Mexico City   Travel Guide

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16 Best Things To Do in Mexico City

Mexico City, officially known as Ciudad de México (CDMX), is a growing and vibrant metropolis nestled in the heart of Mexico. The capital city of Mexico offers a blend of history, culture and gastronomy that attracts millions of annual visitors. From

  • All Things To Do

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Museo Nacional de Antropología Museo Nacional de Antropología

Located within the sprawling Chapultepec Forest , the Museo Nacional de Antropología (National Museum of Anthropology) showcases artifacts from Mexico's pre-Columbian era, dating from about 100 B.C. to A.D. 1521. Housed within the facility’s 22 rooms are artifacts, including the famous Aztec Calendar Stone, known as Piedra del Sol, as well as the ancient statue of Xochipilli, the Aztec god of art, games, beauty, dance and maize (among others). The museum offers a look at how tradition, culture and life were formed in all regions of Mexico, and it also educates visitors on how Mexico’s indigenous descendants live today. 

Past visitors said this is a must-see if you’re interested in the ancient cultures of Mexico/Mesoamerica. Reviewers appreciated that the explanatory text features English translations. The museum is so extensive that many travelers said you can spend a whole day exploring the many collections and exhibits and recommend giving yourself plenty of time to visit. As one of the largest and most visited museums in Mexico, the grounds are also home to a gift shop, a cafeteria and the National Library of Anthropology and History. 

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Bosque de Chapultepec Bosque de Chapultepec free

The main park in Mexico City, Bosque de Chapultepec (Chapultepec Forest) was once the temporary home of the Aztec empire after its citizens migrated to modern-day Mexico City in the 13th century. Today, the 1,600-acre Chapultepec is Mexico City's largest park and is popular among families seeking respite from the busy and crowded city.

Divided into three sections, the park is home to many cultural interests, such as the presidential residence, the former presidential palace, a zoo and several museums (including the highly recommended Museo Nacional de Antropología ). The park also hosts numerous military monuments and effigies of Aztec kings, as well as restaurants and playgrounds, plus lots of green space for stretching. What's more, the park features a large lake, where visitors and locals alike can rent pedal boats to cruise around the water (a particular highlight for kids). On the weekends, local vendors fill the park and sell everything from souvenirs to art to snacks.

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Palacio de Bellas Artes Palacio de Bellas Artes free

Considered the cultural center of Mexico City, the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts) is a must-visit. The exterior of this 20th-century palace showcases art nouveau and art deco-style architecture, while the inside features marble floors and vaulted glass windows. 

In addition to its architectural grandeur, the building hosts cultural events in the national theater, including music, dance, theater, opera and literary performances. The museum at the palace also houses several famous murals, including the work of the famous Mexican muralist Rufino Tamayo. On the top floor, you'll find the National Museum of Architecture, which showcases the work and lives of famous Mexican architects, and multiple art museums and galleries. 

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Popular Tours

Hot Air Balloon Flight over Teotihuacan, from Mexico City

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Balloon flight with pick up in CDMX + Breakfast in a natural cave

Balloon flight with pick up in CDMX + Breakfast in a natural cave

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Xochimilco, Coyoacán & Frida Kahlo Museum

Xochimilco, Coyoacán & Frida Kahlo Museum

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Zócalo (Plaza de la Constitución) Zócalo (Plaza de la Constitución) free

U.S. News Insider Tip: The Zócalo attracts throngs of visitors and locals, so visit in the early morning or afternoon during a weekday to avoid the heaviest crowds. – Kayla Hui

Officially known as Plaza de la Constitución, El Zócalo is the main public square and one of the most recognizable places in Mexico City. It’s also one of the world’s largest city squares. It contains a giant Mexican flag at its center and has been the centerpiece of public gatherings since the days of the Aztec empire (it was considered the ceremonial center of Tenochtitlán). The site also hosts annual, widely attended religious events during Holy Week and for Corpus Christi, as well as fairs, concerts, and parades. Several historic buildings also border the square, including the city's national cathedral , the National Palace  and federal buildings.

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Museo Frida Kahlo Museo Frida Kahlo

One of the best-known museums in Mexico City exhibits the life and work of its most famous artist: Frida Kahlo. The museum, located in the Coyoacan suburb, is also known as La Casa Azul (The Blue House), and was Kahlo's former residence. It hosts some impressive examples of her works, but travelers say that the best part of visiting the house is seeing where the artist lived and painted with her husband, artist Diego Rivera. Along with paintings by both artists, folk art, photos, documents, books and furnishings, the house also displays personal objects.

Recent visitors to the property said it's a must-see for fans of the artist, saying it shows her life and work in a very personal light. Reviewers were particularly impressed with the display of her clothing and dresses. If you want to take photos, there is an additional modest “permit” fee. 

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Basílica de Santa María de Guadalupe Basílica de Santa María de Guadalupe free

U.S. News Insider Tip: During the summer months, pack a hat and water bottle (there is little shade within the complex). If you plan to use the bathroom on site, bring a couple of pesos with you to use the bathroom and buy toilet paper. – Kayla Hui 

The Basílica de Santa María de Guadalupe (Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe) is an important religious site in Mexico City. Construction for the first shrine built to honor the Virgin Mary of Guadalupe started in 1695 on Tepeyac Hill. However, nearly 300 years' worth of construction and environmental damage threatened the integrity of the basilica, so a new basilica was built on the same plaza in the 1970s.

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Templo Mayor Templo Mayor

Before Spanish colonization, Templo Mayor served as the religious center for the Aztec people. When Spanish conquistadors arrived in the early 16th century, the temple was among many structures that were destroyed and a new cathedral was built on top of the ruins. It wasn't until 1978 that the temple dedicated to the Aztec gods Huitzilopochtli and Tláloc (gods of war and water) was unearthed in the heart of Mexico City. Today, the area remains an active archeological site and the adjoining museum houses thousands of  artifacts, including 2,500 wooden objects from the site. 

Recent visitors said it's fascinating to see the ancient ruins that are tucked away in the center of the city. Many said it's worth spending time in the museum as well, but the site and scale can't match up to the massive Museo Nacional de Antropología . Still, the whole complex has been deemed a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is one of Mexico City's most popular attractions. If you’re visiting during the summer months, travelers suggest you time your visit for the morning to avoid the sweltering midday heat. Reviewers also warn that most of the information is listed in Spanish only.

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Museo de Arte Popular Museo de Arte Popular

U.S. News Insider Tip: Ditch the large bags and water bottles prior to your visit as you may be denied entry. – Kayla Hui

This folk art museum features handicrafts from all across Mexico and details the country's history and its many cultures. If you want to find out more about the country’s indigenous communities, this is the place to go, according to travelers. Exhibits include glasswork from Tecali, pottery from Michoacán, masks from Chiapas and alebrijes , the colorful painted animal figures from Oaxaca, among other treasures. Make sure to take time to admire the building itself – the 1920s art deco building was the former headquarters of the fire department.

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Teotihuacan, Guadalupe Shrine, Tlatelolco & Tequila Tasting Tour

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Full-Day Tour Exploring the Waters of Tolantongo

Full-Day Tour Exploring the Waters of Tolantongo

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Balloon flight in Teotihuacán + Pick up CDMX + Breakfast in cave.

Balloon flight in Teotihuacán + Pick up CDMX + Breakfast in cave.

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Chalpultepec Castle Chalpultepec Castle

U.S. News Insider Tip: Sundays are free for all residents of Mexico and expats living in Mexico, so try to avoid visiting that day if you can. It can get crowded, so it’s recommended to go in the morning when the castle first opens. – Kayla Hui

Constructed beginning in 1725, Chalpultepec Castle has served many purposes in its centuries of use; it was a military academy, an observatory, and the only castle in North America to house rulers, including Emperor Maximilian I and his wife Empress Carlota. It would later be established as the National Museum of History by Lázaro Cárdenas in 1939, which would open the castle to visitors. Located at the entrance of Chalpultepec Park , it’s a historical site that can’t be missed on your next visit to Mexico City. 

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Catedral Metropolitana Catedral Metropolitana free

Mexico's national cathedral – the vaulting, austere, ornate church on the Zócalo' s north end – was once the site of an ancient Aztec precinct, so it has housed the city's spiritual core for centuries. The cathedral was built between 1573 and 1813 after the Spanish conquest of Tenochtitlan and is considered one of Mexico City's many must-see attractions. What’s more, the cathedral is one of the largest churches in Latin America. It’s believed that the materials used to construct the church were taken from the destroyed pyramids and structures belonging to the Aztecs. Highlights of the massive cathedral include five naves, 14 chapels, two of the largest 18th-century organs in the Americas, 150 windows and a painting by famed Spanish artist Bartolome Esteban Murillo.

Depending on your interest in Mexican history and architecture, you could spend anywhere from an hour to a half a day at the cathedral (it’s free to enter). Past visitors recommended paying to take a tour of the interior with a member of the cathedral’s staff, who reviewers say offer a wealth of information about the cathedral’s far-reaching history. According to recent visitors, tours cost approximately 100 Mexican pesos (about $6). Recent visitors said the massive structure is stunning to behold, and even if you don't want to take the time to explore the inside, it's worth the photo-op of the exterior. The cathedral is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and admission is free. Many of the best Mexico City walking tours make stops here, which can be another way to hear an in-depth retelling of the cathedral’s history and significance.  For more information, including Mass times, visit the cathedral's website (in Spanish).

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Museo Soumaya Museo Soumaya free

From exceptional architecture to more than 66,000 featured works, Museo Soumaya is one of Mexico City’s most iconic museums. Established in 1994, Museo Soumaya’s main goal is to preserve and exhibit Mexico and Europe’s artistry. Currently, it houses the largest collection of works by Auguste Rodin outside of France, in addition to artwork by Diego Rivera, Titian, Picasso, Monet and more. 

Beyond the art, the architecture alone is worth seeing. The exterior of the six-story building is wrapped in mirrored hexagons, and the building is the brainchild of Mexican architect Fernando Romero. Recent travelers say Museo Soumaya is reminiscent of New York City’s Guggenheim (both museums are architecturally stunning and feature a circular interior with each floor organized by art type). Some reviewers recommend starting your visit at the top and winding your way down. 

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Palacio Nacional Palacio Nacional free

The National Palace holds the federal executive branch of the Mexican government and sits along Mexico City's main public square, El Zócalo . The palace itself is a massive, ornate building that contains several gardens, murals and fountains in the Spanish Renaissance architectural style. Its highlights are several Diego Rivera murals painted in panoramic style across the palace's walls, which past visitors say are a must-see. These murals depict the stages of Mexican history, from pre-Columbian days to the current age.

Because the Mexican president lives and works within the palace, visitors can only access the site on a guided tour. Tours are free, but can’t be booked in advance online. According to recent visitors, you must go to the ticket office at the Museum of Art of the Ministry of Finance & Public Credit, where you can inquire about tour availability and make reservations in person (this is also where tours depart from). Some reviewers reported success booking tickets in advance by emailing [email protected] with information about the preferred tour date and number of people attending. Along the approximately hourlong tours, you’ll see the Rivera mural collections and the courtyards. You may also get the chance to glimpse the exterior of the legislative chambers. 

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Museo Casa Luis Barragán Museo Casa Luis Barragán

Luis Barragán was a prominent Mexican architect renowned for his modernist style, and his former home – which was first constructed in 1947 and now functions as a museum – is one of the finest examples of his work. The museum is an off-the-beaten-path attraction that travelers say will please all, even those not schooled in architectural history. The house is known for its vivid colors, brilliant use of natural light and its impressive garden with a maze of corridors and trees. In 2004, it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 

Recent visitors said the history of the house, in addition to its interesting architecture, is captivating. However, a handful of recent reviewers were disappointed with the ticket reservation process. To visit, you must book a self-guided or guided tour (available in Spanish and English). Self-guided visits are only available on Thursdays at select times. Tickets for self-guided tours cost 450 Mexican pesos (about $26) per person (note that children 12 and younger are not permitted in the house). Guided tours are available at select times Monday through Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Tickets for guided tours cost more. Tickets are released every Tuesday at noon (Mexico City time).  

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Private Tour: Teotihuacan and Guadalupe Shrine

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Teotihuacan Private Tour from Mexico City

Teotihuacan Private Tour from Mexico City

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from $ 126.25

Balloon Flight in Teotihuacan with Breakfast in Natural Cave

Balloon Flight in Teotihuacan with Breakfast in Natural Cave

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Torre Latinoamericana Torre Latinoamericana

Open since 1956, Torre Latinoamericana, the 44-story skyscraper in Centro Histórico, is the place to go if you want the best views of the city. Similar to the Empire State Building in New York City , this tower offers visitors jaw-dropping views from its observation deck and restaurant, making it the perfect opportunity to pull out your camera for that Instagram-worthy picture. 

Recent visitors recommended heading up to the top of the tower during sunset to admire the shifting light as it illuminates buildings like the neighboring Palace of Fine Arts. Travelers also warned that if smog levels are high, you won’t be able to see much from the tower’s peak. Some reviewers recommend spending time in the on-site museum, which details the history of Mexico City and the construction of the tower. 

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Teotihuacán Teotihuacán

U.S. News Insider Tip: There is no shade inside the archeological site, so you’ll want to wear a hat. It’s also helpful to have a small backpack to hold a water bottle, sunscreen and toilet paper to use in the washrooms at the site. – Kayla Hui

One of many UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the Mexico City region, Teotihuacán ( teh -o-tee-wa- can ) contains some of the largest pre-Hispanic pyramids in all of Mexico. The site contains many popular constructions, including the Palace of the Plumed Butterfly, which showcases various columns of winged creatures, and the awesome Pyramid of the Sun, which sits at the heart of the small city. The nearby museum, Museo de la Sitio, also holds many artifacts from the period.

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Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) free

The Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico (Central University City Campus of the National University of Mexico) includes 32 academic programs, the Mexican Olympic stadium, a Mexican cultural center, a nature preserve and the city's Central Library. The main campus is now designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The city's famous muralists have made their mark on the campus, and travelers recommend you check out the work of famous painter David Alfaro Siqueiros at the Rectorate Tower or the work of Juan O'Gorman at the Central Library. The campus also holds the University Museum of Contemporary Art, an excellent spot for viewing Mexico's more recent cultural offerings. The sculpture garden at the art museum is a particular highlight for past visitors, as is the botanic garden.

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The 27 Best Things to Do in Mexico City

By Scarlett Lindeman

Mexico City is changing rapidly from the influx of foreigners who have recently discovered the city’s infinite charms. There are dozens of new restaurants, parties, and projects that keep the vibrancy of this capital city (with a population of over 22 million) surging while the storied museums, ancient bars, and cultural sites maintain their standing. An intoxicating mix of ancient and new, you could spend a lifetime here and barely scratch the surface. While there's no way you’ll manage to cover all of the must see and dos in one trip, sticking to one neighborhood a day keeps things manageable. No matter how you end up spending your time in Mexico's capital, one thing is for sure—you’ll be scheduling your second trip before your first is even finished.

Read our complete Mexico City travel guide here .

This gallery has been updated with new information since its original publish date.

All listings featured on Condé Nast Traveler are independently selected by our editors. If you book something through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

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Colonia Juárez Arrow

The Juarez neighborhood has evolved in recent years. Once gritty, the area is now teeming with great boutiques, bars, parks, and restaurants like Masala y Maiz, which blends Mexican and Indian cuisines, and Niddo, a sunny corner spot that serves a divine brunch. There are loads of hotspots around the leafy central Plaza Washington: La Rifa for artisanal chocolates, Loose Blues for vinyls and vintage denim, and Elly's for natural wines and handmade pastas.

Luis Barragan House and Studio

Luis Barragán House and Studio Arrow

The former home and studio of Pritzker-Prize-winning architect Luis Barragán has been transformed into a museum in Mexico City's Hidalgo District. Architecture and design lovers frequent the estate to study the artist's ingenious use of color, light, shadow, form, and texture. From the street, you'd never guess the personality that lies inside: The stark-gray façade humbly blends in with neighboring homes, but walk to the interior of the estate and you'll find striking walls in a kaleidoscope of bright colors, fountains, and pools.

Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico  Mexico City

Gran Hotel Ciudad de México Arrow

Even if you're not staying at this hotel on the Zócalo, it's worth stopping just to see the jaw-dropping interior. The building originally opened as a department store in 1899. Since then, its art nouveau bones have been carefully maintained: The curving staircase is a replica of the one at Paris's Le Bon Marché , and the antique elevator, made of iron and concrete, was the first of its kind in Mexico City. But the pièce de résistance is the incredible Tiffany stained-glass ceiling, imported from France in 1908.

El Moro Churerria Restaurant Mexico City

El Moro Churerría Arrow

Early evening is churro time in Mexico City—families, couples, and friends all go out for a taste of sweet fried dough and chocolate. You'll often find lines snaking around the block outside this beloved churrería (churro shop). There are shops in Roma, Centro Historico, Condesa, Polanco, and Cuauhtémoc.   Most have spiffy interiors with blue and white tile, bright lighting, and long communal tables. Watch the cooks dip, fry, and sugar-coat your long, spindly churro, which is paired with hot chocolate in a flavor of your choosing.

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Floating Gardens of Xochimilco Mexico City

Floating Gardens of Xochimilco Arrow

Drive 40 minutes south of the city and you'll witness the closest approximation to the Valley of Mexico (in which Mexico City lies) before the arrival of the Spanish. The World Heritage Site of Xochimilco, the extensive lake and canal system that once connected most of the settlements in the valley, is an incredible vestige of the area's pre-Hispanic past. Start at the Embarcadero Belem dock to board a colorful gondola -like boat, called a trajinera , and explore the waterways and artificial islands or chinampas .

Palacio NationalDiego Rivera murals Landmark murals art landmark Mexico city

Palacio Nacional Arrow

Diego Rivera's famous mural The History of Mexico, showcases the Aztec era to the conquest to the Revolution to the development of industry. It's grandiose and captivating, a unique opportunity to learn about Mexico's past. Not to mention it's free: The mural is housed in a distinguished building east of the Zócalo that operates as a government office. Among the office workers milling about, you'll see a mix of local, national, and international tourists who come to be awe-stricken by Rivera’s masterpiece.

Temple Mayor Mexico City

Templo Mayor Arrow

Templo Mayor (translation: main temple) was the centerpiece of Tenochtitlán, the ancient Aztec capital, constructed in 1325 in the marshes of Lake Texcoco. The temple was mowed over and replaced by a cathedral during the Spanish conquest in 1521. Today, the hulking stone ruins lie at the heart of Centro Histórico, embedded in the blueprint of downtown. Surrounded by streets and buildings, it is hard to imagine the temples in their original Aztecan glory, but the nicely organized museum helps paint the full picture.

Casa Azul Museo Frida Kahlo Museum Mexico City Blue House

Museo Frida Kahlo Arrow

The museum, also known as "Casa Azul" for its shocking cobalt blue exterior, is where Frida Kahlo was born, raised, lived, and died. Visitors can take in a few paintings by Kahlo and her husband, Diego Rivera, in addition to other contemporary artists of their era. But perhaps more interesting is the voyeuristic window into their creative world. The home is carefully preserved and maintained; it's easy to image the spaces as they were during Kahlo's time. In addition to their personal effects and domestic materials, the collection of clothes and corsets Frida needed to support her body after her traumatic accident give an intimate look at the artist's daily struggles.

Sculpture Garden at the Museo Universitario Arte Contemporneo Mexico City

Sculpture Garden at the Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo Arrow

Located on the outskirts of Mexico City proper, at the National Autonomous University of Mexico campus, the Sculpture Park is totally off the tourist track. Featuring a range of grand outdoor sculptures, the park is best explored by foot. The sculpture space, which looks like a giant crater, is one the top things to spot. It's built around lava (which can be seen in the center) and has wonderful views from the ledge.

flower market. red and orange flowers

Mercado Jamaica Arrow

The city’s principal flower market offers visitors a fragrant, colorful walk through much of the region’s native flora and fauna, available to be bundled into a bouquet and taken back to your home. Available for your admiration are roses, lilies, daisies, ferns, and violets galore, among other rare and special species. Visit during Dia de Muertos to see trucks carting in pink and orange cempasuchil , or Mexican marigolds, for family members to buy to decorate their ofrendas at home or their loved ones’ graves. Build a bundle to decorate your hotel room with—or better yet, to dry and frame as a memory for when you return home.

Building the Revolution in Mexico City with water features

Monumento a la Revolución Arrow

This landmark, located in the heart of Mexico City, commemorates the Mexican Revolution and is the largest triumphal arch in the world. The main structure evolved over twenty-five years of stops and starts and a major redesign. It was finished in 1938, to comprise an eclectic blend of art-deco and Mexican socialist realism styles. A visit to the top observation deck only costs 110 pesos ($5) and there's a museum underground. You don't need much time to witness the glory of the monument. Saunter around, gawk at the creative architectural stylings of the structure, and walk under the arches. History nerds may be more interested in the small museum below, but more than anything it's an architecturally significant piece, and the observation deck has great views. If you keep your eyes peeled while exploring around town, you'll most likely catch a glimpse of the monument down a main street—but a quick glimpse isn't enough, and it's worth the quick 15-minute trip to walk underneath it.

outside omusubi restaurant Mexico City

Omusubi House Arrow

In a small storefront in Roma Norte, the husband and wife team, Ichiro Kitazawa and Varia Gonzáles Manuel work side-by-side in the miniscule kitchen, cupping steamed rice into palm-sized balls. They will sink sauteed sweet potato into the omusubi which are speckled like confetti with purple and wild rice, a marriage of Mexican ingredients and Japanese technique. They met while working at a Japanese restaurant years back when Mexico City was still called DF, the federal district. He had arrived ten years earlier by way of Osaka, as a hippy backpacker intent on photographing Latin America but fell into cooking; and she, from Puebla. “Omusubi translates to tying up or to bring together” Kitazawa explains, “which is how we wrap the rice”—and a sound metaphor for the forging of connections between their two countries.

Tlaloc Fountain and Dolores Carcamo MuseumMuseo del Carcamo de Dolores Diego Rivera Mexico City Mexico

Cárcamo de Dolores Arrow

Second or third-time visitors to Mexico City who think they've seen everything will find something new here. This historic but infrequently-visited site was constructed in 1951 as a hydraulic water system connected to the city's main water lines. And while it no longer acts as a municipal water work but rather a museum and cultural landmark, it underscores the city's complicated relationship with water. In the lesser-traveled section of Chapultepec, it is currently under renovation and closed to the public, though the massive Rivera sculpture of the Azteca water god Tlaloc out front can still be admired.

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Eat Like a Local Arrow

Eat Like a Local, a Mexico City–based company, runs culinary tours that immerse visitors in the city's vast food scene. Rocio, the guide, has long been a food blogger , and her knowledge about the Mexico City's food scene is totally on point. She's also passionate about connecting tourists with locals, and impacting Mexico City in a positive, sustainable way. There's a set itinerary, but she's flexible—so go on, order another mezcal or pork carnitas, if you like.

Museo Jumex Mexico City Museum

Museo Jumex Arrow

Museo Jumex houses one of Latin America's largest private contemporary art collections, which includes works by Andy Warhol, Martin Kippenberger, Cy Twombly, and Damien Hirst. Mediums range from paintings and drawings to light and video installations. The building is as distinctive as the art: British architect David Chipperfield designed the 15,000 square-foot white-concrete cube with a sawtooth top. (Plus the Soumaya Museum is just across the square, so you can feed two birds with one scone.) 

Cantina Bar Mexico City

Self-Guided Centro Historico Cantina Crawl Arrow

It's easy to pop around in Centro, hitting up a few cantinas to have a drink or two and to soak up the style of these classic, dive-y spots. The more friends you bring and make, the better. Locals and regulars alike hit the cantinas, which maintain a storied baseline for the drinking culture of Mexico City. Musicians pass through, sorrows are drowned, and gains celebrated. Many cantinas serve food, some better than others, and will often gift snacks and small plates if you consume around three drinks, though each spot has its own rules. Beer and tequila prevail. Simple cocktails, built-in-the-glass rum and cokes, margaritas, sangria, rum, brandy, and mezcal. Some cantinas are known for certain drinks, but craft cocktails this is not.

Mexican wrestlers take part in a tribute to Mexican fighter Silver King  who died after collapsing during a show in...

Lucha Libre at the Arena Coliseo Arrow

A giant venue that hosts sporting and entertainment events, the Arena seats as many as 23,300 spectators. It's best known for hosting Lucha Libre wrestling matches. The stadium is sprawling, and some seats are certainly better than others, depending on how much money you're willing to fork out. If you're here because you're a true Lucha Libre fan, make sure to sit in the front row; if you're here to have a fun night out with friends, the cheap seats will do just fine.

Teotihuacan Pyramids Mexico City

Teotihuacán Arrow

The ancient Mesoamerican pyramids of Teotihuacán, in the Valley of Mexico, once served as the largest city in the pre-Columbian Americas. It is thought that during the first millennium A.D. the city had around 125,000 people, including multi-ethnic groups such as the Otomi, Zapotec, Mixtec, Maya, and Nahua. If you have a few days in Mexico City, it's worth the day trip . (Teotihuacán is about an hour outside the city by car.) Leave early in the morning so you can be back in the city by mid-day—and bring sunscreen!

Shoe shine stands in the historic Zocalo or plaza in Oaxaca Mexico.

The Centro Zocalo Historico Bodealores   Arrow

The boleadores are dotted around the perimeter of downtown's main square (and almost every other park and plaza in the city) but you'll have a great view of the cathedrals, flagpole, and Palacio Nacional if you get your shoes shined here. Climb up on the elevated perch of the boleador's chair and they will make your boots shine anew. At 50 to 100 pesos ($3 to $6), it's one of the cheapest shoe-shine experiences around. Boleadores are an important part of Mexican street culture and a fixture of pedestrian avenues, a living-breathing mid-century heritage that is not in danger of dying out. But with the proliferation of cheap plastic shoes and mass-market tennis sneakers, "limpiabotes" are a hand-crafted service for giving leather shoes a new life.

