá→Tulum): 2–2.5 hours for 120–160 MXN. There is no direct ADO bus via this route.

The route passes directly through Cobá ruins — Mexico’s tallest climbable Maya pyramid at 43 meters. Most travelers heading from Valladolid to Tulum skip it entirely. With a rental car, a morning departure with a Cobá stop turns the journey into a half-day ruins experience.

Tulum ruins on the Caribbean coastline — the end destination when traveling south from Valladolid via Highway 109 and Cobá

At a Glance: Valladolid to Tulum Options

OptionCost per PersonTimeBest For
Rental car via Hwy 109~$35–65 USD/day + 0 tolls1.5 hrsFlexibility, Cobá stopover, groups
Colectivo (2 stages via Cobá)120–160 MXN (~$6–8 USD)2–2.5 hrsBudget travelers
Taxi (direct)1,200–1,800 MXN ($60–90 USD)1.5 hrsSmall groups splitting cost
ADO bus (via Cancun)450–640 MXN4–5 hrs❌ Not recommended — very indirect
Organized tour$55–120 USD/personFull dayCobá + cenote guided day trip

The honest take: Rental car is best — no tolls, you can stop at Cobá at 8 AM, and you arrive in Tulum with your own wheels for beach-zone transport (since there’s no Uber in Tulum). Colectivo works for solo budget travelers.


Step Zero: Getting Out of Valladolid

Valladolid is a walkable colonial city. The ADO bus station is 500m from the main plaza. Most colectivos to Cobá depart from around the ADO station or from the market area — ask locals or your hotel for the current departure point, as it can shift.

By rental car from Valladolid: Head south from the city center on Calzada de los Frailes direction, following signs for Cobá / Carretera 109. The road heads south through flat jungle — you’ll reach Cobá in 55 minutes.

Renting a car in Valladolid: Rental car agencies are limited in Valladolid. Book in advance online or rent from Cancun/Merida where selection is better.


The Route: Why Highway 109 Is the Right Road

Most GPS apps default to the coastal Highway 307 route — north to Cancun, then south to Tulum. This adds 75km and an hour to your journey. Ignore it.

Highway 109 (the Cobá route) is the direct road:

  • Valladolid → Cobá: 55km, 45 minutes
  • Cobá → Tulum Pueblo: 45km, 45 minutes
  • Total: 100km, 1.5 hours

No toll booths. Well-maintained two-lane asphalt. Speed bumps (topes) every few kilometers through villages — slow down to 20 km/h or risk your rental car’s alignment.

Cobá pyramid at sunrise — directly on Highway 109 between Valladolid and Tulum, 55km from Valladolid and 45km from Tulum

The Cobá stopover strategy:

  1. 7:00 AM — Leave Valladolid
  2. 7:45 AM — Arrive at Cobá ruins
  3. 8:00 AM — Enter ruins (opens at 8 AM, 90 MXN entry)
  4. 8:05 AM — Climb Nohoch Mul pyramid before the tour groups arrive at 10–11 AM
  5. 10:30 AM — Leave Cobá, head east on Hwy 109
  6. 11:15 AM — Arrive Tulum Pueblo, check in, grab lunch
  7. Afternoon — Head to the beach zone (colectivo or taxi from Pueblo to Zone)

Option 1: Rental Car via Highway 109 (Best)

Distance: 100km
Tolls: None on Hwy 109
Time: 1.5 hours non-stop; 4–5 hours with Cobá ruins stop
Parking at Cobá: 100 MXN
Parking in Tulum: Street parking in Tulum Pueblo is free; beach zone hotels charge 100–200 MXN/day

Driving directions from Valladolid:

  1. From the city center, follow signs for Cobá / Tulum
  2. Take Carretera 109 south
  3. 55km through jungle to Cobá ruins (follow “ruinas” signs at the Cobá intersection)
  4. Continue south/east on Hwy 109 to Tulum
  5. At the Highway 307 junction, turn left for Tulum Pueblo or right for the Zona Hotelera (beach zone)

Note on Tulum arrival: The Tulum beach zone is 3km east of Tulum Pueblo on a single road. There is no Uber in Tulum — arrange a taxi from your hotel in advance, or use the colectivo (30–50 MXN) that runs the Pueblo–Beach Zone corridor.


Option 2: Colectivo (2 Stages — Cheapest)

The budget route is two colectivos: Valladolid → Cobá, then Cobá → Tulum.

Valladolid's main plaza — the starting point for colectivos south to Cobá and onward to Tulum via Highway 109

Stage 1: Valladolid → Cobá (60–80 MXN)

Where to catch it: Near the ADO bus terminal in Valladolid, or from the Mercado Municipal area. Colectivos are shared minivans — look for vehicles marked “Cobá” or ask locals.

  • Cost: 60–80 MXN per person (~$3–4 USD)
  • Time: ~45–60 minutes
  • Frequency: Roughly every 30–90 minutes, approximately 6 AM to 4 PM
  • Pay in cash (MXN only)

Stage 2: Cobá → Tulum (60–80 MXN)

From Cobá village near the ruins entrance, catch a colectivo southeast to Tulum.

