Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula sits on the world's largest underground river system — with over 6,000 cenotes to explore. Here are the 12 best, ranked by experience, accessibility, and what makes each one worth the trip.
2026-06-15
A cenote (pronounced seh-NO-teh, from the Maya dzonot meaning “sacred well”) is a natural sinkhole formed when limestone bedrock collapses to expose the underground freshwater river below. Yucatán has more than 6,000 of them — the largest concentration on Earth — connected by a vast subterranean network called the Sistema Sac Actun, which stretches over 370 km and is the world’s longest known underwater cave system.
The ancient Maya considered cenotes sacred — portals to the underworld, sources of life, and ritual sites. Today they’re among the most spectacular natural swimming experiences on the planet.
Type: Open sky | Distance from Mérida: 2.5 hrs
Ik Kil is the most photographed cenote in Mexico — a 26-meter deep circular pool ringed with hanging vines and ferns, with natural waterfalls cascading from the rim. It’s directly on the Chichén Itzá tourist corridor, which means crowds after 10am. Go early (opening, ideally 8am) or skip the tourist buses entirely.
The experience: Swimming here feels like being inside a vertical jungle. The blue-green water is clear to 20+ meters, and the ancient platform used by the Maya for offerings is still visible underwater.
Type: Semi-open cave | Distance from Mérida: 2 hrs
A narrow wooden walkway extends across the water to a small central platform, perfectly lit by a single shaft of light from above at midday. The cathedral-like silence and the blue luminescence make this one of Yucatán’s most otherworldly spaces. Limited daily visitors means the experience stays intimate.
Pro tip: Arrive between 11am and 1pm for the iconic light shaft. Book in advance.
Type: Cave (descent by rope) | Distance from Mérida: 1.5 hrs
Three connected cenotes accessed by horse-drawn cart through henequen fields — an experience unchanged for decades. You descend into each by rope ladder or steps. The caves are tight and dramatic; the water is a surreal turquoise. Unlike most cenote sites, Cuzamá feels completely local and non-touristy.
Best for: Adventure seekers, those who want an authentic Maya experience, buyers exploring the area south of Mérida.
Type: Semi-open cave | Distance from Mérida: 3.5 hrs
The finest snorkeling cenote in the Yucatán Peninsula. Crystal-clear water with 20+ meter visibility reveals limestone formations, freshwater turtles, and fish. The cave system here connects to the Dos Ojos system — one of the great dive sites of the world. Arrive before 9am to beat Tulum’s crowds.
Type: Cave system | Distance from Mérida: 3.5 hrs
“Two Eyes” — the pair of cenotes that form the entrance to one of Mexico’s most spectacular dive cave systems. Non-divers can snorkel the surface chambers (stunning on their own); certified divers can explore 61 km of surveyed passages through stalactite cathedrals. This is bucket-list territory.
Type: Cave | Distance from Mérida: 1.5 hrs (near Valladolid)
Two cenotes adjacent to each other in a colonial property near Valladolid. Dzitnup (Xkekén) has an iconic vine-draped opening with a shaft of light; Samula has one of the most extraordinary natural features in all of Yucatán — a single tree whose roots descend 15+ meters from the ceiling to drink from the cenote below. The roots hang like living curtains in the blue water. Extraordinary.
Type: Open | Distance from Mérida: 2 hrs
A privately managed cenote with exceptional facilities — hammocks over the water, a restaurant, cocktail bar, and limited daily visitors to preserve the experience. The cenote itself is round and open-sky, with emerald water and rope swings. One of the best for a full relaxed day rather than a quick tourist stop.
Type: Open | Distance from Mérida: 2 hrs
The only cenote accessible within walking distance of a colonial city center. Zací sits in an open-air park in Valladolid — you can swim in jade-green water while egrets nest on the cenote walls. Combine with an afternoon exploring Valladolid’s pastel streets and the best cochinita outside of Mérida.
Type: Cave + open | Distance from Mérida: 2.5 hrs (near Ek Balam)
Reached by bike or on foot through jungle trails from the Ek Balam ruins site. The descent into the cenote involves a 12-meter rope rappel — completely safe, guided, and one of the most memorable entrances of any cenote. Combine with a morning at Ek Balam (Maya ruins with a climbable pyramid and fewer visitors than Chichén Itzá) for one of Yucatán’s best full days.
Type: Cave | Distance from Mérida: 3.5 hrs
A circular hole in the earth drops 10 meters into a cenote with three additional underwater openings below — hence the name “skull.” Cave divers use this as a primary training and dive site. For non-divers, it’s a cliff-jump experience unlike anything else: you jump into darkness, fall 10 meters, and surface inside a cathedral chamber.
Type: Open cave | Distance from Mérida: 2.5 hrs (near Valladolid)
Set inside a boutique property with a colonial house, Oxman’s main attraction is its vine-draped walls and the rope swing that drops you into clear water 15 meters below. The photos look like something from an adventure film — because they do. A classic for a reason.
Type: Open | Distance from Mérida: 2.5 hrs
Community-managed by the village of Yokdzonot, this cenote has no tourist infrastructure, no tour bus stops, and no crowds — just a gorgeous open pool, a platform, and local families. The water is clean and warm; the experience is completely authentic. A counterpoint to every cenote on the tourist circuit.
Many expats use a cenote circuit day trip to explore the areas south and east of Mérida — where some of the most attractive land prices exist. Seeing a region by boat and on foot gives you a ground-level sense of infrastructure, communities, and natural beauty that no real estate listing can provide.
Book a Cenote Circuit → | View Properties Near Cenote Country →
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