MEXICO CITY MEXICO  OCTOBER 30 Terracotta Daughters sculptures a work of art by French visual artist Prune Nourry...

Museo Anahuacalli Arrow

Awesome, grand, and out-of-the-way, Anahuacalli is part studio, part museum, and part shrine for Mexican art that Diego Rivera built as an architectural piece uniting past, present, and future to the natural environment. Rivera's personal and expansive collection of pre-Hispanic figurines, carvings, and totems accumulated over a lifetime. The museum itself was constructed around a swath of rocky terrain Rivera and Khalo had purchased for a farm. The main collection features nearly two thousand figurines representing Olmecs, Toltecs, Nahuas, Zapotecs, the people of Teotihuacan, and those of northeastern Mexico as well as Rivera's sketches for murals. There are also temporary exhibits of more modern Mexican artists, with a recent rotation of 30 textural works by Robert Janitz—paintings, large-format sculptures, and an NFT.

mexico city tourism reddit

Patrick Miller Arrow

From the outside, this dance club looks like dumpy warehouse hidden behind a black gate in Roma Norte. But come on a Friday (the only day it's open), and you'll find a raging party that offers a glimpse of the city's extant disco subculture. An eclectic mix of party-goers show off their moves in dance circles to all kinds of music, from '80s and '90s classics to sub-genres of disco, such as Hi-NRG, Italo, and electro.

Museo Anthropologia Mexico City

Museo Nacional de Antropología Arrow

This massive building in Chapultepec Park is among the city's most famed museums, second only to perhaps the Museo Frida Kahlo . Though the late Mexican architect Pedro Ramírez Vázquez designed it in 1964, the mammoth building still looks as avant-garde today as it did then. (How exactly does that giant concrete slab float above a pond?) The museum holds the world's largest collection of ancient Mexican artifacts. Some of the most iconic Mesoamerican artifacts discovered to date can be found across 23 rooms. If you want to understand Mexico's history, then a visit here is a must.

Plaza Garibaldi night mexico city musicians

Plaza Garibaldi Arrow

Mexico's roving mariachi bands have been found in this plaza, a few blocks north of the Palacio de Bellas Artes , since the mid-1900s. Though the plaza has deteriorated over the years, it's seen a resurgence thanks to a city-driven effort to clean up the neighborhood by installing new sidewalks and street lamps. It's a cultural meeting point of sorts, where travelers can come day or night (though the best time to go is after 11 p.m.), to watch bands solicit bar patrons, cars, and passersby to buy a song .

Torre Latinoamericana Mexico City

Torre Latinoamericana Arrow

This 44-story skyscraper, built in 1965, is the tallest building in Centro Histórico . The tower miraculously withstood both the 8.1-magnitude earthquake of 1985 and the 7.1-magnitude quake of September 2017, making it a rare feat of engineering. The Torre defines Mexico City's skyline (much like the Empire State building in New York) and is a useful tool for orienting oneself in downtown. Head to the top-floor observation deck for jaw-dropping 360-degree views of the city, or to the newly renovated bar/restaurant (one floor below), which has equally impressive views and is almost always empty.

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Salón San Luis Arrow

The dance floor at this old-school salon, cloaked in red light, comes alive as locals, tourists, and old timers twirl and shuffle to a live band . Try your hand at salsa, merengue, cumbia, and norteña numbers as waiters in crisp whites with black bow ties circle the room serving liquid courage. There's no shame in bad dancing, so try and learn the steps. (The pros might even show you a thing or two.)

mexico city tourism reddit

Iglesia San Ignacio de Loyola Arrow

A surprisingly tranquil stop in a high-energy city, this infrequently-visited modernist church is tucked away in plain sight in residential Polanco. Designed by famed architect Juan Sordo, it was completed in 1961 and features a sharp triangular structure covered in handmade yellow ceramic tiles. Show up during visiting hours and you can tour the grounds inside and out. Indoors, the Jesuit temple is encased by multi-colored stained glass windows that catch vibrant fractals on sunny days, with an effect almost like being trapped in a kaleidoscope. It's a place of worship and quiet contemplation, yes, but also a haven for architecture nerds.

mexico city tourism reddit

La Rifa Chocolateria Arrow

Indigenous to Mexico, cacao has been consumed in the country and played an important role in Mesoamerican societies since 19th BCE; La Rifa continues the tradition with a small roaster on-site. There are a handful of tables sprinkled in the tree-shaded plaza out front, optimal perches for spending an hour or two. Ask to see their production in the back and they will most likely give a tour. The main event is sipping chocolates—water-based and closest to how cacao was consumed, pre-Columbian, before the introduction of the Spanish (and thus cows and milk). The front-of-house folks are happy to explain the finer nuances of their roasting process, flavor-profiles, and history of Mexican chocolate.

mexico city tourism reddit

Ahuehuete Arrow

This six-seat collection room is a distillate library, a stunning space housed in a centuries-old building in one of Mexico City’s oldest neighborhood. The Porfirio Díaz-era bar and backbar were found in a Puebla antique store and are over 100 years old (once you book here , you'll be notified of the exact location) It'll cost you $75 per-person for a six-spirit sampling, light snacks, and water. Inside, there are only six seats and a knowledgable barkeep/tour guide crafting a rich journey for you and your fellow spirit geeks. While tequila and mezcal are some of Mexico's greatest exports, there are dozens of other plant-based spirits like bacanora, sotol, raicilla, and charanda, distilled in micro-batch quantities in rural communities that never make it into commerical circulation—nor are they intended to. The team behind Ahuehuete has been collecting bottles throughout the years, traveling to rural villages to find interesting batches for their private collection.

Recommended

The St. Regis Mexico City

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Travel Mexico Solo

Mexico City Travel Guide

Your ultimate guide to mexico city, mexico, mexico city travel guide contents.

Location | Getting There | Where to Stay  |  Things to Do  |  Mexico City Tours  |  Travel Safety  | Mexico City Blogs |  FAQ

mexico city travel guide

Mexico city travel: at a glance.

Mexico City (aka CDMX or DF) is the fifth largest city on Earth, and North America’s biggest (and coolest ) city!

From hip neighborhoods  and Aztec history, to Xochimilco ‘s colorful boats, the amazing Teotihuacan UNESCO World Heritage Site, and of course, delicious tacos , there’s nowhere on Earth quite like Mexico City DF.

🤔 What is CDMX and DF?

You’ll often see Mexico City abbreviated as CDMX. This stands for Ciudad de Mexico en español, which means “Mexico City.”

You may also hear it called “DF,” which is short for  distrito federal , or federal district. 🗣 Note: DF is pronounced day-effay , not dee-eff.

Mexico City DF is about the equivalent of the “DC” in Washington DC. However, Mexico City is both a state and a district in Mexico, unlike Washington DC, which is only a U.S. district.

Mexico City Travel: Know before you go

downtown mexico city historic center

  • ✈️ Airport: Benito Juarez International Airport AKA Mexico City International (code: MEX)

⏰ Time Zone: Central Daylight Time (GMT-5)

  • 💰 Currency: Mexican Peso
  • 🗣 Language: Spanish, though English is common, and you may even hear some indigenous languages
  • 🎫 Mexico Visa: The vast majority of travelers do not need a visa for Mexico — this includes Americans, Canadians, Japanese and most Europeans. Head here to see if you need a Mexico travel visa.
  • 🔌 Electricity Socket : You’ll mostly find Type A (two-prong) and Type B (three-prong) — the same as used in the United States. For visitors from other countries, you’ll need this  universal travel adaptor .
  • 📲 Mexico SIM Card : Wondering, Do I need a SIM card for Mexico? The answer is yes, every traveler will want a one for the reasons explained in this article all about the best Mexico SIM cards .
  • 🚙 Car Rentals : The Mexico rental car process can be a bit daunting, and many people are apprehensive to drive in a foreign country. I get it! Check out this guide to Renting a Car in Mexico for info on the process.

What’s the best time to visit Mexico City?

With its temperate weather, Mexico City is a year-round destination. However, October to April are the ideal months for Mexico City travel because this is the dry season.

It can be cold during the winter nights (think 45°F or 7°C at night from December to February), so some prefer the rainy season of May to September because it’s much warmer.

Where is Mexico City located?

Mexico City is located in Central Mexico — in ( about ) the dead center of the country! It borders seven other states, and makes for a great home base to explore Central Mexico on all these great Mexico City day trips .

Mexico City Map

What state is Mexico City in?

Mexico City is actually its own state — one of the 32 states in Mexico . However, this was a somewhat recent change, and before it became its own state, it was a part of Estado de Mexico (Mexico State).

What’s the best way to get to Mexico City?

teotihuacan tours hot air balloon tour

The Mexico City Airport is the largest airport in Mexico, and you can find direct flights to Mexico City from many places all over the world.

The easiest, safest and best way to get from Mexico City Airport to your hotel is via private shuttle service , but you can also catch a taxi or Uber, or take the Metro, bus or other public transportation.

🚕💨 Note: If you’re planning to take Uber, make sure you have a Mexico SIM Card so you can call one. Trust me on this, the free Mexico City Airport WiFi is always spotty, so you’ll need data to call your Uber.

Best neighborhoods in Mexico City

Wondering where to stay in Mexico City? The majority of visitors stick to the Roma and Condesa area, or Polanco and Reforma area. These are safe and central neighborhoods, close to many things to do in Mexico City !

The four areas highlighted below are where I recommend all travelers stay, but Coyoacan and Centro Historico (Downtown) are also good options.

parque mexico in la condesa | mexico city travel guide

Roma & Condesa

From beautiful architecture, pretty parks, walkability, cute cafes, street art, street tacos, and a chill vibe, Roma and Condesa are two of the best Mexico City neighborhoods. These sister neighborhoods are located next to one another. 

Colonia Roma (Rome Colony) consists of Roma Norte  (North Rome) and Roma Sur (South Rome); many prefer Roma Norte, though both are nice. You’ll sometimes see Condesa referred to by its official name,  La Condesa (The Countess).

golden angel statue on reforma avenue | mexico city travel guide, angel de la independancia

Polanco & Reforma

While Roma and Condesa have a hip feel, Polanco and Reforma are all about luxury. In fact, Polanco is known as the most posh area in Mexico City, and its main street, Avenida Presidente Masaryk, is called the Rodeo Drive of Mexico City .

Reforma is the name of one of Mexico’s main streets, Avenida Reforma , but also the neighborhood’s name. In Reforma, you’re right next to Chapultepec Park , and surrounded by skyscrapers, upscale hotels, cool street art and more.

Best things to do in Mexico City

Besides all the mouth-watering  Mexico City tacos 🌮 you’re going to want to devour, there are also a good amount of Mexico City day trips just outside of the city to see the beautiful nature, UNESCO World Heritage Sites, colorful colonial cities, pueblos magicos (magic towns), and much more.

Discover some of the Mexico City highlights below ⤵

mexico city tourism reddit

Xochimilco Boat Cruise

mexico city tourism reddit

Teotihuacan Pyramids

mexico city tourism reddit

Chapultepec Park & Castle

soumaya museum mexico city

Mexico City Museums

mexico city tourism reddit

Mexico City Day Trips

Lucha Libre masked Mexican wrestler

Lucha Libre Mexican Wrestling

beautiful large european-style building with golden dome in mexico city

Stroll Centro Historico

tacos al pastor

Eat ( way too many ) Tacos

Las Grutas Tolantongo natural hot spring pools near Mexico City

Grutas de Tolantongo

Best mexico city tours.

Tours in Mexico City are a great way to see the sites and all the surrounding areas — and unless you’re planning to rent a car in Mexico City (I don’t recommend this!) , tours are the best way to get around because transportation costs can add up quickly.

Is Mexico City safe for tourists?

According to experts, you are statistically quite safe while visiting Mexico, including Mexico City. That’s not to say bad things don’t happen in Cancun Mexico City; they do.

As with all big cities, it has good and bad areas. If you stick to these  best neighborhoods in Mexico City , and avoid ones like Tepito and Doctores, you’ll likely be be safe in Mexico City.

Millions of Americans go to Mexico on vacation every year, so if we play the numbers game, the number of incidents is very small… When I’m asked if Mexico is a safe place to go travel on vacation, my response is  yes . —Carlos Barron, FBI Veteran (source:  Forbes )

As with traveling anywhere, you’ll also need to follow general travel safety measures, like not walking home alone at night and staying aware of yourself and surroundings. For an added safety measure, pack these  travel safety items , dress in a way so your Mexico City outfits blend in with the locals, and buy a Mexico SIM card .

Is Mexico City safe for solo travelers?

On a personal note, I lived in Mexico City by myself for one year, and felt quite safe. Now, this wasn’t magic; I made it a priority to stay safe by not walking home alone at night, never drinking too much, etc. Check out my Mexico City Solo Travel Guide for more info on Mexico travel safety for solo female travelers.

What’s the best travel insurance for Mexico?

travel insurance for mexico paperwork

This is a question I get a lot as a Mexico travel writer and Mexico expat. To determine which Mexico travel insurance is best for you , consider factors like the policy’s total cost, your deductible, the coverage you need, your medical benefits, etc.

🏆 In general, I only ever recommend three companies to purchase Mexico travel insurance from:

  • World Nomads — For general travelers and adventure travelers.
  • SafetyWing — For general travelers and digital nomads in Mexico.
  • Travel Insurance Master — Mexico travel insurance search tool, for those who want to compare policies.
  • 👉 Click on any of the links above to get a FREE quote on your policy!

Mexico City Blogs: Learn more about Mexico City travel 🇲🇽

people in the Mexico City Day of the Dead Parade

Mexico City Day of the Dead Parade 2024: Ultimate Guide

two people in the mexico city day of the dead parade

Mexico City Day of the Dead 2024: Best Things to Do & More

teotihuacan pyramids on a mexico city to teotihuacan trip

Mexico City to Teotihuacan: 5 Best Ways to Get There in 2024

Mexico city travel: frequently asked questions, can you drink the water in mexico city.

No — Unfiltered Mexico tap water is not safe for human consumption. However, you will need to keep drinking water and to stay extra hydrated, as Mexico is quite close to the Equator. In fact, dehydration is one of the most common ways people get sick in Mexico. So what can you do?

  • If you’re renting a Mexico City Airbnb or VRBO with a kitchen, you can boil the water before drinking it.
  • You can keep buying bottled water — Though this gets expensive, and is horrible for the planet!
  • Use the Water-To-Go Filterable Bottle . This refillable bottle not only keeps you hydrated, but also filters your water so you don’t get sick in Mexico, and is good for the planet ♻️ Get 15% OFF with code SOLO15!

water bottles

The Water-To-Go Bottle has a built-in, three-stage filtration system that removes 99.9999% of all water-borne contaminants. These include bacteria, microplastics, viruses, heavy metals, chemicals and more. I personally own one, as you can drink Mexico water from any source (even the tap), and be completely safe.

Will I get altitude sickness in Mexico City?

Maybe — Altitude sickness is very random, and can happen to anyone who’s at a high elevation. In case you didn’t know, Mexico City is about 1.5 miles above sea level, a half-mile higher than Denver, Colorado, “The Mile High City.”

For this reason,  everyone  who’s traveling to Mexico City should come prepared. Check out this guide — Mexico City Altitude Sickness: How to Prevent & Treat It .

packing list for mexico

🧳 Mexico Packing list

Wondering what else you need on your packing list for Mexico? Check out this guide — Ultimate Packing List for Mexico + FREE Checklist Download !

What’s the Mexico City weather like?

mexico city weather chart

Weather-wise, Mexico City has what is known as the Eternal Spring climate, meaning it’s never super hot or super cold — so you really can visit year-round. However, during the Mexico City rainy season from about April to September, it can rain quite a bit.

The best time for Mexico City travel is during the dry season, from about October to April . The summers are nice as well, just with a much higher chance of rain.

  • The prettiest time of year in CDMX is from (approx.) February to early-April, when the bright purple jacaranda trees are in bloom!
  • This also coincides with the Mexico butterfly migration at the Piedra Herrada Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary , located in the nearby town of Valle de Bravo . From about November to March, millions (maybe even billions ) of monarchs travel to Mexico from Canada.
  • The city hosts the annual Parade of Alebrijes , the Día de Muertos (Day of the Dead) parade, and other festivities during the last week in October.

Is Mexico City worth visiting?

mexico city tourism reddit

Yes — Mexico City CDMX is a unique Mexico destination that so many types of travelers will want to check out.

If you love big cities, you must visit Mexico City — the 5th largest city on Earth! For travelers who love culture, there are three UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Mexico City, and abut 150 Mexico City museums .

Foodies will also fall in love with Mexico City, famed for both its street food tacos and Michelin Star Mexico City restaurants alike.

How many days do I need in Mexico City?

Mexico City is one of the biggest cities in the world — and the largest city in both Mexico, and all of North America. Realistically, you could spend a whole year there, and never run out of incredible things to do in Mexico City ! For a first time trip, four full days seems to be a sweet spot.

As with all big cities, you’ll want to have a great itinerary in place to make the most of your trip. This 4 Day Mexico City Itinerary takes you neighborhood by neighborhood, so you don’t miss any of the best things to see in Mexico City.

🗣 Mexico Language

Mexico Fun Fact : There’s actually no official language of Mexico!

Spanish is the most widely-spoken, so some mistakenly say Spanish is the official language of Mexico. However, the government actually recognizes 68 national languages, including the Nahuatl Aztec language, and the Maya language.

💰 Mexico Currency

Mexican Peso — Exchange rates vary, but have hovered around $18-21 pesos to $1 USD for about the last decade. You will find some places that take U.S. dollars, but usually at an unfavorable rate, so stick to using pesos in Mexico .

☀️ Mexico Weather

Mexico is a big country — the 7th largest on Earth, in fact! It’s hard to generalize the weather in Mexico, because it will vary greatly by where you’re traveling.

In general, temperatures are mostly mild everywhere all year long, though summers on the coast are hot and humid, and winters in Central and Northern Mexico are on the colder side. Throughout the whole country, the rainy season runs from (about) April through September.

✈️ Mexico Busy Season & Slow Season

• Mexico Busy Season: The busy season in Mexico runs October to March, as this is the dry season and you’ll get the best weather. December is the busiest month for tourism in Mexico.

• Mexico Slow Season : If you don’t mind some rain, you’ll often find the best travel deal during the Mexico slow season of April to September. Do keep in mind that June 1-November 1 is Hurricane Season, and Mexico beaches are all susceptible.

• Mexico Shoulder Season : The shoulder season is that magical time when prices are still low and the weather is good. The Mexico shoulder season is from about mid-October to November and January to early-April.

🧳 Download your FREE Mexico Packing Checklist here!

Check out this Ultimate Packing List for Mexico — so you know what to pack and what NOT to pack for Mexico! This article offers advice on packing for Mexico cities, and packing for a Mexico beach vacation.

Beyond what Mexico outfits and clothing you’ll want to bring, here are a few extra things to consider:

• Filterable Water Bottle: Mexico is close to the Equator, so you’ll need to stay extra hydrated. In fact, dehydration is one of the most common ways people get sick in Mexico.

A filterable, refillable water bottle not only keeps you hydrated, but also filters your water so you don’t get sick in Mexico.

The Water-To-Go Bottle has a built-in, three-stage filtration system that removes 99.9999% of all water-borne contaminants. These include bacteria, microplastics, viruses, heavy metals and chemicals.

• Mexico SIM Card: Want to be able to use your phone in Mexico?! Of course you do! Pick up a TELCEL Mexico SIM card before your trip, and swap it out on the plane while you’re waiting to exit, so you have phone and data service the second you arrive in Mexico.

•  Anti-Hangover Meds: Planning to party hardy?! Make sure you’re not wasting any of your precious travel time with a hangover. Liquid I.V. has about 70,000 reviews on Amazon, and is considered the best defense against a hangover.

•  Sun Hat: No matter if you’re headed to the beach or a city, you’ll want to wear a hat to shield yourself from the strong Mexican sun. This cute sun hat is the perfect stylish and practical accessory for your Mexico vacation.

•   Sunscreen: As you’ll want to reapply a few times throughout the day, a light, Mineral-Based Sunscreen is ideal.

Headed to the beach? Do your part to practice responsible tourism in Mexico by only using an eco-friendly reef safe sunscreen while swimming. You can even ditch the sunscreen altogether and opt for a long sleeve swimsuit (AKA rash guard) instead.

•   Bug Repellent: Mosquitoes are common throughout Mexico — especially on the beaches! REPEL Insect Repellent is an eco-friendly brand that’s DEET-free and plant based, with a pleasant lemon and eucalyptus scent. Don’t want to use a spray? Pick up some Mosquito Repellent Bracelets .

The vast majority of travelers do not need a visa for Mexico — this includes Americans, Canadians, and most Europeans. Head here to see if you need a Mexico travel visa.

🤔 What is the mexico FMM ?

When you go through Customs & Immigration to enter the country, you’ll receive your Forma Migratoria Multiple , or FMM Tourist Card (sometimes listed as FMT). If you’re coming by plane or cruise ship, there is no charge; for those driving across the border, the FMM costs about $30USD.

In most circumstances, all visitors get a 180-day (six month) visa — so you can legally stay up to six months!

🚨 Have your FMM on you at all times

Keep in mind that though it’s called an FMM card , it’s actually just a small piece of paper. Keep your FMM on you at all times in your wallet, as this proves your legal status in Mexico. It’s rare, but if an officer stops you, they can ask to see your FMM.

🎫 Don’t lose your FMM!

You need to have your FMM on you at all times, as proof of your legal status in the country.

Be sure to keep track of your FMM, as you’ll have to give it back to an Immigration officer at the airport, cruise port, or land crossing when you’re leaving the country.

If you lose your FMM, there is a $600 peso ($30 USD) cost to replace it, and some paperwork you’ll need to fill out before you can leave the country.

If you’re flying home, plan to arrive at the airport about one hour earlier than you normally would to do the paperwork and pay the fine.

As this question doesn’t have a yes/no answer ( I wish it did! ), I do my best to answer it in depth in this article, Is Mexico Safe for Travelers Right Now ? However, for the most part, Mexico is actually statistically quite safe for all travelers — including solo travelers.

Check my Solo Female Mexico Travel page for more info.

💃 Mexico solo travel guides

Mexico is a big country, and it has plenty of amazing solo female travel destinations — like the ones featured in this article, Mexico Solo Travel: 20 Safe Destinations for Female Travelers .

In it, you’ll get recommendations of places to visit in Mexico, from solo travelers who have actually been to them.

🎧 solo travel podcasts

• Ep. 34 |  Planning your first Mexico solo trip • Ep. 40 | Tips for safe solo travel in Mexico • Ep. 53 | 30 Solo female travel tips, Pt. 1

To answer the question, Is it safe to drive in Mexico? — YES , it’s considered safe to rent a car and drive in Mexico.

As the country is quite large, road trips are a great way to see a lot in a little time, and especially popular in the Yucatan Peninsula and Baja California Peninsula.

The one caveat to Mexico driving safety is that you’ll be in a foreign country, unfamiliar with their laws and customs. Head here for a complete guide to Renting A Car in Mexico: Everything You Need to Know , where you’ll also get 10 useful Mexico driving tips!

🚙💨 Looking for the best Mexico car rental company? Discover Cars works with both local Mexican companies and international companies to get you the best rates. Not only do I recommend them — I also use them!

Find Your Rental Car

As a general rule, you’ll want to know at least a few words of Spanish when visiting anywhere in Mexico. This is both a sign of respect, and will also help you have a better, smoother trip.

If you stick to the more touristic places in Mexico, you should be fine with basic Spanish. For those planning to venture off the beaten path, be advised most people in pueblos  (small towns) speak little to no English.

🗣 Here are some options:

  • Brush up on your Spanish: Use a language-learning program like Rocket Spanish , so you’re confident, and conversational, before your trip.
  • Download the Google Translate App: For this to work at all times, you’ll need a Mexico SIM card with data — as the app won’t work when you’re off-WiFi.
  • Travel with a Mexico phrasebook: This Lonely Planet Spanish Phrasebook is an Amazon best seller, and a great non-digital language assistant!
  • Save this infographic an image on your phone. This way, you have access to these common words, phrases and questions, even when you’re off-WiFi.
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Ofrenda de Día de muertos

The 24 best things to do in Mexico City

This place is a magical and chaotic metropolis, so let us guide you through the very best things to do in Mexico City

Welcome to one of the most exciting places on the planet. Mexico City is a thriller, a chaotic metropolis of history, culture, art, and all the rest, with some of the best street food imaginable seemingly waiting on every corner. Working out exactly the best things to do in Mexico City can be difficult, so let us help you out by narrowing down the list from the good to the great.

But yeah, where to begin? Many of the Latin world’s best museums and galleries are in Mexico City, along with some of the most thrilling bars and clubs , meccas of dance that run from late at night until very, very late in the morning. Mexico City leaves its mark, that’s for sure.

25 Unmissable things to do in Mexico City

Visit the house where Frida Kahlo lived and died

1.  Visit the house where Frida Kahlo lived and died

Can you imagine walking in the exact same place where the famous painter, Frida Kahlo, was born, where she lived and died? You will find this little abode, which is now the Frida Kahlo Museum ‘Casa Azul’, in Coyoacán, her favorite neighborhood. Not only does it safeguard her most cherished works of art, such as Viva la Vida and Frida y su cesárea, but it also is home to her diaries, clothes, and even the artist’s bed. If you look closely, you will find her ashes in what was her bedroom. Gloomy, right?

