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Real Mexico

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Operated by Intrepid Travel
Tripcode: QBYM
Overview
Destination:
Mexico
Duration:14 days
Type:Group tour (max 16)
Style:
18 to 35s,
Travel Period
October 2025 - December 2028
Make new amigos in Mexico with this 14-day exploration from the sprawling Mexico City to the coastal Playa del Carmen. This overland adventure covers the best of the mex – from the colourful architecture and weaving cobblestoned laneways of Oaxaca to the highland charm of San Cristobal de las Casas. Discover the lush jungle and ruins of Palenque, the colourful streets of Valladolid and the gems of the Caribbean, all with your small group of likeminded travellers. Then soak up tonnes of free time to get active (or laze in speakeasy bars). Not to mention a visit to the new Wonder of the World – Chichen Itza! All of this, plus streetside tacos, tostadas and tejates and you’ll see, hear, feel and taste the real Mexico.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION

1. A single supplement is available if you’d prefer not to share a room on this trip. The single supplement excludes Day 5 (Overnight bus) where you will be in shared accommodation. Please speak to your booking agent for further information.

Highlights:
  • 1. A single supplement is available if you’d prefer not to share a room on this trip. The single supplement excludes Day 5 (Overnight bus) where you will be in shared accommodation. Please speak to your booking agent for further information.
Standard inclusions
  • Meals: Meals: 2 breakfasts, 2 lunches.
  • Transport: Private vehicle, Public bus, Local bus, Overnight public bus, Taxi.
  • Accommodation: Hotel (12 nights), Overnight bus (1 night).
  • Mexico City - Leader-led Taco Crawl.
  • Mexico City - Leader-led orientation walk.
  • Mexico City - Gastromotiva (The Intrepid Foundation partner) visit.
  • Oaxaca - Leader-led orientation walk.
  • San Cristobal de Las Casas - Leader-led Orientation Walk.
  • San Cristobal - Santo Domingo Market Visit.
  • Leader-led Informal Spanish Lesson.
  • Misol-Ha - Waterfall Visit.
  • Palenque - Archaeological site (Entrance fee & Transport).
  • Campeche - Orientation Walk.
  • Valladolid - Local Market Visit.
  • Becal - Visit to Jipi hat artisan cave studio.
  • Playa del Carmen - Leader-led Orientation Walk.
  • Chichen Itza - Archaeological site.
  • Yokdzonot Cenote – Visit and Swim.
  • Piste - Home-cooked Lunch.
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Itinerary
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Day 1: Mexico City
Bienvenidos! Your adventure starts in Mexico City – one of the world's largest urban centres – with a welcome meeting at 6 pm tonight. If you arrive early, Mexico City has plenty of museums, galleries and walkable streets to keep you busy. Maybe check out the Chapultepec area with its many museums, hop on one of the colourfully painted boats that cruise through the canal district of Xochimilco or head to the National Palace to see the murals of Diego Rivera. After your meeting tonight, you might want to seek out some tacos for dinner (try to place your order in Spanish)! If you want to explore the vibrant nightlife tonight, your trip leader will have the best recommendations.
Day 2: Mexico City
Maybe grab some chilaquiles (a type of breakfast nachos) this morning, then join your leader for an orientation walk around the historic centre of the city. Mexico City can feel overwhelming due to its sheer size and volume of people, but your leader will know where to go. Along the way, visit our Intrepid Foundation partner, Gastromotiva - an organisation tackling food scarcity and homelessness while promoting a sustainable food movement in Mexico. Walking makes you hungry, so it’s time to head on an included taco crawl and sample a couple of tacos from local street food vendors. The afternoon is free for you to enjoy – if you like art, the Frida Kahlo Museum is a must-see, and for all museum lovers, there's also the Museum of Anthropology or the Palace of Fine Art. Don’t forget to snack your way around the city too, munching on tostadas, tortas, and chicharrones.
Day 3: Oaxaca
Take a public bus to the smaller but no less beautiful city of Oaxaca (pronounced ‘wuh-haa-ka’). This colourful town in the south is full of colonial buildings, colourful arcades and busy markets. You’ll head out on a leader-led orientation walk to get your bearings when you arrive. With two full days here, you’ll have heaps of time to explore the narrow, cobbled streets in the city, as well as the culture and natural beauty of the surrounding area. Indigenous Zapotec and Mixtec selling colourful woven blankets and shawls populate the markets – a great place to shop for textiles, as well as margarita flavours. Here, you’ll also find some tasty regional food specialties – everything from cactus fruit to spicy baked chilli and lime grasshoppers. Make sure you pick up a tejate (a maize and cinnamon-flavoured chocolate drink served cold).
Day 4: Oaxaca
The city (and state) of Oaxaca is yours to explore on this free day. Perhaps head to the mountaintop temples of Monte Alban just outside the city. Monte Alban was inhabited for 1500 years by the Olmec, Zapotec and Mixtec peoples and is an outstanding example of a pre-Columbian ceremonial centre. The settlement's terraces, dams, canals and pyramids were carved out of the mountain. You’d better have your camera ready because up here you can get a fantastic view across the three legs of the valley of Oaxaca. Alternatively, you could take a day tour of the nearby Mitla Ruins. Mitla (the Nahuatl word for ‘underworld’) is an important Zapotec archaeological site and was the main religious centre for the Zapotec people. For something more relaxing, drop by the springs of Hierve el Agua – a series of mineral pools and calcified waterfalls dotted on top of a mountain, providing sweeping views of the Mexican countryside.
Day 5: Oaxaca / Overnight bus
Today is another free day in Oaxaca, but you’ll board an overnight bus later tonight to the mountain-top village of San Cristobal de las Casas. You’ve got today to bask in the colour and sights of Oaxaca, so why not test out your culinary skills at a cooking class. Otherwise, check out the artisan stores in the markets and around town, or head to the historic Templo de Santo Domingo – a grand stone church with a large forecourt.
Day 6: San Cristobal de las Casas
