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Chichén Itzá reopened June 1, 2026 after a dispute over access, vending spaces, guides, and the CATVI visitor centre. Confirm same-day access before you travel.

Last factual update: 1 June 2026. Link update: 8 June 2026.
June 1, 2026 update: Chichén Itzá is officially scheduled to reopen today, Monday, June 1, 2026 after authorities, INAH, and local artisans reached an agreement. The announced public access route is through the CATVI visitor centre only. Because reopening-day operations can still be uneven, travelers should confirm same-day access before leaving.
Chichén Itzá had been closed because of a dispute over visitor access, vending spaces, guides, and local commerce around the newer CATVI visitor centre.
It is not closed because the ruins are damaged.
For travelers, the practical answer is still simple: do not travel to Chichén Itzá unless your tour operator, driver, hotel, or an official source confirms that the site is operating that same morning.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & TipsAuthorities announced that Chichén Itzá would reopen on Monday, June 1, 2026.
That is the most important change for travelers. However, on reopening day, it is still smart to treat access as something to confirm the same morning, especially if you are coming from Mérida, Cancún, Playa del Carmen, or Tulum.
The closure began on 19 May 2026. It was linked to a local dispute involving the traditional entrance area, the newer CATVI visitor centre, artisans, guides, vendors, and authorities responsible for managing the archaeological zone.
Do not rely only on:
This is not yet a normal, settled period. If your visit depends on Chichén Itzá, confirm before you leave.
El Castillo at Chichén Itzá in Yucatán
The short version: Chichén Itzá was closed because authorities and local groups had not fully settled how the site should operate around the newer CATVI visitor centre.
CATVI stands for Centro de Atención a Visitantes. It is the newer visitor centre connected to the updated entry system, services, and market area for Chichén Itzá.
Authorities want a more organised visitor experience. That can mean clearer arrivals, better control of access, designated commercial spaces, and improved services for one of Mexico’s busiest archaeological sites.
Many local artisans, vendors, guides, and families from Pisté and nearby communities see the change differently. For them, changing where visitors enter and where commerce happens could mean losing direct access to tourists and losing income they depend on.
That is why the closure is not only about souvenirs or ticket lines. It is about who controls the economic life around Chichén Itzá.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & TipsNo.
There has been no official indication that the closure is because El Castillo, the temples, the ball court, the Sacred Cenote, or other archaeological structures have been damaged.
The issue is operational, social, and economic. It involves access, security, visitor flow, local commerce, and the reorganisation of activity around the site.
This matters because travelers should understand the closure correctly. This is not a conservation emergency where the ruins are unsafe to see. It is a dispute over how one of Yucatán’s most important tourist sites should function.
Stone carving detail at Chichén Itzá
The CATVI is the newer visitor centre designed to organise arrivals, ticketing, services, and artisan sales at Chichén Itzá.
For visitors, the idea is easy to understand. A better arrival area can mean:
For local sellers and guides, the same change can feel risky. If the main flow of visitors moves away from the traditional entrance and into a new controlled centre, the money moves too.
That is the heart of the dispute.
For years, the traditional access area near the old Parador Turístico has been part of the Chichén Itzá visitor experience. It has also been an important place for local commerce.
Artisans and vendors know where tourists walk, where buses arrive, where guides gather, and where people stop before or after visiting the ruins.
The new CATVI changes that geography.
Authorities have discussed ways to recognise registered spaces, use artisan census information, guarantee places inside the CATVI market, and reorganise people affected near the old access area.
Local groups have pushed back, especially over the future of the old Parador area. Their position has been that both systems should remain open: the traditional access and the CATVI access.
Authorities want a more ordered system. Local workers want to protect their access to visitors.
Both positions explain why the closure became difficult to resolve.
Queue at the entrance to Chichén Itzá
Chichén Itzá is not only an archaeological site. It is also an economic engine for Pisté, nearby communities, guides, drivers, food sellers, artisans, mototaxis, and families who depend on tourism.
For visitors, a vendor stand may feel like a small part of the day. For local families, those sales may be the day.
That is why changing the entrance route matters.
If visitors are channelled through a new market or a different path, some sellers may benefit from better infrastructure. Others may lose visibility. A stand that worked well near the traditional route may not work the same way in a new layout.
The dispute is not simply “vendors versus tourists” or “order versus disorder.” It is about livelihoods, local Maya organisation, state control, heritage management, and who benefits from tourism at Chichén Itzá.
T-shirt vendor near Chichén Itzá
The official position is easier to understand if you have visited Chichén Itzá on a busy day.
The site receives heavy traffic from Mérida, Valladolid, Cancún, Playa del Carmen, Tulum, cruise routes, private drivers, group buses, and independent travelers.
On peak days, the entrance experience can feel crowded and confusing.
A more controlled visitor centre can help with crowd flow, ticketing, tour group movement, designated artisan areas, visitor services, and oversight of access points.
That is the most charitable reading of the government and INAH position: they are trying to modernise and regulate one of Mexico’s most visited archaeological zones.
The local concern is also reasonable: modernisation can change who gets access to the tourist money stream.
Both things can be true at the same time.
The closure began on 19 May 2026 as a temporary or preventive operational closure.
