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.
At a Glance: Valladolid to Tulum Options
| Option | Cost per Person | Time | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rental car via Hwy 109 | ~$35–65 USD/day + 0 tolls | 1.5 hrs | Flexibility, Cobá stopover, groups |
| Colectivo (2 stages via Cobá) | 120–160 MXN (~$6–8 USD) | 2–2.5 hrs | Budget travelers |
| Taxi (direct) | 1,200–1,800 MXN ($60–90 USD) | 1.5 hrs | Small groups splitting cost |
| ADO bus (via Cancun) | 450–640 MXN | 4–5 hrs | ❌ Not recommended — very indirect |
| Organized tour | $55–120 USD/person | Full day | Cobá + 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.
The Cobá stopover strategy:
- 7:00 AM — Leave Valladolid
- 7:45 AM — Arrive at Cobá ruins
- 8:00 AM — Enter ruins (opens at 8 AM, 90 MXN entry)
- 8:05 AM — Climb Nohoch Mul pyramid before the tour groups arrive at 10–11 AM
- 10:30 AM — Leave Cobá, head east on Hwy 109
- 11:15 AM — Arrive Tulum Pueblo, check in, grab lunch
- 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:
- From the city center, follow signs for Cobá / Tulum
- Take Carretera 109 south
- 55km through jungle to Cobá ruins (follow “ruinas” signs at the Cobá intersection)
- Continue south/east on Hwy 109 to Tulum
- 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.
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.
Option 4: ADO Bus (Indirect — Not Recommended)
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:
Arriving in Tulum: What to Expect
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)
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 Situation | Best Option |
|---|---|
| Solo on a budget | Colectivo via Cobá (120–160 MXN) |
| Couple or group | Rental car — stops at Cobá, Cobá-only no extra cost |
| Visiting Cobá en route | Rental car — arrive at 8 AM before tour buses |
| Want to see Tulum ruins + cenotes | Rental car — no Uber in Tulum, need wheels |
| Flying out of Cancun after Tulum | Rental car return via Hwy 307 north |
| Budget, flexible schedule | Two-stage colectivo |
| Coming from Merida | ADO 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
| Destination | Best Option | Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cobá | Colectivo or rental car | 45 min | 60–80 MXN |
| Playa del Carmen | Colectivo Hwy 307 | 45 min–1 hr | 50–80 MXN |
| Cancun | ADO bus | 2 hrs | 250–380 MXN |
| Chichen Itza | Rental car via Valladolid | 2.5 hrs | — |
| Bacalar | ADO or Maya Train | 2.5–3 hrs | 300–600 MXN |
| Valladolid | Colectivo via Cobá | 2–2.5 hrs | 120–160 MXN |
For the reverse journey, see our Tulum to Valladolid guide.