
Sunset over the gulf. Chicxulub Puerto is the part of the Emerald Coast where the day ends with the residents on the malecón — the small beach clubs in their golden-hour rhythm, the small fishing boats coming back from the day's catch, the gulf finally cool.
The Yucatán gulf coast — the corridor known locally as the Emerald Coast — stretches roughly ninety-eight kilometers along the northern shore of the peninsula, from Chelem in the west through Progreso, Chicxulub Puerto, Telchac Puerto, and San Crisanto. The coastline is distinguished by crystalline emerald waters, powdery amber sand, and the secondary-residence rhythm that has shaped the corridor's character for generations — earning Chicxulub Puerto the local nickname of the 'Yucatán Hamptons.' The corridor pairs the gulf-coast beaches with proximity to Mérida (twenty-five to seventy-five minutes inland depending on the village) and a chain of fishing villages, malecones, and small harbors that anchor the social rhythm. The corridor reads as the part of Yucatán the residents who came for the gulf-coast secondary-residence side of the peninsula chose deliberately.
Inside Northern, the architecture takes the gulf coast seriously. Each residence spans 2,519 square feet — two or three bedrooms, balcony space drawn for actual outdoor living, full-height openings that pull the gulf light deep into the interior, kitchens scaled for someone who actually cooks rather than reheats. The materials are honest — wood, stone, glass — and the building's amenity floor supports the kind of community that takes Chicxulub Puerto seriously.
Delivery in 2027. Pricing at $15,800,000 MXN. Northern sits in Chicxulub Puerto at the rare scale of a real family-format residence on the corridor — a footprint that the denser projects simply cannot replicate. For the buyer who came to Yucatán for the most considered version of the 'Yucatán Hamptons' rhythm at the family scale, this is one of the most distinctive new addresses in the neighborhood.
Chicxulub Puerto is a small coastal village on the Yucatán's Gulf coast, 5 km east of Progreso. Historically a fishing village (and famous for the asteroid impact crater offshore), it has emerged in recent years as a residential alternative to Progreso — quieter beach, smaller-scale builds, and a real Yucatecan town character. Real estate here is typically beach-front condos or single-family casas at 20-30% discounts to Progreso central inventory.
At Mexico Luxury Properties, we provide personalized guidance through every step of your purchase. Contact us for a private consultation, virtual tour, or to request the full development brochure.