REVIEW · COZUMEL
Wet And Wild Combo Experience By Jeep & Snorkel Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Cozumel Best Excursions · Bookable on Viator
Cozumel can feel like a buffet of tours. This one is a private Jeep + water adventure that stacks snorkeling, jet skiing, island stops, and a tequila tasting into one smooth day. I love how the morning builds toward the fun, with water time right away at a beach club.
Two things I like a lot: first, the personal guide pace. I’ve seen how guides like Domingo, Israel, Daniel, and Santiago adjust stops for real-world timing and your group’s interests. Second, I love the variety—one minute you’re in the surf, the next you’re learning tequila by seeing the process and tasting flavors.
One possible drawback to plan for: jet ski time can be shorter than you expect, especially if you have a group size that doesn’t match the two-person machine setup. And extras at the beach (like chips, guacamole, salsa, or bottled water) can add up fast, so it helps to have a little cash ready.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- Jeep, Snorkel, Jet Ski, Tequila: The Real Shape of This Day
- Meeting at 7-Eleven and Getting Into the Day’s Rhythm
- Riding the Island in a Jeep: Views, Stops, and a Guided Flow
- Beach Club Water Time: Snorkel + Jet Ski in a Two-Person Setup
- Tequila Tour and Tasting: Handmade Process Meets Real Flavors
- Lunch, Photos, and Shopping: How the Day Lets You Breathe
- Price and Value: Is $130.04 Worth It?
- Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Skip It)
- Watch-Outs: Jet Ski Timing, Extra Costs, and Safety Limits
- Should You Book the Jeep, Snorkel, Jet Ski, and Tequila Combo?
- FAQ
- How long is the Wet And Wild Combo by Jeep & Snorkel Tour?
- What time does the tour start, and where is the meeting point?
- Is pickup offered?
- Is this a private tour?
- What activities are included in the tour?
- What isn’t included in the price?
- Is there a language option for the guide?
- Are service animals allowed?
- What is the cancellation policy if plans change or weather affects the tour?
Key Highlights at a Glance

- Private tour feel: only your group, with a guide who keeps the day moving
- Beach club water time: snorkeling plus jet ski action in a controlled zone
- Two-person jet ski reality: machines are designed for two people, so plan for turn-taking
- Tequila tasting with process: see handmade production and sample different flavors
- Island driving + photo stops: scenic viewpoints and local vendor stops without rushing
- Included refueling: bottled water and soda, plus an included lunch on the day
Jeep, Snorkel, Jet Ski, Tequila: The Real Shape of This Day
This experience is built for people who don’t want to choose between coast views and water fun. You’ll start on land with a Jeep tour around the island, then shift to the beach for snorkeling and jet skiing, and finish with a tequila stop and more island cruising.
The timing matters here. At roughly 5 hours 30 minutes, the day is packed but not frantic if your group shows up ready. You’re not doing one long thing; you’re doing several shorter hits—snackable adventure instead of one big commitment.
If you’re cruising and trying to make Cozumel count, this combo is the kind of itinerary that helps you come away with photos, stories, and a few new tastes. Just keep your expectations aligned with the fact that some activities have time limits and safety boundaries.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cozumel.
Meeting at 7-Eleven and Getting Into the Day’s Rhythm

The tour starts at 9:00 am at the 7-Eleven on Av. Rafael E. Melgar 2 in Cozumel. You end back at the same meeting point, which makes the last step easy—no mystery drop-off location.
Pickup is offered, which is a big help in Cozumel where it’s easy to lose time walking in the heat. If you’re not getting pickup, give yourself a little buffer to get there on time, especially if you’re coming from a cruise port and need to catch your bearings fast.
This is a private tour/activity, so you won’t be waiting on strangers or getting stuck with someone else’s pace. In practice, that’s why people rate this so highly. Your guide can adjust the day to what your group needs that morning—time in the water, photo stops, and the order that feels most comfortable.
Riding the Island in a Jeep: Views, Stops, and a Guided Flow

Once you’re together, you drive the island in your Jeep and make different stops at scenic points. Think of it as a guided sightseeing route with built-in breaks, not a nonstop ride from one attraction to the next.
What you’re really buying with the island driving isn’t just the vehicle. It’s the ability to move across Cozumel’s coastlines and viewpoints while someone local helps you understand what you’re seeing. In multiple guide experiences shared by guests, the best moments were often the “small” stops—short photo breaks and points of interest along the drive.
You’ll also get some time that feels like casual local browsing. There can be stops with local vendors and shopping opportunities, and one guide even accommodated a quick request for a nearby grocery store stop when it fit the day’s flow. That flexibility is one reason this works well for families and groups with mixed interests.
If you care about photos, wear something you can move in. Cozumel sun shows up fast, and you’ll likely want sunscreen, water, and something for wind-salt comfort once you hit the beach.
Beach Club Water Time: Snorkel + Jet Ski in a Two-Person Setup

Your first real “wet” stop is at a beach club, where you do the water activities in a defined area. The combination here is snorkeling plus a jet ski experience, and the whole point is controlled fun—enough adrenaline to feel like a highlight, without turning it into a long lesson.
Here’s the key detail to plan for: the jet ski machines are designed for two people. That doesn’t automatically mean you’ll have equal time for every person in a larger group, because turn-taking can affect timing. One group reported jet ski time felt shorter than expected and that only a limited number of jet skis were available for their group size—so if your party is bigger than two, ask your guide how the timing works.
Also note the jet ski area is limited for safety reasons. That means you should not picture a huge open-water course. In exchange, you get a safe, well-managed session that’s timed into the rest of the day.
Practical tip: bring a dry bag if you have one, or at least keep your phone and wallet in something sealed. After snorkeling and jet ski time, you’ll want your things ready for the next stop—tequila tastes better when you’re not chasing your keys.
Tequila Tour and Tasting: Handmade Process Meets Real Flavors

