More than 3,200 businesses operate across CDMX, averaging a 4.46 rating citywide. Over 1,200 are budget places under MX$100. Another thousand or so sit in the mid-range. Just 73 make the upscale cut. That distribution shapes how the city eats: premium pricing earns no automatic respect here, and the budget tier is where the surprises live.
The clearest proof is Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán. Calle A in the Educación neighborhood. Rating: 4.7 from 714 reviews. Quality score: 98.2, the highest in this dataset. The menu is American comfort food on a Mexican timetable: macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, milkshakes, and bolognese pasta. Opens at 3 PM, everything under MX$100. That a Coyoacán fries shop tops the rankings, ahead of mezcal bars and formal Mexican restaurants, is the most useful signal here.
Coyoacán sends a second candidate. LOS COMPAYES COAPA on Armada de México 1494 in Cafetales covers the traditional register: birria, consomé, nachos, tacos, and pork ribs. Rating 4.6, score 96.6, also under MX$100. Open from 10 AM on weekends, 1 PM weekdays, closing at 8:30 PM. Two high-scoring budget restaurants in the same southern neighborhood is not a coincidence. These colonias are carrying more than their share of the city's quality.
Put Pipiris next to Toks on Paseo de las Palmas 239 in Lomas de Chapultepec. Toks has 2,452 reviews and a 4.4 rating at MX$100–200. Score: 96.4. The address is prestigious, valet parking is in the keywords, and the review count is more than three times Pipiris's. Pipiris still scores higher. The Lomas premium buys location and service context, not the food.
Broka on Zacatecas 126 in Roma Norte is what the neighborhood does best: the courtyard, mezcal cocktails, European rabbit, soft shell crab, and gnocchi on a menu that mixes cuisines without committing to any single tradition. Pricing is $$, rating 4.4 from 1,523 reviews, score 96.4. Open Wednesday through Saturday, with midnight closing times Thursday through Saturday. Mezcal has been reshaping this restaurant-bar hybrid format across the city, and Broka is Roma Norte's version of that.
Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol on Valentín Gómez Farías 67 in San Rafael takes the same $$ tier with a 4.6 rating and 317 reviews. Score: 96.1. The menu is formal Mexican: chiles en nogada, chamorros, pork shank, pibil snapper, arrachera, and stuffed peppers. Closed Mondays, noon to 7 PM otherwise. At $$ pricing, a 4.6 beats Broka's 4.4. One is Friday night cocktails in a courtyard; the other is Sunday comida with the whole table.
Martina Fonda Fina on Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61 in San Miguel Chapultepec runs weekdays 8:30 AM to 5 PM, Saturdays until 2:30 PM, closed Sundays. Budget pricing, 4.5 rating from 530 reviews, score 97.0. The menu leans toward chilaquiles and vegetarian plates. The fonda fina model, the elevated lunch counter, is a specifically Mexican format, and Martina is one of the better executions near Chapultepec.
The gap in CDMX's restaurant market is at the top. Fewer than 3% of restaurants are upscale, and the citywide average is already 4.46. The budget tier is not a compromise here. In Coyoacán, you find 97-point scores for under MX$100. That is where to eat first.





