Isla Pasion Cozumel: The Complete Guide to Cozumel's Private Island Beach Day
Cozumel Cruise Tours
April 25, 2026
8 min read
Isla Pasion is a private island just off Cozumel known for white sand, calm shallow water, and all-inclusive beach days. Here's exactly what's included, how to get there, and whether it's worth booking on a port day.
Isla Pasion Cozumel: The Complete Guide to Cozumel's Private Island Beach Day
If you have looked at Cozumel shore excursions for more than five minutes, you have seen the photos: a small island ringed by impossibly turquoise shallows, hammocks strung between palms, and a long curve of white sand with almost no one on it. That is Isla Pasion — Passion Island in English — and it is one of the most popular full-day excursions for cruise visitors who want a quiet beach experience instead of a busy reef tour or a packed downtown afternoon.
This guide covers what Isla Pasion Cozumel actually is, how the access works, what the all-inclusive experience really includes, and how to decide whether it is the right call for your port day.
What Isla Pasion Cozumel actually is
Isla Pasion is a small private island off the northern tip of Cozumel, separated from the main island by a narrow channel of shallow turquoise water. The entire island is operated as a single private beach club — meaning the only way to set foot on the sand is by booking an organized excursion. There are no public ferries, no private boats allowed to drop you off, and no day-tripping unless you have a confirmed reservation.
The island itself is small: roughly half a mile long, fringed with palms, and surrounded by some of the calmest, clearest water in the Cozumel area. Because of how the island sits relative to currents and prevailing winds, the swimming areas tend to be flat and shallow even on days when the rest of Cozumel's coast is choppy. That makes Isla Pasion a particularly strong option for families with small children and anyone who wants beach time without rough surf.
Unlike many "private island" experiences in the Caribbean — where you are dropped on a sandy crowded strip with rented umbrellas — Isla Pasion runs as an all-inclusive operation. Your booking includes the round-trip transfers, food, drinks (yes, including alcohol), beach chairs, hammocks, and most water activities. You arrive, hand over your wristband, and the only thing you spend money on is gratuity and the optional add-ons.
Plan Your Cozumel Adventure
Family owned since 1996. 3,000+ five-star reviews. NO TOUR, NO FEE guarantee.
Why visitors book Isla Pasion over other Cozumel beach options
Cozumel has no shortage of beach clubs. Mr. Sancho's, Nachi Cocom, Paradise Beach, and Playa Mia all sit along the southwestern coast and offer day passes to cruise visitors. So why does Isla Pasion command premium pricing and consistently sell out on heavy cruise days?
A few real differentiators:
It is genuinely a private island. The southwest beach clubs sit on the main island of Cozumel and share the coast with hotels, locals, and other visitors. Isla Pasion is geographically separate. You arrive by boat, the island holds a controlled number of guests per day, and the experience feels qualitatively different from a beach club.
The water is calm. The island's protected northern position, combined with the shallow channel, produces some of the gentlest swimming conditions in the Cozumel area. Kids who would be uncomfortable in the surf at most Cozumel beaches play happily in waist-deep water at Isla Pasion.
The all-inclusive is meaningful. Open bars at beach clubs are common in Cozumel; full all-inclusive food, drink, and activity packages on a private island are not. The math usually works out in the visitor's favor — by the time you have eaten lunch, had a few drinks, and used the kayaks or paddleboards, the day pass has paid for itself.
The crowd cap is real. Beach clubs on the main island can absorb very large groups on heavy cruise days. The boat capacity to Isla Pasion limits the number of guests on the island, which keeps the sand and the water from feeling overrun.
For travelers planning a port day around relaxation rather than activity, Isla Pasion sits at the top of the list of things to do in Cozumel for exactly these reasons.
How the access and transfers work
Booking Isla Pasion is a single-package commitment. Once you book, the operator handles the entire chain:
Pickup at the cruise pier or hotel. A short transfer (usually 30 to 45 minutes) up the western coast to the marina at the northern tip of Cozumel.
Boat ride to the island. A roughly 15-minute ride on a covered boat across the calm channel. This is one of the most photographed transfers in Cozumel — the water turns from deep blue to brilliant turquoise as you approach the shallows.
Wristband check-in. On arrival, you receive an all-inclusive wristband at a small reception cabana. From there, the entire island is open to you.
Beach time. Loungers, palapas, hammocks, and beach beds are available across the island on a first-come basis. Premium private cabanas can be booked separately for an upgrade.
Lunch service. Buffet-style Mexican and international food, typically served midday with a long open window.
Activities. Included activities usually cover kayaks, paddleboards, snorkeling gear, and beach volleyball. Optional add-ons include massages, parasailing, and small-group banana boat rides.
Return transfer. Boats and ground transfers run on a fixed afternoon schedule. Build in a comfortable buffer before your ship's all-aboard call.
