Is Tulum still worth investing in? We break down cap rates, short-term rental yields, legal risks, and the exact neighborhoods where smart investors are buying right now.
2026-07-05
Tulum has transitioned from a boutique bohemian village to a luxury destination with direct international flights, a new international airport (General Arturo Anaya García — TQO), and billions in infrastructure spending. Property values have appreciated 15–25% annually in prime areas since 2019.
But 2026 is different. Supply has caught up in some corridors. Knowing where and what to buy makes all the difference.
| Metric | Tulum | Playa del Carmen | Cancún |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avg price/m² (jungle condo) | $2,800–$4,500 USD | $2,200–$3,800 USD | $1,800–$3,200 USD |
| Gross short-term rental yield | 8–14% | 6–10% | 5–9% |
| Annual appreciation (2023–2026 avg) | 12–18% | 8–12% | 7–10% |
| Occupancy rate (peak season) | 78–88% | 72–82% | 65–75% |
| Typical closing costs | 5–8% of price | 5–8% | 5–8% |
Source: AMPI (Asociación Mexicana de Profesionales Inmobiliarios), 2026 Q1 data
Aldea Zamá is Tulum’s first master-planned residential community. Gated, cenote-studded, with paved streets and dedicated infrastructure. It attracts digital nomads and high-income remote workers.
La Veleta is Tulum’s fastest-growing residential zone, 3 km from the beach and adjacent to the new commercial corridor.
The beachfront zone delivers the highest nightly rates ($400–$1,200/night in peak season) but has environmental regulatory risk.
South of Tulum proper, this corridor offers lower entry prices and growing demand from eco-tourism.
All coastal Tulum property requires a legal structure since it falls within the restricted zone (50 km from the coast).
Fideicomiso (Bank Trust) — Recommended for most buyers
Mexican S.A.P.I. (Investment Corporation)
On a $350,000 USD purchase:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Notary fees | ~$3,500 |
| Acquisition tax (ISAI) | ~$7,000 |
| Fideicomiso setup | ~$1,500 |
| Appraisal (avalúo) | ~$800 |
| Legal/attorney fees | ~$2,500–$5,000 |
| Developer closing costs (varies) | $0–$17,500 (0–5%) |
| Total estimate | $15,300–$35,300 |
Budget 5–10% of purchase price for total closing costs.
A 1BR condo in Aldea Zamá listed on Airbnb/VRBO realistically generates:
| Season | Nightly Rate | Occupancy | Monthly Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peak (Dec–Apr) | $180–$320 | 85% | $4,590–$8,160 |
| Shoulder (May–Jun, Nov) | $130–$200 | 65% | $2,535–$3,900 |
| Low (Jul–Oct) | $90–$150 | 50% | $1,395–$2,325 |
| Annual average | $140 | 67% | ~$2,800/mo |
After property management (25–30%), utilities, HOA, and taxes: net yield of 6–9% on a $300,000 property.
Foreign owners with rental income must file with Mexico’s SAT (tax authority):
Recommendation: Hire a bilingual CPA with Mexico+US cross-border experience. Cost: $1,500–$3,500/year.
Buy if: You have a 3–7 year horizon, can weather 1–2 years of softer occupancy, and focus on Aldea Zamá or established corridors.
Wait if: You’re expecting quick 30% flips — that era is largely over in prime zones. Pre-construction plays still work but require selecting the right developer.
Avoid if: You need guaranteed liquidity within 12–18 months. Mexican real estate is illiquid; expect 4–12 months to close a sale.
For personalized investment analysis on specific Tulum properties or developers, contact our real estate team.
Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.
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