Visit the artisanal market, La Ciudadela

2.  Visit the artisanal market, La Ciudadela

An array of colors unfolds at your every step in this artisanal market, which is over 50 years old. Lose yourself in the shelves of skulls, jugs, jaguar heads made with black mud, wood, or with a Huichol decoration, traditional games, baskets made of palm leaves, saddlery, vases, pots, and talavera plates; alebrijes (Oaxacan-Mexican folk art sculptures of fantastical creatures) and replicas of pre-Hispanic pieces of art. All the artesania that you can find in the country’s touristic hotspots, you can find here in this market.

Watch the sunrise from 65m above

3.  Watch the sunrise from 65m above

Want to have a 360-degree view of Mexico City while admiring the sunrise? Monumental Sunrises are offering you this incredible experience, thanks to which you will see the sunrise from the highest point of the Revolution Monument (no more than 65 meters high). The tour includes coffee and a pastry to help you get to the little light from where you can admire the city’s emblematic buildings, such as the Frontón México, the Opera House, the Tlatelolco University Cultural Center, and the Chopo University Museum, which was brought piece by piece from Germany. To enjoy this experience (which lasts for around 2 hours), bring comfortable shoes and a coat. You must reserve your place ahead of time.

Marvel at the murals in the Palace of Fine Arts

4.  Marvel at the murals in the Palace of Fine Arts

If you go into the Palace of Fine Arts, as well as coming across eclectic and impressive architecture, you will find yourself in front of enormous works of art that defined an era and placed Mexican muralism on the global art scene. You will find murals from Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Rufino Tamayo, Roberto Montenegro and Manuel Rodríguez Lozano. Rivera’s unmissable Man at the Crossroads, the smaller and revived version of the piece that was started and not finished at the Rockefeller Centre in New York.

Little Venice in the middle of Mexico City

5.  Little Venice in the middle of Mexico City

Xochimilco was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987, and its neighborhoods are full of tradition and respect for nature. It’s one of the most important tourist destinations in Mexico City, in which you float through canals in traditional trajinera boats. During the tour, you will come across boats with mariachis players, ‘ranchero’ trios, and marimbas, who will offer to play you a few songs and liven up your evening. Ask to visit the Island of Dolls, an eerie plot of land where dolls are hung from the trees. Its creation is attributed to Julián Santana Barrera, who is said to have used the dolls to scare away the spirit of a girl who drowned near the area.

Explore incredible attractions after dark at the Museums at Night

6.  Explore incredible attractions after dark at the Museums at Night

Set aside the last Wednesday of every month to look around exhibitions in the city’s cultural hotspots at night. The Museum Night concept was born in Berlin around 1997, and it takes place every month in Mexico City, while in other cities, it happens more sporadically. Usually, these museums offer guided visits, tours, workshops, concerts, and other special activities on the night.

Exercise in Chapultepec Forest

7.  Exercise in Chapultepec Forest

With more than 61000 visitors a day, Chapultepec Forest is one of our favorite places to roam when we’re free. As well as being home to museums and many places to relax, Mexico City’s biggest lung has 5 tracks where you can train and get in shape for free: El Sope, Circuito del Lago Mayor, Corre, Segundo Circuito, and Circuito Gandhi. Climb, bend and sweat till your last drop at these open-air gyms.

Visit an old bookstore in the Historic Centre

8.  Visit an old bookstore in the Historic Centre

Want to find a book that is already out of print? Looking for the first edition of your favorite novel? Want to add to your personal book collection but don’t have much budget? If your answer is yes to any of these questions, you will love this bookstore. A few steps from the Teatro de la Ciudad Esperanza Iris, you’ll find El Laberinto. Their stock list is extensive and very varied, and there is everything from Vladimir Nabokov and Agatha Christie to Chinese cookbooks and Jane Fonda’s entertainment handbook.

Walk among pre-Hispanic deities

9.  Walk among pre-Hispanic deities

The Templo Mayor is home to the precious aspects of our history. When visiting this museum site, you stop in front of what was the great Tenochtitlan’s important temple. Among the 7000 remains found there in the late 70s, we invite you to discover the largest Mexican sculpture that has ever been found: the polychrome relief of the goddess of the Earth, Tlaltecuhtli. You will also stumble upon a large circular monolith that represents the Moon goddess, Coyolxauhqui.

Enter the twilight zone of rum and cigars

10.  Enter the twilight zone of rum and cigars

The 3rd floor of Molière 48 is one of the most mysterious floors in Polanco. There is a red telephone booth that, with the correct number code (cigar), opens a door onto a terrace that leads to a rum, whisky, and cigar heaven. The sign on one of the walls reads, “Gentlemen, you may smoke”; in the specific smoking room, they sell cigars from brands like Vegas Robaina de San Luis, Flor de Las Antillas, Toro Gordo, Cohiba, and many more from various tobacco brands from all over the world. If your bank balance is big enough, ask for a private cellar to store your purchases.

Open your heart to the pleasure that is university theater

11.  Open your heart to the pleasure that is university theater

University is a hotspot for crazy ideas; it’s where talent emerges and philosophers of the future mature. The National Autonomous University of Mexico is also one of the most important cultural projects in the history of the country. For that reason, the plays performed at the UNAM Theatre are a great opportunity to see classic texts adapted to unlikely modern-day situations, avant-garde visual approaches, and to discover upcoming actors. Amén University Theatre Thursdays are when $30 tickets are sold at every theatre in the UNAM. Whatsmore, you don’t have to be a student to get tickets at that price!

Medieval style diner and magic show

12.  Medieval style diner and magic show

The Mesón del Cid is a themed restaurant that was founded in 1972, which is in the style of a castle with dark varnishes, colored stained glass windows, armor, stately elegance, and many a story to tell. As well as trying the rustic and traditional Spanish cuisine, which features suckling pig, mushrooms, cheeses, and homemade bread, Fridays include a bit of magic that El Mago Hir oversees. Saturdays are the medieval nights that start at 8:30 pm. 

Buy antiques at La Lagunilla

13.  Buy antiques at La Lagunilla

La Lagunilla is one of the most famous open-air markets in Mexico City. Every Sunday, hundreds of sellers arrive at 6 am to set up their stalls in the streets of the Morelos district, very close to Tepito. Here you will find all sorts of items, clothes, and vintage furniture, from 70s record players to analog cameras, paintings from the beginning of the previous century, and games that will bring back memories from your childhood.

See if you can find the entrance to one of the best speakeasy bars in town

14.  See if you can find the entrance to one of the best speakeasy bars in town

Even if you explored all of Juárez, shop by shop, house by house, you would never guess the entrance to the Hanky Panky Cocktail Bar. We’ll give you a few clues, but first, you must do your part and make a reservation through Facebook or the phone to find out the address. To get in, you have to find your way to the back of a food business shop, where a hidden door will take you into the bar; if you’re on the list. Let the bartenders do what they do best at the bar, and make sure you try the food from chef Maycol Calderón.

Celebrate the dead in the Megaofrenda of the Main Square

15.  Celebrate the dead in the Megaofrenda of the Main Square

Day of the Dead is one of the most important traditions in Mexico. On the 1st and 2nd of April, we wait for the deceased and prepare offerings with ‘pan de muerto’, traditional food, corpse figures, marigold flowers, candles, and tissue paper with elaborate cut-out designs. One of the most iconic celebrations is the Megaofrenda in the Zócalo (Main Square), and every year it has a different theme. 

Explore the Foro Sol during Vive Latino

16.  Explore the Foro Sol during Vive Latino

The Ibero-American Festival of Musical Culture Vive Latino is one of the most anticipated events in Mexico. Each year, young people from every state come together in the Foro Sol to experience two days dedicated to cinema, music, and art. Important national bands have performed here, such as Café Tacvba, Natalia Lafourcade, Los ángeles azules and Zoé, as have international stars such as Los fresones rebeldes, Morrissey, The National, Los Fabulosos Cadillacs and Blur. It’s the longest-running music festival in Mexico.

Recovery Brunch at the world’s favorite bar: Fifty Mils

17.  Recovery Brunch at the world’s favorite bar: Fifty Mils

Renowned as one of the best bars in the world, the Fifty Mils bar has done more than most to completely revolutionize the concept of brunch in this part of the world. It isn't cheap, but food this good rarely is, especially when you consider the location, surroundings, and all-around excellence of the package. If this isn't a magic cure for a hangover, we don't know what is. 

Discover new bands at the Nrmal Festival

18.  Discover new bands at the Nrmal Festival

This small festival doesn’t ask for anything from giants like Corona Capital. Nrmal was born in Monterrey, but it officially moved to Mexico City in 2014. What makes it famous is the curating of its lineup, as each year it features many experimental artists - it doesn’t matter if you don’t know who’s playing - such as The Black Angels, A Place To Bury Strangers or Health. Every March, the Deportivo del Estado Mayor Presidencial is full of characters with outfits that make us feel like we’re at the Met Gala.

Watch a film at the Cineteca Nacional

19.  Watch a film at the Cineteca Nacional

This cinematographic center opened its doors in 1974. After various incidents, it was redeveloped in 2012 and became one of the best places to enjoy cinema in Mexico City. It offers everything from commercial films to a wide range of options dedicated to arthouse films, cinema cycles, and alternative cinema.

A romantic night at the Lanchacinema

20.  A romantic night at the Lanchacinema

On the first Saturday of every month, the Chapultepec forest lake has a cinema screening which you can enjoy from the comfort of a boat. You will test your senses (and concentration) as you have to watch the film while the lake’s waters keep the boat moving.

This activity lends itself to spending a romantic night with your partner, so prepare a picnic basket, grab a blanket and rediscover Mexico City’s green lung while watching your favorite film.

An installation which will soak you in water

21.  An installation which will soak you in water

It’s one of the best-kept secrets in the Chapultepec Forest. For many centuries, the Cárcamo de Dolores was the main source of fresh water in the city. In 1951, the Mexican artist Diego Rivera paid it a tribute with his mural El agua, origen de la vida, which decorates the pump building. The pump was conceived to collect and distribute water from the Lerma river, but it became less important when the water in the walls increased. These days, the sound installation Cámara Lambdoma (by Ariel Guzik) allows you to listen to the running water while admiring Rivera’s mural.

Sing along to your favourite band at Corona Capital

22.  Sing along to your favourite band at Corona Capital

Corona Capital could be considered the first big international music festival which started to bring artists to Mexico that we thought we’d never see. Every year, at curve 4 of the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, more than 85 000 people gather to listen to the bands and their music. During its first editions, we saw huge artists such as Pixies, Echo and The Bunny Men, James, Mogwai, Portishead, and The Strokes. Over the past few years, The XX., Foo Fighters, Muse, and PJ Harvey have all played. There’s nothing like seeing your favorite band while enjoying a cold beer.

Have dinner in the middle of the city’s green lungs

23.  Have dinner in the middle of the city’s green lungs

A moonlit picnic in which you breathe fresh air, dine and listen to music in the 5.3 hectares of land which make up the Botanical Gardens of the Chapultepec Forest, considered the oldest urban park in America. You prepare your own menu and bring whatever takes your fancy, but if you want to surprise your date, you can buy a picnic basket for $300, which includes a bottle of red wine, a tablecloth, LED candles, plastic glasses, two ciabattas, two apples, and chocolates. Entry is free, and you don’t need to reserve, but arrive early to make sure you get a comfortable spot.

Take a spin class at altitude

24.  Take a spin class at altitude

Imagine exercising at more than 200m above sea level? Stop just dreaming about it and get yourself on a fixed bike in one of the special classes organized by Fitspin, which takes place at the highest point of several skyscrapers in Mexico City. As well as burning 700 calories, and working your legs, glutes, abdomen, and chest during the 50-minute session, you will also witness one of the best views in the whole of the city. There isn’t a fixed timetable for these classes, but we recommend you keep checking social media to find out about upcoming dates.

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19 Top-Rated Tourist Attractions in Mexico City

Written by Meagan Drillinger Updated Dec 26, 2023 We may earn a commission from affiliate links ( )

Author Meagan Drillinger spends months each year in Mexico, and visited Mexico City most recently in 2023.

Mexico City is, in a word, magic. The capital of the country of Mexico, Mexico City (or Ciudad de Mexico) is a swirl of gorgeous architecture, art museums, fabulous restaurants, and hotels — all set on streets that drip with centuries of history.

The Palace of Fine Arts

The city sits at an altitude of more than 2,200 meters in the Anáhuac Valley, wreathed in mighty mountain ranges — just have a look at the two snowcapped volcanoes, Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl, which stand guard in the distance.

Mexico City is one of the largest and most exciting cities in the world . Home to more than 21 million people, it's a thriving (sometimes chaotic) capital, home to the country's top tourist attractions , including the historic city center, more than 170 museums, theater, and even a few Aztec ruins.

Discover more things to do in this vibrant city with our list of the top attractions in Mexico City.

1. Zócalo: The Birthplace of the Constitution

2. the national museum of anthropology, 3. templo mayor and the great pyramid of tenochtitlán, 4. the palace of fine arts, 5. mexico city metropolitan cathedral, 6. the national palace, 7. chapultepec park, 8. paseo de la reforma and the angel of independence, 9. national history museum, 10. coyoacán & the frida kahlo museum, 11. the basilica of our lady of guadalupe, 12. alameda central, 13. the square of the three cultures and santiago de tlatelolco, 14. the house of tiles, 15. museo mural diego rivera and museo rufino tamayo, 16. museo soumaya, 17. explore the polanco neighborhood, 18. visit teotihuacan, 19. church of san francisco, where to stay in mexico city for sightseeing, tips and tours: how to make the most of your visit to mexico city, map of tourist attractions in mexico city, mexico city, mexico - climate chart.

Zócalo: The Birthplace of the Constitution

The beating heart of Mexico City is Zócalo — the Plaza de la Constitución (Constitution Square) — where the country's first constitution was proclaimed in 1813. Measuring some 240 meters in each direction, it's one of the world's largest squares and was laid out almost immediately after the conquest of the former Aztec city of Tenochtitlán on which it stands.

In the early colonial period, the square served a variety of purposes, including as a bullfighting arena and market, while today, it's used for festivals, parades, and demonstrations.

Dominated by three of the city's most visited tourist attractions — the National Palace , the Metropolitan Cathedral, and the Templo Mayor with its Aztec relics — Zócalo is the perfect place to begin exploring this historic city.

Hot Tip: A short stroll away from Zócalo, you can view three floors of murals by the famous artist Diego Rivera at the Secretaría de Educación Pública (education ministry). Entry is free.

Aztec Sun Calendar at the National Museum of Anthropology

One of the most important of its kind in the world, the National Museum of Anthropology lies in Chapultepec Park and is hard to miss due to the huge monolithic figure marking its entrance.

Built in 1964, this strikingly successful example of contemporary architecture is famous for its magnificent displays of old Indian art treasures, most notably in the Central Patio, part of which is roofed by a gigantic stone shelter supported by an 11-meter-tall column with waterfalls symbolizing the eternal cycle of life.

As spectacular as the building itself is its vast collection, which includes archaeological finds from extinct Indian cultures along with details of the lifestyles of contemporary Indian inhabitants of Mexico.

Other highlights include the National Library of Anthropology , founded by Lucas Alaman in 1831 and developed by Emperor Maximilian, which boasts more than 300,000 rare volumes.

Address: Av Paseo de la Reforma y Calzada Gandhi S/N, Chapultepec Polanco, 11560 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Templo Mayor and the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlán

Despite the widespread destruction after the defeat of the Aztecs, a number of their important historic sites have been unearthed and put on display in recent years. The most important site is Templo Mayor, home to the remains of the Great Temple of Tenochtitlán, including the first relic discovered in 1978, a finely sculpted round disc more than three meters in diameter and weighing eight-and-a-half tons.

Further excavations — including the summit platform of an earlier pyramid with well-preserved temple walls, along with the skulls of sacrificial victims — indicate the temple site had been built over by the Aztecs and their predecessors 11 times.

Templo Mayor

A highlight of a visit is a walkway past the precinct of the aristocratic "winged warriors," where remains of residences decorated with multi-colored reliefs have been unearthed, along with evidence of the original paintwork.

Hot Tip: The vast majority of relics and artifacts uncovered are housed in two museums: the Templo Mayor Museum built on the temple site, and the nearby National Museum of Anthropology , widely regarded as the most important museum in Mexico.

Address: Seminario 8, Centro Histórico, 06060 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Templo Mayor - Floor plan map

One of Mexico City's most important cultural landmarks, the Palace of Fine Arts (Palacio de Bellas Artes) is an architectural gem. Towering over the adjacent park, this massive marble building — designed by Italian architect Adamo Boari with Art Nouveau and Art Deco influences — was completed in 1934 and is so heavy that it has sunk more than four meters, despite attempts to lighten it by removing part of its huge dome.

The palace serves as an opera house and concert hall hosting a variety of traditional and international dance and operatic productions. But many visitors also come here to view the impressive murals adorning its interior by famous artists such as Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and José Clemente.

On the 4th floor is the Museo Nacional de Arquitectura with rotating exhibits on contemporary architecture.

The Palace of Fine Arts

If you happen to be in town on Wednesday or Sunday, tickets to the Ballet Folklorico are a must. For nearly 60 years, this performance has brought the traditional costumes, dance, and music from all regions of Mexico to one stage for a performance that is beyond entertaining, colorful, and beautiful.

Hot Tip : If you're able to see a performance here, you'll also be rewarded with a chance to enjoy the theater's stunning interior décor, including its spectacular glass-mosaic curtain, made by Tiffany's of New York, depicting the Valley of Mexico and its two mighty volcanoes.

Address: Juárez, Centro Histórico, 06050 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral

Dominating Zócalo Square, the massive Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral (Catedral Metropolitana de la Asunción de María) is one of the oldest and largest churches in the Western Hemisphere. Built atop part of the old Aztec temple precinct, construction of this massive basalt and grey sandstone structure began in 1525 and extended over 250 years.

In spite of the two neoclassical towers and certain other features, the façade creates a predominantly Baroque impression with its massive twisted columns. Standout features are the bell towers added in 1793 and the statues of Faith, Hope, and Charity on the clock tower, dating from 1813.

Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral

The cathedral's interior also shows a mingling of styles, with particular highlights being the richly carved Altar of the Kings (Altar de los Reyes) from 1739, with its superb devotional painting of the Assumption (Asunción de María) to which the cathedral is dedicated.

Also of interest are a chapel containing the remains of Mexican Emperor Agustin de Iturbide, and the crypt with its tombs of many of the city's archbishops, among them Juan de Zumárraga, the great teacher of the Indians and the first incumbent of the see.

Address: Plaza de la Constitución S/N, Centro, 06000 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Cathedral of Mexico City (Catedral Metropolitana) - Floor plan map

Occupying the east side of Mexico City's main square, Zócalo, the immense National Palace (Palacio Nacional), built of reddish tezontle stone and boasting a 200-meter-long façade, is the official residence of the president.

Built on top of an Aztec palace, it was the seat of the Spanish viceroys during the colonial period and has been much altered and enlarged over the years. One of the oldest and finest buildings in the city, it includes such notable features as the Freedom Bell , rung on September 15th, 1810, at the start of the War of Independence (it's rung on the anniversary of this event each year).

The palace boasts many handsome rooms laid out around its 14 courtyards, some accessible to visitors, the most notable being the arcaded Grand Courtyard with its fine frescoes depicting the country's rich history. Don't miss The History of Mexico mural by Diego Rivera, which adorns the grand staircase.

English-language guided tours explore a museum, a number of large halls, and the parliamentary chamber in which the Reform Constitution of 1857 was drawn up (it and the Constitution of 1917 are on display).

Other attractions here are the State Archives , with important historical documents, and the Biblioteca Miguel Lerdo de Tejada , one of the country's largest libraries.

Address: Plaza de la Constitución S/N, Centro, 06066 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Chapultepec Park

Bosque de Chapultepec is Mexico City's principal park, and covering an area of more than four square kilometers, it is also its largest. Once a stronghold of the Toltecs, it was here in AD 1200 that the Aztecs settled, and according to legend, laid out a park in the early 15th century.

Over time, the hill became a summer residence of the Aztec rulers with water from its springs conveyed to the temple precinct in the capital by means of an aqueduct, the remains of which can still be seen in Avenida Chapultepec. Portraits of the Aztec rulers were carved on the slopes of the hill, remnants of which can still be seen.

These days, the park is popular for its lakes, sports facilities, botanic garden, and museums — you'll find both the National History Museum and the National Museum of Anthropology here — along with numerous fun events, including concerts and theatrical performances.

Also of interest is the Museum of Modern Art (Museo de Arte Moderno), which opened in 1964 and is important for its retrospective look at Mexican art before and during the colonial period and its collection of pictures and sculptures by Mexican artists of the 19th and 20th centuries.

The Chapultepec Zoo is also here with a surprising diversity of animals from around the world.

Paseo de la Reforma and the Angel of Independence

The principal east-west traffic artery of Mexico City, Paseo de la Reforma extends for 15 kilometers from Tlatelolco to the residential district of Las Lomas but is best known for the stretch from Avenida Benito Juárez to Chapultepec Park .

Here, this attractive boulevard widens to 60 meters with a pleasant green strip in the middle containing busts and monuments to numerous national heroes. While now largely known as a busy entertainment and shopping area, this magnificent avenue - laid out during the reign of Emperor Maximilian - is home to a number of important attractions, most notably the massive Independence Monument (Monumento a la Independencia), also known as "El Angel" for the figure of a winged goddess of victory standing atop its tall 36-meter column.

In addition to its fine statues of the heroes of the country's independence movement is the Mausoleum, with its many skulls of some of the country's most important historical figures.

On Sunday mornings, Paseo de la Reforma closes to cars to become a pedestrian and cycle-friendly thoroughfare. It's one of the best things to do for residents of all ages. You may even find a pop-up yoga class happening in the street.

Address: Paseo de la Reforma y Eje 2 PTE, Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

National History Museum

Another of Mexico City's world-class attractions is the National History Museum (Museo Nacional de Historia). Housed in the 18th-century Chapultepec Castle (Castillo de Chapultepec), on a site once occupied by Aztec buildings and later by a Spanish hermitage, the museum opened in 1944 and is home to an impressive collection of pre-Columbian material and reproductions of old manuscripts, as well as a vast range of exhibits illustrating the history of Mexico since the Spanish conquest.

Highlights include arms and armor, documents, maps, and plans of the Conquest period and its immediate aftermath; ceramics, clothing, jewelry, and coins from three centuries; relics and souvenirs of the struggle for independence and the revolutionary wars; portraits of leading figures in Mexican history; and a number of state carriages, including those used by Benito Juárez and Emperor Maximilian.

Also of interest are the apartments occupied by Maximilian and Charlotte, decorated in neoclassical style and containing furniture brought from Europe. The castle also offers beautiful views over the city.

Address: Castilla de Chapultepec 1a Sección, Mexico City, CDMX, Mexico

Coyoacán & the Frida Kahlo Museum

Laced with atmospheric cobblestone streets, Coyoacán is one of Mexico City's oldest neighborhoods. Take time to stroll around the maze of laneways here and explore the hidden plazas, colonial-style mansions, and art-filled old churches like San Juan Bautista.

You can also sample exotic fruits and vegetables at the markets. One of the top tourist attractions in the town is the Frida Kahlo Museum in La Casa Azul (The Blue House), where the famous Mexican artist was born and where she frequently returned throughout her life. Here, you can view some of her most important paintings, as well as works by her famous husband, the mural artist Diego Rivera, and personal items from the couple's life. Note that it's best to purchase tickets in advance.

An easy way to see all the highlights of Coyoacán is on the full-day Mexico City Super Saver Tour . This 11-hour excursion begins with a guided tour through the neighborhood, including a visit to the Frida Kahlo Museum and North America's oldest university, as well as a boat tour along the canals of the UNESCO-listed ecological reserve, Xochimilco.

While you're in Coyoacan you can also visit the Museo Casa de Leon Trotsky . This is the house where Leon Trotsky, the exiled Russian politician, spent the final years of his life before he was assassinated.

Address: The Frida Kahlo Museum, Londres 247, Del Carmen, Coyoacán, 04100 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

The Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Said to have attracted its first pilgrims when it opened in 1531, the Roman Catholic Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe (Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe) attracts millions of visitors and worshipers each year, particularly during the Feast Day each December 12th.

Built adjacent to the hill where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared, the site consists of a complex of buildings overlooking a broad public square adorned with a number of interesting modern sculptures, including a large concrete cross with a unique clock and chime.

Highlights include a splendid altarpiece dedicated to Mary in the 16th-century Old Basilica, and the new Basilica de Guadalupe, built in 1976, and notable for its distinctive modern curved appearance.

Address: Plaza de las Américas 1, Villa de Guadalupe, 07050 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Alameda Central

Alameda Central, a shady and beautifully kept park with many splendid fountains and sculptures, was laid out in 1592 on the site of a once-busy Aztec market. It remains a bustling location to this day, especially at Christmas, when it is beautifully illuminated and decorated. Next to the park is the stunning Palacio de Bellas Artes , which hosts music and theatrical performances as well as important art exhibitions.

Address: Av Hidalgo S/N, Cuauhtémoc, Centro, 06010 Ciudad de México

The Square of the Three Cultures and Santiago de Tlatelolco

Another of Mexico City's important historic squares is the Square of the Three Cultures (Plaza de las Tres Culturas). The square occupies the site of the main square of the Pre-Columbian town of Tlatelolco and the scene of the last desperate stand by the Aztecs in 1521 - an event remembered by a memorial tablet.

It takes its name from its interesting mix of buildings from three different periods: Aztec pyramids and temples, a Spanish church, and modern tower blocks. In addition to the principal pyramid, other Aztec remains include a number of smaller pyramids, platforms, staircases, walls, and altars, as well as a "tzompantli," a wall of skulls and fine reliefs of Aztec calendar signs.

