The Maya Cities of the Puuc
Uxmal | Mexico
Nature
Heritage
Day Trip from Mérida to UNESCO-listed Uxmal and Sayil exploring Puuc Maya architecture and a cenote.
About
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Nearby
Zachary Lindsey
What is this?
This full-day route moves through the Puuc hill country, a region shaped by low hills, limited surface water and a demanding landscape. You begin at Uxmal, the best-known city of the Puuc region and UNESCO World Heritage site. Built between the 7th and 10th centuries, Uxmal is known for its well-preserved architecture and refined decorative style. Smooth lower walls are topped with intricate mosaic façades and repeated masks of Chaac, the rain god — architecture shaped by both belief and the need to manage scarce water through underground cisterns.
From Uxmal, you continue to Sayil, a smaller, less crowded Maya site with dense residential and administrative structures. Its palace complex and façades feature columns and geometric latticework, suggesting a narrative tied to power, warfare, and local tradition.
Lunch in Muna, a town shaped by both colonial and Indigenous histories, is followed by a visit to a freshwater cenote, where you can swim and cool off before returning to Mérida.
What makes this unique?
This experience is designed to share the most evocative Maya sites in the Puuc region, paired with access to a freshwater cenote. Uxmal is widely visited, Sayil far less so, but visiting them with Zac and his local guides changes the experience. Their combined perspective brings history, legend, and myth into focus, offering a deeper understanding of both places.
The route is grounded in landscape as much as architecture. Puuc means hill, and the day follows the terrain that shaped settlement patterns — from elevated stone cities to a cenote that brings the story back to the region’s reliance on seasonal rain and stored water.
Your visit to Uxmal and Sayil is enriched by the voices you hear along the way. Like all of Zac’s tours, this combines archaeological context with local perspectives. Your archaeologist host offers an overview of Maya history, while local knowledge adds nuance and continuity. You hear legends, details and interpretations often absent from standard visits.
What is the profile of the host?
Zac is a journalist and trained archeologist who arranges intimate, harmonious adventures that connect you with the land and people of the Yucatan peninsula. With a small selection of local collaborators, he provides in-depth experiences focusing on sustainability and meaningful interaction, utilizing a method developed for the science of anthropology in which both outsider and insider perspectives are used. That way, you get a truly comprehensive understanding of a place.
What to bring?
Check the weather forecast and dress for heat and sun; lightweight, practical clothing works best.
Mosquito repellent and sunscreen are strongly recommended.
Bring swimwear and a towel if you plan to swim at the cenote.
** If a site is unexpectedly closed, your host will adjust the route to a comparable alternative.
Where is this located?
Where will we meet?
At your hotel or destination of your choice in Merida or surrounding areas. Post booking, connect with Zac via Fernwayer Chat to share details and finalize the meeting point.
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USD 200
per person
Private
2 - 6 peopleⓘ
8 hours
The price includes all fees and tips.
Full-day excursion through the Puuc region from Mérida.
Full guidance by an expert archaeologist throughout the day.
Private transportation throughout the experience.
Visit to the Uxmal archaeological site, including entrance.
Visit to the Sayil archaeological site, including entrance.
Lunch at a traditional local restaurant.
Visit to a freshwater cenote with time to swim.
Offered in English
Private
2 - 6 peopleⓘ
8 hours
The price includes all fees and tips.
Full-day excursion through the Puuc region from Mérida.
Full guidance by an expert archaeologist throughout the day.
Private transportation throughout the experience.
Visit to the Uxmal archaeological site, including entrance.
Visit to the Sayil archaeological site, including entrance.
Lunch at a traditional local restaurant.
Visit to a freshwater cenote with time to swim.
Offered in English