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El Cozumeleno Beach Resort - Cozumel, Mexico

Playa Santa Pilar Km 4.5
Cozumel, 77600
Nightly Rates (312.00 - 342.00)   4 Star
El Cozumeleno Beach Resort

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
This elegant resort is only five minutes from the airport, downtown and shopping area. Here you can find romance, excitement or relaxation. Remodeled and expanded, this 252 room resort offers the most spectacular swimming pools in Isla Cozumel, here you won't pay for meals, tips and snacks, or premium beachside cocktails on the perfect chaise, or snorkeling or scuba lessons or tennis and much more. ALL INCLUSIVE FEATURES: Room, baggage handling, breakfast buffet, lunch, dinner, beer, wine, liquor & soft drinks, daytime tennis, miniature golf, fitness center, game room, all taxes, and theme nights.

El Cozumeleno Beach Resort


Amenities
  • 120 AC

  • Air Conditioned

  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Balcony

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Beach

  • Porters

  • Boating

  • Boutiques

  • Car Rental Desk

  • Conference Facilities

  • Currency Exchange

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Disco

  • Drugstore

  • Driving Range

  • Elevators

  • Fishing

  • Game Room

  • Golf

  • Exercise Gym

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Horseback Riding

  • International Direct Dial

  • Iron

  • Iron

  • Jacuzzi

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Lounge

  • Maid Service

  • Multilingual

  • No Smoking Rooms/Facilities

  • Play Ground

  • Pool

  • Indoor Pool

  • Outdoor Pool

  • Poolside Snackbar

  • Parking

  • Putting Green

  • Restaurant

  • Room Service

  • Safe

  • Scuba Diving

  • Security

  • Telephone

  • Tour Desk

  • TV

  • Television with Cable

  • Wake-up Service

  • Wind Surfing


  • Rate Disclaimer
    Room rate ranges are a general guideline. Specific rates will be displayed based on your day of arrival and room rates available. Click on the "Book It" icon to view specific rate information, guarantee and cancel policy. To speak with a reservation agent, please call 1 800 207-6900 USA and Canada. If calling from outside the U.S.A., see our international reservation phone numbers at www.hotelbook.com/brands/HB/bookit.htm

    Miscellaneous Information
  • American Dollars is the native currency. 

  • 252  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 5  floors. 


  • Directions
    Principal Airport: Aeropuerto Int'l Airport CZM 2 mi, San Gervasio Ruins 11 mi, San Miguel Town Center 3 mi

    Guarantee Policy
    A credit card is required to book online. Peak seasons may require your card is charged in advance. Reading the rate rules after selecting your rate will indicate if your card will be charged. This information will appear in your email confirmation.

    Cancellation Policy
    Subject to the discretion of the hotel, the credit card provided may be charged if the reservation is canceled after the cancellation deadline has passed or if the guest fails to arrive. The cancellation policy will appear after selecting rate rules.

    Restaurant Information
    Restaurants  El Coral Restaurant, serving International cuisine buffet style for breakfast and dinner, lunch is a la carte. La Veranda Restaurant, serving gourmet international cuisine a la carte for dinner only. Snack Bar, serving fast food from 11:00am to 5:00pm.

    Meeting Facility
  • Meeting & Conference Facilities
  •   Convention Center Length - 32.45 meters Width - 15.60 meters Height - 4.28 meters Maximum Theatre Style Capacity - 530 Maximum Classroom Style Capacity - 295 Maximum U Shaped Style Capacity - 120 Maxumum Boardroom Style Capacity - 120 Maximum Cocktail Style Capacity - 530 Maximum Banquet Style Capacity - 400 Maximum Dinner-Dance Style Capacity - 350 Meeting rooms has windows with natural daylight that can be effectively blacked out. Brand new convention center divisible into smaller ballrooms only convention center available in Cozumel.



    Related Mexico Content

    ’¡Viva Mexico!’ was how Miguel Hidalgo rallied his fellow Mexicanos to the struggle against colonialism, and it is a cry that is repeated by the president and echoed throughout the land every 15 September - Independence Day. As slogans go, it could not be more apt; Mexico is bursting with life. 

    While many nations live to work, Mexico does the opposite. The people are vivacious lovers of free time and socialising, and work will never have the importance that friends and family do. The mother, giver of life, is honored and respected, and all children, whether
    belonging to locals or visitors, are doted upon.

    The country’s past seems to live at one with its present. In Mexico City, the Plaza de las Tres Culturas celebrates the three major cultures that have shaped Mexico: there are Aztec ruins, the 17th-century colonial church of San Diego and several late 20th-century buildings. Even the dead are alive here, at least once a year; on the Day of the Dead, the living bring gifts to their dearly departed and spend the night in their company, remembering and celebrating how things used to be.

    Where the Caribbean Sea meets the Yucatan Peninsula, coral reefs come alive, with sea creatures, great and small. The Pacific coast attracts elephant seals and spectacular grey whales, who choose Mexico to breed and give birth, year after year. 

    Nor is the desert a barrier to life - it is home to agave, the mother of all tequilas. The blue plant has a lot to answer for in Acapulco and Cancún, where humans come ashore after a day in the surf to flirt in bars and nightclubs.

    The biggest mass of teeming life in the whole of Mexico, is of course, its capital, where 20 million people (a fifth of the whole population) squeeze in together to work and play, live and love, die... and come back to life.

    Geography
    Mexico is at the southern extremity of North America and is bordered to the north by the USA, northwest by the Gulf of California, west by the Pacific, south by Guatemala and Belize, and east by the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean. Mexico’s geographical features range from swamp to desert, and from tropical lowland jungle to high alpine vegetation. Over half the country is at an altitude greater than 1,000m (3,300ft). The central land mass is a plateau flanked by ranges of mountains to the east and west that lie roughly parallel to the coast. The northern area of this plateau is arid and thinly populated, and occupies 40% of the total area of Mexico. The southern area is crossed by a range of volcanic mountains running from Cape Corrientes in the west through the Valley of Mexico to Veracruz in the east, and includes the magnificent volcanoes of Cofre de Perote, Ixtaccíhuatl, Matlalcueyetl, Nevado de Toluca, Orizaba and Popocatépetl. This is the heart of Mexico and where almost half of the population lives. To the south, the land falls away to the sparsely populated Isthmus of Tehuantepec whose slopes and flatlands support both commercial and subsistence agriculture. In the east, the Gulf Coast and the Yucatán peninsula are flat and receive over 75% of Mexico’s rain. The most productive agricultural region in Mexico is the northwest, while the Gulf Coast produces most of Mexico’s oil and sulphur. Along the northwest coast, opposite the peninsula of Baja California, and to the southeast along the coast of Bahía de Campeche and the Yucatán peninsula, the lowlands are swampy with coastal lagoons.


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