The square is also home to a rather sobering memorial museum, Memorial 68, commemorating the tragic murder of some 250 protesting students by government forces in 1968.

Also of note is the Baroque church of Santiago de Tlatelolco , built in the early 17th century on the site of a small chapel from 1535 that belonged to the Franciscan convent of Santiago. Adjoining the church is one of the old convent buildings, formerly the Colegio Imperial de Santa Cruz, in which the Franciscans taught the gifted sons of the Aztec nobility (one of the most notable teachers was Bernardino de Sahagún, the great chronicler of the history of New Spain).

The House of Tiles

Opposite the picturesque Church of San Francisco is the spectacular House of Tiles (Casa de los Azulejos). It was originally built in 1596 and boasts a façade decorated by the Conde del Valle de Orizaba 150 years later, with exquisite blue and white tiles from Puebla.

It became even more famous after artist José Clemente Orozco painted murals on the walls of the staircase in 1925. The House of Tiles is now a restaurant and an evocative venue to dine al fresco in the building's spectacular courtyard, surrounded by what is one very large work of art.

Hot Tip : Be sure to check out the large photo marking the spot where Emiliano Zapata and Pancho Villa dined together on arrival in Mexico City.

Address: Av Francisco I. Madero 4, Centro, 06500 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Museo Mural Diego Rivera

A short walk from the National Museum of Anthropology is Museo Rufino Tamayo, named after Rufino Tamayo (1900-91), one of Mexico's most famous painters. Notable for its unusual interior, the gallery opened in 1981 and, in addition to Tamayo's artwork it also displays his own extensive collection of several hundred works by contemporary artists, including prints, paintings, sculptures, and wall hangings.

Another important art facility worth visiting is Museo Mural Diego Rivera named after one of the country's leading artists whose most famous painting - Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park - in which he caricatured some of Mexico's historical figures, is on display here after years of being banned by the state (Rivera had originally called it Dios no existe , or God does not exist ).

Address: Paseo de la Reforma 51, Bosque de Chapultepec, 11580 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Museo Soumaya

A trip to Mexico City would be incomplete without a visit to the Museo Soumaya . This futuristic, architectural mind-meld was founded by Carlos Slim, one of the wealthiest men in the world, who named it for his deceased wife, Soumaya. Inside is more than 66,000 pieces of art that span 3,000 years, from sculptures from Mesoamerica right up to works from Tintoretto and Salvador Dali.

The non-profit cultural icon originally was housed in the Plaza Loreto of San Angel until 2011. It was moved to a new building in Plaza Carso in Nuevo Polanco, designed by Mexican architect Fernando Romero. The silver, reflective building spans 170,000 square feet of space and is a design feat in itself, pinched at the center like an hourglass, but angular like the hull of a ship.

But the real masterpieces continue inside. The majority of art is from the 15th to 20th centuries, though there is a substantial collection of indigenous Mexican art. Slim is the owner of the world's largest private collection of Auguste Rodin's art, as well, and the museum has the largest collection of casts of his sculptures outside of France.

Address: Blvd. Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Granada, Miguel Hidalgo, 11529 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Sunrise in Polanco, Mexico City

When it comes to the original "in vogue" destination in Mexico City, Polanco is at the top of the list. This swanky, glitzy, expensive neighborhood has always been about high style, fine dining, and fabulous hotels. Within the neighborhood are countless shops and restaurants, as well as a corner of Chapultepec Park .

If you're looking for one of the most up-scale destinations in Latin America, Polanco certainly takes the lead. The neighborhood's main artery is the Avenida Presidente Masaryk , which is often likened to the 5th Avenue of Mexico City. It's easy to see why when you see art gallery after art gallery, fine dining after fine dining, shopping malls, and gorgeous hotels.

Start at the Antara Fashion Hall , where you'll find all the brand names, from Hugo Boss to Carolina Herrera. You can also visit the Siqueiros Public Art Room, where muralist David Siquieros hosts workshops, talks, conferences, and exhibitions. You can also pop into Chapultepec Park for a lovely little afternoon picnic.

In the evening, snag a reservation at the legendary Pujol restaurant before heading to the Telcel Theatre for a Spanish-language performance of one of the Broadway greats.

Teotihuacan

Perhaps one of the most culturally and historically significant sites in Mexico City, the archeological zone at Teotihuacan tells so much of the story of the birth of Mexico.

The ancient site, a UNESCO World Heritage Site , was settled around 400 BCE and rose to be one of the most powerful cities in the region. It is still a mystery how the city came to be, but several theories exist surrounding earlier tribes that could have contributed to the city's growth. In the 15th century, the Aztecs claimed the city, naming it Teotihuacan.

Today what remains of Teotihuacan's eight square miles are 2,000 single-story apartment compounds, pyramids, temples, and palaces. It is known for its iconic Pyramid of the Sun and Pyramid of the Moon. The Pyramid of the Sun is the largest structure in Teotihuacan and faces west, measuring roughly 720 feet by 760 feet.

Priests at Teotihuacan were known to practice human and animal sacrifice. In fact, archeologists discovered 18 sacrificial victims buried around some of the temples, including the Pyramid of the Moon.

Today visitors can explore Teotihuacan on their own or as part of a tour. The archeological site is just 30 miles outside Mexico City.

Church of San Francisco

Along Madero Street (the street that leads to the Zocalo), you'll find the stunning Church of San Francisco. It's directly across the street from The House of Tiles. This beautiful, historic convent was once at the heart of a sprawling church and monastery complex. Today, all that remains is the church.

Still, what remains is a spectacular site to behold. Just look at the beautifully carved doorway, which dates back to the 18th century. The reddish bricks that you see to the right are stones that were used originally to build the Aztec buildings that once made up Moctezuma's private zoo.

When first constructed, the church was one of the earliest and most powerful Franciscan monasteries in the city. It also held the first 12 Franciscan friars who arrived in what was then "New Spain."

The church that exists today is actually the third to be built here and dates back to the early 18th century. Services are still held today.

Address: Av Francisco I. Madero 7, Centro Histórico de la Cdad. de México, Centro, Cuauhtémoc, 06000 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

If you're traveling to Mexico City for the first time, the best area to stay is in the historic city center (Centro Histórico de la Ciudad). This UNESCO World Heritage Site centers around the Zócalo, with the Metropolitan Cathedral, National Palace, and Templo Mayor.

The affluent Polanco neighborhood, also makes a great base, with its luxury hotels and upscale restaurants. It's about a 30-minute drive from the Centro Histórico, but near all the attractions of Chapultepec Park and the famous shopping street, Paseo de la Reforma. Here are some highly rated hotels in these convenient locations:

Luxury Hotels:

  • If you like grand historic hotels, the Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico in the Centro Histórico has affordable rates and an unbeatable location, within walking distance of the major historical attractions and with a rooftop terrace overlooking the Zócalo.
  • A dazzling stained-glass ceiling caps the elegant lobby. In the quieter Polanco neighborhood, a short stroll from Chapultepec Park, JW Marriott Hotel Mexico City features a full-service spa and outdoor pool.
  • Near Polanco and just a short walk to the Chapultepec Castle, the St. Regis overlooks Paseo de la Reforma and occupies a sleek modern building with contemporary decor to match.

Mid-Range Hotels:

  • A 10-minute walk to Zócalo, near restaurants and shops, the boutique Historico Central , in a beautifully restored 18th-century building, blends history with modern decor and thoughtful added touches such as artisan soaps.
  • Also in a historic building is the Hampton Inn & Suites Mexico City - Centro Historico , featuring a gorgeous stained-glass ceiling. It lies within walking distance of the Zócalo, Alameda Cathedral, and the Palacio de Bellas Artes.
  • The name says it all when it comes to location at the Zocalo Central , in an elegant building dating from the late 19th century. Some rooms score a bird's-eye view over this famous square.

Budget Hotels:

  • Near the Palacio de Bellas Artes, a 20-minute walk from the Centro Histórico, the good-value One Ciudad De Mexico Alameda has clean, compact rooms and free breakfast.
  • A few blocks from Paseo de la Reforma, Hotel Bristol is popular for its friendly service and comfortable rooms, while the modern City Express Plus Reforma El Angel is a short cab ride away from the historical center.

Taking an organized tour is the best way to see Mexico City's top attractions and a convenient way to enjoy day trips to surrounding sites. Guided tours save you time navigating the city's traffic-clogged streets, plus you can learn about the history and culture of the city. These sightseeing tours all include expert guides, entrance fees, and round-trip transportation.

  • Coyoacán, National University, and Frida Kahlo Museum: Mexico City's art, history, and nature are covered on the full-day Mexico City Super Saver Tour . This 11-hour excursion begins with a tour through the cobblestone streets of the evocative colonial city of Coyoacán, including a visit to the Frida Kahlo Museum and National University. Top off your city sightseeing adventure with a relaxing boat tour along the canals of the UNESCO-listed ecological reserve Xochimilco.
  • Teotihuacan Pyramids: On the eight-hour Early Morning Teotihuacan Pyramids Tour , you'll be one of the first visitors to gain access to this UNESCO-listed archaeological park. Better still, a private archaeologist guides you through the top sites, including the Palace of Quetzalpapalotl, Sun Pyramid, and Moon Pyramid. After exploring these ancient temples, the tour takes you to an obsidian workshop to see local artisans at work.
  • Iztaccihuatl Volcano: Avid hikers can enjoy spectacular views of Popocatepetl and the Valley of Mexico on the Iztaccihuatl Volcano Hiking Tour from Mexico City . This 12-hour tour includes a hike up the intermediate trail of this dormant volcano, stopping short of the 5,230-meter summit to admire the panorama.

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Mexico City Travel Tips: 20 Dos and Don'ts No One Tells You

kim standing in front of a yellow mural in mexico city

Make Mexico City Your Even Favorite-er City

These travel tips are part of our local, loco, (not) low-cal Mexico City blog , which includes our city guide , favorite local food , why bike , and report on pulque .

Mexico City is our favorite city to visit over and over again. And even though we think we know the city pretty well by now, every time we go we learn a few things that make it our even favorite-er city. These things we've learned are the Mexico City travel tips we're sharing below.

If you haven’t been before, these tips will probably make Mexico City your favorite city too. And if this ain’t your first rodeo a) You obviously have great taste in travel destinations, and b) Prepare to make your tastes even tastier.

Either way, these Mexico City travel tips will upgrade your perception of the DF CDMX.

Tips for your Trip

These Mexico City travel tips are split into four sections. Jump to directly to any one by clicking these shortcut links:

  • Upon Arrival
  • While in Mexico City
  • Things Not to Do
  • Before Leaving

Kim on EcoBici on la Reforma

As Soon As You Arrive in Mexico City

✓  get a cell phone sim.

You're going to need data in Mexico City to use Uber and the EcoBici shared bikes ( see below ), so get a SIM card immediately upon arriving. Dealing with a cell phone company is far from the most pleasant way to start your trip, but it'll make your trip more pleasant.

You can get a local SIM in the airport at the Telcel office in Terminal 1 or at an Oxxo or 7-11. They'll help you set it up. Here's what you need to get started:

  • A SIM card. This shouldn't cost more than 150 pesos. It should come with  and it should come with some "welcome credit."
  • A basic Amigo Sin Limite plan. Get the 50 peso one, which entitles you to 7 days of unlimited calling and messages to Mexico, USA, and Canada and 300 MB of data. This likely will be included with the cost of your SIM card.
  • An Internet Amigos plan for extra data. It costs 150 pesos for 1 GB.

Tip:   By default, Telcel sets up your account so that if you add credit ( una recarga in Spanish) it will automatically be used to buy the most expensive Amigos Sin Limite plan possible. To have more control over what you buy when you do a recarga, ask that they change your account accordingly.

More Tips: Read this more detailed guide to SIM cards in Mexico  if you're still in doubt.

T-Mobile User?: Eric comments below that your phone will work just the same as in the US (and France, Germany, Japan, and other countries), for no extra charge.

Kim at a stall in Mexico City's San Juan market

✓  Withdraw as many pesos as possible

In the interest of reducing the number of ATM trips you need to make and foreign withdrawal fees, take out as much cash as you can all at once. You're going to need it. Cash is still king in Mexico City and it will remain that way until business owners can no longer dodge taxes by taking it as payment.

Don't worry about withdrawing more than you need. As you'll soon discover in our final Mexico City travel tip below, you can actually make money off any pesos you haven't spent by the end of your trip!

Bank of America client?: Eric comments that you can make withdrawals from Scotiabank ATMs free of charge and with the prime rate so long as you refuse the insurance and say No to the proposed exchange rate at the last step of your withdrawal.

✓  Buy a plug-in mosquito repelling device

One of the few things that suck about Mexico City is the mosquitos. There aren't swarms like in the Amazon or Northern Canada, but they still have a remarkable ability to ruin your sleep.

Nothing 60 pesos ($3 USD) can't fix, though.

At the nearest convenience store or supermarket, pick up a little white plug-in device that uses blue tabs, put in a socket near your bed every night, and enjoy a blissful sleep.

We swear by the things. Our last two times in Mexico City, we "donated blood" for a couple nights, got fed up, got a mosquito repelling thing, and slept blissfully from then on.

Note: The things don't seem to exist on Amazon. We looked. Just get one when you arrive.

Chris riding EcoBici past a beetle in a Mexico City street

✓  Sign up for EcoBici

Despite the popular belief that Mexican traffic is as loco as swallowing a habanero whole, Mexico City is actually a surprisingly bike-friendly city. Side roads are mostly empty, the roads are flat, and drivers are more likely to honk one of those custom Mexican sexy whistle horns at you than an angry one.

If you're comfortable biking, sign up for EcoBici, Mexico City's bike share program, as soon as possible.

To give you an idea of how handy it is, in our most recent week in town we did over 40 rides covering 150 km.

For everything you need to know to spice up your Mexico City trip with EcoBici, including its pros and cons, how to use it, where to use it, and whether it's safe for you or not, don't miss our guide .

Warning: As Marcia learned the hard way and warns in the comments, don't sign up for EcoBici until you are ready to use it, because your account automatically initiates upon payment.

Related: How to Experience More of CDMX, Faster, by Using EcoBici

Travel Tips for a Better Time in Mexico City

✓  ask for samples at restaurants.

If you're unsure of which sauce, mole, or pulque flavor to order at a restaurant, ask for samples. Just about every restaurant and bar will be happy to oblige. That way you'll make the right choice every time and experience more flavors. Plus it's free.

Mug of beer at Terraza Catedral rooftop bar

✓  Get on the rooftops

The Google search results for "Best rooftop bar in Mexico City" suck. The places that show up in the results are higher-end than they are high up, often covered, and have no views.

We know because we went up to each of them and generally came back down quickly and unimpressed.

But we found a few worth climbing the stairs up to (…or pushing the button in the elevator).

Mexico City Rooftop Bars:

  • Terraza Catedral , has 35 peso draft beers and views of the Zocalo. It's better than El Mayor's rooftop bar and restaurant three blocks down the way. On weekdays it's "open at 1 p.m." (not really; see tip below) to the public. On weekends it opens at 6 p.m. and there's a cover fee.
  • El Balcon del Zocalo's name is self-explanatory. It's ideal for a fancier welcome or goodbye dinner.
  • Pulqueria Insurgentes doesn't have a view, but its got a refreshingly airy and unpretentious rooftop. On Sundays, their pulque is buy-one-get-one-free, and on Mondays all alcoholic drinks are half-priced.

Save these bars' locations and those of 19 more of our favorite restaurants, cafés, and street food right to your phone's Google Maps by getting our free Mexico City treasures map, below .

Outdoor workout area near Insurgentes station in Mexico city

✓  Burn off those buns (and tortillas)

Without a doubt, the best part about Mexico City is the food. The more food you eat, the better your trip will be. So how do you eat as much as humanly possible?

Working up an appetite with exercise.

Here are some fun (and mostly free) places to get your non-habanero-induced sweat on:

  • Hapi Fitness (first class 100 pesos): You'll be thinking "help-me" not "hapi" while doing a Hapi Fitness class, but we guarantee you'll be happy afterward. What's more, you'll emerge from the studio and find yourself right inside Dosis Cafe, where you can immediately reward yourself with a tasty pastry.
  • Park 54   (1st class free): Quick, dirty, and sweaty, Park 54's group circuit workouts will get you pumped and pump you up for a big day.
  • Gandhi Circuit in Chapultapec Park  (Public, see Google Maps ): This 1-km loop through the trees with a small workout area in the middle is a good spot for a breath huff-and-puff of fresh air.
  • Outdoor calisthenic parks  (Public): You can find chin-up bars and other apparatus for doing bodyweight workouts right beside Insurgentes metro station, in Parque Espana, in front of Qi Fitness in Condesa, and in the Centro.

Related: 9 Fun & Fast Tricks We Use to Stay Fit While Traveling

Chris walking into Pulqueria Duelistas

✓  Venture into a pulqueria

Pulque is kombucha with attitude. It's a gut-friendly fermented drink with 3-to-8-percent alcohol that you can only find within a day's drive Mexico's high plains.

It's not necessarily taste-bud friendly, though. Raw pulque is an acquired taste whose appeal is hurt by the fact that people too often compare its texture to that of semen. But if you give it a chance, get a curado that's blended with fruits, and compare it to yogurt-mixed-with-beer instead of sperm, there's a good chance you'll enjoy it.

Even if you can't swallow the stuff, pulquerias are worth venturing into for their dive-y, old school atmosphere and for the chance to meet the curious characters who you'll be drinking beside.

As for which pulqueria to go to, as a general rule of thumb the farther the pulqueria is from tourist attractions, the better.

If you're interested in trying this "kombucha on steroids," make sure to check our guide to its up-and-down-and-up-again history, amazing nutritional benefits, and where to get it in Mexico City.

art deco blue building la roma mexico city

✓  At least stay in the Condesa / Roma Norte area

As we explain in the neighborhood overview of our Mexico City first-timers' guide , it's the ideal area to base your stay. It's central, safe, cosmopolitan, and has tons of places for eating, shopping, exercising, and eating some more.

Condesa / Roma Norte has plenty of boutique hotels and hostels. If we were rich or it were our honeymoon, we'd stay at the Nima Local House or La Valise .

Related: Quick and Dirty Mexico City First-Timers' Guide

✓  Read these other blogs' Mexico City travel tips

Here are a couple other posts with not-obvious, original, and actually helpful Mexico City travel tips:

  • What not to Do in Mexico City: Advice from a Local , by Northern Lauren
  • 17 Things to Know Before You Go to Mexico City , by Explore Parts Unknown

✓  Try these tips and tricks to change the way you travel

You're sure to find at least one idea that will change the way you travel in our list of our best travel tips and tricks . It has everything from advanced, experimental travel tips and tricks to practical but oft-overlooked ones to dumb advice we hear others give too often (and what to do instead).

What NOT to Do in Mexico City

Vendor and his basket of churros on a Mexico City street

✗  Don't be a wuss

Worried that your ice cubes might be made from tap water?

Suck it up and suck down your drink anyways.

Wondering where that food's been and how long it's been sitting out?

Tell your selfish yuppy gut bacteria they need to make some Mexican friends. It's good for all of you.

Concerned that you'll stick out like a sore thumb in a poorer neighborhood?

Hate to break it to you, but the people in those neighborhoods are too preoccupied with more important things to care about your presence.

Get over yourself and don't be a wuss.

✗  Don't look like a tourist

Even if you're a big, light-haired, fair-skinned guy like Chris you  should at least try to look like a local resident instead of a tourist.

That means no flip-flops under any circumstances, and no shorts unless it's blisteringly hot outside.

Otherwise, it's so obvious you're a tourist that you may as well wear your national flag as a cape, paint your face in the same colors, and fan yourself with 500 peso bills.

✗  Don't pay for water

You know how full-serve gas station attendants try to upsell you on premium gas and you have to say, "No, just regular, please"? Well that's how it is with water at restaurants in Mexico City.

When you ask for water your waiter will default to bringing you an expensive bottle. But if you ask the right way, they'll begrudgingly give you a glass of filtered water for free.

Ask for " agua del filtro ." Most likely, the server will pretend not to understand at first, so insist. Say, " Un vaso de agua del garrafon " (a glass from the jug). Repeat if necessary.

The waiter will eventually relent and bring you your water, saving you some pesos and saving the environment from another empty bottle.

Close up of torta from Fonda Chilaquil with line in background

✗  Don't wait in super long in lines

Here's a hot travel take: Anything you need to wait around in line with other tourists for is not worth doing.

For example, unless you're such a Frida fan that you've grown a unibrow in her honor, it's not worth it (unless you buy in advance, as per the tip below). Also, instead of waiting to blow your pesos with other hip gringos at Hotel Condesa's bar, get some pulque at Pulqueria Insurgentes. And rather than wait forever for a pastry from Rosetta go up the street to the much more spacious Cafe NIN, which has the exact same treats minus the line.

But when it comes to less-touristy attractions, don't be scared off by rumors of lineups. Three of our favorite food spots —Fonda Margarita, Esquina Chilaquil, and Tacos Don Juan—were said to have hour-plus long lines, but in all three cases we waited no more than twenty minutes. We suspect the locals exaggerate to keep annoying tourists away.

Tip: Save yourself a couple of hours waiting to get into the Frida museum by buying tickets in advance on this site or doing a tour, like this this highly-rated Airbnb experience , that includes VIP skip-the-line entry. (Thanks to Nina for this tip. She also recommends paying extra for a guide or audio tour, which she regrets not doing.)

✗  Don't go anywhere when it's close to its opening or closing hours

Based on our experience, opening and closing hours are suggestions in Mexico City, not reality.

Inevitably, the person running the shop, restaurant, or bar will have an excuse to open later than advertised and close earlier.

Being naive to this reality (perhaps due to Chris' always-on-time Swiss ancestry) and slow learners, we went but had to come back another time to four different places during our trip: Helado Obscuro, Terraza Catedral, Minichelista, and Pulqueria La Nuclear.

Close up of Dorilokos and the guy who sells them

✗  Don't trust strangers who approach you in perfect English

We were minding our own business eating some Dorilokos near the Anthropology Museum when a frazzled-looking white guy approached. In perfect English, he rambled on about how he was robbed in a taxi and was desperate to catch his flight. He asked for twenty to thirty dollars for a taxi, saying he would repay us later via PayPal.

We asked him to screw off. There was a fluent-English speaking tourist booth beside us whose job it is to help out people like him, so he was clearly a scammer.

A similar situation happened near Bellas Artes with a guy at one of those three-cups-one-ball sleight-of-hand games who asked us to "help him out for a sec."

Long story short, if you have the face of a sucker like we apparently do, there's a decent chance you'll be approached by indecent people trying to scam you. If they have suspiciously good English, be suspicious.

If you feel bad, do something nice for a stranger when you get home to make up for it.

✗  Don't take taxis

We don't know about you, but we prefer not to pay more money to expose ourselves to a higher risk of getting ripped off and getting lost. That's why we use Uber in Mexico City.

As an example, an official taxi from the airport to Roma Norte costs 220 pesos. Uber costs 130. Use those 90 pesos you save towards getting yourself a Mexican SIM card ( see above ) so you can use Uber.

Don't overlook other forms of transit, too. Biking, the bus, and the metro can be faster and are certainly cheaper. See our Mexico City Guide for more on getting around.

Before You Leave Mexico City

✓  buy your souvenir mezcal or tequila in the city, not at the airport duty-free.

The selection of booze in Mexico City's airport duty-free is expensive and only has brands you can buy in liquor stores back home.

Get a cheaper, better, more unique bottle in town. Bundle it up before packing it in your check-in luggage, pray it doesn't get smashed en route, then share it with your friends while exaggerating about how sought-after the particular brand it is.

✓  Make some money on the exchange rate

Mexico City airport currency exchange booths will pay you to take US dollars off their hands.

For example, Chris exchanged 720 pesos to dollars at the end of our trip. According to the official exchange rate that day, those pesos should have been worth $36 USD. But they gave him $37. He made $1 profit, which is more than this blog earns him most days.

If you happen to have have $10K cash in your bank account, you can exploit this loophole to make hundreds of dollars.

el tacoton cdmx eat like a local in mexico city

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Quick guide of Mexico City travel tips like what to get as soon as you arrive, what to ask for in restaurants, and what to avoid.

Read This Next:

These Mexico City travel tips are part of our Local, Loco, and (Not) Low-Cal Mexico City blog.

Discover a whole lot more tasty tips by completing the series:

Mexico City blog city guide series cover image of vendor.

Mexico City Guide: 12 F.A.Qs for 1st Timers

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How to Eat Like a Local in Mexico City: 15 Surefire Favorites

Kim at a corner on her EcoBici

How to Explore Mexico City by Bike

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Pulque: A Guide to Mexico's Kombucha on Steroids

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50+ Travel Tips and Tricks That Will Change the Way You Travel

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26 thoughts on “Mexico City Travel Tips: 20 Dos and Don'ts No One Tells You”

Great tips for visiting Mexico city. I like how you promote visiting local places. You have a to be a bit extra cautious when visiting Mexico.

Thanks for the perspective Henry. I agree you have to be cautious when visiting Mexico, but honestly you have to be cautious in any foreign country. Even in Vancouver, where we are now, you can find yourself in trouble if you're naive and careless. As for CDMX specifically, based on our experience and that of our friends who've been there and lived there, I'd definitely say it's way, WAY safer than most people think. As safe as many American cities. But just like in those cities, you're right that you gotta be careful.

Thanks for the tips! I'm planning a trip to Mexico City for the first time in February and I'm curious to hear why you think the Frida Khalo museum isn't worth it. I was planning to get tickets in advance to try to avoid the lines, but I'd love to hear your thoughts.

Hey Olivia. That's a really fair question. The reason I'd say it's overrated is because of the huge line that wastes so much precious CDMX time and because people go because other people go, even if they don't give a crap about art or Kahlo. They may as well go to one of the many other, but less popular, museum. But if you can avoid the line by getting a ticket and if you go in already with a true appreciation of Kahlo and desire to learn more, then by all means it's a good idea. Most people don't fit those criteria, though.

