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Cenote San Ignacio Guide: How to Visit from Mérida, Tickets & What to Expect

◷Updated June 7, 2026

Practical guide to visiting Cenote San Ignacio in Chocholá, near Mérida, including tickets, hours, transport, facilities, night swimming, family tips, and what to combine nearby.

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Cenote San Ignacio Guide: How to Visit from Mérida, Tickets & What to Expect
Updated
June 7, 2026
Sections
38
Source
yucatan.guide

In this guide

  • Quick facts
  • Is Cenote San Ignacio worth visiting?
  • Where is Cenote San Ignacio?
  • What the cenote is like
  • Tickets, prices, and hours
  • What is included at the park?
  • The Adventure Pass
  • The Night Pass
  • How to get there from Mérida
  • By rental car

Cenote San Ignacio is one of the easiest cenotes to visit from Mérida. It sits in Chocholá, west of the city on the road toward Campeche, and works well when you want a clean, organized cenote day without driving deep into the countryside.

This is not a wild, rustic cenote with a dirt parking lot and a hand-painted sign. It is a managed ecotourism park with a cave cenote, pool areas, hammocks, restaurants, bathrooms, changing rooms, guided access, hotel rooms, and optional night swimming. That makes it more expensive than many village cenotes, but also much easier for families, first-time visitors, couples, and travelers who want facilities.

Go here if you want a simple half-day from Mérida. Skip it if your priority is a cheap, quiet, local-style cenote route.

Visitors sitting beside the water inside Cenote San Ignacio

Quick facts

DetailWhat to know
LocationChocholá, Yucatán, west of Mérida
Best baseMérida
Drive from Mérida CentroAbout 35–45 minutes
Typical visit time2–3 hours
Best forFamilies, first-time cenote visitors, easy half-day trips, night swimming
Less ideal forBudget cenote hopping, remote nature days, travelers who want a very quiet swim
AccessCave cenote, wet surfaces, steps, guided access
FacilitiesRestaurants, showers, changing rooms, hammocks, life jackets, pool areas
Current detailsCheck the official park page before going, especially for prices and hours

Is Cenote San Ignacio worth visiting?

Yes, for the right traveler.

Cenote San Ignacio is worth visiting if you want a comfortable, structured cenote near Mérida. The main value is convenience. You do not need to build a complicated route, worry much about facilities, or search for lunch afterward.

It is best for families, first-time visitors, couples looking for an easy half-day, travelers with limited time in Mérida, and groups who prefer bathrooms, food, shade, life jackets, and organized access.

It is not the best choice if you want the cheapest possible cenote swim, a remote natural setting, a large open-air cenote with dramatic daylight, or a full day of village cenote hopping.

If you only have one cenote day in Yucatán and want variety, Homún, Cuzamá, or cenotes near Valladolid may give you a broader route. If you want an easy swim close to Mérida, San Ignacio makes sense.

Where is Cenote San Ignacio?

Cenote San Ignacio is in Chocholá, Yucatán, west of Mérida. It is close enough to visit as a half-day trip from the city.

Approximate travel times:

Starting pointApproximate time
Mérida Centro35–45 minutes
Mérida airport area25–35 minutes
Mérida periférico west side20–30 minutes
Uxmal55–75 minutes
Progreso1 hour 10 minutes–1 hour 30 minutes

Traffic inside Mérida can make a bigger difference than the highway distance. If you are leaving from Centro, add extra time for crossing the city.

What the cenote is like

The main cenote is inside a limestone cave. You enter through a controlled access point and descend into a darker, cooler-feeling space. The water is clear, with artificial lighting that helps make the cave easier to navigate.

This is one reason San Ignacio works well for nervous swimmers. The setting is enclosed and supervised rather than open and wild. Life jackets are available, and the park is set up for visitors who may not be used to swimming in natural water.

Cave water and limestone formations at Cenote San Ignacio

The tradeoff is that it can feel more commercial than rural cenotes. Do not come expecting silence and untouched nature. Come expecting a comfortable cenote park where the logistics are handled for you.

Tickets, prices, and hours

Prices can change, so check directly with the park before you go, especially if you are planning around a holiday, a group, or the night experience.

