
Playa Mia Beach
Cozumel's all-action beach club on turquoise water





About
Playa Mia stretches roughly 400 metres of white sand along the southwestern shore of Isla Cozumel, where the Caribbean laps in that unmistakable shade of turquoise. It's a full-service beach club rather than a wild shoreline — think floating trampolines anchored offshore, water slides, and kayak rentals humming with activity from mid-morning onward. The water is calm and safe for swimming, making it a reliable choice for families who want structure alongside their sun. It's busy by design: Playa Mia is a fixture on the cruise-excursion circuit, so expect a lively, well-organised atmosphere rather than a quiet escape.
How to get there
From San Miguel de Cozumel, the drive takes around 20 minutes by car, with paid parking available on site — fees may be included in certain packages, so check when you book. If you're coming from the mainland, the ferry from Playa del Carmen runs daily and takes about 45 minutes, landing you in Cozumel from where you'll need onward transport to the club. Entry requires a per-person fee, so budget accordingly before you arrive. No outside food or alcohol is permitted, and a wristband system controls access to the various activities once you're inside.
Who it's for
For couples
Couples who want a polished, activity-rich day rather than solitude will find Playa Mia delivers — paddleboard together on the turquoise water, then settle into the bar complex for the afternoon.
For families
The wristband activity system means kids can move freely between water slides, trampolines, and kayaks in a structured, safe environment, while parents can watch from the beach or the restaurant — it's genuinely built for family days.
Our take
Feet in the sand, eyes on the screen
Playa Mia is safe for swimming and well-run — those two facts matter most. It's not a beach for solitude seekers; it's a commercial beach club that does exactly what it promises: organised fun on white sand with turquoise water as the backdrop. The floating trampolines and water slides are genuine draws, especially for families, and the on-site facilities mean you won't go hungry or thirsty. The real risk here isn't in the water — it's timing. On heavy cruise-ship days the place gets extremely packed, and that experience is a different beast entirely from a quieter weekday. Avoid June through September: peak cruise overlap, sargassum risk, and hurricane season make that window the wrong call. Come between November and April, dodge the ship schedules, and Playa Mia delivers a well-organised, fun-filled day on one of the Caribbean's most photogenic stretches of coast.
What to do
The on-site action alone fills a day — floating offshore trampolines, water slides, and kayak and paddleboard rentals keep all ages occupied without leaving the club. When you're ready to venture out, Chankanaab National Park is about 10 kilometres away and offers dolphin encounters, a snorkelling lagoon, and Mayan replica ruins worth the trip. Divers should note that Palancar Reef, one of the world's most celebrated coral systems, is accessible by dive boat roughly 12 kilometres from here. The Planetario de Cozumel Cha'an Ka'an, about 10 kilometres away, adds a cultural counterpoint to the water-heavy itinerary.
Frame the floating offshore trampolines from the shoreline with the turquoise water filling the background — it's the shot that defines Playa Mia.
The water slides photographed from below, with the Caribbean behind them, work well in the mid-morning light. For a quieter composition, the white sand at the southern end of the 400-metre stretch gives a cleaner foreground before the main activity zones take over.
Where to eat
The club's own restaurant and bar complex handles most meals and drinks on site, which is convenient given the no-outside-food policy. If you're exploring nearby, Paradise Beach and Mr. Sanchos are both within 700 metres and offer their own beachside dining options. San Francisco Beach and Carlos and Charlie's are similarly close, giving you solid alternatives for an evening meal after the club closes.
Where to stay
Secrets Aura Cozumel is the closest hotel at just 1.1 kilometres away, making it the most convenient base for a multi-day visit. Further along the island, El Cid and Villablanca Garden Beach Hotel sit around 10–11 kilometres out, while Blue Angel Hotel and Dive Op — a natural pick for anyone planning reef dives — is about 12 kilometres away.
Photography
The best shots are from the waterline looking back at the white sand against the turquoise Caribbean, ideally in the first hour after opening before the beach fills up. The floating trampolines make a striking mid-water subject — shoot from the shore in the late morning when the light is high and the water colour is at its most vivid.
Good to know
Paid entry is required at the gate, and once inside you'll be issued a wristband that unlocks the water activities — don't lose it. No outside food or alcohol is allowed, so plan to use the on-site restaurant and bar complex. Crucially, Playa Mia sits on one of Cozumel's busiest cruise corridors: on days when multiple ships are docked, the beach becomes extremely packed — check cruise-ship schedules before you visit and aim for non-ship days if possible. All water activities require a safety briefing before you participate; don't skip it.
Map
Nearby places
Paradise Beach
Carlos and Charlie's
Mr. Sanchos
San Francisco Beach
Nachi-Cocom
Secrets Aura Cozumel
El Cid
Villablanca Garden Beach Hotel
Blue Angel Hotel and Dive Op
Hotel Cozumel & Resort
Arrecife Palancar
Living Underwater
Planetario De Cozumel Cha'an Ka'an
Things to see around San Miguel de Cozumel
Playa San Francisco
Long public beach with calmer atmosphere adjacent to Playa Mia
Chankanaab National Park
Marine park with dolphin encounters, snorkeling lagoon, and Mayan replica ruins
Palancar Reef
World-renowned coral reef system accessible by dive boat
Frequently asked
The information on this page is provided for guidance only and may evolve. Access conditions, safety and infrastructure can change without notice. Always check official sources before traveling.
Nearest beaches
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Photo credits
Sources and licenses for the photos shown above.
- Photo 1 — Serge Melki from Indianapolis, USA · source · CC BY 2.0
- Photo 2 — Isacdaavid · source · CC BY-SA 4.0
- Photo 3 — Serge Melki from Indianapolis, USA · source · CC BY 2.0
- Photo 4 — Serge Melki from Indianapolis, USA · source · CC BY 2.0
- Photo 5 — Isacdaavid · source · CC BY-SA 4.0