"The Blue House" is a marvelous 'don't miss' home that reflects so much of who Frieda Kahlo was. Colorful, decorated in this artist's very particular taste. One of the few city spots to which I often return..I am an artist. Much of my work – water color and photography, is of Mejico…

"Fair skinned, blonde haired" I see you poking fun at yourself. Really appreciate the post, been trying to collect as much information as possible. We're headed to CDMX mid February. I didn't see any mention of Xochilmilco canals or the ruins of Teotithuacan. Any recommendations? Priced a potential tour but more expensive than expecting. We are thinking maybe uber and tour ourselves. Vale la pena?

Also, lucha libre, yes or no?

Thanks – Mary

Hi Mary, Thanks for the questions!

We share our brief takes on Xochimilco, Teotihuacan, and lucha libre in our "Quick and Dirty Mexico City Guide" . Of the three, we'd recommend lucha libre the highest… even though we haven't done it. All our friends who have, even those who we wouldn't suspect would like it, gave us rave reviews.

On the other two, in addition to what we write in the Quick and Dirty guide I'd say the biggest determinant of whether to go or not is how much time you have. We consider neither to be absolute "must dos" for trip of less than a week, especially since the time you lose going there and back is precious. And if you want to get out of town, it's possibly even worth considering a pueblo like Tepotzlan instead.

Whatever you decide, have a fantastic trip. And if you discover tips of your own, or ones of ours you disagree with (politely of course), please come back to share it!

"For example, unless you’re such a Frida fan that you’ve grown a unibrow in her honor, it’s not worth it."

Are you seriously suggesting that Casa Azul isn't worth the wait? Instead of skipping the museum, I'd suggest planning your day better. There's tours that help you skip the line.

Fair enough, Julia. Sorry maybe for making you frown so much you almost have a unibrow yourself.

I would bet that a good percentage of people waiting in line are waiting simple because everyone else said to go. They could either plan better like you say, or prioritize based on their own interests.

Yeah, don't take a taxi! Much better to support this Uber exploiter company. by the way: a bus or metro would be even cheaper. But that is too local perhaps.

From taxi scammers to uber exploiters. What's next in the evolution? You're right, Momo, that we should mention buses and metro here. I'll update the post. Thanks!

OMG This post had me absolutely cracking up! "Tell your yuppie gut to make some Mexican friends." LOL what an incredible line! I am heading to Mexico (but CDMX for only 2 days) and am so thankful I found this post! Great tips. We are going to the Frida Khalo house, but got skip the line tickets in advance, and though I'm not a huge fan of art and museums, do love her for all that she accomplished as a female Mexican artist. As a traveler watching the budget I definitely appreciate all the local and more affordable tips!

Hey Nina, Thanks. It's nice to hear at least some people appreciate my attempts at humor.

Now that you mention it, I should mention the skip-the-line option for Frida. Thanks!

If you come up with any other tips to add from your experience, let me know. If I like it, I'll add it and link to your site as a shout-out.

Buen viaje!

Any comments on airlines between cities in Mexico. I don't want to waste time taking 6 hour bus trips, but the airlines have lots of negative reviews. Thanks!

Sorry, Jaimee, but I've mostly bussed around Mexico so I don't have enough experience on the airlines to help out. Any other reader with tips, please chime in!

Hi Jaimee, I highly recommend flying with a Mexican airline. Just be aware of the extra costs for luggage (that's why I always travel only with hand luggage), especially with the cheaper airlines. I have tried many airlines like Volaris, Air Mexico, Aeromar, VivaAerobús and even small airplanes with only 12 passengers and they were all very reliable. Let me know if you have more questions. And enjoy Mexico!

Great tips, guys (and gals). Thank!!

Two more we can add from recent experience.

1) Bank of America partners with ScotiaBank for ATM service in MX (and much of Latin America?) There are no fees for using a BoA ATM card at a Scotiabank AND you get prime exchange rate BUT a) you have to refuse the insurance and b) you have to say NO to their proposed excange rate (which is the last question the ATM asks you). Also there is seldom a Scotiabank location where you need it.

Regarding Cell Phones, T-mobile is a German company, and therefore they are aware that there are other countries in the world besides the US. They have partners in MX, Japan, France and – not surprisingly – Germany (these we have used ourselves) plus MANY more countries. When you arrive in a country with a T-mobile partner, you receive a text from them welcoming you, and then magically, your phone works, calls, texts, data, the whole enchilada. It's almost like living in the 21st Century !!

Thanks, Eric! I've updated the post with these tips of yours. Hope you enjoyed/are enjoying CDMX!

It’s a little concerning that you’re downplaying water safety precautions. “Don’t be a wuss. Suck it up and suck up the water?” I work in travel medicine and traveler’s diarrhea is the #1 sickness people get while visiting other countries. Not to mention other food and water borne illnesses like typhoid fever and Hepatitis A that can be difficult to treat in other countries. Most travelers who are new to the area should indeed be taking these precautions seriously. Contracting one of these illnesses can completely ruin one’s trip. Also, your verbiage and choice of words like “suck” and poking fun at unibrows is distasteful.

Thanks for sharing your tastes, Rae. Truly. It helps other readers to have varying opinions.

I love your blogpost and loved Mexico City so much! It was actually nicer than I expected. I thought it would be hectic, dirty and loud, but it was such an amazing city. We stayed in Roma Norte, but this would not be my first choice for my next time, because it has a lively (gay) party scene. I would go to Condesa or Reforma next time. I also recommend getting a creditcard with pesos on it, because they do accept a card in many places. And my final advice: just go!

Amazing blog! Thank you for making me want to visit Mexico right now. I just wanna share I use this website https://www.holidayhare.com/city/mexico-city/4075 to check country/city info like weather, visa requirements etc. before I travel. 🙂

We are planning a trip to Mexico next year, I wanted to check out your airbnb links but they don't seem to be working. Can you provide that info again??

Hi Amanda. Sorry but it seems they're not available anymore, so I've removed them from this post. Thanks for the heads up. Enjoy your stay!

Love this but frustrating that i signed up for a 3 day ecobicci prior to my trip It starts today and expires before i even arrive! I thought it would start on my initiation Maybe you should warm people not to sign up till you are ready to use it

How annoying! Thanks for the warning, Marcia. I've added the heads up to the post.

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A Week in Mexico City – BEST Things to Do and See

By: Author Susan Moore

Posted on Last updated: November 24, 2023

I planned my solo trip to Mexico City after reading a travel blog city guide. I was inspired by all of the great architecture, art museums, and archaeological sites. With just over a week in Mexico City I had plenty of time to explore on my own.

If you love art and food and history as much as I do you will LOVE Mexico City :)

For many years I envisioned visiting the Frida Kahlo Museum. I had seen photos of Diego Rivera’s murals and I wanted to see them in person.

I had a yearning to see the pyramids that were built by the native inhabitants of Mexico many centuries ago. My previous visits to Mexico I visited beach destinations of  Cancun, Cozumel, and Huatulco .

Mexico City Palacio de Bellas Artes at dusk.

Mexico City Palacio de Bellas Artes is a beautiful building – a must visit during your week in Mexico

This post contains compensated links and I may receive a commission for purchases made through links. See my disclosure about affiliate links

I had planned to go to Mexico City with a friend a few years ago but she had to cancel, as happens so many times when I plan travel with others! One more reason why I prefer to travel alone.

Booking the trip around the US Thanksgiving holiday I only missed 4 weekdays but I had a total of 10 days off in a row.

One Week in Mexico City Best Things to Do and See.

In This Article:

How many days in Mexico City?

If you are not sure how long to spend in Mexico City I suggest making a list of all the sights you feel you  need to see in Mexico City. Then figure out how may days you will need.

Personally I think about one week in Mexico City is a enough to see plenty and not feel rushed. Maybe 1 week to 10 days would be best if you plan to take lots of day trips.

Even if you only have a weekend in Mexico City you can still do a lot. If you only have 2 or 3 days I would stay in the central historic district near many of the top tourist sites in Mexico City. You don’t want to spend too much time stuck in traffic or on the subway.

READ MORE: 52 Best Solo Travel Quotes

Things to do in Mexico City on your own

Trust me when I tell you there is no shortage of things to do in Mexico City all by yourself. For one thing there are world class art museums.

Secondly, it’s an archaeological lovers dream, complete with ruins and a top rated museum that is the number one tourist attraction in the city.

Third, the food is outstanding in variety of cuisine as well as price points. Enjoy everything from street food to dining at 5-star restaurants.

You’ll find it’s easy to get around on your own either walking or using the super cheap metro that has special cars for women and children only.

Perfect for the solo female traveler! Although I used the regular metro cars and didn’t have any problems it’s nice to have the option of women only cars.

Have a look at some of the top things to do in Mexico City.

Archaeological ruins at Teotihuacan – City of the Gods

This amazing archaeological site is about a one-hour bus ride from the city. The buses leave every 20 minutes from Terminal Autobuses del Norte, across the street from Autobuses del Norte Metro (line 5) station.

Teotihuacan entrance fee

Tickets to get into Teotihuacan cost 70 pesos. You can purchase the ticket when you get off the bus at the site.

Susan Moore in front of pyramid at the archaeological site Teotihuacan.

Solo travel Mexico City day trip to pyramids at Teotihuacan – City of the Gods

Check out the latest hotel rates and availability here

Diego Rivera mural at Palacio de Bellas Artes

While I didn’t get to see a performance at the Palacio de Bellas Artes at least I did get to visit and I highly recommend it.

The art work is incredible and includes Diego Rivera’s mural Man, Controller of the Universe . Read more about my visit to Palacio de Bellas Artes .

Mural by Diego Rivera

Diego Rivera mural Man, Controller of the Universe – detail

Frida Kahlo Museum in Coyoacan

One of the big highlights for me included visiting the house where Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera lived in Coyoacan neighborhood. You can find more about  visiting the Frida Kahlo Museum here .

Studios of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera at Frida Kahlo Museum.

Art studios of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera at the Museo Frida Kahlo in Mexico City

Frida and Diego’s house is known as Casa Azul for the beautiful blue exterior of the house.

Text: Frida y Diego vivieron en esta casa 1929 - 1954, painted on blue wall, with 7 small sculptures below.

Blue courtyard of Museo Frida Kahlo in Coyoacan neighborhood

When you visit the Frida Kahlo museum I suggest spending some time in the neighborhood. A good place to have lunch in Coyoacan is Restaurante El Morral.

Mexico City tacos salsa limonada at Restaurante El Morral in Coyoacan neighborhood.

Mexico City tacos salsa limonada – Restaurante El Morral in Coyoacan neighborhood

National Museum of Anthropology

The largest and most visited museum in Mexico City is worthy of a few hours. Located within Chapultepec Park

Entrance fee

70 pesos for adults. Free entry for nationals, seniors over age 60, children under 13, people with disabilities, teachers, and students.

Attend a guided tour Tuesday to Saturday at 10:30 am 12:30 am 1:30 pm 3 pm and 5 pm

Tuesday to Sunday 9 am to 7 pm (closed every Monday)

Giant animal sculpture inside the Anthropology Museum located in Chapultepec Park.

Mexico City Anthropology Museum

Piedra del Sol - Sunstone - Aztec calendar at Anthropology Museum located in Chapultepec Park.

Mexico City Anthropology Museum piedra del sol – sunstone – Aztec calendar

Museum of Modern Art at Chapultepec Park

Museum of Modern Art features Frida Kahlo's painting Las dos Fridas.

Las dos Fridas by Frida Kahlo at Mueso de Arte Moderno

After visiting the indoor exhibits I enjoyed a stroll through the outdoor sculpture garden at the Museum of Modern Art.

Museo de Arte Moderno outdoor sculpture gardens

Modern Art Museum in Chapultepec Park features an outdoor sculpture garden - Ovi by sculptor Hersua.

Sculpture by Ovi by Hersua is made of iron, cement, copper foil

Via Corta Cafe de Autor at Museo de Arte Moderno

There is also a wonderful coffee shop at the Museum of Modern Art. I sat outside enjoying my cappuccino and tiramisu.

Coffee and tiramisu at Via Corta Cafe de Autor, at Museo de Arte Moderno in Mexico City's Chapultepec Park.

Mueso de Arte Moderno Via Corta Cafe de Autor – tiramisu and cappuccino

Rufino Tamayo Museum

Just a short walk from the Museum of Modern Art in Chapultepec Park is the Rufino Tamayo Museum. It is a small museum so there is often a queue to get into the museum especially on weekends.

Museo Rufino Tamayo exhibit.

Exhibit at Museo Rufino Tamayo in Chapultepec Park

National History Museum Mexico City

The National History Museum and Chapultepec Castle are located on the top of a hill in Chapultepec Park.

National History Museum at Chapultepec Park in Mexico City - the mural Alegoria de la Revolucion Mexicana - Eduardo Solares Gutierrez.

Detail of Alegoria de la Revolucion Mexicana by Eduardo Solares Gutierrez

Chapultepec Castle

Adjacent to the National History Museum is the extravagant Castillo de Chapultepec where Maximilian I and Empress Carlota once resided.

Chapultepec Castle with extravagant decorations in green and gold.

Castillo de Chapultepec – Mexico City’s former Royal Residence

Here is one more photo from Chapultepec Park featuring one of the tiny residents of the park. The squirrels are a great amusement to many visitors at the park.

Squirrels are abundant at Chapultepec Park in Mexico City, this one greeted me when I entered the park.

Squirrel hanging out at Chapultepec Park in Mexico City

Angel of Independence monument – Paseo de la Reforma

There are wonderful views from the balcony of Chapultepec Castle including Paseo de la Reforma where there are several monuments.

Paseo de la Reforma features several monuments including The Angel of Independence.

The Angel of Independence – Paseo de la Reforma

Best view of Mexico City Historical District

Besides the balcony of the Chapultepec Castle the best view of Mexico City is from atop the Torre Latinoamericana building located in Centro Historico – the central historical district.

There are several metro stops in the area so it is easy to get to.

Overhead grand vista from the Torre Latinoamericana building, looking towards the Palacio de Bellas Artes.

View of Mexico City from Torre Latinoamericana building

There is a restaurant and bar on the 41st floor of the Torre Latinoamericana building where you can enjoy a coffee or cocktail along with a magnificent view of Mexico City.

Centro Historico – Zócalo

The Central Historic District features the large plaza known as Zócalo which was originally the ceremonial center of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan.

The official name of the plaza is Plaza de la Constitución but everyone refers to it as Zócalo.

Metropolitan Cathedral. at Zocalo plaza in the Centro Historico.

Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City’s Centro Historico – Zócalo

Tacos in Mexico City

You gotta try the tacos in Mexico City! Along with great architecture and historical sites there were some delicious tacos to be had for only a few pesos.

Delicious carnitas – which means little meats were a favorite. Although I am not a big meat-eater these tacos were so tasty!

Carnitas (little meats) in corn tortillas with a side of cebolla (onion), Mexico City street tacos.

Mexico City tacos – carnitas (little meats) and onions in Centro Historico

La Condesa neighborhood

Traveling alone it is important to feel safe and secure and I felt perfectly safe in my neighborhood La Condesa in Mexico City.

I stayed on Amsterdam Avenue which is an oval-shaped road with a center pedestrian walkway all around. It took me around 45 minutes to walk the whole loop and I walked the loop several evenings.

Mexico City breakfast enchiladas verde.

Mexico City breakfast enchiladas verde

Sculpture along Amsterdam Avenue pedestrian walkway in La Condesa neighborhood.

Amsterdam Avenue pedestrian walkway in La Condesa

Walking around La Condesa early in the morning is pleasant because it’s not so busy and I was more observant of the beautiful architecture and design.

Old Carpinteria art deco building in La Condesa neighborhood.

Mexico City neighborhood La Condesa architecture and design

While I enjoyed my 8 days of solo travel in Mexico City I could spend another week or two to see more of the sights that I missed.

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Mexico City Chapultepec Castle former Royal Residence on Paseo de la Reforma.

Kay Dougherty

Thursday 21st of May 2015

Years ago my best friend's husband did a lot of work in Mexico City and he had to have bodyguards and a bulletproof car when he went there on business! That made me write it off my list of places to visit. But maybe that's an outdated perspective on it? You apparently felt safe although it's still probably a place I would hesitate to visit on my own (what a wuss). Your host sounds wonderful and that would go a long way to alleviate any uneasiness!

Karen Warren

Mexico is high up in my wish list of places to visit, and it looks as if Mexico City has lots of the things I like best - history, art and food. And I love outdoor sculpture too, so I need to get there soon!

Wednesday 20th of May 2015

Hi Susan, I really felt the leisurely manner in which you toured the magnificent Mexico City. You took your time visiting important museums -- my favorite, Frida Kahlo's -- as well as taking time out for a squirrel shot. You have mentioned before that solo travel allows freedom of choice and pace, and I envy that of you! Conrad and I have traveled frequently with friends or family, which means everyone has an opinion for where and when to do things. I think I could get into the solo thing for a while! Thanks for showing us this lovely city. Regards, Josie

Marilyn Jones

Tuesday 19th of May 2015

I enjoyed reading about your adventures in Mexico City and especially appreciated your advice on where you stayed. What a great idea to stay with someone local! Your photos are all excellent too!!

Irene S. Levine

Monday 18th of May 2015

What a great post. The art of the city is so powerful! It sounds like you did great planning for what turned out to be a great trip. I'm sure this post will inspire others to visit Mexico City, too. You have me hooked:-)

Let's Travel To Mexico

Is Mexico City Worth Visiting? Tips from A Local

Mexico city skyline at night

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Is Mexico City Worth Visiting? The short answer is yes! But I may be biased. Keep reading these 26 Pros and Cons of visiting Mexico City.

This post will cover everything you need to know about traveling to one of the biggest cities in the world so you can make the decision for yourself!

I was born and bred in Mexico City and to be quite honest, I never really thought of the city as much growing up.

It wasn’t until I decided to travel the world and live in different cities across different continents that I concluded that CDMX, as it’s locally called now, is one of the most thrilling capitals in the entire world.

After almost ten years of traveling all over and finding home bases in places like New York City, Miami, Bangkok, London, and Dusseldorf, I decided to move back to Mexico City because what this city has is pretty unique.

You can’t ever really get bored here because there is something going on every second of every day!

Of course, like any big city in the world, Mexico City has a lot of pros and a lot of cons.

For that reason, I put together a comprehensive guide with everything you need to know about this humongous metropolis so you can decide if Mexico City is worth seeing on your own.

Monumento a La Patria CDMX under a pink sky

Why should you visit Mexico City?

👉🏼 is mexico city safe.

Like any big city, Mexico City has safe and unsafe areas. Generally, Mexico City is a very safe destination to visit.

Safe areas to stay for tourists include Roma Norte, Roma Sur, Condesa, Polanco, Lomas de Chapultepec, Cuauhtemoc, and Santa Fe. When staying in any of these areas, you will rarely encounter problems.

With that said, I still recommend practicing any safety precautions you would in any big city. 

👉🏼 Is Mexico City tourist friendly?

Mexico City doesn’t have the tourism infrastructure other cities in Mexico like Cancun or Los Cabos have, but it is generally very tourist friendly as long as you don’t expect locals to cater for you.

While this is rapidly changing due to a high influx of digital nomads, most people working at shops, restaurants, and cafés don’t speak English.

Neighborhoods like Condesa and Roma are changing this, but you should still expect to have to translate often.

Moreover, one thing to note about traveling to Mexico City is that due to plenty of digital nomads and remote workers coming to live here for extended periods of time since 2020, locals are beginning to resent gentrification.

While you shouldn’t encounter problems, there is definitely a rise in xenophobia among Mexico City locals as many have been displaced from their homes.

The issue is mostly targeted toward long-term stayers rather than visitors, but it is still something you should keep in mind when visiting.

Madre - restaurant cafe Roma building Mexico city

Reasons why you should visit Mexico City: Pros

1. rich history & attractions: historic center.

Also known as the Plaza de la Constitución, the Zócalo is the main square and the historical heart of Mexico City.

This place is a must-visit on anyone’s Mexico City itinerary as it holds immense cultural and historical significance.

For centuries now, the Zocalo has been the main gathering place for political, cultural, and social events in the city.

These days, the Zócalo is a magnificent space to look at, but it also acts as a cultural center of sorts where food, crafts, and souvenirs are sold.

Occasionally, events and concerts are held here as well.

As a tip, the Zócal still continues to be an important gathering spot in the city.

Protests happen here often as do plenty of political events. My advice is to make sure to check what’s going on during your visit as it can sometimes get incredibly crowded.

✨ Templo Mayor

You wouldn’t expect to find Mesoamerican ruins in the middle of a huge metropolis, but in Mexico City, everything is possible!

Templo Mayor was once the center of Tenochtitlan (the former Aztec capital). The Spanish largely destroyed it during the conquest and replaced it with a cathedral. 

There are still some ruins to explore and consider the splendor this significant capital once held, despite the fact that few of the temples were spared.

overview of Mexico city from the torre latina

✨ Palacio Nacional

Located in the historical center of the city, Palacio Nacional serves as the official seat of the executive branch of the Mexican government.

While some parts of it are out of reach for visitors for that very reason, you can still enter the place and check out its interior.

The building itself is magnificent work of art and a testament to colonial architecture in Mexico.

A favorite feature is the Diego Rivera mural series, “The History of Mexico”.

His works of art cover the walls of the main staircase and tell the story of Mexico as a country, covering pre-Columbian times all the way to the Mexican Revolution.

2. Amazing Architecture

One of my favorite things about Mexico City is its blend of amazing architecture.

One second, you can be looking at humongous skyscrapers, and the next, you can be admiring ancient Aztec ruins or colonial buildings.

The city has plenty of well-preserved ruins and buildings from prehispanic and Colonial times.

As the city grew and modernized, new buildings showcasing beautiful Art Nouveau and Neoclassical styles also popped up.

Seriously, walking around the city feels like you’re strolling through an architecture museum that reflects Mexico’s Citys ever-evolving identity.

The front of the cathedral in the Zocalo Mexico with a giant Mexican flag

3. Ancient Mesoamerican civilizations

Mexico City has been inhabited by several ancient civilizations, each of which has left a significant mark on the city’s culture and history. 

The most famous of these civilizations were the Aztecs, who founded their capital city of Tenochtitlan (modern-day Mexico City). 

Before the Aztecs, though, the area in and around Mexico City was home to several other civilizations.

These include the Toltecs (10 century) and the Teotihuacan (1st and 8th centuries).

4. Pyramids of Teotihuacan

One of the most significant archeological complexes in the world is Teotihuacan, which is about an hour’s drive from the center of Mexico City.

Teotihuacan was once the biggest city in all of North America, and the Aztecs later used it as a place of pilgrimage.

Today, tourists can explore a sizable portion of the ruins and take in Teotihuacan’s two impressive pyramids, the Pyramid of the Sun and the Pyramid of the Moon, which are connected by a broad avenue with many still-standing structures and murals.

In addition, hot-air balloon rides are available here ! If you have the time and resources, I really recommend taking one because it will help you understand the true grandeur of the site.

monument in mexico city aerial view

5. Authentic Mexican culture

Mexico City has its own unique identity, history, and culture, making it very different from the rest of Mexico.

Even if you’ve visited other destinations in Mexico, you’ll feel as though you’re getting to know an entirely different side of the country. 

6. Awesome Foods & Restaurants

Mexico City has one of the most interesting food scenes in the entire world.

Not only will you find incredible street food on every single corner of the city, but you will also find tons of cozy hole-in-the-wall restaurants as well as plenty of high-end dining establishments.

As if that weren’t enough, Mexico City is also home to some of the best restaurants in the world, including Pujol, Sud 777, and Quintonil, to name just a few.

7. Buzzing Bars and Nightlife

If you’re into glitzy outings, you’ll fall head over heels in love with Mexico City’s nightlife . 

The city is home to some of the best bars in the world as well as some of the coolest clubs you’ll ever visit (think Salon Solin, Looloo, Republika, and Montana to name just a few!).

zocalo CDMX from a roof top view

8. Xochimilco Floating Gardens

Located in the south of Mexico City, Xochimilco Floating Gardens are a set of canals and artificial islands that were created by the Aztecs for agricultural purposes.

These days, the canals are a popular tourist attraction, with plenty of tours available on colorful boats called “ trajineras ” that can take you to several of the islands (if you’re into creepy stuff, make sure to book a tour that includes a visit to the Island of the Dolls – you can thank me later!)

Xochimilco is also a popular drinking spot in Mexico City. You can head over there with your friends, rent a trajinera , and party the day away as you ride the canals!

There are several tours available as well where you can join a shared trajinera and meet people (great if you’re traveling solo and want to make friends).

9. Fantastic Art Scenes & Museums

🎨 national anthropology museum.

The National Anthropology Museum is one of the most wonderful museums I’ve ever visited. This place alone makes Mexico City worth visiting.

This enormous museum is dedicated to preserving and exhibiting the cultural heritage of Mexico’s indigenous peoples.

Here, you’ll find a vast collection of artifacts, including the Aztec Calendar Stone and a replica of the tomb of Mayan ruler Pakal the Great as well as exhibits spanning thousands of years of history, representing various indigenous communities from different regions of the country.

Roma Norte neighborhood - view of buidling on a corner with many trees

🎨 Frida Kahlo Museum

The Frida Kahlo Museum , also known as the Casa Azul (Blue House), is a must-visit attraction in Mexico City. 

This museum is located in the actual house where Mexican artist Frida Kahlo was born, lived, and created much of her artwork. 

During your visit, you can explore the rooms that have been preserved to reflect Kahlo’s life as well as a collection of her paintings, personal belongings, and tools. 

