Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya

One day, two totally different thrills. I love the ten-line zipline circuit with big names like Superman and Tarzania, and I also love that you end with a private cenote swim in the jungle. The one catch: you’ll want to budget for on-site photos, which can get pricey.

The flow is built for fun and safety: harness, clear instructions, then guided lines above the trees before a short jungle ride to the water. You’ll spend about 3 hours 30 minutes overall, and the park keeps groups to a maximum of 60 travelers, which helps the day feel organized.

Key Highlights Worth Matching Your Mood To

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Key Highlights Worth Matching Your Mood To

  • Ten ziplines in one circuit with varying heights and distances, including Superman and the zipline coaster called Tarzania
  • Aquazip is the wet line (and the Aqua-zip can be optional on the last cable)
  • Safari truck transfer to a private sinkhole for a refreshing cenote swim
  • Lunch light + water included, so you’re not scrambling for food midway
  • Photo plan is part of the experience since cameras aren’t taken onto the zipline portion

What You’re Really Doing: Zipline Circuit, Then a Private Cenote

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - What You’re Really Doing: Zipline Circuit, Then a Private Cenote
This is a classic jungle-adventure setup. You start above the treetops on a circuit of ten zip lines, then you shift gears and head deeper into the jungle to cool off in a private cenote (sinkhole). If you like your days with a clear before-and-after, this one delivers.

The zipline portion is where most people feel the biggest adrenaline. The lines vary in length and height, so it’s not just one “long glide” over and over. There’s also a sense of play in the design, including the chance to do a more dramatic maneuver on the way in (the kind of move that makes people laugh and cheer).

Then the cenote changes the pace quickly. Instead of wind and harnesses, you’re dealing with limestone walls, hanging mossy shadows, and water that feels like a natural air-conditioning system. In the cenote, you’re not just dipping a toe. You swim, jump off the platform/edge when you’re ready, and generally act like you planned this day for years (even if it was booked on impulse).

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cancun.

Getting There From Cancun and Riviera Maya Without Losing the Day

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Getting There From Cancun and Riviera Maya Without Losing the Day
Hotel pickup is part of the deal. Your day typically starts with pickup from your hotel, then you go to Selvatica at Ruta de los cenotes, Km 18, 77580 Puerto Morelos, Q.R., Mexico.

Two practical notes matter:

First, always treat the pickup time as real, not flexible. One of the biggest complaints in this kind of tour is missing the correct time window and losing parts of the program. If your plan is set by email or messaging, screenshot it and keep checking.

Second, ground transportation may cost extra depending on where you’re staying. The tour includes hotel pickup, but it also lists an optional $10–$20 per person ground transportation add-on. That means your specific route coverage can vary, so confirm what you’re getting for your exact hotel location.

The tour ends back at the meeting point area (Selvatica), which usually means the last part of your day feels smooth and not like you’re trapped waiting around for another transfer.

Selvatica Zipline Circuit: Superman, Tarzania, and the Wet Aquazip

The heart of the day is the 10 zip-line circuit. You’ll be fitted with safety equipment and go through a briefing before you head up. The park approach is designed so you’re not guessing while you’re clipped in. Guides are named in the past experience accounts for being clear and even funny, including Paco, John, Hugo, Jesus, Brian, and Chino—so you can expect a coached, structured vibe.

Here’s what stands out in the line-up:

  • Superman zipline: a more dramatic flying-style run that people tend to remember long after the ride ends.
  • Aquazip: the wet element. Plan for getting soaked, and note that the Aqua-zip can be optional on the last cable, so if you want to limit water, ask how that option works for your group.
  • Tarzania (zipline coaster): this is the “not just flying straight” part, where the coaster-style design adds motion beyond a simple straight line.

Timing matters here. The circuit and then Tarzania take about 1 hour each in the flow of the day. That’s long enough to get a real workout in your legs (stairs and climbing into position) and long enough that you’ll likely want to mentally shift between lines.

One more thing: you can’t count on bringing your own camera onto the zipline portion. People described a no-camera rule for the lines, with on-site staff taking photos instead. That means you’ll need to decide in advance if you want to rely on the professionals, or if you prefer to save your money and enjoy the day with your hands free.

The Safari Truck to the Private Cenote: Cool Water After Big Air

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - The Safari Truck to the Private Cenote: Cool Water After Big Air
After the lines, you drop back to the ground and head deeper into the jungle by Safari Truck. This isn’t a long hike. It’s a transfer designed to keep the momentum going while you move toward the cenote.

Then comes the cenote itself: a private sinkhole surrounded by jungle vegetation. This is where you feel the biggest temperature shift. The water is the payoff for the heat and adrenaline from above.

What you do in the cenote can feel surprisingly active. Accounts describe time to swim, jump from platforms/edges, and even enjoy a short zipline element around the water area (depending on how the day’s flow runs). You’ll also get the chance to see wildlife like fish, and some groups mention spotting a morpho butterfly floating through the space.

For a lot of people, this is the moment that turns “fun tour” into “I’m glad we did this.” Ziplining is thrilling, but cenotes are memorable because they’re visually different every second you move—light changes on the limestone, water ripples, and the jungle sounds feel close.

Lunch, Lockers, Towels, and the Photo Cost Reality Check

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Lunch, Lockers, Towels, and the Photo Cost Reality Check
Lunch is built into the schedule, and the tour includes a light lunch plus water. You’re not eating late, and you’re not dealing with the stress of finding food after you’re already tired and wet.

