Four wheels, wings, and swimming.
This combo tour is interesting because it strings together ATV challenge riding, ziplines, horseback, and a cenote swim in one smooth 5-hour outing, so you get a real sense of Riviera Maya outdoors without juggling bookings. Guides like Henry and George of the Jungle pop up in the experience, and you’ll feel the focus on safety and pacing as you move from activity to activity. Hotel pickup helps, too, which makes this feel like a true day trip instead of a scavenger hunt.
I especially love the variety: ziplining through the trees is pure adrenaline, and the horseback ride adds a slower, calmer jungle rhythm. I also like the fact you’re staying fueled, with snack and water included after you work up an appetite.
One possible drawback: the tour has a strict no phones during activities rule, and that can affect how many photos you can take yourself (a paid photo option is often offered later).
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- A Four-in-One Jungle Day in Cancun’s Riviera Maya
- Timing and Pickup: What “Door-to-Door” Really Means
- Check-In, Lockers, and the Phone Rule
- Zip Lines Through the Trees: Speed, Height, and Quick Instruction
- ATV Challenge Road: Power With Clear Limits
- Horses Along the Jungle Trail: The Calm Part That Feels Like a Reset
- Cenote Swim: The Sacred Cool-Down
- Lunch, Snack, and Keeping Your Energy Up
- Price and Value: Why $60.75 Can Make Sense
- What to Pack for Comfort (and Less Hassle)
- Safety, Fitness, and the Rules You Should Actually Read
- Should You Book This ATV, Zipline, Horseback, and Cenote Combo?
- FAQ
- What activities are included in the ATV combo tour?
- How long is the tour and when do you arrive at the park?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Are cell phones allowed during the activities?
- What are the weight limits and ATV driving rules?
- What extra costs should I expect?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Four activities in one run means less travel time between stops and more time in the jungle.
- Hotel pickup and round transport helps you avoid local logistics headaches.
- Zipline circuit first sets the tone early, before you hit the ATVs.
- Cenote swim is the cool-down and the break point in the middle of the day.
- Lockers cost extra (locker fee is listed), so pack with that in mind.
- Rules matter: weight limits and the adult driving rule for ATVs are enforced.
A Four-in-One Jungle Day in Cancun’s Riviera Maya

This is a “do it all” adventure day built for people who want big outdoors energy without spending the whole trip coordinating multiple tours. You start at a jungle park, get checked in, leave personal items in lockers, and then move through activities in a set flow.
The big win is contrast. You get adrenaline with the zipline circuit and ATV riding, then you get quiet-time vibes with well-trained horses on a jungle trail. The cenote acts like the reset button: you’re hot, you cool off, and you move into the meal portion feeling human again.
The tour caps at 25 travelers, which is a big deal for comfort. You’re not stuck in a giant crush, so it tends to feel organized rather than chaotic.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cancun
Timing and Pickup: What “Door-to-Door” Really Means
Pickup is included, and that’s one of the reasons this combo works so well. Schedules differ by zone, and the company sends your exact pickup time by text or mail.
Here’s the structure you can expect:
- Morning tour
- Cancun and Playa del Carmen zone: pickup 8:00 to 8:30 am
- Tulum zone: pickup 7:00 to 8:00 am
- Arrival to the park: 9:30 am
- Noon tour
- Cancun and Playa del Carmen zone: pickup 12:00 to 12:30 pm
- Tulum zone: pickup 11:00 am to 12:00 pm
- Arrival to the park: 1:30 pm
If your hotel isn’t in the listed pickup area, you’ll need a special meeting point. For Tulum hotels/Airbnbs, that meeting point is Super Aki Tulum Supermarket (downtown). If you’re in Tulum, build in buffer time to reach that supermarket—don’t count on the van finding you exactly on your schedule.
Practical tip: put sunscreen on early. You may be stepping into sun fast once you’re checked in.
Check-In, Lockers, and the Phone Rule

