CDMX doesn't ease you in. You step out of the Metro and there's a taco stand, a juice counter, a woman selling tamales from a cooler, and a guy asking if you need a taxi — that's just the sidewalk. The city has thousands of places to eat spread across dozens of colonias, and what sets it apart from other Mexican cities is how seriously every price point gets treated. A MX$60 lunch at a neighborhood fonda gets the same care as a tasting menu. The clientele overlaps more than you'd expect. Nobody here thinks eating cheap is slumming.
Chubbies Polanco | Lago Andromaco 17, Granada | MX$100–200
The Granada colonia runs just north of Polanco proper — quieter, less conspicuous. Chubbies has been building a following there on pure merit: nearly 1,200 reviews at 4.8 stars don't happen by accident. Open daily from 12:30pm, until 11:30pm on Fridays and Saturdays. The price is MX$100–200 per person — not street food territory, but reasonable for the quality of what's coming out of that kitchen.
Michelanga Narvarte | Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente | under MX$100
Narvarte is where Chilangos actually live when Condesa is too expensive, and Michelanga is the neighborhood beer garden that earned its place. The concept runs on micheladas — spiced tomato-clam beer drinks that are just better in Mexico than anywhere else on earth — with variations using camarones and tamarind. Opens at 1:30pm daily, until 9pm on weekdays and 10:30pm on weekends. Prices stay under MX$100, which is dramatically less than you'd pay at a bar in Roma Norte for a comparable afternoon out.
Pipiris Fries | Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán | under MX$100
Coyoacán has the tourist market and the weekend crowds around the plaza, but Pipiris Fries is in the quieter Educación neighborhood. They do loaded fries with serious toppings — macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, boneless steak — alongside milkshakes and rotating monthly specials. Opens at 3pm daily, closes at 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Budget well under MX$100. If you're spending an afternoon near Parque Viveros, this works as a good stop on the way back.
Vegan Ramen Mei | Félix Cuevas 835, Del Valle Sur | MX$100–200
Del Valle Sur is residential and easy to pass through without stopping. Vegan Ramen Mei is worth the detour. Over 1,100 reviews at 4.7 is repeat-customer territory — not first-timers being generous. The ramen runs MX$100–200 and the menu goes beyond noodles: orange chicken and sweet and sour chicken appear alongside the bowls. Opens at 2pm daily, closes at 9pm. Easy to reach from División del Norte on the Metrobus.
Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes | Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Insurgentes San Borja | MX$100–200
Insurgentes is the spine of the city — Line 3 Metro runs underneath it for kilometers in both directions. Torito is at number 1020 in the San Borja stretch, open from 12:30pm and until 1:30am on Friday nights. Mojitos and micheladas get flagged in reviews alongside tortilla soup. The MX$100–200 range makes it reasonable for a long afternoon. The location alone makes this the most accessible spot on this list.
LOS DE ARRIBA | Maricopa 10, Nápoles | Wed–Sat, 8pm–1am
Nápoles is unremarkable by day. At night on a Friday, LOS DE ARRIBA changes the block. It's a live music bar — son cubano, bohemian sets, standup comedy, and whatever the booker decided this week, Wednesday through Saturday only. Reviews mention getting tickets in advance. The price range runs mid-to-upper; this isn't a place to economize. Get there when the first set starts.
One day in CDMX: Start at Michelanga in Narvarte at 1:30pm for micheladas and camarones. Head south by 3pm to Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán — opens at 3pm, eats under MX$100. Cross back north to Del Valle Sur for ramen at Vegan Ramen Mei around 6pm. If it's a Thursday or Friday, close at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles from 8pm. Total food spend for three stops: under MX$400. Add drinks at LOS DE ARRIBA and the day lands around MX$600–700.





