Tickets for Teotihuacán: Fast-Track Admission & Transport from Mexico City
Take a day to visit one of the most impressive sites of the Aztec world
- Get return transport to the Mexican archaeological complex of Teotihuacán in air-conditioned comfort from Mexico City (roughly 2 hours each way)
- Spend 4 hours at the site and visit the onsite Museum of Teotihuacán Culture, filled with pottery and bones
- Climb the magnificent Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, see the Butterflies Temple, the Avenue of the Dead and the Temple of Quetzalcoatl
Get return transport to the Mexican archaeological complex of Teotihuacán from Mexico City. Skip the lines with fast-track entrance and explore the Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, see the Butterflies Temple, the Avenue of the Dead, the Temple of Quetzalcoatl and the onsite museum!
Once a prosperous pre-Columbian city, the Mexican archaeological complex of Teotihuacán would have looked very different between the 1st and 7th centuries AD. Back then almost 25,000 people called it home.
Lace up your comfy walking shoes and travel northeast from Mexico City to spend 4 hours wandering this landmark site, packed with history and mystery.
Climb the magnificent Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, see the Butterflies Temple, the Avenue of the Dead and the Temple of Quetzalcoatl. Then visit the onsite Museum of Teotihuacán Culture, filled with pottery and bones from this amazing ancient era.
Find out why Teotihuacán is still considered a model of urbanization and large-scale planning, which has greatly influenced contemporary culture.
Show your smartphone ticket at the meeting point.
- Cancellations are possible up to 72 hours before your visit date
- Changes may be possible for this ticket
Departure Points in Mexico City
- Zona Rosa: NH Reforma Hotel, Calle Liverpool 155, Juárez quarter, between metro stations Sevilla and Cuauhtémoc
- Downtown: Hostel Amigo, Calle Isabel la Católica 61-A, Historic Center, close to metro stations San Juan de Letrán, Isabel la Católica, Zócalo, Allende, Pino Suárez, and Salto del Agua
Did you know the San Juan River's course was literally altered to cross the Avenue of the Dead? Now that's commitment!
