What you should know before moving to Playa del Carmen
There are things about moving to Playa del Carmen that nobody tells you until you are already here. Most of them are not problems. They are just differences. Understanding them before you arrive saves you a week of confusion and prevents the kind of early frustration that has nothing to do with the city and everything to do with wrong expectations.
Practical things to know before moving to Playa del Carmen
Your tourist visa gives you up to 180 days
When you fly in, immigration gives you a form (FMM) with a number of days. It can be anywhere from 7 to 180. Most people get 180, but it is not guaranteed. Check the number before you leave the airport. If it is lower than you need, you can request more at the immigration counter. Once you leave, it is much harder to change.
The peso is stronger than you expect
If you are coming from the US or Europe, Playa is more affordable than most cities back home but less cheap than many older travel guides suggest. The peso has strengthened significantly in recent years. Budget based on current exchange rates, not on blog posts from 2019.
WiFi varies a lot
Some apartments have solid, fast internet. Others have connections that drop regularly. WiFi speed is something to verify before signing a lease or committing to a longer stay. Coworking spaces are generally reliable. Your accommodation internet may not be.
Not everything takes cards
Larger restaurants, supermarkets, and chains accept cards reliably. Smaller restaurants, laundry services, markets, and many local businesses are cash-only. Carry pesos. Always have small bills.
The heat is real from May to September
Playa is humid tropical. From May through September, midday heat can be intense. A/C in your apartment is not optional during these months. Plan your outdoor time for mornings and late afternoons. Most residents adjust their routines around the heat without thinking about it after the first few weeks.
Social things to know before moving to Playa del Carmen
The community is genuinely welcoming
This is not a city where newcomers struggle to break in. The expat and nomad community is large, active, and used to people arriving. Events, groups, and shared spaces make it easy to meet people quickly. You just need to show up.
Spanish helps but is not required
English is widely spoken in Centro, tourist areas, and most businesses that expats use regularly. But learning basic Spanish makes daily life smoother and opens up a much wider range of restaurants, services, and neighborhoods. Even a few phrases go a long way.
Playa has a rhythm you will need to find
Things move slower here. Errands take longer. Appointments start late. Deliveries arrive when they arrive. This is not inefficiency. It is just a different pace. The people who adjust fastest are the ones who stop measuring everything by how it worked at home.
Things that surprise most people after arriving
- How walkable the city is. Most of what you need is within 15 minutes on foot.
- How many people are in the same boat. You will meet other newcomers immediately.
- How fast it starts to feel normal. Most people stop feeling like tourists within two to three weeks.
- How much the neighborhoods vary in character within a small area.
Knowing these things before moving to Playa del Carmen does not remove the adjustment period. It just makes it shorter and less stressful.