You will get a pretty intimate insight into her artistic vision, struggles, and legacy (I highly recommend watching the 2002 Frida movie before visiting!).

🎨 Palacio de Bellas Artes

The Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts) is an iconic cultural landmark in Mexico City and a magnificent building that combines neoclassical and Art Nouveau architectural styles.

These days, it acts as one of the most important centers for performing arts in the country, not to mention it also contains collections of Mexican art, including murals by renowned artists such as Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros. 

As if that weren’t enough, its rooftop offers panoramic views of the city , allowing visitors to appreciate the architectural splendor of Mexico City’s historic center.

Whether attending a performance or exploring art exhibitions, a visit to the Palacio de Bellas Artes is a must on your itinerary.

Mexico city street with two big trees in front

10. Beautiful Churches and Cathedral

⛪ metropolitan cathedral.

Located in the heart of Mexico City, the Metropolitan Cathedral is a magnificent religious and architectural masterpiece, not to mention it is also the largest cathedral on the American continent!

Even though religion isn’t as important for a large percentage of locals in Mexico City anymore, the cathedral is still a symbol of the city’s cultural heritage and history. 

Its construction began during the 16th century and took over 250 years to complete.

Its elaborate details and gorgeous architecture are reason enough to visit this Mexico City attraction, but also the fact that stepping inside will take you back centuries of Mexican history.

⛪ Basilica of Santa Maria Guadalupe

Another important religious site in Mexico City is the Basilica of Santa Maria Guadalupe, which is one of the most important Catholic pilgrimage sites in the entire world.

It was built in order to honor Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Guadalupe. The complex is made up of several buildings, with the main basilica dating all the way back to the 16th century (it wasn’t completed until 1976, so it actually looks quite modern!).

Mexico City panoramic view - asking yourself if is Mexico City worth visiting?

11. Amazing green space and parks

🌳 parque mexico.

Located in the Condesa Neighborhood, Parque Mexico is one of the city’s lungs and one of the most iconic parks in Mexico City.

The park features plenty of natural beauty, a wide array of trees, and lanes that will make you feel like you’re in a mini jungle.

In addition to that, this park has become a favorite for ex-pats and visitors because of the beautiful Art Deco buildings surrounding it, many of which harbor cafés, boutique shops, and trendy restaurants.

Something else you’ll love about Parque Mexico is the fact that it is a sort of artistic hub in Condesa.

Dance classes, exhibitions, outdoor concerts, and live performances are all held here any day of the week, especially during the afternoons and early evenings. 

During the weekends, Parque Mexico gets pretty crowded, so I would recommend visiting on a weekday if possible.

🌳 Bosque de Chapultepec

Bosque de Chapultepec is four times the size of Central Park and almost the size of Singapore, making it one of the largest urban parks in the world.

Being here always makes me feel as though I’ve left the city entirely. Because the park is absolutely humongous, it is divided into different sections.

The first one is the most popular one and one where you’ll find some of the biggest attractions in Mexico City such as the Chapultepec Castle, the zoo, and the Museum of Anthropology.

This part can get pretty crowded and feel a bit more commercialized for that reason, but you will still be able to find a quiet spot either way.

The second section also has lots of attractions as well as plenty of hidden gems.

This part of the park is pretty developed but has a much more local feel to it.

You’ll find restaurants, locals hosting picnics, joggers, and dogs running around.

The third section feels more like an actual forest you can get lost in for hours!

Most people never really visit this area of the park, so you will feel like you have it all to yourself.

Street in La Roma with trees

🌳 Parque Alameda Central

Ever since it opened during the 16th century, Parque Alameda Central has been a popular hangout spot for Mexico City locals.

This historical park is known for its beautiful monuments, fountains, and landscaping as well as for being home to several important buildings in the city like the Palacio de Bellas Artes.

🌳 Jardin Allende

Jardin Allende is a small yet incredibly charming park located in the Centro Historico.

The park boasts a fountain, benches, and a pretty tranquil ambiance where you can observe the local life in Centro. 

12. Cheapest capital city in North America

While Mexico City isn’t the cheapest place to visit in the country, it is still the most inexpensive city on the North American continent.

Soumaya museum with straircase with people sitting and  others walking

13. Perfect for solo travelers

Mexico City has a pretty young and open-minded atmosphere, which makes it perfect for solo travelers.

With so many museums, attractions, parks, and events you can attend on your own, the city is perfect if you’re traveling alone.

Making friends is also very easy, as the city has become a popular place for solo travelers, remote workers, and digital nomads.

14. Enormous marketplaces

One of the best things to do in Mexico City if you want to get to know a more local side of it is to check out a few of its markets.

Markets in Mexico City sell everything you can think of, ranging from fresh fruits and produce to prepared food, groceries, clothes, home supplies, and just about everything in between.

Some of the top markets to visit include the Central de Abastos (this is where most restaurants in Mexico City get their supplies and ingredients!), Mercado Medellin, Mercado San Juan, and Mercado Sonora.

Mexico city UNAM mural painting

15. Vibrant musical scene

Mexico City is a hub for music, with plenty of concerts and festivals being held here for those who enjoy modern music.

Mariachi and jazz are also a big part of Mexico City’s culture.

One of the best places to listen to live mariachi music is at Plaza Garibaldi, a lively square lined with bars and restaurants where you can enjoy traditional Mexican food and drinks while listening to live mariachi music.

As a local tip, I recommend visiting Garibaldi on a tour. While the area is pretty guarded because of tourism, it’s not exactly the safest place in Mexico City.

Jazz is also popular here, with plenty of bars offering live jazz every evening.

Musak, Jules Basement, Tokyo Music Bar, Jazzatlán Capita, Parker & Lenox, and Zinco Jazz Club are all popular spots for jazz lovers.

16. Largest Butterfly Migration (Monarch Butterfly Reserve)

Mexico City is located close to the Monarch Butterfly Reserve , where you can witness one of the most spectacular natural phenomena in the world.

Every year, millions of Monarch butterflies travel to Mexico to escape the cold climate of Canada and the United States. 

The butterflies arrive in Mexico in November and spend the winter in the reserve’s forests before heading back north in March.

If you’re visiting Mexico City during this time of the year, I highly recommend visiting the reserve to experience one of the coolest natural sights the country has to offer!

sunset from a rooftop in CDMX

17. Excellent location for day-trips

Thanks to Mexico City’s centric location amid many states, the city is a wonderful hub for day trips .

It would be impossible for me to list them all in one post, but some of my favorite day trips to take from Mexico City include Malinalco, Valle de Bravo , Taxco, Queretaro , Puebla, Cholula, and Tepoztlan, to name just a few.

18. Nearby Volcanoes to hike

Mexico City is surrounded by impressive volcanoes you can hike!

Nevado de Toluca and La Malinche are two of the “easiest” hikes around Mexico City and perfect to get acclimatized (although I still found these hikes pretty tough!).

If you’re looking for a challenge, you can also choose to hike the Popocatepelt, Iztaccihuatl, and Pico the Orizaba, all of which are some of the highest peaks in North America.

19. Day of the Dead Festival

Day of the Dead is huge all over Mexico and in Mexico City, it is mainly celebrated with a vibrant parade featuring elaborate puppets, costumed performers, and lots of other things that depict the story behind the date.

The parade usually begins at the Zocalo and travels all the way through Paseo de la Reforma (the city’s most important avenue).

Aside from the parade, there are plenty of other festivals and events that take place in the city between October and November.

Zocalo - aerial view of zocalo with main square

Visiting Mexico City: Cons

20. unsafe neighborhoods.

There are plenty of safe neighborhoods in Mexico City, but like any large city in the world, there are some unsafe ones as well.

As long as you keep about your wits and know which areas to avoid, this should not be a huge con when deciding to visit Mexico City.

Unsafe neighborhoods include Tepito, parts of Centro Historico, Neza, Iztapalapa, and Doctores.

The city has made improvements in terms of safety in many of these places, but it’s still best to avoid them for the time being.

21. Air Pollution

Mexico City faces significant challenges when it comes to air pollution.

Its large population, car emissions, industrial activities, and humongous urbanization rates coupled with the city’s geography and location in a high-altitude valley all contribute to the problem.

Prolonged exposure to air pollution can lead to respiratory problems, cardiovascular issues, and plenty of health complications.

With that said, if you’re visiting Mexico City for a short period of time, this should not affect you greatly, although I’ve had friends with sensitive bodies and lungs struggle while visiting the city, especially in May when the weather is very dry.

22. Poor Water Quality

Water quality in Mexico City isn’t great in some areas due to population growth, pollution, and industrial activities. 

This, however, does not really affect tourists staying in nicer neighborhoods like Roma Norte, Condesa, Polanco, Lomas de Chapultepec, and others.

As long as you don’t attempt to drink tap water , you will be fine!

23. Too much crowd

With 8 million inhabitants, Mexico City can get pretty crowded. Add to that the fact that 13 million people also live in Greater Mexico City (many of which work in the metropolitan area), and you’ve got yourself a pretty packed place!

24. Traffic can be a challenge

Traffic can be an issue in Mexico City, especially during the weekdays. This can make moving around pretty time-consuming, especially if you don’t want to walk or take public transportation.

polanco mural

25. Earthquake hotspot 

Earthquakes are a big issue in Mexico City. I kid you not, while I was writing this post, there was a big quake with an epicenter in the city!

Mexico City is located in a seismically active region, making it prone to earthquakes.

The city has experienced devastating earthquakes throughout its history, with notable events including the 1985 earthquake and the 2017 earthquake.

These earthquakes caused widespread destruction, loss of life, and significant damage to infrastructure.

In recent years, I’ve felt more earthquakes in Mexico City than I ever had.

While none of them have been fatal since the 2017 one, they can be a pretty terrifying experience no matter how used to them I get.

This is definitely a huge con of visiting Mexico City. 

Alarms usually ring a few minutes before an incoming earthquake happens, giving you time to evacuate the building and find a safe spot.

Make sure you read about earthquake safety before visiting the city so you know what to expect, how to react, and how to stay safe during one.

26. Red light district & prostitution

Even though prostitution is illegal in Mexico, Mexico City still has several red-light districts. This, however, does not affect tourists at all.

Mexico city zocalo By night

Getting around Mexico City

✔ walking around mexico city.

Mexico City is humongous, so walking all over the city isn’t possible, but plenty of neighborhoods such as Condesa, Roma, Cuauhtemoc, Polanco, and others are very walker-friendly, so you can easily explore these areas on foot if you wish to.

✔ Renting a car

While renting a car is pretty easy and inexpensive in Mexico City, I personally would recommend against doing so unless you plan on taking lots of day trips out from the city and want to have the ease of doing so indifferently.

For one, traffic in Mexico City can be a nightmare, not to mention driving can get pretty hectic.

You may just wind up spending half of your visit to Mexico City stuck in traffic and getting stressed!

You will also end up spending a lot more money and time than expected finding parking spots and figuring out the parking rules where you are.

Entrance of Museo Jumex, written on the building in big black letters

✔ Ubers and Taxi

One of my favorite ways to get around Mexico City is by Uber .

The app works well and is usually inexpensive, although prices can vary depending on traffic, time of the day, and whether or not it’s raining.

Additionally, there are other ride-sharing apps available you may want to download to compare prices.

These include Cabify, DiDi, and InDriver (InDriver is usually much cheaper, but cars can sometimes not be of that great quality. Keep in mind this app is cash only).

Taxis are another way to get around, but they aren’t usually recommended even by locals for safety reasons.

If you must take a taxi, make sure you only take one from an official agency.

✔ Public Transportation

👉🏼 Subway: The subway has stations all over the city (with the exception of Santa Fe). Locals in CDMX refer to it as the “metro”.

There are 12 metro lines in total, and they are distinguished by different colors and numbers. The cost of a one-way metro ticket, including transfers, is 5 pesos.

👉🏼 Metrobus: The Metrobus is another great, affordable, and efficient way to get around Mexico City.

The Metrobus runs over the ground, unlike the metro, but it still has its own lane on the road, so traffic has no bearing on how quickly it travels.

The Metrobus is 6 pesos in price. You must obtain a city card in order to use it because cash payments are not accepted (you can buy one directly at the machines at any station).

Aerial view of Mexico City with skyscrapers during the day

✔ Bike Share (Eco Bicis)

I love using bike sharing (eco bicis) to move around the neighborhood like Condesa, Polanco, and Roma Norte which have great infrastructure for cycling.

Using eco bicis is very easy. It usually takes less than 45 minutes to get from point A to point B and the first 45 minutes are free.

After 45 minutes, you must pay $50 MXN per hour to continue riding (or drop your bike off at a station, wait five minutes, and then pick up another one).

Is Mexico City expensive?

Mexico City is not the most affordable place in Mexico, but you can easily visit the city on a budget if you stick to street food and smaller restaurants.

Accommodation prices have increased in recent years, but it is still possible to find apartment rentals and hotel rooms for prices that won’t break the bank.

Tour prices are generally very pocket-friendly, too!

All in all, visiting Mexico City can be as cheap or as expensive as you want it to be as there are options for every budget.

Jumex. museum statue

Where to stay in Mexico City 

🛌🏻 budget: hotel pf.

mexico city tourism reddit

Hotel PF is conveniently located in the trendy Condesa neighborhood and offers comfortable rooms, modern amenities, and complimentary breakfast for an affordable price. 

Awesome stay, I highly recommend it. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Jaime, may 2023

👉 Check rates and availability at Booking.com | Expedia | Hotels.com

🛌🏻 Mid-range: Nima Local House

mexico city tourism reddit

Nima Local House is set in the stunning Roma neighborhood inside a stunning turn-of-the-century casona . This stunning boutique hotel features cozy rooms, intimate spaces, and incredibly stylish decor.

Immaculately clean and fantastic service. Perfect location and amenities. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Matthew, november 2021

🛌🏻 Luxury: The Four Seasons Hotel

mexico city tourism reddit

The Four Seasons Hotel is a 5-star hotel located in the lively Paseo de la Reforma, Mexico City’s main avenue.

Its beautiful and modern rooms provide plenty of comfort and the hotel features lots of amenities like a spa, upscale restaurants, and a stunning outdoor courtyard (make sure you schedule at least one Sunday brunch here during your time in Mexico City!).

The beds and linens are amazing and the staff is the best. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Alejandro, march 2022

The best time to visit Mexico City

👍🏻 cheapest time to visit mexico city.

Mexico City is generally a year-round destination so prices don’t change much throughout the year. 

The cheapest time to visit would be between May and September, when the rainy season is going on and hotel rates and flights may lower down a little bit.

With that said, prices don’t really change much unless you’re visiting during a major festival or event such as Day of the Dead, Christmas, or Formula 1.

the angel statue in Mexico city at night

👍🏻 Best time to visit for lesser crowds

In general, Mexico City does not have a high or low travel season. There isn’t much of a difference in terms of crowdedness in a city with more than 20 million inhabitants.

Consider traveling during Mexico’s Semana Santa (Spring Break) and the Christmas Holidays if you want to visit when the city is less crowded.

During these times, a large number of residents of Mexico City depart the city for vacation, making the city appear noticeably more empty.

👎🏻 Worst time to visit Mexico City

The worst month of the rainy season in Mexico City is usually July, which typically lasts from June to October.

Even during these months, I’ve noticed rain hasn’t been as bad in recent years, but from June through September in particular, be prepared for torrential downpours that typically begin in the afternoon and last well into the evening.

Additionally, the driest months of the year are April and May.

Although this shouldn’t stop you from going to Mexico City, if your body has previously had trouble with high altitudes, I would recommend avoiding visiting at this time.

Many visitors to Mexico City at this time of year have complained of heavy headaches and even nosebleeds because of the combination of altitude and dryness, though not everyone experiences it. 

Soumaya Museum front of the building with people in front

Mexico City travel tips

📌 Credit and debit cards are widely accepted all over the city, including small establishments and street food stalls . You should carry a bit of cash in case you need it, but your card will get you a long way.

📌 Learn some basic Spanish phrases . Many people in Mexico City speak English, but it is not the norm. Knowing a few Spanish phrases can be very helpful.

📌 If you want to try street food, I recommend doing so on the stalls that have lots of locals purchasing food as well. This means the place is clean, offers fair prices, and has delicious food.

La Roma Church with trees

Frequently Asked Question s

Is it worth visiting mexico city.

Yes! No matter your travel style, Mexico City has something for everyone and is definitely worth visiting.

From great food to incredible architecture, culture, and history, you’re guaranteed to find something to pique your interest in this huge metropolis.

Why do tourists visit Mexico City?

Tourists love Mexico City for plenty of reasons. One of the main draws for visitors is the city’s rich cultural heritage, which you can explore through its museums, galleries, and architecture.

Its cuisine is another reason people visit the city. With delicious street food on every corner and some of the best restaurants in the world, Mexico City definitely knows how to do food right.

Aside from that, Mexico City has a vibrant nightlife, world-class shopping, and lots of entertainment options. Getting bored here is simply impossible because there’s always something going on!

Close up of Colonial Building

Is Mexico City a walkable city?

Mexico City is absolutely humongous so at first glance, it may not look like a very walkable city.

However, most of the main things to see are pretty centered and the neighborhoods you’ll likely stay at (Condesa, Roma, Polanco, etc) are all incredibly walkable.

You may need to grab an Uber at times due to distances, but in general, if you have a decent fitness level, you can easily walk from A to B easily.

Most of these neighborhoods are pretty flat, safe, and their streets were designed with pedestrians in mind, so you shouldn’t encounter any problems when walking!

Can you get around Mexico City without a car?

Yes, getting around Mexico City without a car is possible.

Transportation options abound in the city and range from multiple public transportation methods to ride-sharing apps, e-bikes, e-scooters, and more.

Colonia Roma Murals - the best restaurants in Roma Condesa

How many days is enough for Mexico City?

Three days should be enough to get a taste of Mexico City and see many of the main attractions.

If you want to get to know the city better and beyond its touristy side, at least a week is recommended.

Is Mexico City a foodie destination?

Yes. Mexico City is considered one of the best destinations for food in Mexico.

Not only will you find a wide variety of authentic Mexican dishes and street food stalls in the city, but also some of the best restaurants and fine dining spots on the continent.

Park in La Condesa

Can I drink tap water in Mexico City?

Tap water in Mexico is not considered safe to drink.

Is Mexico City a cheap city to visit?

Depending on your interests, Mexico City can be as cheap or as expensive as you want it to be. 

Street food and local restaurants are very inexpensive, but there are also tons of high-end dining establishments.

Hotels range from mid-range Airbnbs and hostels to ultra-luxury rooms.

More often than not, visiting the main sights and museums is pretty cheap.

Mexico city at night main square

Wrapping Up: Is Mexico City worth visiting?

Mexico City is an incredibly exciting city and a place you will fall head over heels in love with if you enjoy visiting big metropolises.

From its cultural heritage, rich history, modern ambiance, and incredible food scene, there’s pretty much nothing Mexico City lacks.

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Dani is a travel write and blogger from Mexico City who traveled all over the world for 5 years before returning to Mexico. After visiting and living in so many different countries, she realized how lucky she is to call Mexico her home.

The 17 Best Things to Do in Mexico City

mexico city tourism reddit

Although it may be best known as a densely-populated city with heavy traffic, first-time visitors are astounded by Mexico City’s vibrancy and a vast array of cultural offerings. There are layers of rich history to uncover, from the time of the Aztecs through the Spanish invasion, to modern-day times. Visitors are tantalized by the numerous museums, parks, and archaeological sites, as well as markets, shops, and amazingly delicious food. You’ll never run out of things to do so make your list of priorities, but don’t be afraid to ditch your plan and go where the wind blows. Here’s a list of some of the best experiences to have on a trip to Mexico City—whatever you don’t have time for on your first trip, you can save for the next.

Explore the Historical Center

TripSavvy / Jorge Castro

A wander around this area of town will give you insight into how Mexico City earned its nickname “City of Palaces.” Home to historic landmarks dating from as far back as the Aztec era, the Centro Histórico is Mexico City's beating heart. Centered around the massive main plaza, the Zócalo, visitors flock to its museums and iconic buildings like the Art Nouveau Palacio de Bellas Artes and the Metropolitan Cathedral, the oldest and largest in Latin America. Enjoy a drink on one of the terraces overlooking the Zócalo as you take in the view and the activities taking place below.

Ride the Turibus

This hop-on hop-off bus tour allows you to get a viewpoint of the city and an understanding of its layout that you won’t get any other way. Hop on by the cathedral and from the city center, you’ll make your way down Paseo de la Reforma, traversing many of Mexico City’s interesting neighborhoods. You’ll go through Chapultepec park and get a feel for that area and the distances between neighborhoods.

Marvel at Murals

 TripSavvy / Taylor McIntyre

The Mexican muralist movement got started after the Mexican Revolution when the government hired painters to cover the walls of public buildings with images postulating a re-visioning of Mexican history and Mexican identity. Diego Rivera was the most prolific and you can see his work in several buildings in the city center. The "History of Mexico" mural showcases the country’s past from the Aztec era through the conquest and the Revolution to the development of industry. Located in the National Palace building on the east side of the Zócalo, this is a convenient spot to get your dose of art. If you want more, head to the Antiguo Colegio San Ildefonso , a block north, which has murals by several different artists, and another block north to the Secretary of Education building where there are more murals to admire. 

Admission to both the National Palace and the Secretary of Education building is free. You’ll need to leave an official I.D. (one per group) at the entrance and which is returned to you when you exit the building.

Learn about Ancient Civilizations

TripSavvy / Jorge Castro  

Situated within the lush forest of the Bosque de Chapultepec, Mexico City's Museum of Anthropology is vast, well-organized, and possesses the largest collection of Mesoamerican artifacts in the world. Within its 23 exhibit rooms, this museum offers a look at how life, tradition, and culture, were formed in ancient Mexico. The first two exhibit halls are devoted to the beginnings of civilization, then continue through the history of Mexico with halls devoted to the different regions and civilizations. The second floor is dedicated to exhibits of living cultures.  You could spend at least a full day here learning about Mexico's ancient civilizations , but if you’re pressed for time, be sure to see the Aztec room at the far end of the museum as well as the Maya display

Climb the Pyramid of the Sun

Walk on the sacred grounds of the ancient people of Teotihuacan, at one time the largest city in Mesoamerica. The immense Avenue of the Dead that runs through it was built between the 1st and 7th centuries and includes 2,000 residential compounds as well as the enormous Pyramid of the Sun and Pyramid of the Moon. UNESCO considers the city a model of urbanization and large-scale planning, which had a great influence on subsequent cultures. If you’re not afraid of heights, climb the 200 plus steps to the top of the Pyramid of the Sun. If you manage to go on the spring equinox , dress all in white to fit in as you receive the special energy the sun imparts on that day.

Cheer on Luchadores

Though it combines techniques of wrestling, judo, and other martial arts, Mexican Lucha Libre is a sport like no other. The daring luchadores clad in tights and masks (and sometimes capes) entertain the crowd with their high-flying acrobatic moves in and outside the ring. This quintessentially Mexican show needs to be experienced first-hand. The fun atmosphere, athletics, showmanship, and crowd response make it a fun activity whether or not you’re a wrestling fan. Lucha libre matches take place several nights a week at Arena México and less frequently in the smaller, more family-friendly Arena Coliseo .

Take in a Folk Dance Performance

Courtesy Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes

Mexico’s Folkloric Ballet puts on an enthralling spectacle of color, rhythm, movement, and music in regular performances at the Palacio de Bellas Artes. Add to that the majestic location, in the opulent art nouveau theater, with a unique stained glass curtain designed by Tiffany’s, and this is a show you should be sure to include in your itinerary. Each number is highly entertaining and tells a story of folk traditions from across Mexico. Performances take place most Wednesdays and Sundays. Find the schedule and get tickets at the Palacio de Bellas Artes website .

Visit the Home of Architect Luis Barragán

Courtesy Casa Luis Barragán

You’d never guess from its plain gray facade what lies inside the former home and studio of architect Luis Barragán. It blends seamlessly with the neighboring homes in the residential area of Tacubaya, but UNESCO listed this as a World Heritage site in 2004. Inside, you’ll find striking use of light and color, as well as water features and interesting textures. Built between 1943 and 1948, Barragán lived and worked here until his death in 1988. In his home, the architect put into practice the concepts for which he was well-known: thick walls and stark lines reminiscent of Mexico’s colonial-period friaries and convents, contrasted by rich textures and bold colors. Visits are by appointment only, so be sure to schedule a time through the website.

View the City From Above

The Mirador Torre Latinoamericana was the tallest building in the city when it was built in 1956. Now there are many that are taller, but not in the historical center, where its 44 floors make it a prominent landmark, towering above its neighbors. You can pay admission to go up to the observation deck at the top, or go to Miralto Restaurant on the 41st floor to enjoy dinner along with your view. You’ll get a distinctive perspective of the Palacio de Bellas Artes across the street, the traffic along the city’s main thoroughfares, and on a clear day, you can see across the Valley of Mexico, from mountains to volcanoes. And don’t worry about earthquakes: this was the world's first major skyscraper successfully built to endure high-level quakes, a fact which was proven in 1985 and again in 2017.

Visit a UNESCO-Listed University Campus

Mexico’s National Autonomous University (UNAM) is one of the most important cultural projects in the country’s history. Built in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the project employed more than 60 architects, engineers, and artists and integrated varied disciplines including urbanism, architecture, engineering, landscape design, and fine arts along with aspects of local tradition. Known as Ciudad Universitaria “University City,” the campus hosts buildings you would usually associate with a university as well as a sculpture park, a botanical garden , the MUAC contemporary art museum , and the iconic Biblioteca Centra l . Recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it’s worth spending a day exploring this fascinating place.

