Things to do in Chichén Itzá
Chichén Itzá is an important Mayan archaeological complex found in Mexico, in the Northern part of the Yucatan Peninsula. The ruins, which cover an area of 3 square kilometers, belonged to a great city that was one of the most important centers in the region around the epiclassic period of the Mayan civilization, between the sixth and eleventh centuries. The site includes several buildings, representative of different architectural styles. such as the Pyramid of Kukulcán, the Temple of the Warriors, The Ball Court, The Observatory, The Nunnery and beautifully conserved smaller temples in their vicinity.
The site of Chichén Itzá was declared UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988 and has been voted one of the 7 Modern Wonders of the World in 2007.
Our recommendations in Chichén Itzá
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Chichén Itzá
Cancun
Mexico
Reviews Chichén Itzá
“TUi had no involvement, it was let to Amigo Tours. The guide & driver were excellent. Payment of Chichen Itza Tax was an issue. Expected to pay a third party in Mexico by unsecured & open wi fi connection via hotel the day before, and produce receipts. The transport provided was inadequate - a crew bus type vehicle holding 13 with no toilet to travel 600km on Mexican roads. We were obviously the overspill. AMigo tours had a 50 seater coach with a toilet the same day. Tui obviously overbooked.”
“Tour guide was lovely, very knowledgeable (Leila/ Leia I think her name was). Would recommend her to anyone. However, the pick up and drop off times make the day very unpleasant. In total the tour events took 4 hours of a 14 hr day. The rest we were bus bound, it took in total 4 hrs to both pick up and drop off - the issue is the number of hotels and people needing picked up and dropped off - instead certain hotels should be offered certain days to go within a small drop off area.”
“No need to stop at the mayan village as there is nothing there and just adds more to a day which is already long with lots of travel. The locals coming on-board the bus to rip tourists off with sob stories should not be allowed as the make you feel obliged and pressured into buying”
“At Coba we simply didn't have enough time, we could have hired bikes but that shouldn't have been additional if it was so necessary as we discovered. We spent a lot of time ‘shopping' as opposed to the actual experience; and also was under the assumption we would spent some time in vallodolid, but we just lapped the Central Park in the coach and left. I was very disappointed by having to pay lots of taxes/fees.”