But storage and souvenirs are where the day can get more expensive than the $69 headline.

Here’s what’s commonly not included:

  • Locker rental (listed at $12)
  • Towels (listed at $5)
  • Optional insurance fee for certain add-ons (listed as ATV $12 and Polaris $20)
  • Photo purchases taken by staff during the zipline portion

The photo situation is the biggest surprise for many people. In one account, a family saw hundreds of photos on a tablet and felt the cost was heavy for digital images. Another complaint pattern is that once you get hungry and tired, you’re in a “can’t easily escape” moment. If you don’t want to buy photos, decide that in your mind before lunch and stick with it. If you do want them, ask the staff what pricing looks like upfront so you’re not hit with an end-of-day shock.

A small practical tip: plan to keep valuables minimal. You’ll be moving between zones—harnessing area, platforms, then water—and lockers are extra, so bring less rather than more.

Is It Family-Friendly? Fitness Level, Safety, and Real-World Comfort

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Is It Family-Friendly? Fitness Level, Safety, and Real-World Comfort
This tour is described as family-friendly and suitable for a moderate physical fitness level. That matters because you’re dealing with stairs and getting positioned for different cable launches. You’re not doing a technical climb, but you are doing a physical activity that needs balance and willingness to follow directions.

The best sign is the range of ages reported by people who went: kids as young as 5, teens, and adults up into their 80s. That tells me the experience is designed to scale with different comfort levels. The key is listening to the staff and moving at a steady pace during the setup and transitions.

Safety is also a repeated theme. People described harness fitting, equipment checks, and a briefing that makes beginners feel at ease. Guides are praised for being patient and supportive, especially when someone gets nerves before a launch. So if you’re bringing someone who hesitates, you’re not the only one.

Value at $69: What You’re Getting, What You’ll Pay Extra, and Where It’s Worth It

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Value at $69: What You’re Getting, What You’ll Pay Extra, and Where It’s Worth It
At $69 per person, this is strong value if you want two headline activities in one half-day: ziplining plus cenote swimming, with lunch included. Many travelers spend more for just one of those experiences.

Where the value equation can change:

  • Photos: not included, and can add a lot depending on what you purchase.
  • Comfort extras: lockers and towels cost extra.
  • Transportation: depending on your hotel area, you may pay an additional pickup/ground-transport fee.

Still, the structure is what makes it worth it. You don’t waste the day hopping between companies. You get guided access to the zipline circuit, then a direct path to a private cenote. That saves time and mental energy, and it means you’re not trying to coordinate buses while wet and tired.

For families, couples, and active solo travelers, the day works because it’s scheduled to keep you moving. For slower travelers, it can feel like a lot of action in a short window, but most of the “work” is the zipline prep and moving between zones, not long waiting.

Who Should Book This Selvatica Zipline and Cenote Tour (and Who Might Skip It)

Selvatica Adventure Park: Ziplines and Cenote Tour from Cancun and Riviera Maya - Who Should Book This Selvatica Zipline and Cenote Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
Book it if:

  • You want the classic Cancun-area combo of jungle ziplining + a private cenote swim in one package
  • You’re traveling with mixed ages and want something that can handle both thrill-seekers and cautious types
  • You’re okay with relying on staff photography instead of filming everything yourself
  • You’d like a light lunch included so you aren’t hunting food mid-adventure

Consider skipping or switching if:

  • You hate planned spending at the end of tours (photo upsells are a major complaint pattern)
  • You’re not comfortable with stairs and harness setup (moderate fitness is expected)
  • You want lots of personal control over your own camera during the zipline portion

Should You Book This Selvatica Adventure Park Tour?

I’d book it if you value organization, a real jungle setting, and a day that doesn’t drag. The mix of ten different ziplines plus the cooling private cenote gives you variety, not just repetition. The safety coaching seems to matter, and the overall structure keeps the day moving smoothly.

Just go in with eyes open. Decide your budget for lockers/towels and be ready for the photo decision. If you can handle that, this tour is one of the more satisfying ways to spend a half-day near Cancun.

FAQ

How long is the Selvatica zipline and cenote tour?

It’s approximately 3 hours 30 minutes.

What does the pickup from my hotel look like?

You’re picked up at your hotel for the start of the activity. If your area isn’t covered the way you expect, there may be an additional ground transportation cost listed at $10–$20 USD per person.

What’s included in the $69 price?

The included items are the 10 zip-line circuit, Aqua-zip (listed as optional in the last cable), swim in a private cenote, and a light lunch plus water.

What’s not included?

Not included: optional insurance fees for certain add-ons, locker rental ($12), towels ($5), and ground transportation if needed (listed as $10–$20 USD per person).

Is the Aquazip part mandatory?

The Aqua-zip is listed as optional in the last cable, so you may be able to skip if you want to avoid the wet portion.

Can I bring a camera onto the zipline?

You generally can’t take your own camera onto the zipline portion, and staff take photos instead.

What physical fitness level is required?

The tour notes a moderate physical fitness level. Expect stairs and time spent moving between platforms.

How big are the groups?

The activity lists a maximum of 60 travelers.

What if my plans change? Can I cancel for a refund?

You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time. If you cancel within 24 hours, the amount paid is not refunded.

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