Once you arrive, you check in, store personal objects in lockers, and then move into the activities. A locker fee is listed as $5 USD, which comes as a surprise to some people because it adds cost late in the day.
Another rule that shapes the whole experience: cell phones aren’t allowed during the activities. That’s clearly stated for security. If you love taking your own videos or action photos, you’ll want to adjust expectations. You’ll likely buy photos later if you want professionally captured shots.
What I’d do in your shoes:
- Bring a small bag or crossbody only for before/after parts of the day.
- Keep your essentials minimal, because lockers are part of the process.
- Plan on relying on the guides and photographer for the “proof” shots.
Zip Lines Through the Trees: Speed, Height, and Quick Instruction

The tour starts with the ziplines jungle circuit, and it’s placed first on purpose. Getting the high-energy activity out of the way early means you don’t feel drained later when you’re asked to concentrate on ATV rules or horse handling.
You’ll fly through trees and reach notable speeds. The park also gives a panoramic view, which is where you get your orientation of the jungle scenery before you go deeper on the ground.
A realistic consideration: ziplining has a 270-pound weight limit listed for the ziplines portion. If you’re close to that range, confirm directly when booking.
Also: expect a basic safety briefing. It’s an adrenaline activity, but the pacing tends to be guided rather than chaotic.
ATV Challenge Road: Power With Clear Limits

Next comes the ATV ride, where the tour shifts from flying to riding straight through jungle terrain. The description emphasizes the power of the ATVs and exploring the jungle in a more hands-on way than the earlier zipline sections.
This is also where rules get very concrete:
- Weight limit for ATVs: 300 pounds
- Only adults 18+ can drive their own ATV
- Children 17 and under must be accompanied by an adult
If you’re traveling with a group that includes teens, this matters. Plan who drives ahead of time so the day doesn’t turn into last-minute problem solving.
A small but important reality check from experience on similar combos: ATV equipment can vary in condition. Some people have noted ATVs needing maintenance or alignment during their rides. The staff is often helpful, but if you’re picky about brand-new gear, this is the part of the day most likely to feel less polished than the rest.
Still, the ATV portion is consistently described as a highlight because it’s the most physical, hands-on adrenaline step after the ziplines.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cancun
Horses Along the Jungle Trail: The Calm Part That Feels Like a Reset

After the ATVs, you’ll slow down with horseback riding, framed as a relaxing jungle trail experience. The tour wording specifically highlights that the horses are well-trained and that the ride is designed to be comfortable and peaceful.
This is one of your best “value for variety” moments. A lot of adventure days overdo adrenaline and leave you exhausted at the end. Here, the horse ride gives you a break where you’re not holding onto handlebars at speed or climbing in and out of platforms.
You’ll get jungle scenery without the noise. It’s also a good activity for travelers who want something outdoorsy but less rough than the ATV segment.
Horse riding has a 220-pound weight limit listed, so it’s worth checking if you’re booking for anyone larger than that threshold.
Cenote Swim: The Sacred Cool-Down

Then comes the part most people remember long after they leave Cancun: the cenote. Cenotes are natural sinkholes that stay cool, and swimming there feels different than any pool time. The tour description calls it a sacred cenote, and the experience is built around relaxation and refreshing in nature.
From what’s shared by past participants, the cenote setup can include jump options and additional fun features like extra zipline elements, depending on how the activity is run that day. Even if you don’t jump, the water itself is the main draw.
You’ll also get a clear “shift” in the day:
- ATV and zipline: heat + adrenaline
- Cenote: water + cooling off
- After: snack and the end-of-tour wrap-up
If you want a single word for this stop: relief.
Lunch, Snack, and Keeping Your Energy Up

