Playa del Carmen, on Mexico’s Riviera Maya, is the setting for Dive Mike’s Divemaster course — a focused professional program that moves experienced recreational divers into leadership roles. Located steps from the town’s piers, the training mixes shore-based knowledge sessions, skills circuits in protected bays, and guided dives on nearby coral reefs over the course of approximately fifty hours. The local dive terrain is varied: towering spur-and-groove reef ridges, fringing coral gardens, and clear sand channels punctuated by rocky bommies. Beneath the surface, you’ll navigate classic Caribbean features — staghorn and brain coral colonies, columns of elkhorn, rocky swim-throughs, and occasional cenote inlet profiles where limestone karst influences water chemistry and visibility. Key features for training include reef-wall dropoffs used for deep skills, current channels ideal for drift leadership exercises, and night-dive sites that test navigation and scene management under low light. Dive Mike runs the SDI and PADI Divemaster pathways. The program’s practical emphasis is what sets it apart: instructors focus on real-world supervision, dive planning, emergency response, and small-group management aboard local skiffs. The course requires Rescue Diver certification, at least forty logged dives at entry, current CPR and First Aid, and medical clearance; students complete ten evaluated dives during the program and must have sixty logged dives at certification. Included are air tanks, weights, instructor supervision, and drinking water on the boat; learning materials, equipment rental, NITROX, and marine park fees are additional. This training is rooted in the region’s maritime culture. The Riviera Maya occupies lands long crossed by Maya trade routes, and nearby protected reefs such as those by Cozumel reflect decades of conservation work. As a candidate you’ll learn sustainable habits—proper buoyancy to keep off coral, reef-safe sunscreen use, and the rationale for paying marine park fees that support local management. Beyond accreditation, the Divemaster course offers a gateway to the local dive industry. Graduates often guide tourists across coral passes, supervise specialty clinics, or assist on wreck and cenote trips. For divers who want to teach confidence, hone rescue judgment, and work with Mexico’s Caribbean ecosystems, this course in Playa del Carmen is a demanding, hands-on proving ground that converts enthusiasm into professional capability. Check-in is at 8:00 AM at dive shop in Playa del Carmen; bring a swimsuit, towel, biodegradable sunscreen, your certification cards. Dive Mike staff can answer course questions and pricing — contact them via the website, phone +52 984 803 1228, WhatsApp +52 984 235 0817, or email [email protected]. Expect classroom blocks mixed with full-day boat operations and shore drills; plan on several consecutive days or spaced sessions depending on your schedule. For those serious about a diving career, the practical hours and local reef exposure make this program a next step.