Maya Jungle Adventure Park and Valladolid: Day trip from Cancun
Private ride with a local driver
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About your trip
Trade the resort for adrenaline and colonial charm with a private driver. This day trip takes you to Cenote Maya Park, home to the Yucatan’s largest vaulted dome. At nearly 20 meters tall, this massive cavern offers a staircase descent or a free rappel into refreshing waters, featuring an underground zip-line, "Tarzan" ropes, and kayaking.
After your adventures, participate in an authentic Mayan blessing ceremony and enjoy a traditional buffet lunch. To conclude the day, unwind in the candy-colored streets of Valladolid, the Yucatan’s most picturesque colonial town.
Throughout the journey, your professional driver handles all navigation, parking, and logistics. This seamless service ensures a comfortable and well-paced experience, allowing you to enjoy the best of the jungle and city at your own leisure.
What to expect
Your day trip begins wherever you are
Meet our professional driver right where you prefer in Cancun whenever suits you best. No time wasted getting to the pickup point, grab your bag and start your trip right away.Discover more with local expertise
Your driver’s local insights will set the tone for your day trip. A hidden café here, a must-try restaurant there; insider tips you’ll love sharing later. This isn’t a guided tour but your ride will be rich with stories and discoveries along the way. And throughout the day, your driver will be available for you as needed, ready to assist, happy to help, making your trip stress-free.Explore at your own pace
Perfect for any private group
Whether you're traveling solo, as a family with kids, or as a large group, this service is tailored for your comfort and flexibility. It's the ideal option especially if you have limited time or a busy schedule.Good to know
- Two-way private car transfer
- Air-conditioned vehicle
- Personalized pickup and drop-off
- Professional English-speaking driver
- Complimentary bottled water
- Free cancellation 24 hours before departure
- Entry/Admission tickets to paid attractions Cenote Maya Park and Valladolid should be purchased separately unless specified otherwise
- Meals, snacks, and gratuity are not included
Your trip at a glance
Your trip at a glance




Main attractions • A multi-cenote complex offering access to several distinct sinkholes within a single site — ranging from open-air pools flooded with natural light to semi-submerged cave cenotes requiring a short swim through darkness to reach inner chambers • The park sits within managed jungle grounds with wooden walkways connecting the cenotes, making it one of the more comprehensive cenote experiences available near Cancún without travelling deep into the interior • The cave cenote section is particularly striking — stalactites and stalagmites surround the water at the cave entrance and the contrast between the lit exterior pool and the dark inner chamber is dramatic
Things to do • Swimming across the full range of cenote types within a single visit — the variety of light, depth and atmosphere between the open and cave sections makes Cenote Maya Park more diverse than a single-pool cenote stop • Snorkelling in the clearer open sections reveals submerged rock formations and freshwater fish; equipment is available to hire on-site • Zip-line and rope swing access into the open cenotes for those wanting a more active experience
What to eat • The park has an on-site restaurant and bar serving Yucatecan dishes and cold drinks — convenient for a mid-day break between cenotes without leaving the complex









Main attractions • One of the Yucatán's most beautifully preserved colonial cities — founded by the Spanish in 1543 on the site of the Maya settlement of Zací, its grid of pastel-painted facades, arcaded streets and flowering courtyards has changed little in character since the 17th century • The Cathedral of San Gervasio on the main square (Parque Francisco Cantón) is a robustly simple colonial church whose history reflects the full weight of the Spanish conquest — built in part with stones taken from demolished Maya temples • Cenote Zací sits within the city itself — a large open cenote in a small park just three blocks from the main square, its dark water and cave swallows making it one of the most atmospheric urban cenotes in the Yucatán
Things to do • Walk the Calzada de los Frailes — a cobbled colonial street of ochre and terracotta facades leading to the Convent of San Bernardino de Siena (1552), the oldest convent in the Yucatán and one of the finest examples of fortress-church architecture in Mexico • Browse the Mercado Municipal for Yucatecan handicrafts, embroidered huipil textiles and local food stalls — the market is working and local rather than tourist-facing, which makes it one of the most authentic shopping stops in the region
What to eat • Longaniza de Valladolid — a spiced pork sausage unique to the city, grilled and served with x'nipek (habanero and tomato salsa) — at any of the market fondas or the restaurants lining the Parque Principal; Taberna de los Frailes on the Calzada is the most atmospheric sit-down option














