CDMX has 124 Japanese restaurants right now. Not Japanese-inspired — Japanese. That makes it the third-largest restaurant category in the entire city, trailing only generic restaurants and places explicitly labeled Mexican. More Japanese spots than pizza places. More than seafood. That ratio is not an accident; it's where money and appetite have been moving for a couple of years.
The Asian wave, and what CDMX is doing with it
Santo Hand Roll Bar in Roma Norte has over 3,300 reviews at 4.8 stars. A hand roll bar. The kind of place where you stand at a counter eating temaki with your hands. That review volume puts it ahead of restaurants with decades of operation. Roma is dense with this stuff: ramen counters, izakayas, sushi spots, and matcha cafés.
The more interesting action is at places like Jappy Asian Food on Primavera in Ángel Zimbrón — which, to be clear, is not where you'd expect a 4.9-star restaurant. One cook, one server, a tiny room, and lines because a TikTok video got out. The miso ramen gets described as "explosive and perfectly balanced." The menu runs suadero ramen and biriamen — birria broth and suadero meat, two of CDMX's most traditional taco preparations, woven into Japanese noodle format. This is CDMX answering back.
Vegan gone casual
Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle has a 4.7 rating from over 1,100 reviews. The owner is Japanese. The menu runs Tokyo Red, Shiro Tonkotsu, red tonkotsu, and a vegan orange chicken that keeps appearing across reviews the way a specific dish does when it genuinely surprises people. Non-vegans go. "Delicious even if you are not a vegan," one reviewer wrote after going back twice. The house yuzu kombucha gets cited independently. This is not a niche operation for the firmly committed — it's a ramen shop that happens to be plant-based, and the distinction is starting to matter less than the score.
French pastry, CDMX edition
Vulevú Bakery is on Córdoba in Roma Norte and charges budget-tier prices for things that take real technique: almond croissants, kouign amann, flan parisien, and a guava cruffin that is basically the whole trend condensed into one pastry. "One of the best almond croissants I've had in CDMX," one reviewer writes. The flan parisien gets called "a thing of glory." Nearly 1,400 reviews and a top quality score — bread and coffee under 100 pesos. The market for technically serious pastry at accessible prices is real and apparently large.
The burger that won't stop
Chubbies Polanco in Granada is pulling a 98.8 quality score on volume that would collapse most small kitchens — over 1,100 reviews, new ones landing daily. The Special is the burger to order, though the buffalo ranch version comes up enough across reviews to be considered signature territory. At 100–200 pesos near the soccer and paddle courts on Lago Andromaco, it's casual and consistent at a level that earns that number. The review timestamps alone tell the story: multiple five-stars in the last 24 hours every time I check.
What comes next
The biriamen at Jappy and the guava cruffin at Vulevú are pointing in the same direction. CDMX has been absorbing formats — ramen, hand rolls, croissants, smash burgers — long enough that the counter-movement is starting. The next interesting thing isn't another wave of imports. It's import format with Mexican ingredients: suadero where you'd expect pork belly, guava where you'd expect raspberry, mezcal where you'd expect sake, and huitlacoche where you'd expect truffle. It's already happening in a few places. It'll be impossible to miss by the end of the year.