As of the latest official park information, the listed non-guest passes include:

PassAdult priceChild priceNotes
General Pass$470 MXN$370 MXN for ages 4–12Standard park visit
Adventure Pass$660 MXN$560 MXN for ages 12+Adds adventure activities
Night Pass$560 MXN$370 MXNEvening cenote experience

The property also lists Yucatán resident rates with valid ID. If you live in Yucatán, ask before paying.

Published hours:

Visit typeHours
Daytime visit10:00 am–6:00 pm
Nighttime visit6:00 pm–10:00 pm

Always confirm current hours on the official Cenote San Ignacio park page before leaving Mérida. Cenote parks can adjust schedules for maintenance, weather, private events, or seasonal demand.

What is included at the park?

Cenote San Ignacio is more than a single swimming hole. The wider property includes several water areas and visitor facilities.

Expect some combination of:

  • Cave cenote access
  • Emerald River area
  • Heart of Water area
  • Park pool
  • Hammocks and lounge areas
  • Life jackets
  • Showers and changing rooms
  • Restaurant service
  • Guided access
  • Hotel rooms on site
  • Optional adventure activities
  • Optional night experience

The exact inclusions can depend on whether you are visiting with a day pass, staying at the hotel, or adding an upgraded pass. Ask what your ticket includes before paying, especially if you are choosing between the General Pass and Adventure Pass.

Emerald River area at Cenote San Ignacio

The Adventure Pass

The Adventure Pass is for visitors who want more than a swim. The property lists activities such as a zip line, suspension bridge, inflatable tube, and other activity options depending on availability.

This can be good for teenagers, active couples, or groups who want the day to feel less like a simple cenote stop. It is less necessary if you mainly want to swim, take photos, have lunch, and relax.

The Adventure Pass has age and height limits. The official park page lists a minimum age of 12 and minimum height of 1.35 m for the adventure activities. Check before promising it to children. If you are traveling with younger kids, the General Pass may be enough.

The Night Pass

The night swim is one of the main reasons to choose San Ignacio over many other cenotes near Mérida. The property offers evening access from 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm, with the cenote lit inside the cave.

Night swimming experience inside Cenote San Ignacio

This is better for couples, groups of friends, and travelers who want something different after a hot day in Mérida. It can also be useful if your daytime schedule is already full.

A few cautions:

  • The cave setting is darker than a daytime open cenote.
  • Photos may be harder without a good phone or camera.
  • Children who are nervous in caves may prefer a daytime visit.
  • Arrange your return transport before going at night.

If you are not staying at the hotel and do not have a rental car, do not assume you can easily find a return ride late in the evening.

How to get there from Mérida

By rental car

This is the easiest option. Drive west from Mérida toward Chocholá and Campeche. The route is straightforward, and parking is normally part of the park setup.

A rental car gives you the most flexibility if you want to combine the cenote with Hacienda Yaxcopoil, Oxkintok, Calcehtok caves, or a wider Puuc route.

By private driver

A private driver is the easiest option if you do not want to rent a car. This works well for families, older travelers, wedding guests, or groups who want door-to-door transport.

For a simple visit, book a half-day driver from Mérida. For a fuller day, combine San Ignacio with one or two nearby stops.

By taxi or rideshare

A taxi or rideshare may be possible from Mérida, but the return can be less reliable. This is especially true at night.

If you go this way, arrange the return before entering the park. Do not leave the return plan until you are wet, tired, and ready to leave.

By public transport

Public transport toward Chocholá may be possible, but it is not the most practical option for most visitors. You may still need local transport from town to the cenote property, and schedules can be inconvenient.

If your travel day matters, use a car, driver, or arranged transfer.

Best time to visit

For a daytime visit, go in the morning or early afternoon. The cave setting keeps the cenote more sheltered than an open-air swimming spot, but the outdoor areas, parking, and walking paths can still be hot.

Weekdays are usually better than weekends. Sundays, holidays, and school vacation periods can be busier.

Best practical windows:

GoalBest time
Fewer peopleWeekday morning
Easier family visitMorning or early afternoon
Cooler outdoor areasMorning
Night swimArrive near 6:00 pm
Lunch plus swimLate morning into early afternoon

If you are going mainly for photos, remember that this is a cave cenote. You will not get the same bright overhead sun effect as at open cenotes.

