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Tipping at Hotel Xcaret: Who, How Much, What Currency

Jan 13, 2025
XcaretBy Katie York

Reviewed for accuracy on Jan 13, 2025

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Tipping at Hotel Xcaret: Who, How Much, What Currency

The Hotel Xcaret rate sheet says "gratuities included." Every concierge I've spoken to confirms it. And every front-line staff member at the property — bartender, server, pool attendant, housekeeper — works in a tip-driven Mexican hospitality culture where the published rate "including tips" still leaves a meaningful gap between "fair pay" and "actually generous."

After five stays I've settled into a tipping pattern that I think is honest, not extravagant, and produces noticeably better service. Here's the version I'd give a friend before their first stay.

The short answer

Tips are not required. They are absolutely expected. The rule I follow:

If you would tip the same person at a US restaurant or hotel, tip them here. The "all-inclusive includes gratuity" line is technically true and ignores how the actual service economy works on the ground in Quintana Roo.

For a couple on a 5-night stay, I'm typically out roughly $200–$300 in tips across the entire week. That's on top of the room rate. It's not optional in the moral sense even if it's optional in the contractual sense.

What I tip and to whom

This is what I actually do, refined over five stays. Amounts in USD with peso equivalents — both currencies are accepted equally for tips at the hotel.

  • Bartender, per drink — $1–2 USD or 20–40 pesos. I drop one bill on the bar with the order, not at the end. The next round comes faster and stronger.
  • Server, dinner — $5–10 USD per couple per meal, on top of the included gratuity, depending on how attentive they were. I tip more at the smaller, slower restaurants (Encanto, Cocina de Mexicana) where one server actually owns your table.
  • Server, buffet — $3–5 USD per meal. They're not doing as much, but they're still clearing plates and refilling drinks.
  • Pool waiter, per round — $1–2 USD. Same logic as the bar. First round comes with a tip, every subsequent round is fast.
  • Housekeeping — $5 USD per night, left in cash on the desk with a "thank you" note in the morning. Not at the end of the stay. The person who cleans your room on day one is often a different person than the one on day five, and the tip should land with whoever did the work.
  • Bellhop / luggage — $5 USD per bag at arrival, same at departure if a different person handles it.
  • Concierge, for bookings — $10–20 USD if they did real work for me. Booking your standard week of dinners doesn't require a tip; getting you a last-minute Sound of Xcaret ticket or a HA' table on a sold-out night absolutely does.
  • Spa therapist — 10–15% of the treatment price. Spa is not part of All-Fun-Inclusive so the gratuity is real money on top of a real bill, but the same logic applies.
  • Park guides and shuttle drivers — $5–10 USD for the day if they were genuinely helpful. The Xichén Chichén Itzá day tour driver and guide always get the bigger end of that.
  • Kids' club staff — $10 USD per day if they had your kid for more than a couple of hours. Easy to forget, important to do.

The staff people forget

A few service roles people skip without realizing they should tip:

  • The pool towel attendant. They're handing you fresh towels and storing your stuff in a cubby. $1–2 at the start of the day buys you the better cubby and the dry towel later.
  • The boat shuttle crew. The boat that runs through the underground rivers between México and Xcaret park has a small crew. $2–3 for a full-family group on a peak day means a lot to them.
  • The host at restaurant entry. They're the ones who can find you a table when you forgot to make a reservation. $5 in the right hand on a packed night actually works.
  • The kitchen. A few of the smaller restaurants will let you tip the chef directly if you ask. I've done this once at Cocina de Mexicana after a particularly good meal and the chef came out to thank us at the table.

Pesos or US dollars?

Both are accepted everywhere. The honest breakdown:

  • For the worker, pesos are slightly better. The hotel will exchange large piles of small USD bills for them, but they take a small hit on the rate. Pesos are usable directly.
  • For you, USD is more convenient if you didn't pull pesos at the airport ATM. A pile of one-dollar bills from your home bank is the easiest tipping kit to bring on the plane.
  • A mix is fine. I bring about $80 in singles for the first two days and switch to pesos once I've hit the on-property ATM.

What you should not do is tip with credit cards "added to the room charge" through a server. That money goes through a hotel pool and the worker in front of you sees a fraction of it on their next paycheck. Cash on the bar / cash on the table / cash in hand is the clean way.

The full money picture — exchange rates, ATMs, where to avoid the front-desk rate — is in the Hotel Xcaret currency guide.

Round numbers I bring on every trip

For a 5-night couples stay, I land in Cancún with this in cash, in singles and small bills, in my carry-on:

  • $80–$100 USD in singles for early-trip bartenders, pool waiters, bellhops
  • $40 USD in fives and tens for housekeeping (one $5 per night plus a buffer)
  • $50 USD in tens or twenties for concierge / spa / kids' club
  • A debit card with no foreign-transaction fee for the on-property ATM withdrawal of pesos on day two

For a family of four on a longer stay, double everything except the concierge / spa float — that line scales with the number of bookings, not the number of bodies.

What I do not tip

A few things where I either don't tip or tip much smaller than people assume:

  • At the included buffet drink station. The person handing you a coffee at breakfast is at a counter, not a table. Big tips at the buffet drink station feel awkward to everyone.
  • At the gift shop. It's retail. The cashier is on a salary, not a tip economy.
  • For the front desk check-in agent. Their job is salaried and they handle the room assignment, not the service experience. I've never tipped at check-in and I've never had a problem.
  • On a folio "automatic gratuity" line at HA'. HA' adds a service charge automatically to the supplement bill. I usually add a small additional tip ($10–20) for the captain who ran our table, but I don't double-tip the full amount.

What I'd do differently

My first stay I tipped roughly half what I tip now and convinced myself "all-inclusive includes gratuity" was the whole story. The service was fine. It was not warm. By day three I noticed the couples around me getting faster bar pours, friendlier check-ins, and a particular waiter who knew their drink order without asking — and the difference was a dollar bill on the bar with every order.

Now I treat tips at Hotel Xcaret the same way I'd treat tips at a domestic US hotel where I want repeat-customer treatment. The math is roughly $40–$60 a day for a couple, scaled to family size. The difference in actual experience is far larger than the cost.

For the related-money picture, the currency guide covers ATMs and exchange rates, and the bracelet system explainer covers what charges still hit your room even with All-Fun-Inclusive — both relevant context for how much cash you should actually bring.

Free PDF

Get the free Hotel Xcaret Cheat Sheet (PDF)

12 pages of pre-trip booking order, tipping, what's included, and the restaurants to reserve before you fly.

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