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The Cozumel Ferry in 2026: Schedules, Prices, and Everything Cruise Passengers Should Know - Cozumel cruise news
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The Cozumel Ferry in 2026: Schedules, Prices, and Everything Cruise Passengers Should Know

Cozumel Cruise Excursions
May 23, 2026
8 min read

Planning to take the Cozumel ferry from Playa del Carmen — or out to the mainland for a port day? Here is the full 2026 guide to ferry schedules, ticket prices, terminal locations, and the timing tricks that keep cruise passengers from missing the ship.

The Cozumel Ferry in 2026: Schedules, Prices, and Everything Cruise Passengers Should Know

The Cozumel ferry is one of the most underrated parts of a Yucatán trip. For a few hundred pesos and about 45 minutes on the water, you can cross between Cozumel and Playa del Carmen — opening up cenote tours, Tulum ruins, Mayan jungle adventures, and a completely different side of Mexico from what most cruise passengers see. But the ferry can also be the single thing that ruins a port day if you misread the schedule, pick the wrong terminal, or underestimate the return crossing.

This is the 2026 guide to the Cozumel ferry: who operates it, the actual schedule, current ticket prices, how to find the right terminal on each side, and the timing rules cruise passengers must follow if they plan to use it. For a curated overview of how to use the ferry as part of a wider day plan, our Cozumel ferry schedule and travel page is updated with current departure times and operator changes.

Who Operates the Cozumel Ferry?

Two companies operate the passenger ferry route between Cozumel and Playa del Carmen:

  • Ultramar — the larger and more frequently used operator, with modern catamarans, air-conditioned cabins, an outdoor sundeck, and consistent on-time performance.
  • Winjet — a smaller competitor running similar boats on overlapping schedules, often at a slightly lower price point.

Both ferries run the same route, take roughly the same crossing time (35–45 minutes depending on weather and sea state), and depart from the same general terminal areas on each side. Buying with one operator does not allow you to return with the other — your ticket is operator-specific.

For most cruise passengers, the practical advice is: take whichever ferry leaves closest to when you want to depart. The boats are comparable, and trying to optimize on a 10–20 peso price difference is rarely worth it when your ship sails at 5 PM.

The Cozumel Ferry Schedule in 2026

The Cozumel ferry schedule is built around hourly departures during the day, with a few extra runs at peak times. In 2026 the schedule looks roughly like this:

From Playa del Carmen to Cozumel (Muelle Fiscal terminal): boats depart every hour or half-hour from about 6:00 AM to 11:00 PM, with the densest service between 8:00 AM and 7:00 PM.

From Cozumel to Playa del Carmen (downtown Cozumel pier): boats depart on a parallel schedule, generally from about 5:00 AM to 10:00 PM, again with the most frequent service during the middle of the day.

A few important notes:

  • The published schedule and the actual schedule can differ on holidays, during high winds, and during the Christmas/Easter peak. Confirm the day-of schedule the morning you sail.
  • The last ferry of the day is not somewhere you want to rely on if you are connecting to a cruise. Always plan to use a ferry that leaves at least 90 minutes before the published "all aboard" time on your ship.
  • Cancellations due to weather happen — particularly during nortes (cold fronts) in December through February. Plan a buffer.

For families building an exact port-day itinerary, we keep a maintained list of operator schedules and confirmed departure changes in our Cozumel news section.

Cozumel Ferry Ticket Prices in 2026

Prices fluctuate with the peso, but as of mid-2026 the typical fares are:

  • One-way adult: approximately 280–330 MXN (about $16–19 USD)
  • Round-trip adult: approximately 530–620 MXN (about $30–35 USD)
  • Child (under 12): about half the adult rate
  • Infants (under 5): typically free
  • Seniors with INAPAM card (Mexican residents): discounted rate

A few money-saving notes:

  • Round-trip tickets are slightly cheaper than two one-ways and lock you to one operator for the return.
  • Pay in pesos when possible. Both terminals accept US dollars but the exchange rate they apply is consistently worse than what you'll get from a local ATM.
  • Both Ultramar and Winjet accept credit cards at the terminal counter, though small-amount fees sometimes apply.
  • Avoid third-party "ferry resellers" outside the terminal. They are not cheaper and sometimes sell expired or invalid tickets.

Where Are the Cozumel Ferry Terminals?

The terminal layout is straightforward but trips up first-timers every day.

Cozumel Side

The Cozumel ferry terminal is in downtown San Miguel de Cozumel, on the main waterfront just south of the central square (Plaza del Sol). It is not the same as any of the three cruise ship piers (Punta Langosta, Puerta Maya, or the International Pier). The ferry pier is a separate facility, and you cannot walk directly from the cruise terminals to the ferry pier without a short taxi or a walk along the malecón.

From each cruise pier the practical reality is:

  • Punta Langosta: closest to the ferry terminal — about a 5–7 minute walk along the malecón.
  • Puerta Maya (Carnival pier): about 15–20 minutes by taxi or 25–30 minutes on foot.
  • International Pier: about 10–15 minutes by taxi.