How long to spend

Most travelers should plan:

  • 2 hours for a quick swim and look around
  • 3 hours for a relaxed visit with changing time and snacks
  • 4 hours if adding lunch and the pool
  • Evening block for the Night Pass

If you are coming from Mérida, a simple visit can fit into a half day. Leave after breakfast, swim, eat lunch, and be back in the city by mid-afternoon.

Is it good for families?

Yes. This is one of the more family-friendly cenote options near Mérida because the facilities are organized and the access is more controlled than at many rural cenotes.

Families will appreciate bathrooms, changing rooms, life jackets, restaurant access, pool areas, lounge areas, and the shorter drive from Mérida.

For young children, bring water shoes, towels, dry clothes, and a small waterproof bag. Cave cenotes can feel strange at first if children are not used to dark water, so do not rush them into the water.

If your children are sensitive to caves, darkness, or echoing spaces, consider visiting during the day before trying the night experience.

Accessibility notes

Cenote San Ignacio is more developed than many cenotes, but that does not mean it is fully accessible for every traveler.

The main cenote is inside a cave, so expect steps, wet surfaces, uneven limestone, and limited space around the water. This may be difficult for travelers with reduced mobility, knee problems, balance issues, or strong discomfort in enclosed spaces.

The broader park areas are easier, but the cenote itself may still require caution.

Ask the property directly before visiting if someone in your group needs step-free access or mobility assistance.

What to bring

Pack simply.

Bring:

  • Swimsuit
  • Towel
  • Water shoes or sandals with grip
  • Change of clothes
  • Cash and card
  • Waterproof phone pouch
  • Refillable water bottle
  • Dry bag for electronics
  • Light cover-up for after swimming

Avoid heavy sunscreen, creams, and oils before entering the cenote. Rinse before swimming and keep the water clean. Cenotes are part of Yucatán’s fragile groundwater system, not regular swimming pools.

Food and facilities

One advantage of Cenote San Ignacio is that you do not need to leave immediately after swimming to find food or bathrooms. The property has restaurant service and visitor facilities, which makes the day easier.

This is useful if you are traveling with children, older parents, or a group where people move at different speeds.

Food on site also means you can treat San Ignacio as a slow half-day instead of a quick swim stop.

Heart of Water area at Cenote San Ignacio

What to combine with Cenote San Ignacio

Cenote San Ignacio works well on its own, but it can also fit into a larger west-of-Mérida day.

Hacienda Yaxcopoil

A practical cultural stop between Mérida and the Uxmal road. This works well if you want a light history stop before or after swimming.

Oxkintok

A quieter archaeological site west of Mérida. It is less famous than Uxmal or Chichén Itzá, but useful if you want ruins without the large crowds.

Calcehtok Caves

Better for adventurous travelers. The caves are not the same kind of easy visit as San Ignacio, so do not combine them with people who dislike tight spaces, rough ground, or physical activity.

Uxmal

Possible, but it turns the day into a larger route. If Uxmal is your main focus, go to Uxmal early and consider San Ignacio only if your group still has energy on the way back.

Mérida afternoon or evening

The easiest plan is to visit San Ignacio in the morning, return to Mérida, rest, and go out later for dinner in Centro or along Paseo de Montejo.

Simple itinerary ideas

Easy half-day from Mérida

  • 9:30 am: Leave Mérida
  • 10:15 am: Arrive and enter the park
  • 10:30 am: Swim in the cenote
  • 12:00 pm: Pool, hammocks, or lunch
  • 1:30 pm: Return to Mérida
  • 2:15 pm: Back at hotel or Airbnb

This is the best plan for families and first-time visitors.

Cenote and hacienda day

  • Morning: Hacienda Yaxcopoil
  • Late morning: Cenote San Ignacio
  • Lunch: On site or back in Mérida
  • Afternoon: Rest in Mérida

This works well if you want a calm day without driving too far.

West Yucatán adventure day

  • Morning: Oxkintok
  • Midday: Calcehtok caves
  • Afternoon: Cenote San Ignacio
  • Evening: Return to Mérida

This is better with a rental car or private driver. It is not ideal for small children or travelers who want a slow day.