You’re not left to “tour on vibes” only. The package includes snack and bottled water, and there’s also a Mayan-chef-style meal portion built into the day.
People talk about the food in positive terms, often describing it as tasty and substantial enough to land you back at your hotel feeling fed, not hungry. The meal is also part of why this combo tour feels good value: you’re paying for admissions and transport, and the snack/food reduces the need to budget meals separately.
If you have dietary needs, keep it practical. Nothing in the provided details says special meals are available, so it’s smart to bring a plan for flexibility.
Price and Value: Why $60.75 Can Make Sense
At $60.75 per person, this tour looks like a budget-friendly “big day,” and the math mostly checks out because the package includes a lot:
Included items listed:
- ATV Challenge Road admission
- Ziplines Jungle Circuit admission
- Horseback relaxing time admission
- Mayan cenote admission
- Round-trip transportation
- ATV insurance and fees
- Snack and bottle of water
What’s not included:
- Photos (extra cost)
- Locker ($5 USD)
So you’re paying for transport + three major paid activities + water/snack in one shot. That’s the core value: you reduce booking friction and entry fees at multiple places.
Just keep two things in mind:
- Phone restrictions may push you toward buying photo packages if you want action shots.
- Locker fees and photo add-ons are the most likely “surprise costs.”
Still, compared with booking each piece separately, this structure often comes out cheaper and easier—especially for first-timers in Cancun/Riviera Maya.
What to Pack for Comfort (and Less Hassle)
The tour recommends you bring:
- clothes change
- towel
- closed shoes
- swimsuit
- sunscreen
- biodegradable repellent
- sunglasses
- bandanas for ATV
That list is practical because you’re mixing wet (cenote) and dusty/muddy (ATV) elements. Closed shoes matter for grip and foot safety.
Also, pack like the phone rule is real. Even if you bring your phone, you might need to stash it during activities, so a portable charger won’t help much if you can’t use it out on the course.
Safety, Fitness, and the Rules You Should Actually Read
The tour asks for moderate physical fitness. That doesn’t mean “athletic only,” but it does mean you should feel comfortable with active outdoor tasks, stairs/terrain, getting on and off equipment, and general movement.
Safety rules explicitly stated:
- Cell phones not allowed during activities
- Weight limits: 270 ziplines, 300 ATVs, 220 horseback
- ATV driving rule: only adults 18+ drive their own ATV; kids under 18 can ride but can’t drive solo
- Insurance is included for ATVs, but you still have to follow safety directions on-site
In plain terms: follow staff instructions quickly. This is the kind of tour where small behavior choices make the day go smoother for everyone.
Should You Book This ATV, Zipline, Horseback, and Cenote Combo?
Book it if you want:
- a single 5-hour outing with multiple adrenaline-to-relax stops
- hotel pickup in Cancun/Playa del Carmen/Tulum areas
- variety: ziplines + ATVs + horses + a swim in a cenote
- a cap of up to 25 travelers so it feels organized
Skip or choose another option if:
- you’re deeply reliant on filming during the actual rides, because phones aren’t allowed during activities
- you strongly prefer brand-new equipment (some comments mention ATV wear/maintenance issues)
- you want lots of time lounging or eating; the day is built to move, not stretch
My take: if you’re on your first Riviera Maya visit and you want one standout nature-and-adventure day, this combo is a solid way to spend it. Plan for the locker fee, accept the phone rule, and you’ll get a full spectrum of jungle fun in a tight timeframe.
FAQ
What activities are included in the ATV combo tour?
The included activities are ATV challenge road admission, a zipline jungle circuit, horseback relaxing time, and admission to a Mayan cenote. A snack and bottle of water are also included, along with round transportation and ATV insurance & fees.
How long is the tour and when do you arrive at the park?
The tour runs about 5 hours. For the morning schedule, the park arrival is listed as 9:30 am. For the noon schedule, the park arrival is listed as 1:30 pm.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes. The tour includes round transportation and pickup from your hotel lobby (or a specified meeting point if your hotel is not listed). Pickup time depends on your zone and is sent by text or mail.
Are cell phones allowed during the activities?
No. For security measures, the use of cell phones is not allowed during the activities.
What are the weight limits and ATV driving rules?
Ziplines have a 270-pound weight limit, ATVs have a 300-pound limit, and horseback riding has a 220-pound limit. Only adults 18+ can drive their own ATV, and children 17 and under must be accompanied by an adult.
What extra costs should I expect?
Photos are an additional cost. Also, there is a locker fee listed as $5 USD. The tour notes that the locker is used to store personal objects during the activities.






