  • Cost: 60–80 MXN per person
  • Time: ~45 minutes to Tulum Pueblo
  • Frequency: Every 1–2 hours
  • Where to catch it: In Cobá village near the road junction

Total journey time (no ruins stop): 2–2.5 hours, 120–160 MXN.
With Cobá ruins visit: 5–7 hours depending on time at the site.

Note on Tulum arrival: Colectivos drop you at Tulum Pueblo (the town). From there to the beach zone: take another local colectivo (30–50 MXN) along the beach road, or a taxi (150–250 MXN).


Option 3: Taxi (Direct, 1.5 hrs)

A direct taxi from Valladolid to Tulum costs 1,200–1,800 MXN ($60–90 USD) for the whole vehicle.

  • Ask at the ADO station or your hotel for a taxi to Tulum
  • Negotiate the price before getting in
  • Travel time: 1.5 hours via Hwy 109

Practical for groups of 3–4 splitting the cost — works out to ~$15–22 USD per person.


No direct ADO bus runs from Valladolid to Tulum via Cobá. The indirect route goes via Cancun:

  • ADO Valladolid → Cancun: 200–260 MXN, 2–2.5 hrs
  • ADO Cancun → Tulum: 250–380 MXN, 2 hrs
  • Total: 450–640 MXN, 4–5 hours

The colectivo via Cobá is faster and half the price. Only use ADO if you have no other choice or you’re already at Cancun.


Option 5: Organized Tour

Tours from Valladolid typically cover Chichen Itza (in the morning, heading northwest) rather than Tulum/Cobá. For a Cobá-focused day trip from Tulum, see Things to Do in Tulum.

For a Cobá + Tulum combined tour from Cancun or Cancun Airport:

Tours & experiences in Tulum


Arriving in Tulum: What to Expect

Tulum beach zone on the Caribbean — 3km east of Tulum Pueblo, accessible by colectivo (30–50 MXN) or taxi (150–250 MXN)

Tulum has two very different zones:

Tulum Pueblo (the town): Budget hotels, local restaurants, Mexican daily life. 5–15 minute walk to the ADO bus station. Colectivos to the beach run from the main road. Prices: $30–80 USD/night accommodation, 50–150 MXN for meals.

Tulum Zona Hotelera (beach zone): Resort hotels, beach clubs, boutique restaurants. 3km east of Pueblo on a single road. No Uber. Prices: $150–600+ USD/night. A significant jump in cost.

Transport within Tulum:

  • No Uber or DiDi (taxi unions have blocked ridesharing)
  • Colectivo Pueblo ↔ Beach Zone: 30–50 MXN per person
  • Taxi Pueblo → Beach Zone: 150–250 MXN
  • Bicycle rental: 100–200 MXN/day (best way to explore the beach road)
Cenote Dos Ojos near Tulum — one of 6+ cenotes within 10km of Tulum Beach Zone, all accessible by bicycle or rental car

Tulum cenotes (near the beach zone):

  • Gran Cenote: 4km from the beach zone, 150 MXN entry
  • Dos Ojos: 8km, 650 MXN entry (snorkel equipment included)
  • Cenote Calavera: 3km, 100 MXN

Best Option by Traveler Type

Your SituationBest Option
Solo on a budgetColectivo via Cobá (120–160 MXN)
Couple or groupRental car — stops at Cobá, Cobá-only no extra cost
Visiting Cobá en routeRental car — arrive at 8 AM before tour buses
Want to see Tulum ruins + cenotesRental car — no Uber in Tulum, need wheels
Flying out of Cancun after TulumRental car return via Hwy 307 north
Budget, flexible scheduleTwo-stage colectivo
Coming from MeridaADO Merida→Cancun→Tulum or Maya Train

Practical Notes

No Uber in Tulum: Arrange taxis in advance through your hotel, or use the Tulum taxi stand. Fixed-rate zones are posted — insist on the official rate.

Semana Santa (March 29–April 5): The beach road in Tulum becomes extremely congested during Holy Week. Colectivos stop running reliably after 8 PM. Hotels book out early. If visiting during Semana Santa, arrive early in the day and settle in before sunset traffic.

Sargassum: Tulum’s beach zone faces southeast — this makes it more vulnerable to sargassum seaweed arrivals (April–October peak). Check current conditions at sargassummonitoring.com before booking beach-zone accommodation.

Currency: Carry pesos for colectivos, cenotes, and markets. Many beach-zone restaurants quote prices in USD but accept MXN at a fixed rate.


Getting Around the Yucatán from Tulum

DestinationBest OptionTimeCost
CobáColectivo or rental car45 min60–80 MXN
Playa del CarmenColectivo Hwy 30745 min–1 hr50–80 MXN
CancunADO bus2 hrs250–380 MXN
Chichen ItzaRental car via Valladolid2.5 hrs
BacalarADO or Maya Train2.5–3 hrs300–600 MXN
ValladolidColectivo via Cobá2–2.5 hrs120–160 MXN

For the reverse journey, see our Tulum to Valladolid guide.

Tours & experiences in Tulum