Why Tulum is the World’s Most Instagrammable Destination
March 2025 . 8 min read . By Voyex Travel Team
There is a photograph taken in Tulum that appears, in variations, approximately six million times on Instagram. It shows a woman in a white dress standing on the clifftop at the Tulum ruins, the ancient Mayan watchtower rising behind her, the Caribbean glittering impossibly turquoise a hundred feet below. The photograph is not staged. The location actually looks like that. And this is the central truth about Tulum: it is not just a good photography location. It is a place so relentlessly, almost aggressively beautiful that the camera feels inadequate to capture it.
Here is why.
The Ruins on the Cliff
The Tulum Archaeological Zone is the only ancient Mayan city built directly above the Caribbean Sea — a compact walled city perched on a 12-metre limestone cliff, its centrepiece temple (El Castillo) framed perfectly against the turquoise water below. Built between the 13th and 15th centuries, the city was still inhabited when Spanish explorers first saw it from the sea in 1518 — they described it as “a city so large that Seville would not seem more considerable.”
Arrive at 8am, the moment the site opens, before the tour groups arrive. In the early morning light, with the sea mist still rising from the Caribbean and the ruins completely empty, the site is extraordinary — a perfectly composed image that no filter can improve and no camera can fully capture.
The Yucatán Peninsula sits atop a vast limestone shelf riddled with cenotes — natural freshwater pools formed by the collapse of limestone bedrock, connected by an underground river system stretching thousands of kilometres beneath the jungle. Around Tulum, dozens of cenotes are accessible, each with its own character and beauty.
Gran Cenote
The most visited cenote near Tulum — a partially open-sky freshwater cavern with crystal-clear water, stalactites, sea turtles, and cave fish. The light that filters through the limestone opening at midday turns the water electric turquoise and creates natural light shafts that photograph like something from a fantasy film.
Cenote Dos Ojos
Twenty minutes south of Tulum, Dos Ojos (“Two Eyes”) is a twin-chamber cave system popular with divers and snorkellers. The underwater sections — stalactites and stalagmites preserved perfectly in water unchanged for millennia — are among the most photographed underwater environments on earth.
Cenote Calavera
The “Temple of Doom” cenote — a dramatic drop into a circular underground pool through three circular holes in the limestone ceiling. Cliff-jumping is permitted. The light at 11am, pouring through the three ceiling openings onto the turquoise water below, is spectacular.
Visit cenotes in the morning. By early afternoon, particularly in high season, they fill with tour groups. Gran Cenote at 9am in January is a completely different experience from Gran Cenote at 2pm in August.
The Beach Road — Bohemian Caribbean
Tulum’s Carretera Tulum-Boca Paila — the Beach Road — is a 10km stretch of jungle-flanked Caribbean coastline lined with eco-luxury hotels, yoga studios, open-air restaurants, beach clubs, and bars built from driftwood, recycled glass, and reclaimed wood. At golden hour, cycling or taking a tuk-tuk along the strip as the sky turns orange over the Caribbean and the candles come out in the beach restaurants, Tulum looks exactly like the fever dream of a place too beautiful to be real.
Tulum has one of the most extraordinary restaurant scenes of any beach town in the world — a collision of Mexican ingredients, international technique, and an audience willing to spend serious money on serious food. Hartwood (open-fire cooking in a jungle setting, ranked repeatedly among the world’s 50 best restaurants), Arca (rooftop terrace, wood-fired Yucatecan cooking), and Posada Margherita (the finest Italian pasta within 2,000 miles of Rome) are just three of dozens of exceptional restaurants on a strip that serves everything from traditional Mexican tacos to Japanese omakase to Lebanese mezze.
Practical Notes
- Best time to visit: December to April. Avoid September–October (hurricane season).
- Getting around: Rent a bicycle or take tuk-tuks along the Beach Road. Taxis are cheap for the town-to-ruins journey.
- Photography: Tulum ruins — arrive at 8am. Cenotes — morning light only. Beach Road — golden hour (5–6pm).
- Stay on the Beach Road for the full experience, not in the town centre.
Experience Tulum on the Discover Mexico Package
Our 12-day Mexico package includes 3 nights in Tulum (Beach Road boutique hotel), the Tulum ruins at sunrise, Cobá pyramid climb, Gran Cenote swim, and an optional Sian Ka’an UNESCO boat tour — plus Mexico City, Cancún, and Chichén Itzá. From $2,490 per person.
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