Authorities framed it as a measure to coordinate operations and restore proper visitor conditions. But the local dispute around CATVI, the old Parador, artisans, vendors, and guides quickly became the central issue.
After that, the situation developed into a standoff.
Meetings were held between authorities, artisans, guides, and community representatives. Proposals were discussed. A planned reopening for Monday 25 May 2026 did not go ahead as expected because the proposed terms were rejected.
On Sunday, 31 May 2026, authorities announced that the site would reopen on Monday, 1 June 2026, with public access routed through CATVI.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & TipsCheck before going.
Before you leave for Chichén Itzá, confirm with at least one reliable source:
If you are already in Valladolid or Pisté, ask locally before paying for transport to the entrance.
If you are coming from Mérida, Cancún, Playa del Carmen, or Tulum, be more cautious. Chichén Itzá is a long day trip, and it is not worth spending hours in a van without confirmation that the site is open.
Contact the tour company before pickup time.
Ask three direct questions:
A good operator should give you a clear answer. If the answer is vague, do not spend the day hoping the situation changes at the gate.
If you are traveling with children, older relatives, or a tight schedule, choose certainty over hope. This is not the week to gamble on a long day trip without confirmation.
If Chichén Itzá is closed and you still want a ruins day, choose an alternative that is confirmed open that morning.
From Mérida, Uxmal is usually the strongest substitute. It is beautiful, less chaotic, and works well with Kabah or a Ruta Puuc day if you have enough time.
From Valladolid, Ek Balam can work well, especially if you combine it with a cenote and a slower lunch stop.
From Cancún, Playa del Carmen, or Tulum, ask whether a revised route through Valladolid, Ek Balam, and a cenote makes more sense than a cancelled Chichén Itzá day.
A simple replacement plan could be:
Private drivers and flexible tours are easier to adjust. Large group tours may have less room to change the day.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & Tips
Visitors walking through the archaeological site of Chichén Itzá
Yes, Valladolid can still be worth visiting even if Chichén Itzá is closed.
Valladolid works well as a calmer colonial city stop with food, cenotes, churches, and easy access to nearby communities. It is also a good base if Chichén Itzá reopens and you want to be close.
But if your only reason for going east is Chichén Itzá, pause before committing to the drive.
From Mérida, Valladolid is still a long day. From Cancún or the Riviera Maya, it can also become a full-day trip. Without the ruins, make sure the replacement plan is something you actually want.
If you have a rental car, do not leave early for Chichén Itzá without checking the status.
The drive from Mérida is usually around two hours each way. From Valladolid it is shorter, but still not worth doing blind if gates are closed or access is contested.
Keep your day flexible. A sensible backup plan could be:
Carry cash, water, and patience. When a site like this is in dispute, information can change faster than websites are updated.
Families should be cautious.
Chichén Itzá is already hot, exposed, and tiring for children. Adding uncertainty at the gate makes the day harder.
If you are traveling with young kids, older adults, or anyone who struggles with heat, choose a confirmed alternative instead of waiting near the entrance.
A cenote and Valladolid day may be more comfortable than a tense ruins attempt.
An official reopening date has now been announced.
According to the 31 May 2026 joint announcement from the Yucatán government and INAH, Chichén Itzá is scheduled to reopen on Monday, 1 June 2026.
The most important practical detail is that authorities said public access would be exclusively through the CATVI visitor centre.
That means travelers should expect:
If your visit depends on Chichén Itzá, keep checking until the morning of your visit anyway.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & TipsNo. Do not cancel a whole Yucatán trip because of this closure.
You may need to adjust one day, but Yucatán still has strong alternatives: Uxmal, cenotes, Valladolid, Izamal, Mérida, haciendas, beach towns, and smaller archaeological routes.
Chichén Itzá is important, but it is not the only reason to visit the region.
If this was your one big ruins day, replace it with a confirmed site rather than spending the day chasing uncertain access.
Chichén Itzá was closed because of a dispute over visitor access, vending spaces, guide activity, and the reorganisation of local commerce around the new CATVI visitor centre. It was not closed because the ruins were damaged.
No. The closure was temporary, and authorities announced a planned reopening for Monday, 1 June 2026. Even so, confirm same-day operating conditions before you go.
CATVI means Centro de Atención a Visitantes. It is the newer visitor centre and market area designed to organise arrivals, services, and artisan sales at Chichén Itzá.
Many artisans and local workers worry that moving visitor flow away from the traditional entrance area will reduce their contact with tourists and hurt their income.
Only if your operator confirms that the site is open that day. During the closure, do not assume a tour will run normally just because it is still listed online.
From Mérida, Uxmal is usually the strongest alternative. From Valladolid or the Riviera Maya, Ek Balam, cenotes, and a Valladolid day may work better. Always confirm current opening conditions before leaving.
Chichén Itzá was closed because of a local dispute over access, commerce, and control around the new visitor centre.
The ruins themselves are not the problem.
As of Monday, 1 June 2026, the site is officially scheduled to reopen, with visitor access routed through CATVI. For travelers, the best approach is still practical: confirm before going, keep a backup plan, and expect some operational changes while the reopening settles in.
Backup planComplete Guide to Chichén Itzá: Tickets, Hours, Tours, Cenotes & Tips