Cruise City Streets on a Bicycle

Although it may sound like a scary proposition in a city of this size, you can join thousands of locals and other visitors on Sundays between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. when several main streets are closed to vehicular traffic to give cyclists (as well as rollerbladers and pedestrians) the chance to take over the city. Check out the various statues and monuments as you cruise along Paseo de la Reforma. There are several bike-sharing and rental services to choose from including the public EcoBici which has numerous docking stations throughout the city, and private companies like Mobike and Dezba which require you to upload an app to your phone to pay and unblock bikes. You can rent and ride a bike any day, but if you’re unfamiliar with the city and its traffic, it’s best to start on a Sunday when you won’t have to negotiate right of way with motor vehicles.

Sample Street Food

Mexico City has excellent restaurants at every price point, but savvy visitors know that some of the best food experiences in this city can be found on the street for just a few pesos. Tacos al pastor, tacos de canasta, tamales or guajolotas (a tamal in a crusty bun), carnitas (cubed, fried pork), chilaquiles, esquites (sweet corn), quesadillas and tlacoyos are just a few of the options to try. Street food stands with the biggest crowds are always your best bet. If you don’t speak Spanish and find the street food scene intimidating, take a tour! Both Eat Like a Local and Eat Mexico offer excellent food tours.

Discover the City’s Largest Green Space

El Bosque de Chapultepec , Mexico City’s largest park, is considered the oldest urban park in America. Covering 1,600 acres, it’s home to several significant historical sites, as well as multiple museums , an amusement park, a zoo, and a variety of recreational spaces. Follow the road to the top of the hill overlooking Mexico City, where Chapultepec Castle houses the National History Museum to get great views of the park and the city beyond. Chapultepec Lake has rowboats and pedal boats for rent by the hour to enjoy the scenery from a different perspective.

Float Among the Gardens at Xochimilco

Board a trajinera (a colorful gondola-like boat) to explore the canals and “floating gardens” of Xochimilco . This area is located 12 miles south of the historical center and has a network of canals and artificial islands known as chinampas. These are vestiges of the traditional precontact land-use in the lagoons of the Mexico City basin, a testament to the efforts of the Aztec people to turn a marshy area into arable farmland. As you float along, you’ll come across other boats carrying food sellers and others carrying musicians who will offer to play you a few songs to entertain you as you go.

Visit the House Where Frida Lived

Frida Kahlo, one of Mexico’s most recognized artists, was born, lived, and died in her family home in the southern Mexico City neighborhood of Coyoacán. After her death in 1954, her home was turned into a museum . Some of her and her husband’s (famed muralist Diego Rivera) artwork is on display here, but the real attraction is seeing the space where they lived, which they lovingly decorated with Mexican folk art and turned into a work of art in itself.

Sip a Mezcal at a Traditional Cantina

Courtesy Bar La Opera

When you’ve done your share of sightseeing, and want to spend some time among locals having their own version of a good time, head to one of Mexico city’s traditional drinking establishments. Order a drink and enjoy some on-the-house botanas (bar snacks) while you soak in the ambiance. There are hundreds of traditional cantinas in the historic center alone.  Although these places used to be exclusively for men, nowadays, women are welcome. Check out El Tío Pepe, which opened in 1890, and is usually uncrowded, located on Dolores at the corner of Independencia, or Bar La Opera famous mainly because of a bullet hole in the ceiling left by Pancho Villa.

Listen to Mariachis at Plaza Garibaldi

This historic square located at the northern edge of the historical center is the destination for live music in the capital city. Although the plaza is famous for mariachis , you’ll also find trios, norteño groups, and groups playing Son Jarocho, traditional music from Veracruz state. Settle in at the bar at one of the many establishments that line the plaza, such as Bar Tenampa , or find a spot at an outdoor table to enjoy some people watching while mariachi groups wearing their silver-studded outfits perform. traditional songs. If you choose to hire a band to play for you, expect to pay around 150 pesos per song. The plaza itself is safe, but the area around it can be sketchy, especially at night, so avoid wandering around the surrounding streets.

The Top 10 Sights in Mexico City

20 Top Things to Do in Mexico

A Walking Tour of Mexico City

Chapultepec Park

Your Trip to Mexico City: The Complete Guide

Top 10 Free Things to Do in Mexico City

48 Hours in Mexico City: The Ultimate Itinerary

The 10 Best Mexico City Neighborhoods to Explore

Top Mexico Destinations

The Top 8 Annual Events in Mexico City

10 Cities in Mexico Recognized by UNESCO

Discover Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera in Mexico City

Getting Around Mexico City: Guide to Public Transportation

UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Mexico

Mexico's National Museum of History at Chapultepec Castle

Top 7 Museums in Mexico City

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Reasons Why You Should Visit Mexico City at Least Once in Your Lifetime

From the food to gorgeous music, there are plenty of reasons why youll love the Mexican capital

Northern England Writer

If you haven’t been yet to the capital of Mexico , what are you waiting for? These are the 12 reasons why you should visit Mexico City at least once in your lifetime.

Keen to go but you’d prefer to travel in a group? Then book Culture Trip’s five-day Mexico City tour which showcases the best of the city.

It has a thriving art scene

The artsy side to Mexico City is well-documented, and the art scene has been steadily on the rise for years now. Currently, some of the best contemporary galleries in the city can be found tucked into the centrally located Roma and, to a lesser extent, Condesa districts. However, if you go further afield you’ll be rewarded by some great finds. Take San Rafael or even the architecture-lovers’ hotspot of San Miguel de Chapultepec; of course, Kahlo’s former haunt Coyoacán goes without saying. Don’t forget about the street art either!

mexico city tourism reddit

Even though Asia is often considered to have the best street food scene in the world, the street-side offerings in Mexico City are certainly not to be sniffed at. With tacos, tlacoyos and tamales galore, you could spend an entire lifetime exploring the tastes of the capital. However, don’t forget about the gourmet restaurant scene either; Mexico City has some of the finest dining establishments, like Pujol and Padella.

people cheering on a mountain

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It’ll change your opinion on Mexico

If you’re from the US , or perhaps any Western country, your opinion on Mexico may have been skewed by dangerous political rhetoric. However, a visit to Mexico City will change your perspective on how this misrepresented country is portrayed and give you a chance to see just how amazing it is for yourself. While there are still dangers, as there are in any capital, the good far outweighs the bad.

mexico city tourism reddit

There’s a nightlife scene to suit everyone

Mexico City has got nightlife for any age, taste and orientation, from the many gay bars that line the streets of the Zona Rosa, to the fancier, buy-a-bottle nightclubs of the swanky Polanco district. Whether you like reggae , reggaeton or even jazz, you can easily find a spot to wile the night away with a craft beer , cocktail or traditional mezcal .

mexico city tourism reddit

You can try pulque and other weird and wonderful Mexican drinks

Speaking of the Mexico City drinking scene, the capital is the ideal location to taste test not just the classics like tequila and mezcal, but also some lesser-known Mexican beverages. We’re of course talking about pulque , the Mesoamerican drink that’s oddly nutritional and sometimes off-puttingly gloopy. Given that it’s practically impossible to export and transport, you can only really find it in the central regions of Mexico, to which Mexico City belongs.

mexico city tourism reddit

There are more than enough museums to keep you occupied

We’ve mentioned the art, but the museums are definitely worthy of a shout-out too – all 150 of them. Mexico City is the capital city with the most museums in the world and they range from the super famous and well-known (think, the Museo Nacional de Antropología) to the far more obscure (like Museo de El Carmen, which houses real life mummies) and even the informational and underrated (the Interactive Economy Museum in the historic centre is not just for kids). Basically, you’ll never be bored in Mexico City.

mexico city tourism reddit

It’s easily the cheapest capital city in North America

No guide to why you should visit Mexico City would be complete without mentioning just how affordable it is for the average tourist or traveller. In fact, it’s far and away the cheapest capital city in North America , and you can really stretch your money in Mexico City . While flights from outside the US can be a bit pricier, this initial upfront cost is balanced quickly by the cheap food, affordable accommodation and budget drinking options.

There’s nothing quite like landing in Mexico City at night

While we’re on the subject of flying into Mexico City, if you’re lucky enough to be landing there at night (or at least once the sun’s gone down), you’ll get to truly appreciate the vastness of the capital. Twinkling lights stretch as far as the eye can see, crawling up the mountains that hem in the city on all sides. Really, there’s nothing as impressive as coming in to land in Mexico City after dark.

mexico city tourism reddit

The city is more diverse than it’s given credit for

It’s the overwhelming size that lends Mexico City the diversity it has. Most people know that the centre is largely dominated by the sprawl of Bosque de Chapultepec, but few people realise that there are actually tons of national parks within the limits of Mexico City that allow you the chance to escape the rat race. You can hike in Ajusco, explore underrated attractions in Desierto de Los Leones, or relax in Los Dinamos.

mexico city tourism reddit

Design hotels are on the rise in Mexico City

If you think you have to slum it in a hostel while in Mexico City, think again. Design hotels are growing in popularity in the Mexican capital. Sparked by a boom in tourism, areas like Polanco , Roma and Condesa are filled to the brim with luxury and boutique accommodation options. There are also further-afield options in Coyoacán, Santa Fe and even the good old historic centre . That’s not to say that Mexico City hostels are bad though! In fact, some of them are incredibly cool .

mexico city tourism reddit

There are plenty of nearby ruins

If you like history and want to experience it in an atmosphere other than that of a museum, then Mexico City is the ideal place to visit. It’s surrounded by some of the most important Aztec, Toltec and Mesoamerican ruins. They include the fantastic Teotihuacán, the towering sculptures of Tula, Hidalgo and the city centre ruins of the Templo Mayor. All easily accessible from or within the capital, they’re world-class for a reason.

mexico city tourism reddit

Mexico City is a great base for taking diverse day trips

Finally, even if you’re not so interested in Mesoamerican pyramids, Mexico City is the perfect base for taking several day trips . You can go down to Taxco, Guerrero, if former colonial silver mining towns are your thing, or you can go climb a mountain in Toluca. Alternatively, escape to Veracruz or pop down into Puebla and Cholula, the town with a church on every corner.

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Where to Stay in Mexico City: 9 Best Areas

Where to stay in Mexico City

From an elevation of more than a mile in the air, Mexico City is a magical destination. Nearly 1,000 years of history can be explored here, and the city boasts many diverse neighborhoods . When you choose a place to stay in Mexico City , you also are making a decision about what kind of experiences you want to have.

The diverse areas in Mexico City are all worthy of exploration. From the Zocalo Area to Santa Fe, you’ll want to have your camera at the ready so you can capture lively street scenes, historic architecture and public art .

As Mexico’s capital, Mexico City is loaded with fantastic museums, and the nightlife never seems to die down. You could easily be dancing, drinking and socializing until the sun rises on the next morning.

If possible, it’s best to get around the city on foot. Mexico City is actually laid out perfectly to accommodate those choosing this method of transportation. Of course, this also is a large metropolitan area, so it stands to reason that you need an alternative form of transportation on occasion.

The sitio taxis that run all over the city are inexpensive and safe . You have little chance of getting lost when you’re riding with these experienced locals.

Most of the neighborhoods in Mexico City are well-connected by the community’s mass transit system. Unfortunately, safety and security concerns mean that it is not always advisable for travelers to use the buses and subway.

  If you do venture into the subway , you’ll be impressed by the modern, well-organized underground stations and the smoothness and efficiency of the ride. Just be on high alert and keep an eye on your belongings. The Metro is a notorious haven for pickpockets and thieves.

Also, if you’ll be traveling by bus or subway, keep an eye out for pink placards that designate certain transportation for women only . This program was instituted in 2008 to stem the number of incidents on public transportation in which women were groped by men.

It’s a successful program, and it may be a wise choice to take advantage of this option for women traveling alone. Men should take care not to board one of these buses or cars.

Mexico City has many of the same problems as all other major metropolitan areas. Nonetheless, it remains an enchanting city that is fu ll of color and life .

The locals are warm and welcoming, and the many distinctive neighborhoods in Mexico City are simply waiting to be discovered and enjoyed.

Table of Contents

Where to stay in Mexico City: Best areas and neighborhoods

If you’re wondering where to stay in Mexico City , then this in-depth look at all of the major neighborhoods will help you to arrive at an informed decision.

1. Historic Centre, best area to stay in Mexico City for sightseeing and budget travelers

Where to stay in Mexico City: Best areas and neighborhoods

Sometimes called Centro Historico or simply Centro, the heart of Mexico City is the home of the Zócalo , the city’s main plaza and the largest such gathering place in Latin America. In fact, the Zócalo can accommodate almost 100,000 people.

As the name suggests, this neighborhood in Mexico City is filled with historic buildings , many of which were built sometime between the 16th and 20th centuries.

This is Mexico City’s oldest neighborhood . The conquering Spaniards began building here in the 16th century on the ruins of the Aztec capital known as Tenochtitlan. It is this long and complex history that has led to the neighborhood being named a World Heritage Site .

The Zócalo is the focal point of the neighborhood, with many events, festivals and gatherings happening here throughout the year. Visitors can attend anything from a traveling museum to a skateboarding and BMX exhibition.

People who love history won’t be able to resist the charm of this district. This is where it is possible to visit excavated ruins dating from the Aztec empire. Called the Templo Mayor , this structure was once the spiritual centerpiece of Tenochtitlan.

The pyramid is a breathtaking sight, and to learn more about the structure and Aztec culture, a visit to the Museo del Templo Mayor is an absolute must.

Other popular sights in the neighborhood include the Catedral Metropolitana , the beautiful Diego Rivera murals at the Ministry of Education, the gorgeous Palacio Postal and Alameda Central , a municipal park that’s been in existence since 1529.

If you’re looking for a place to stay in Mexico City , this is an excellent choice . It’s a center of entertainment and commerce . You’ll find plenty of restaurants, bars, shops and nightclubs.

Accommodations range from incredibly inexpensive hostels to elegant, old-world style inns . Rates tend to be quite affordable in this district, and many of the properties have rooftop restaurants and gardens.

This is a great place for any traveler to stay in Mexico City, but use caution when out after dark as pickpockets prowl the area.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN CENTRO HISTORICO

  • ($$$)   Gran Hotel Ciudad de Mexico
  • ($$)  NH Collection México City Centro Histórico
  • ($)  Hotel Diligencias

2. Polanco, where to stay in Mexico City for luxury travelers

Polanco this is a fabulous place to stay in Mexico city

This sprawling residential area sits immediately to the west of the city’s center. Chapultepec Park is the heart of this neighborhood, and it is the largest green space in the city. The park dates to the 15th century when it was established by an Aztec ruler.

In many ways, this is Mexico City’s most exclusive and upscale neighborhood . Visitors will find plenty of museums, restaurants, shops and entertainment throughout the district. Sometimes called the Beverly Hills of Mexico City, this is a fabulous place to stay.

This is definitely a destination for shoppers. The district boasts the biggest department store in Latin America in addition to six malls. Avenida Presidente Masaryk is the main shopping thoroughfare where visitors will find Cartier, Rolex, Gucci, Tiffany and many more.

Given the neighborhood’s upscale reputation, it’s fitting that many of the city’s finest restaurants are located here. It’s easy for gourmands to enjoy a memorable meal on every street in the district.

This also is an excellent place to stay in Mexico City because of the museums. This is the home of the renowned National Museum of Anthropology as well as the Chapultepec Castle and the Modern Art Museum .

From beautiful parks to art galleries , it’s easy to see why this is one of the best neighborhoods in Mexico City.

In keeping with the upscale surroundings, the hotels in the district tend to be rather expensive . Visitors will find everything from high-rise versions of internationally recognized brand-name hotels to small boutique inns housed in historic properties.

There is a dearth of hostels, so those looking for a really affordable stay are better off in Centro.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN MEXICO CITY IN POLANCO

  • ($$$)  Grand Fiesta Americana Chapultepec
  • ($$$)   Presidente InterContinental Mexico City, an IHG Hotel
  • ($$)   St. Isidro Suites Corporate Housing

3. Paseo de La Reforma, where to stay in mexico City for first timers

Paseo de La Reforma to stay in Mexico city

Think of La Reforma as the Times Square of Mexico City. Everything happens along this main thoroughfare. Monuments, shops, outdoor markets and nightclubs line every mile of this memorable street.

What’s more, you’ll find all sorts of hotel accommodations that are suitable for every budget and style.

The area along the Paseo de La Reforma is incredibly friendly to pedestrians , encouraging visitors to get out and explore.

It’s easy to get to El Angel de Independencia on foot, and there is an incredible number of eateries in the area serving authentic Mexican fare. Countless monuments line the boulevard, offering a broad survey of Mexican history.

Whether you walk or take a taxi, the whole city is accessible, making this one of the best areas in Mexico City to look for a hotel.

Because of the Paseo de La Reforma’s extension diagonally across the heart of the city, it is possible to find all sorts of accommodations .

Hostels costing just a few dollars per night are widely seen as are high-rise, new construction hotels with plenty of upscale amenities.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN PASEO DE LA REFORMA

  • ($$$)  Sofitel Mexico City Reforma
  • ($$)  Casa Prim Hotel Boutique
  • ($)   One Ciudad de Mexico Alameda

Read also: Best things to do in Mexico City

4. Condesa, bohemian and trendy neighborhood

Condesa is one of the most popular areas in Mexico City

A Bohemian neighborhood that is undeniably hip, Condesa is one of the most popular areas in Mexico City. The boulevards are wide and lined with graceful trees, and art nouveau and art deco architecture dominate the district.

Inside the buildings, visitors find an eclectic collection of art galleries , bars, restaurants and shops. The younger crowd loves Condesa after dark for its many clubs and night spots .

Condesa’s trendiness comes at a price. Many people live here, and it is one of the most expensive districts in Mexico City. Nonetheless, it also is one of the most charming.

Its centerpiece is lovely Parque Mexico , where most of the city’s dog population spends the day while their human counterparts are at work. Live music and other performances are frequently given here. Moreover, this is a wonderful place to enjoy a walk or a jog.

In keeping with its Bohemian yet expensive reputation, visitors will find a range of accommodations here. Tourists who want to stay in Mexico City where the cool young crowd hangs out will love it.

It’s filled with trendy boutique hotels and smaller properties with distinctive charm. Prices tend to be high, but bargains can be found by the determined. This is not the section for finding an inexpensive hostel.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN MEXICO CITY IN CONDESA

  • ($$$)   Hippodrome Hotel Condesa
  • ($$)  Hotel Villa Condesa  
  • ($)  Hotel Roosevelt

5. Roma, excellent place to stay in Mexico City for travelers on any budget

Roma is a equally Bohemian and chic neighbor in Mexico city

Made famous in a well-received Academy Award-winning film, Roma is Condesa’s equally Bohemian and chic neighbor . It lies to the immediate west of the city’s historic center, making it easy to reach from that district.

Established in the early twentieth century, La Roma started out as an enclave of the upper classes. It became distinctly middle class in the second half of the century, with the 1985 earthquake bringing a downturn in the district’s fortunes.

All of that is now in the past, and gentrification is running riot in Roma. The streets are lined with art galleries, boutiques and restaurants. Nonetheless, the neighborhood remains largely residential . As in Condesa, Art Nouveau and Art Deco buildings are found here in abundance.

Most streets in this area are quiet . Large, leafy trees provide a pleasant contrast with all of the development in the region. The sprawling Jardin Ramon Lopez Velarde dominates the landscape to the east. Several smaller parks and public squares also are located within Roma.

As a largely residential neighborhood, this is one of the areas in Mexico City that doesn’t have a great deal of options for accommodations. Nonetheless, what is there includes a tolerably wide selection.

Hostels charging just a few dollars per night are found nearby, and there also are modern hotels with plenty of amenities that cost a few hundred dollars per night. Consequently, Roma could be an excellent place to stay in Mexico City for travelers on any budget .

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN ROMA

  • ($$$)  Brick Hotel
  • ($$)   Stanza Hotel
  • ($)  Hotel Monarca

See also: Where to stay in Puerto Vallarta , where to stay in Cancun , where to stay in Playa del Carmen , where to stay in Tulum , where to stay in the Riviera Maya

6. Zona Rosa, where to stay in Mexico City for nightlife

Zona Rosa one of the best place for you to stay in Mexico City

Effervescent and relentlessly touristy, Zona Rosa never seems to stop, let alone slow down. This is Mexico City’s most gay-friendly neighborhood, though it quickly becomes clear that all are welcome in this eclectic corner.

If your idea of a good time is browsing through trendy shops by day and dancing through the night at a series of bars and clubs, then this is the best place for you to stay in Mexico City.

Zona Rosa was initially developed late in the nineteenth century to accommodate European immigrants and well-to-do residents of the city center who were looking for a quieter, less busy option.

With the Mexican Revolution underway between 1910 and 1920, development in the district was put on hold for many years. The resolution of that conflict allowed building to continue. By the 1950s, artists and intellectuals were beginning to flood into the neighborhood.

The new residents gave Zona Rosa a Bohemian flair, attracting plenty of upscale bars and restaurants. International dignitaries would be brought here to dine, but the halcyon days were destined to end.

Many of the more respectable businesses began leaving in the 1980s, making way for increasingly touristy offerings along with prostitution and other criminal enterprises.

With the turn of the century, Mexico City officials turned their sights to revitalizing the neighborhood. They succeeded in many ways, though it is generally not considered safe to walk here at night, and it is inadvisable to get too drunk when out and about.

This is one of the city’s premier areas for shopping and nightclubs of all sorts. While some night spots are relatively straightforward, others seem to try to outdo each other in terms of outrageousness.

As mentioned, Zona Rosa is incredibly gay-friendly, with numerous bars, clubs and other businesses catering to the community.

While visitors will find plenty of intriguing shops here, they also should be prepared to encounter numerous erotic shops, which may mean that this is not the most family-friendly neighborhood .

Nonetheless, the antique vendor s are charming, and the frequent festivals are fun. People are warm and welcoming here. Moreover, there are plenty of wonderful restaurants that beg to be sampled.

Whatever type of accommodations you prefer, you can probably find it in the Zona Rosa. Hotel prices tend to be cheap , even for the more upscale properties in the neighborhood. There are even a few hostels in the zone. However, they tend to be a bit more expensive than they are in other neighborhoods.

If you prefer the other end of the spectrum, Zona Rosa also is home to some surprisingly upscale properties that feature fitness centers, spas, swimming pools and many other amenities. These will cost several hundred dollars per night.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN MEXICO CITY IN ZONA ROSA

  • ($$$)   Eurostars Zona Rosa Suites
  • ($$)   Hotel Geneve CD de Mexico
  • ($)  Ibis Styles Mexico Zona Rosa

7. Coyoacan, coolest area to stay in Mexico City

Coyoacan nice place to stay in Mexico city

This is a beautiful, colonial-era neighborhood that features cobblestone streets and old-world charm . It’s found about five miles from the city center, and it can be reached by Line 3 of the Metro. The town square here is gorgeous. Many people come to see it and the collection of superb museums.

Coyoacán once was the home of Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo . After Leon Trotsky was exiled from the USSR, he lived here as well. Despite all of the old-world grandeur, the air is tinged with a counter-culture feel. A fun hippie market is held here every weekend.

Not so long ago, Coyoacán was independent of Mexico City, and that spirit of independence remains strong in the community. When visiting the coffee shops and cafes, visitors are likely to encounter spirited political and cultural debates.

Mexico’s national university is found nearby, which likely contributes to the intellectual and progressive atmosphere. Many art schools are located within the district, so expect to find several galleries and exhibitions.

This is the district where you’ll find the excellent Frida Kahlo Museum where you can learn about her work and life. Museums dedicated to Diego Rivera and Leon Trotsky also are found here. The National Museum of Popular Culture similarly is located in Coyoacán. This institution features an extensive collection of folk art.

Another fascinating spot is the Los Coyotes Zoo with its collection of native animals. Most visitors won’t want to miss an opportunity to explore Vivero Coyoacán , the neighborhood’s principal park. It is the home of the famous Fountain of the Coyotes, which is renowned across the city.

Whether you are enjoying the museums or the traditional Mexican market in Coyoacan, you may reach the conclusion that this is one of the best neighborhoods in Mexico City.

Unfortunately, there’s not an overabundance of accommodation choices here. Most are clustered around the neighborhood’s perimeter. The good news is that they are a fairly eclectic mix.

Given the proximity of the university, cheap hotels are easy to find, though there seems to be a shortage of hostels. Most of the other hotels are reasonably priced .

You won’t find much for recognizable brand names. What you get instead are unique guest houses, inns and hotels that are far more personable and interesting. If you can find accommodations here, you’ll probably love it.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN COYOACAN

  • ($$$)   Agata Hotel Boutique & Spa
  • ($$)   Suites Perisur Apartamentos Amueblados
  • ($)   One Periferico Sur

8. San Angel, lovely cobblestone streets and colonial-era architecture

San Angel: an ideal home base to stay in Mexico city

This gorgeous neighborhood is an ideal home base for people who love history and culture. In its earliest days, Spanish nobility retreated here to get away from the bustle and heat of the city.

Expansion soon saw the area absorbed into the city proper, but the neighborhood still retains its lovely cobblestone streets and colonial-era architecture .

The Bazar del Sabado is held here each weekend, and it is a “must do” for visitors. The Saturday Bazaar is held in the Plaza San Jacinto which is the center of the neighborhood. Spending a whole day browsing here is easy as this outdoor market features some of the best handicrafts made across Mexico.

In addition to the bazaar, the Plaza is the site of historic events, and it is surrounded by graceful buildings and fascinating restaurants. Near the Plaza is the Museo Casa del Risco with its superb exhibition of art from Mexico and Europe.

The Templo y Ex-Convento del Carmen , which was built in 1615, also is nearby. In addition to an architecturally impressive edifice, the grounds of the monastery boast enormous gardens that are waiting to be explored.