The entire experience runs about six to seven hours door to door, which fits well inside a standard cruise port window but does require committing to the full day. This is not a tour where you pop in for an hour.
What the all-inclusive really covers
The most common confusion about Isla Pasion is around what is and is not included. The published packages vary slightly by operator, but the standard inclusions are:
Round-trip transportation from the cruise pier
Welcome drink on arrival
Beach loungers, palapas, and hammocks
Buffet lunch
Open bar (national beer, house cocktails, wine, soft drinks, water)
Snorkel gear
Kayaks and paddleboards
Beach volleyball, soccer, and lawn games
Restrooms and changing facilities
Common upgrades and add-ons (extra cost):
Premium beach cabanas with bottle service
Massages and spa services
Parasailing
Banana boat and tube rides
Premium liquor brands at the bar
Underwater photo packages
Things to budget for outside the package:
Tips for boat crew, beach servers, and lunch staff (10 to 15% in cash is standard)
Locker rental if you want to secure valuables
Souvenirs from the small on-island shop
For first-time visitors trying to decide which Cozumel excursion fits their day, our tours page compares the major options side by side.
When to visit Isla Pasion Cozumel
Like the rest of Cozumel, Isla Pasion runs year-round, with seasonal differences worth understanding before you book.
December through April is high season. Expect the calmest water, the most consistent weather, and the highest demand. Cruise traffic is heaviest in this window, which means the boats fill earlier — book ahead.
May and June are an excellent value window. Water temperatures are warm, the crowds thin out, and pricing on some operator packages drops slightly.
July through October is hurricane season. Most days are still beautiful, but the chance of disrupted sailings rises and post-storm sediment can affect the channel water clarity. Travel insurance is worth considering if your trip falls in this window.
November rebounds quickly after summer storms and offers a strong combination of warm water, clear channel visibility, and lower-than-peak pricing.
For port-day planners, the Cozumel cruise port overview shows which piers are likely to be busiest on your specific sailing date, which affects how much buffer time to leave for transfers.
Who Isla Pasion Cozumel is right for — and who should skip it
Isla Pasion is not the right excursion for everyone. The honest tradeoff:
It is a great fit for:
Families with young children who want safe, calm water
Couples looking for a relaxed all-inclusive beach day with photo-worthy scenery
Multi-generational groups where some people want to be active and others just want to nap in a hammock
First-time Cozumel visitors who want a low-stress day that requires no decision-making once they arrive
Anyone whose mental picture of a "perfect cruise port day" is white sand, turquoise water, and an open bar
It is probably not the right fit for:
Snorkelers focused on coral reefs and abundant marine life — the channel around Isla Pasion is gorgeous but does not have the reef structure of Palancar or Columbia. A dedicated snorkeling tour is a better choice.
Adventure travelers wanting jeep tours, ATV rides, or zipline experiences — Cozumel has fantastic options for those, just not on Isla Pasion.
Tight-budget travelers — there are cheaper Cozumel beach options if pricing is the primary constraint.
Visitors with very short port windows (under six hours total) — the transfer time eats too much of the day to make it worthwhile.
Tips that actually improve your Isla Pasion day
Five practical points repeat consistently in good reviews:
Arrive early. The earliest boat departures get you to the island while the sand and water are still uncrowded. By midday, the island is at its busiest.
Pick your spot deliberately. Beach loungers near the main service area are convenient; loungers a 5-minute walk down the beach are genuinely peaceful. Walk past the first row of chairs.
Use the included activities. The kayaks and paddleboards are sitting right there. People consistently regret not using them.
Pack mineral sunscreen. Mexican law and basic environmental decency require reef-safe (oxybenzone-free, octinoxate-free) sunscreen. Bring it from home — selection on the island is limited and expensive.
Bring small bills for tips. Tipping in USD or pesos in cash is the norm. Boat crew, lunch servers, and beach attendants all earn a meaningful share of their income through gratuities. Plan for $10 to $20 per person in tip cash across the day.
For broader trip planning beyond Isla Pasion, our plan your day tool helps you sequence transfers, excursions, and shopping time so the entire port day flows smoothly.
Final thoughts on Isla Pasion Cozumel
Isla Pasion delivers a specific kind of port day extremely well: a private-island, all-inclusive, calm-water beach experience with almost no decisions required once you arrive. For families, couples, and groups who want exactly that, it is one of the strongest excursions in Cozumel and consistently lands at the top of guest reviews.
The keys to a great Isla Pasion day are not complicated: book ahead with a reputable operator, arrive early, use the included activities, respect the marine environment, and leave a comfortable buffer for the return transfer. Do those things, and you will end the day with the kind of vacation memories that the photos are actually trying to capture — calm turquoise water, soft white sand, and the genuine sense that for a few hours on a private island off Cozumel, the rest of the world stayed home.