After the beach club, the day turns to tequila. You’ll visit a tequila tour stop where you can see the handmade elaboration process and taste a wide variety of flavors.
What I like about this kind of tequila stop is that it’s not just a flight of shots. You get context for why different tequilas taste different—how production choices affect the final flavor. And the tasting itself is the reward: you can sample multiple expressions and choose what you genuinely want to take home.
Some guests specifically praised the tequila guide for being informative and passionate. That helps a lot. If the guide explains what you’re tasting as you go, the tasting becomes a conversation instead of a checklist.
If you’re the type who buys souvenirs, plan your money for the end of the tasting. It’s easier to pick up a bottle when you’ve already had time to compare flavors and decide what fits your taste.
Lunch, Photos, and Shopping: How the Day Lets You Breathe

You’ll be refueled with an included lunch, and the day also includes soda/pop and bottled water. In real-world terms, the meal has shown up as hearty beach-friendly food—often tacos or fajitas—plus sides like beans, rice, tortillas, and chips with salsa and guacamole.
One thing to watch: included meals don’t always mean you get unlimited extras. A guest report described paying extra for items like chips, guacamole, salsa, and water during lunch. So if you’re hungry-hungry, it’s smart to ask what’s included on that day’s menu and then treat additional items as optional.
Between lunch and tequila, you’ll also have more chances for photos and short stops for local vendors. This is the “Cozumel in motion” part: you see different areas of the island without needing to plan every stop yourself.
Price and Value: Is $130.04 Worth It?

At $130.04 per person for about 5.5 hours, this is priced like an active private day with multiple paid components. The big value signal is that it bundles several categories that are usually separate: private island transportation, guided tour time, snorkeling, and jet ski activity, plus the tequila tasting experience.
You also get included basics that matter on a hot island day—bottled water and soda/pop. Those small comforts add up when you’re out in sun and salt for hours.
Is it “cheap”? No. But it can be a smart value if you’d otherwise pay for snorkeling, then separately pay for a jet ski activity, then separately pay for tequila tasting and a guided drive. The combo also reduces hassle: one tour, one guide, one schedule.
Where value can drop is when you don’t match the activity setup with your group size. Because the jet skis are designed for two people, larger groups may have turn-taking that can change how much time each person feels they got. That’s not a dealbreaker, but it’s a reason to go in informed.
Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Skip It)

This is ideal for couples and families who want one day that feels like a greatest-hits collection. If you like mixing dry-land sightseeing with real water time, you’ll probably love the flow.
It’s also a good fit if you want a guide who can make the day practical. Multiple guides were called out by name—Domingo, Israel, Daniel, and Santiago—and the best pattern was that they made things easy: they were on time, communicated clearly, and helped keep timing aligned with cruise schedules or group requests.
Here’s who might not love it as much:
- People who expect a long jet ski session with no turn-taking
- Groups that want full control over every minute of the water time
- Anyone hoping lunch means unlimited extras
If you’re excited by the idea of snorkeling plus adrenaline jet ski plus a tequila tasting, this combo is built for you.
Watch-Outs: Jet Ski Timing, Extra Costs, and Safety Limits
Let’s be honest: the biggest “possible disappointment” is jet ski time. One family reported that the jet ski experience they expected at 30 minutes felt more like 20 minutes, and only two jet skis were used even though their group had three people. Another review noted the time can be short and the jet ski area is limited.
That doesn’t mean the day is poorly run. It means you should treat the schedule as a framework, not a stopwatch promise.
Two ways to reduce stress:
- Before you start, ask your guide how jet ski time will be handled for your group size and whether the session involves turns.
- Plan for extra spending at the beach club. Included lunch and drinks are real, but add-ons may show up as paid items.
Safety boundaries also matter. The jet ski area is delimited for safety and traffic reasons, so you’ll stay within a controlled zone. If you’re picturing huge open water, adjust your mental map.
Should You Book the Jeep, Snorkel, Jet Ski, and Tequila Combo?
I’d book it if you want a private, active Cozumel day with multiple highlights and a guide who keeps things moving. The combination of island driving, snorkeling, jet skiing, tequila tasting, and an included meal hits a lot of vacation goals at once.
I’d hesitate if your group is bigger than two and jet ski time is your top priority. In that case, confirm how timing and machine availability work before you go, so you’re not surprised when you get split into turns.
For most couples, many families, and anyone who enjoys variety, this is a strong value play. You’ll come away with the kind of day that’s easy to remember: salt air in the morning, tequila learning in the afternoon, and a jeep ride that keeps the island feeling big even when the clock is moving.
FAQ
How long is the Wet And Wild Combo by Jeep & Snorkel Tour?
It runs for about 5 hours 30 minutes.
What time does the tour start, and where is the meeting point?
The start time is 9:00 am. You meet at 7-Eleven, Av. Rafael E. Melgar 2, 77675 Cozumel, Q.R., Mexico.
Is pickup offered?
Yes, pickup is offered.
Is this a private tour?
Yes. Only your group participates.
What activities are included in the tour?
The tour includes a jeep island ride, a tequila tour with tasting, snorkeling, and a jet ski experience at a beach club. It also includes a tour guide plus soda/pop, bottled water, and an included lunch as part of the experience.
What isn’t included in the price?
Alcoholic beverages and tips are not included.
Is there a language option for the guide?
The tour is offered in English.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
What is the cancellation policy if plans change or weather affects the tour?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the start time. The tour requires good weather, and if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

