Visitors will find numerous parks, charming restaurants and unusual boutiques throughout the district. Arriving here is easy thanks to Line 1 of the Metrobus system. Accommodation choices are few and far between in the district.

What there is, however, is relatively inexpensive yet quaint. Bed and breakfasts, guest houses and inns offer plenty of personality and won’t break the bank.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN MEXICO CITY IN SAN ANGEL

  • ($$$)   Casa San Jacinto
  • ($$)  Stara San Angel Inn Boutique Hotel
  • ($)   Coyotito Beds San Ángel, suites con encanto!

9. Santa Fe, one of Mexico City’s newest neighborhoods

Santa Fe: fabulous and modern place in Mexico city

This highly commercial area is one of Mexico City’s newest neighborhoods. It’s filled with gleaming skyscrapers , but it doesn’t lend itself particularly well to being a place to stay in Mexico City.

Everything looks fabulous and modern . However, there is a definite shortage of accommodations here.

If you were blindfolded and dropped in Santa Fe, you could be forgiven for believing that you had been left in an American city. This is where you’ll find the local offices for many multinational corporations and high-tech businesses.

Young professionals with plenty of money settle here in droves in high-rise condominiums and apartments. Accordingly, a restaurant and nightlife scene has sprung up here to cater to them. Santa Fe also boasts a sprawling shopping center filled with upscale shops.

The area is well-served by buses, so it’s not much of a problem to make the 12-mile journey from the city’s center . Mass transit to the neighborhood is an absolute necessity because so many workers must commute here. Predictably, morning and evening rush hours produce a traffic jam of epic proportions.

Santa Fe sprang up quickly in the 1980s and 1990s. While great attention was paid to gleaming skyscrapers, there seems to have been little overall planning. Accordingly, you’ll find few parks, greens spaces or even pathways for pedestrians . This is not one of the most visitor-friendly areas in Mexico City.

Accommodations are few and far between, congregating mostly on the neighborhood’s perimeter. Some are surprisingly inexpensive yet modern and include some nice conveniences like 24-hour restaurants.

If you’re willing to pay top dollar in the neighborhood, you can reserve a room at a full-service resort with restaurants, spa and swimming pools.

Santa Fe is a fairly safe neighborhood , but it is far away from most of Mexico City’s top sights , and it lacks much in the way of interest for tourists. The lodgings here are exceptionally nice, so it may still be a worthwhile choice.

BEST PLACES TO STAY IN MEXICO CITY IN SANTA FE

  • ($$$)   Live Aqua Urban Resort Mexico
  • ($$)   Hilton Garden Inn Mexico City Santa Fe
  • ($$)   Hyatt House Mexico City Santa Fe

Photo: Shutterstock

2 thoughts on “Where to Stay in Mexico City: 9 Best Areas”

Brilliant on areas – thank you!

Very helpful, I am planning to stay in Polanco area

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The best neighborhoods in Mexico City

John Hecht

Sep 23, 2023 • 5 min read

mexico city tourism reddit

No matter what vibe you seek, Mexico City has the perfect neighborhood for you © Drazen_ / Getty Images

Which neighborhood you decide to base yourself in on your trip to  Mexico City  is a key consideration when it comes to planning your vacation. 

To help you pick the right area, we've pulled together our favorite walkable neighborhoods that are full of character and charm. In the trendy Roma and Condesa districts, the fiesta never stops as you tap into the spirited nightlife and food scene, while across town in Centro Histórico, it's all about soaking up the many cultural offerings and old-world architecture. Or take it down a notch and embrace the low-key bohemian lifestyle of Coyoacán, just like Frida and Diego did back in the day.

A busy street filled with cars and people leads toward the Zócalo and the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City, Mexico

Centro Histórico

Best neighborhood for culture and architecture

Mexico's heart beats in the Centro . With more than 1500 historic buildings, ancient Aztec ruins, vibrant art and some of the nation's most absorbing museums, the Centro Histórico is the place to channel your inner culture vulture.

A stroll through the Zócalo , Latin America's largest main square, takes you to dramatic Diego Rivera murals housed in Palacio Nacional , while just a stone's throw away, you have Templo Mayor , a sacred Aztec temple with a world-class museum.

In addition to its vast and varied cultural offerings, the Centro provides a backdrop of striking colonial buildings, some of which have been carefully converted into hostels and boutique hotels. Granted, organized chaos is king in the hectic Centro, but if you like an area with plenty of action, the historic center is chock-full of rewards.

People dining at streetside tables at a restaurant in the Mexico City neighborhood of Roma

Best neighborhood for eating and drinking

Just when it looked like this colonia (neighborhood) had reached the height of cool, along came Alfonso Cuarón's recent Oscar-winning memoir film Roma to pique visitors' interest even more. Now it seems like every other week the rapidly gentrifying Roma sees a hot new cocktail bar or stylish fusion restaurant popping up in its splendid French-style mansions.

When in Roma, don't miss out on the delectable barbacoa tacos at El Hidalguense , where lamb is slow-cooked over aged oak wood and the pulque (a fermented alcoholic agave drink) flows like water. Book a table at the perennially packed Contramar , a trendsetting seafood restaurant famous for its tuna tostadas and zesty, grilled whole fish.

After the meal, grab a mezcal or cup o' joe on Álvaro Obregón, Roma's main strip, or saunter along Calle Colima, a buzzy street dotted with community art galleries, small museums and the popular Rosetta bakery.

Colorful street art mural of a young person riding an elk painted on a large wall in the neighborhood of Condesa, Mexico City

Best neighborhood for a laidback vibe

One could argue that the trendy Condesa neighborhood has taken a backseat to ultra-hip Roma. However, it's still one of the city's most appealing places to stay for its welcoming B&Bs, convivial bars and highly diverse choice of restaurants.

At times, it's hard to know where Condesa ends and the neighboring Roma begins as both boho-chic enclaves exude a similar laid-back vibe in their verdant parks , sidewalk cafes and hopping late-night taco joints.

Many neighborhood hotspots are clustered around Parque España and Parque México , the latter a former horseracing track that was transformed into an iconic oval park in the 1920s. Nearby, well-managed bed and breakfasts such as Red Tree House and Hotel Villa Condesa provide the perfect base to explore Condesa and beyond.

An older couple dances in the street of Alameda Central in Mexico City, Mexico

Alameda Central

Best neighborhood for local flavor

For better or worse, downtown Mexico City has undergone an ambitious makeover over the past decade, with most of the sprucing-up focused on the Centro Histórico, but you can still experience the city center of old along the busy streets south of Alameda Central . Start with tequila in the atmospheric Tío Pepe , the oldest bar in town that was described by beat writer William Burroughs as a “cheap cantina” in his 1953 novel Junkie .

Next, mosey on over to the original location of El Huequito , a hole-in-the-wall taco joint that has been slicing some of the city's tastiest tacos al pastor (spit-cooked pork) for more than six decades.

Of course, a visit to this neighborhood wouldn't be complete without spending time in Alameda Central itself, the oldest urban park in the Americas and home to Palacio de Bellas Artes , which houses masterful works of art by Mexico's big three muralists: Rivera, Siqueiros and Orozco.

A man punts on a boat called a trajinera on the canals of Xochimilco in Mexico City

Xochimilco and Cumbres del Ajusco

Best areas for outdoor activities

For a real Mexico City treat, take a gondola ride along the ancient canals of Xochimilco , the last vestiges of a once vast network of waterways dating back to Aztec times.

You can also cruise out to the creepy Isla de las Muñecas (Island of the Dolls), where hundreds of deteriorating dolls hang from the clotheslines and trees to ward off the spirit of a drowned girl. Depart from the Cuemanco dock, where you can purchase cervezas and tacos before boarding the boat.

About 25km (15.5 miles) west of Cuemanco lies Cumbres del Ajusco, a national park with a hiking trail that ascends to Mexico City's highest peak. If you like the quiet of Ajusco's fragrant pine forest, consider an overnight stay in a log cabin at the family-friendly Parque Ejidal San Nicolás Totolapan .

For rock climbing and more nature exploring, visit the third and fourth sections of nearby Los Dinamos, a protected canyon area that's home to Mexico City's last free-flowing river.

Colorful pottery and tiles in Casa Azul, Frida Kahlo's home in Mexico City

Best neighborhood for quiet charm

It's easy to understand why Mexican artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera chose to call Coyoacán home for so many years. Even after decades of being swallowed by Mexico City's urban sprawl, Coyoacán has managed to retain a certain degree of village charm on its cobbled streets and colorful plazas, not to mention it can be surprisingly quiet.

Almost every visitor to Mexico City makes a pilgrimage to Casa Azul , Kahlo's former home and studio, to gain a deeper understanding of the painter. In fact, it has become such a tourist hotspot that visits must now be booked in advance online.

Just around the corner, the Museo Casa de León Trotsky sees far fewer visitors, yet it offers a downright fascinating look at a house where Leon Trotsky, an exiled Marxist revolutionary from Ukraine, lived in exile before he was assassinated with an ice axe.

This article was first published June 2018 and updated September 2023

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Mob in Mexico brutally beats suspected kidnapper to death hours before Holy Week procession

The Good Friday Eve religious procession, which dates back centuries in the old Mexican silver-mining town of Taxco, went off as planned Thursday night despite the mob killing of a woman earlier in the day.

A woman suspected in the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, is dragged out of a police vehicle by a mob in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Police then picked her up off the ground and took her away. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman suspected in the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, is dragged out of a police vehicle by a mob in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Police then picked her up off the ground and took her away. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

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A mob beats a woman they suspect of kidnapping and killing an 8-year-old girl, after dragging her out of a police vehicle, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Police then picked her up and took her away. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

ADDS THAT THE WOMAN DIED - A mob beats a woman they suspect of kidnapping and killing an 8-year-old girl, after dragging her out of a police vehicle, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Police then picked her up and took her away. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Residents gather as the coffin that contain the remains of an 8-year-old girl is delivered to family, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. The 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday; her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Funeral workers carry the coffin that contain the remains of an 8-year-old girl, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. The 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday; her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A relative of an 8-year-old girl, who was kidnapped the previous day, weeps as her body is handed over to family in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A relative mourns as funeral workers carry the coffin that contain the remains of an 8-year-old girl, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. The 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday; her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman holds a sign with a message that reads in Spanish: “Justice for Cami” in reference to an 8-year-old girl who disappeared the previous day, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. The 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday; her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman wipes away tears during a demonstration protesting the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, in the main square of Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Hours earlier a mob beat a woman to death because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing the young girl. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Women chant the word “justice” during a demonstration protesting the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, in the main square of Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Hours earlier a mob beat a woman to death because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing the young girl. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman chants the Spanish word for “justice” during a demonstration protesting the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, in the main square of Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Hours earlier a mob beat a woman to death because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing the young girl. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman carries her daughter during a demonstration protesting the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, in the main square of Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Hours earlier a mob beat a woman to death because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing the young girl. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A woman holds a sign with a message that loosely translates from Spanish: “Children should not be harmed”, during a demonstration protesting the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl, in the main square of Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. Hours earlier a mob beat a woman to death because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing the young girl. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

A bare-footed penitent walks in a Holy Week procession, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Penitents carry a bundle of thorny branches during a Holy Week procession in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. In traditional processions that last from Thursday evening into the early morning hours of Friday, hooded penitents drag chains and shoulder the thorny bundles through the streets, as some flog themselves with nail-studded whips meant to bring them closer to God. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

TAXCO, Mexico (AP) — A mob in the Mexican tourist city of Taxco brutally beat a woman to death Thursday because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing a young girl, rampaging just hours before the city’s famous Holy Week procession.

The mob formed after an 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday. Her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. Security camera footage appeared to show a woman and a man loading a bundle, which may have been the girl’s body, into a taxi.

The mob surrounded the woman’s house Thursday, threatening to drag her out. Police took the woman into the bed of a police pickup truck, but then stood by — apparently intimidated by the crowd — as members of the mob dragged her out of the truck and down onto the street where they stomped, kicked and pummeled her until she lay, partly stripped and motionless.

Police then picked her up and took her away, leaving the pavement stained with blood. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries.

“This is the result of the bad government we have,” said a member of the mob, who gave her name as Andrea but refused to give her last name. “This isn’t the first time this kind of thing has happened,” she said, referring to the murder of the girl, “but this is the first time the people have done something.”

FILE - President Javier Milei addresses lawmakers during the opening legislative session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, March 1, 2024. Argentina and Colombia have agreed to end a diplomatic spat that escalated over right-wing Argentine President Javier Milei’s visceral attack on his leftist counterpart in Colombia last week, prompting the country to order the expulsion of Argentine diplomats. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, File)

“We are fed up,” she said. “This time it was an 8-year-old girl.”

A relative of an 8-year-old girl, who was kidnapped the previous day, weeps as her body is handed over to family in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

The mayor of Taxco, Mario Figueroa, said he shared residents’ outrage over the killing. Figueroa said a total of three people beaten by the mob — the woman and two men — had been taken away by police. Video from the scene suggested they had also been beaten, though The Associated Press witnessed only the beating of the woman.

The state prosecutors’ office said the two men were hospitalized. There was no immediate information on their condition.

In a statement issued soon after the event, Figueroa complained he did not get any help from the state government for his small, outnumbered municipal police force.

“Unfortunately, up to now we have not received any help or answers,” Figueroa said.

The Good Friday eve religious procession, which dates back centuries in the old silver-mining town, went off as planned Thursday night.

People crowded Taxco’s colonial streets to watch hooded men walking while whipping themselves or carrying heavy bundles of thorns across their bare shoulders in penitence to emulate the suffering of Jesus Christ carrying the cross.

But the earlier flash of violence cast a pall over the already solemn procession, which draws thousands to the small town.

Many participants wore small white ribbons of mourning.

“I never thought that in a touristic place like Taxco we would experience a lynching,” said Felipa Lagunas, a local elementary school teacher. “I saw it as something distant, in places far from civilization ... I never imagined that my community would experience this on such a special day.”

Mob attacks in rural Mexico are common . In 2018, two men were torched by an angry crowd in the central state of Puebla, and the next day a man and woman were dragged from their vehicle, beaten and set afire in the neighboring state of Hidalgo.

But Taxco and other cities in Guerrero state have been particularly prone to violence.

Funeral workers carry the coffin that contain the remains of an 8-year-old girl, in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024. The 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday; her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

In late January, Taxco endured a days-long strike by private taxi and van drivers who suffered threats from one of several drug gangs fighting for control of the area. The situation was so bad that police had to give people rides in the back of their patrol vehicles.

Around the same time, the bullet-ridden bodies of two detectives were found on the outskirts of Taxco. Local media said their bodies showed signs of torture.

In February, Figueroa’s own bulletproof car was shot up by gunmen on motorcycles.

In Taxco and throughout Guerrero state, drug cartels and gangs routinely prey on the local population, demanding protection payments from store owners, taxi and bus drivers. They kill those who refuse to pay.

Residents said they have had enough, even though the violence may further affect tourism.

“We know the town lives off of Holy Week (tourism) and that this is going to mess it up. There will be a lot of people who won’t want to come anymore,” said Andrea, the woman who was in the mob. “We make our living off tourism, but we cannot continue to allow them to do these things to us.”

Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

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How Tecate Pa’l Norte Festival Became Monterrey, Mexico’s ‘Touring & Economic Engine’

The event, which takes place in the Mexican border state of Nuevo León, now gathers 300,000 people across three days and has Coachella-like ambitions.

  • By Griselda Flores

Griselda Flores

Senior Editor, Latin

2024 Tecate Pa'l Norte

When brothers Oscar and Jesús Flores launched the first-ever of Pa’l Norte in 2012 in Monterrey, Nuevo León — under Apodaca Group, their father Oscar Flores Elizondo ‘s entertainment and promotion company — they figured it would be a one-time thing.

“We thought it would happen once, and then we’d just move on with our other projects,” Oscar says. He, along with Jesús and their sister Blanca , comprise the leadership of Apodaca alongside their dad, who founded the company in 1978 as Representaciones Artísticas Apodaca. At the time, the brothers were young executives and, as much as they liked their dad’s business, they wanted to put their own stamp on it. “My brother and I had never produced a festival when we decided to launch Pa’l Norte; fun fact, we had never even attended a festival in our lives,” Oscar says with a chuckle.

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Even with hiccups along the way, including being understaffed and a hailstorm the day before which they thought would cancel the event, they pulled through. And, unlike today, the event didn’t have a lot of support from sponsors, even with the Apodaca name attached to the festival. It was also at a time when the city, located in a state that borders Texas, was recovering from a brutal wave of murders linked to organized crime. Which is not to say Monterrey is a crime-less city today — but although organized crime is still a major concern in the city, it has not affected the festival in its 12 years. Its security plan includes city and state police officers (Fuerza Civil) inside and outside the festival, plus private security.  

When Pa’l Norte first launched, Monterrey — an important commercial entry port between the Northeastern region of Mexico and the United States — was also on its way to becoming a modern economic region exploding with tech innovation. “It was like the perfect musical symphony,” says Francisco Orozco , professor at the school of business at the prestigious Tecnológico de Monterrey. “There was a political change in the city that opened doors for these types of events to happen and people gained the confidence and courage to leave their homes again. We proved we weren’t just bullets.”

2024 Tecate Pa’l Norte Surprise Performers: Xavi, Bobby Pulido, Elvis Crespo & More

Three years into the festival, Oscar and his brother dropped the rock-only label because “we wanted to grow and bring more commercial artists,” says Oscar (the festival also adopted the slogan “Siempre Poderoso y Ascendente,” or, “Always Powerful and Ascendant”). They also scored a partnership with concert promoter OCESA, which Live Nation acquired in 2021 for $416 million, doubling down on their efforts to expand their reach. “OCESA has been a great ally that has supported us a lot,” Oscar says. “We are partners in many festivals, but this partnership was key for Pa’l Norte because together with them, we were able to grow in many areas such as sponsorships, international artists.”

The now re-branded Tecate Pa’l Norte — after landing a major sponsorship deal with the beer giant — has gone through massive changes, which has led to its global appeal. “Apodaca has been very meticulous with their alliances, from the beer industry to teaming up with the ministry of tourism to have hotels and transportation available when the festival takes place, [and] also partnering with airline Viva Aerobus for sponsorship,” Orozco says. “It’s a business model that works. They know the importance of allies and that’s why the festival has grown the way it has.”

Today, it’s the “most important musical event in Northern Mexico,” according to Nuevo León’s Ministry of Tourism. “Every year we are talking about more than 75% hotel occupancy derived from Pa’l Norte, but this year will be much more special because it coincides with Easter,” the government agency told Billboard in a statement. “Throughout these 12 years, it has positioned itself not only to impact the creative industries in Nuevo León, but also as one of our most important economic and tourism engines. This year we estimate a revenue of close to 750 million pesos (approximately $46 million U.S.).”

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Pa’l Norte’s three-day event now has nine stages that gathers 100,000 people per day at the emblematic Parque Fundidora (before, the capacity was 37,000 when it started at Parque Diego Rivera). Its lineup has evolved from genre-specific to super-eclectic with past headliners including Billie Eilish , Foo Fighters , Caifanes , Maná , Tame Impala , The Killers , Los Fabulosos Cadillacs and 50 Cent . This year’s edition was headlined by Peso Pluma , Blink-182 , Imagine Dragons , Maná and Fuerza Regida .

“At the end of the day, promoters are looking to have the most popular acts on their lineup,” says Alan David Robles-Soto , director of the music production program at Tecnólogico de Monterrey. He’s also a guitarist who’s performed alongside Mexican bands like Jumbo and División Minúscula. “It’s the same case with Coachella: it used to be a rock festival and then it wasn’t. It’s in the promoter’s best interest, they want to push sales and the ones who are going to sell are bands like Blink-182.”

Pa’l Norte is perhaps Mexico’s biggest, and most diverse, music festival, though other major events like Vive Latino and EDC Mexico (both produced by OCESA in Mexico City) also move significant tickets: The former had a total of 160,000 attendees this year, while EDC Mexico had 200,000 people in attendance for its 2023 edition. Meanwhile, the Machaca festival, also in Monterrey, gathered 65,000 last year, according to local reports, and the Baja Beach Fest in Baja California (which went from six days to three) draws in a daily capacity of 35,000.

“The importance that Mexico has in Latin America in terms of income in the sub-sector of live music is noteworthy,” Orozco says. “Artists are not only performing in Mexico City or Monterrey but also in other states where we did not imagine artists would go. They understood that people are willing to spend a lot of money for these experiences. Geographically and logistically, the country, which borders the U.S., is in a very important spot for them as well.”

Producing more than 600 shows a year, including 15 festivals across the country, Apodaca now has several divisions under its umbrella, including booking, distribution and management. With Pa’l Norte, the goal is only to become more global and, in the future, Oscar hopes to add a streaming option to expand its reach and potentially turn it into a two-weekend event, à la Coachella. For now, he’s pleased with the festival’s growth over the past 12 years and the impact it’s had on the Mexican state.

“As citizens of Nuevo León, we are very proud that Pa’l Norte is a source of work for restaurants, hotels, taxi drivers during that week,” says Oscar. “At the festival, we have more than 10,500 people working per day; generating that number of jobs fills us with pride. We want to keep impacting. The slogan says it all [always powerful and ascending].”

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Mob beats to death suspected kidnapper in Mexico hours before Holy Week procession

People stand around a woman who was beaten by a mob that dragged her from a police vehicle under suspicion that she had participated in the kidnapping and killing of an 8-year-old girl in Taxco, Mexico, March 28, 2024. The woman died of her injuries.

TAXCO, Mexico — A mob in the Mexican tourist city of Taxco brutally beat a woman to death Thursday because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing a young girl, rampaging just hours before the city’s famous Holy Week procession.

The mob formed after an 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday. Her body was found on a road on the outskirts of the city early Thursday. Security camera footage appeared to show a woman and a man loading a bundle, which may have been the girl’s body, into a taxi.

The mob surrounded the woman’s house Thursday, threatening to drag her out. Police took the woman into the bed of a police pickup truck, but then stood by — apparently intimidated by the crowd — as members of the mob dragged her out of the truck and down onto the street where they stomped, kicked and pummeled her until she lay, partly stripped and motionless.

Police then picked her up and took her away, leaving the pavement stained with blood. The Guerrero state prosecutors’ office later confirmed the woman died of her injuries.

“This is the result of the bad government we have,” said a member of the mob, who gave her name as Andrea but refused to give her last name. “This isn’t the first time this kind of thing has happened,” she said, referring to the murder of the girl, “but this is the first time the people have done something.”

“We are fed up,” she said. “This time it was an 8-year-old girl.”

A relative of an 8-year-old girl, who was kidnapped the previous day, weeps as her body is handed over to family in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024.

The mayor of Taxco, Mario Figueroa, said he shared residents’ outrage over the killing. Figueroa said a total of three people beaten by the mob — the woman and two men — had been taken away by police. Video from the scene suggested they had also been beaten, though The Associated Press witnessed only the beating of the woman.

The state prosecutors’ office said the two men were hospitalized. There was no immediate information on their condition.

In a statement issued soon after the event, Figueroa complained he did not get any help from the state government for his small, outnumbered municipal police force.

“Unfortunately, up to now we have not received any help or answers,” Figueroa said.

The Good Friday eve religious procession, which dates back centuries in the old silver-mining town, went off as planned Thursday night.

People crowded Taxco’s colonial streets to watch hooded men walking while whipping themselves or carrying heavy bundles of thorns across their bare shoulders in penitence to emulate the suffering of Jesus Christ carrying the cross.

Penitents carry a bundle of thorny branches during a Holy Week procession in Taxco, Mexico, Thursday, March 28, 2024.

But the earlier flash of violence cast a pall over the already solemn procession, which draws thousands to the small town.

Many participants wore small white ribbons of mourning.

“I never thought that in a touristic place like Taxco we would experience a lynching,” said Felipa Lagunas, a local elementary school teacher. “I saw it as something distant, in places far from civilization ... I never imagined that my community would experience this on such a special day.”

Mob attacks in rural Mexico are common . In 2018, two men were torched by an angry crowd in the central state of Puebla, and the next day a man and woman were dragged from their vehicle, beaten and set afire in the neighboring state of Hidalgo.

But Taxco and other cities in Guerrero state have been particularly prone to violence.

In late January, Taxco  endured a days-long strike  by private taxi and van drivers who suffered threats from one of several drug gangs fighting for control of the area. The situation was so bad that police had to give people rides in the back of their patrol vehicles.

Around the same time, the bullet-ridden bodies of two detectives were found on the outskirts of Taxco. Local media said their bodies showed signs of torture.

In February, Figueroa’s own bulletproof car was shot up by gunmen on motorcycles.

In Taxco and throughout Guerrero state, drug cartels and gangs routinely  prey on the local population, demanding protection payments from store owners, taxi and bus drivers.  They kill those who refuse to pay.

Residents said they have had enough, even though the violence may further affect tourism.

“We know the town lives off of Holy Week (tourism) and that this is going to mess it up. There will be a lot of people who won’t want to come anymore,” said Andrea, the woman who was in the mob. “We make our living off tourism, but we cannot continue to allow them to do these things to us.”

The Associated Press

COMMENTS

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    TAXCO, Mexico (AP) — A mob in the Mexican tourist city of Taxco brutally beat a woman to death Thursday because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing a young girl, rampaging just hours before the city's famous Holy Week procession. The mob formed after an 8-year-old girl disappeared Wednesday.

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    Pa'l Norte is perhaps Mexico's biggest, and most diverse, music festival, though other major events like Vive Latino and EDC Mexico (both produced by OCESA in Mexico City) also move ...

  22. Mob beats to death suspected kidnapper in Taxco, Mexico before Holy

    TAXCO, Mexico — A mob in the Mexican tourist city of Taxco brutally beat a woman to death Thursday because she was suspected of kidnapping and killing a young girl, rampaging just hours before ...