
Our Habitas Tulum - Adults Only
When you book Our Habitas Tulum - Adults Only in Riviera Maya, Mexico through our Fora Reserve partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Complimentary daily breakfast
- Room upgrade (subject to availability)
- Early check-in and late check-out (subject to availability)
- Welcome amenity
- Resort credit of 100 USD for stays of minimum 2 nights
Location
Our Habitas builds communities around culture, nature, and human connection. The approach here prioritizes experience over excess, drawing guests into the rhythm of the place rather than isolating them from it.
Tulum occupies a singular position along Mexico's Caribbean coast. The pre-Columbian walled city perches on limestone cliffs above turquoise water, its stone temples remnants of a major Maya port that flourished between the 13th and 15th centuries. The property sits along a stretch of powdery beach where jungle meets sea, close to Playa Paraiso and Amansala Beach, each under three kilometres away. Unlike the hotel zones farther north, Tulum retains a barefoot elegance, its main road lined with open-air restaurants, mezcalerias, and wellness studios that close when the sun sets. The coastline here still feels wild despite the arrival of boutique hospitality.
Felipe Carrillo Puerto International Airport opened 23 kilometres south, streamlining arrivals. Cancún International Airport remains an option 112 kilometres north, though the drive passes cenotes and roadside taco stands worth the detour.
The property anchors itself in communal gatherings: morning yoga under palapa roofs, sunset DJ sessions, shared tables where strangers become collaborators. The kitchen emphasizes wood-fired cooking and coastal Mexican ingredients, served family-style to encourage conversation over courses.
Beyond the grounds, the clifftop Maya ruins of Parque Nacional Tulum stand five kilometres away, their stone structures framing the sea in a way few archaeological sites manage. Dive into cenotes: Cenote Corazon, nearly eight kilometres inland, offers warm spring-fed waters beneath jungle canopy, while Cenote Dos Pisos descends through limestone chambers ten kilometres west. The Sian Ka'an biosphere reserve stretches 70 kilometres south, a Unesco-protected expanse of mangrove channels and lagoons where the Maya believed the sky originated. Book a boat tour through its labyrinth of waterways at dawn, when frigatebirds circle and crocodiles sun on mudbanks. Offshore, Akumal Dive Shop runs excursions to coral reefs 27 kilometres north, where green sea turtles graze on seagrass beds visible even from the surface.
Winter brings the clearest skies and gentlest heat. Temperatures hover in the mid-twenties Celsius, mornings cool enough for coffee outdoors before the sun climbs. February and March see the least rainfall, ideal for cenote diving and ruin exploration without afternoon downpours.
Summer turns humid, with September delivering the heaviest rains and brief tropical storms that clear as quickly as they arrive. The jungle thickens, waterfalls swell, and crowds thin. May offers a sweet spot before the wettest months, warm but not yet stormy, the Caribbean at its most luminous blue.
November through April remains the high season for good reason: consistent sunshine, calm seas, and trade winds that temper the heat without chilling evening swims.
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