This afternoon, say ‘hola’ to San Cristobal, your pastel-hued highland home for the next two days. Your leader will point out the main things to know on a leader-led orientation walk this morning. With its winding cobblestone streets snuggled in the Chiapas highlands, San Cristobal de las Casas has an old-world feel mixed with strong pre-Hispanic roots. After your walk, you’ll head to the colourful Santo Domingo textile market with your group – one of the best spots to shop for jewellery and clothing. After, maybe wander to a local cafe and check out their baked goods or try some pox (a traditional corn-based liquor, often flavoured with other ingredients).
Day 7: San Cristobal de las Casas
There’s no alarm clock needed this morning as today is yours to explore San Cristobal de las Casas at your own leisure. Maybe take in the cobblestone streets and architecture, soaking up the old-world feel that’s mixed with strong, pre-Hispanic roots. If you're in the mood for adventure, maybe take a trip to Sumidero Canyon, where you can take a boat down the mighty Rio Grijalva. Or you might like to get things pumping with further exploration of the villages by mountain bike.
Day 8: Palenque
Say goodbye to San Cristobal de Las Casas as you head for Palenque. When you arrive, the afternoon is free for you to relax or explore. Situated in a steamy jungle, Palenque is a central town close to the nearby Maya ruins of the same name, which you'll have a chance to check out tomorrow.
Day 9: Palenque
This morning, you’ll head to the archaeological zone and visit the ruins of Palenque. Sitting on a hilltop surrounded by thick trees, the ruins date back to AD 600 and are some of the most impressive Maya relics in Mexico. As you take a self-guided walk among the temples, listen out for the eerie calls of howler monkeys and screeching parrots echoing from the jungle. There are many ruins that are still un-excavated and remain concealed in the forest. You can opt to take a guided tour of the ruins or through the surrounding jungle to a hidden waterfall (at an extra fee). The area gives you an idea of what the Spanish invaders must have seen when they arrived. This afternoon visit Misol-Ha, where the cascading falls and quiet surroundings create a refreshing escape into nature.
Day 10: Campeche
Take a local bus to the coast to spend the night in Campeche – a seaside town with photogenic streets lined with multi-coloured low-rise buildings. When you arrive, head out on a leader-led orientation walk to get your bearings. The rest of the afternoon is free for you to explore on your own. For dinner tonight, you’ll find good seafood almost anywhere, and some great local restaurants at Portales de San Martin.
Day 11: Valladolid
Tavel to the city of Valladolid, known for its pastel-coloured buildings. On the way, visit the town of Becal, known as ‘the Hat Town’, where your group will meet with an artisan who weaves traditional jipi hats (named after the variety of palm used to make them). Learn about the history of jipi and how the palm bunches are hung out to dry, often in the backyards of local homes. Once dyed and dried, a skilled artisan braids the palm strands into beautiful hats, often working in a homemade cave – the cave's humidity makes the palm fibers easier to manipulate. After talking with the locals, you’ll carry onto Valladolid. When you arrive, visit a local market with your leader and enjoy a free evening to explore at your own pace.
Day 12: Valladolid
Today is a free day to explore Valladolid and its surroundings. Maybe start the day with a morning walk around the city’s gorgeous streets, then visit one of the nearby cenotes – Xkeken, Samula, Nool-Ha and Suytun are all gorgeous natural swimming holes and you can spend your day lazing in the underground cave, with huge stalactites hanging above, swimming in the electric blue waters. Tonight, maybe ask your leader where the best spots for some local food are.
Day 13: Chichen Itza / Playa del Carmen
Head to the Yokdzonot cenote for a swim this morning. Surrounded by hanging vines, the cenote was developed by a group of local Maya women as a sustainable and communally owned source of employment for the local people. After, see one of the new Seven Wonders of the World at Chichen Itza – considered the most important examples of the fusion of Maya and Toltec traditions in Yucatan. See the Caracol (a circular stellar observatory), the Great Ball Court (the largest field in Mesoamerica), the main sight in El Castillo (a step pyramid dominating the centre of the site) and many more historic ruins (don’t forget your camera!). For lunch, get to know a local family over a pibil feast in Piste (a traditional Maya style of cooking that involves wrapping food in banana leaves and barbecuing it underground). Later, continue to Playa del Carmen. Blessed with clear waters and gorgeous beaches, you can spend your time snorkelling among the mangroves or in underground caverns or strolling along the white sands of the playa (beach). Your leader will take you on an orientation walk around the city when you arrive. Tonight, maybe feast on seafood, kick back with your group and watch the waves with a margarita.
Day 14: Playa del Carmen
With no activities planned for today, your trip comes to an end – but that doesn’t mean your adventure has to! Today is a perfect day to travel south on a half-day tour to the Tulum archaeological site, which is quite unique because of its placement on the side of a cliff overlooking the turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea. If you wish to spend more time in Playa del Carmen, just reach out to your booking agent to organise additional accommodation.
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Travellers

Operator
Intrepid Travel

Intrepid is a small group tour travel company with humble beginnings that now sends over 100,000 travellers a year on grassroots and responsible travel tours.

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Please note: We are proud to be an independent agent to travel providers of hotels, flights and other related services. We are not a tour operator. Details and information on the offer are provided by 3rd party businesses and although we do our best to verify the information, we cannot guarantee its accuracy on all occasions. These offers are not available in conjunction with any other offer unless otherwise stated. Pricing and availability are subject to change without notice. For more information, please see Terms of Use
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13 nights
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