Taxis are abundant and inexpensive on Cozumel. Confirm the fare before you get in — most short rides from the cruise piers to the ferry terminal run 100–150 MXN ($6–9 USD).

Playa del Carmen Side

The Playa del Carmen ferry terminal is at the end of Calle 1 Sur, at the base of Quinta Avenida (5th Avenue). If you have been to Playa del Carmen for shopping or restaurants, you have walked past it. The terminal is a short, well-marked walk from the main pedestrian zone.

If you arrived in Playa del Carmen by ADO bus from the airport, the ADO terminal is about a 7–10 minute walk to the ferry pier.

How Cruise Passengers Should Use the Cozumel Ferry

The Cozumel ferry opens up a long list of mainland excursions — cenote tours, Tulum ruins, Coba pyramids, Xcaret-style parks, jungle ATV adventures, and authentic Mayan villages. But it also adds two crossings to your day, and the math has to work.

Here is the cruise passenger's rule of thumb for ferry-based excursions:

  1. Count six hours minimum off the ship for any mainland excursion. That's roughly: 45-minute ferry to Playa, 30 minutes ground transfer to the activity, 2–3 hours at the activity, 30 minutes back to Playa, 45-minute ferry back to Cozumel, 15-minute taxi to the ship — plus buffers.
  2. Build in a 90-minute return buffer. Cruise lines do not wait for passengers who took independent ferries and missed the boat. Aim to be back on Cozumel at least 90 minutes before your published all-aboard time.
  3. Take the second ferry of the morning, not the first. The 7:00 AM ferry leaves before most cruise passengers can clear customs and immigration, and the 8:00 AM crossing is the practical first option for most ships. Sailing back, prioritize the ferry that lands you in Cozumel about two hours before all-aboard.
  4. Pick an operator and stick with it for the day. Round-trip tickets cost less and avoid switching counters.
  5. Pre-arrange ground transportation on the Playa side. Walking up to a random taxi at the Playa ferry terminal is fine for short rides, but for longer excursions (Tulum, Chichen Itza, cenote loops) a pre-arranged transfer or tour vehicle waiting for you eliminates 15–30 minutes of friction in each direction.

If a fully self-organized ferry day feels like too many moving parts, the simpler option is to book a Cozumel-based excursion that doesn't require the ferry at all. Our overview of things to do in Cozumel walks through the best activities you can do without leaving the island — snorkeling at El Cielo, jeep tours, the south-side beach clubs, cenotes on Cozumel itself, and more.

Cozumel Ferry Tips Most Guides Miss

A few practical notes that come from running thousands of port days:

  • Sit on the upper deck for crossings to Cozumel in the morning — better views, better breeze, less of the rocking sensation that some passengers feel below deck.
  • Sit indoors on the lower deck for choppy crossings if you are prone to seasickness. Bring ginger chews and consider a Bonine or Dramamine before boarding.
  • Bring a light layer. The air conditioning inside the catamaran cabins runs cold, especially when the boats are not full.
  • Buy water and snacks before boarding. Onboard concessions are limited and overpriced.
  • Watch your belongings on the dock. The terminals themselves are safe, but pickpockets occasionally work the boarding queues during high season.
  • Save photos of your ticket to your phone in case the paper version gets wet or lost.
  • Know your ship's all-aboard time and your ship's flag — Cozumel taxis often know cruise schedules better than the passengers do, but it helps to be specific when asking for the right pier.

When Not to Take the Cozumel Ferry

The Cozumel ferry is a great tool, but it isn't the right choice for every port day. Skip it if:

  • Your ship is in port for less than 8 hours.
  • You are traveling with very young children or elderly family members for whom two extra crossings would be exhausting.
  • The weather forecast includes high winds — the boats still run in moderate weather, but rough crossings are uncomfortable.
  • You only want to relax. There is plenty to relax with on Cozumel itself, without spending two of your daylight hours on a ferry.

For day-of port planning, our cruise port arrival guide and our port day planning walkthrough cover how to sequence excursions, food, and back-on-ship buffers regardless of whether the ferry is part of your day.

The Bottom Line

The Cozumel ferry is a reliable, inexpensive, and surprisingly pleasant way to connect Cozumel and the mainland — and a powerful tool for cruise passengers who want to combine an island morning with a mainland afternoon (or vice versa). Operated by Ultramar and Winjet on parallel schedules, the ferry runs roughly hourly from early morning to late evening, costs around $30–35 USD round-trip, and takes about 45 minutes each way.

The single most important thing for cruise passengers to remember is the return buffer. Always plan to land back in Cozumel at least 90 minutes before all-aboard. Ships will leave without you. Ferries will sometimes be canceled or delayed. Your itinerary needs to absorb both.

When you are ready to build your port day, our Cozumel ferry guide and schedule page keeps the latest departure times and operator notes in one place, and our excursion catalogue can match a tour to your timing — ferry-based or island-only. Either way, with a little planning, the Cozumel ferry can turn a single cruise port day into one of the best parts of the entire trip.

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Cozumel Cruise Excursions

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