Night swim plan

  • Late afternoon: Early dinner or snack in Mérida
  • 5:15 pm: Leave Mérida
  • 6:00 pm: Enter for Night Pass
  • 8:30–9:30 pm: Return to Mérida

Arrange transport in advance. Do not rely on finding a ride at the last minute.

Staying at Hotel Hacienda Cenote San Ignacio

The cenote is attached to a hotel property, so staying overnight is possible. This makes sense if you want a quiet night outside Mérida, a romantic dinner, or easier access to the park without thinking about transport.

For most travelers, it is not necessary. Mérida is close enough that a day visit is simple.

Consider staying if you want the night cenote experience without a late drive, are planning a romantic stay, want a soft landing outside Mérida, or prefer resort-style convenience over independent logistics.

Skip the overnight if you want to spend most of your time in Mérida’s restaurants, museums, markets, and evening events.

GuideCenote Oxman Guide: Hacienda Cenote Near ValladolidCenote Oxman is one of the most enjoyable cenotes near Valladolid if you want a proper swim, a dramatic open sinkhole, hanging roots, and the option to spend a slower half-day at a hacienda-style property. Use it to compare access, atmosphere, and whether the cenote fits your pace for Valladolid, Cenotes, and Yucatan.Open →

Common mistakes to avoid

Do not arrive without checking current prices. San Ignacio costs more than many rural cenotes, and the price difference can surprise travelers expecting a simple $100–$200 MXN swim.

Do not assume this is an untouched cenote. It is a developed park. That is the point.

Do not depend on rideshare for the return, especially at night.

Do not overpack. You need swim basics, dry clothes, and a little cash.

Do not plan a packed ruins day and expect everyone to still enjoy a long cenote stop afterward. Heat and driving can wear people down quickly.

Who should choose San Ignacio instead of Homún?

Choose Cenote San Ignacio if you want comfort, facilities, and a shorter drive from Mérida.

Choose Homún if you want more cenote variety, lower-key village stops, and a fuller adventure day.

San Ignacio is easier. Homún is more varied.

For families with young children, San Ignacio may be the better first cenote. For travelers who want to visit three or four cenotes in one day, Homún or Cuzamá will usually be more satisfying.

Who should choose San Ignacio instead of Valladolid cenotes?

Choose San Ignacio if you are based in Mérida and do not want a long drive.

Choose Valladolid cenotes if you are already spending time in Valladolid, Chichén Itzá, or eastern Yucatán.

Valladolid has some of the most photogenic cenotes in the state, but they are not close to Mérida. San Ignacio is a practical Mérida-area choice.

Is Cenote San Ignacio safe?

For normal swimmers, Cenote San Ignacio is one of the easier cenotes to manage because it is organized and supervised. Life jackets are available, and the swimming area is part of a formal park.

Still, it is natural water inside a cave. Watch your footing, use handrails where provided, avoid running, and keep children close.

If someone in your group cannot swim, use a life jacket and stay near the entry area.

Can you visit without a tour?

Yes. Most visitors can go independently by rental car or arranged transport.

You do not need a full tour unless you want someone else to handle the route, timing, driver, and nearby stops. A private driver can be useful if you are combining the cenote with ruins, caves, or haciendas.

For a simple swim from Mérida, independent travel is fine.

Planning help

If you are unsure whether San Ignacio fits your route, use Yucatán Guide’s trip support before booking. This is the kind of stop where the right answer depends on your group.

For families, wedding guests, premium trips, and groups without cars, a private driver or managed itinerary can make the day easier. For independent travelers with a rental car, San Ignacio is simple enough to visit on your own.

Final take

Cenote San Ignacio is a practical, comfortable cenote near Mérida. It is not the cheapest or most rustic option, but it is one of the easiest.

Go if you want clean facilities, a cave cenote, food on site, and a short transfer from the city. Consider the night swim if you want something different and have transport arranged.

Skip it if you are chasing remote cenotes, low prices, or a full adventure route. In that case, look toward Homún, Cuzamá, or the cenotes near Valladolid instead.

Source: yucatan.guide