Mexico City has over 200 mexican restaurants worth tracking, spread across a wider geographic range than most food coverage acknowledges: Benito Juárez, Centro Histórico, Roma, Polanco, and working-class delegaciones like Iztapalapa that rarely make the food press. The city's restaurant scene tilts heavily toward budget and mid-range options (out of roughly 3,280 tracked businesses, fewer than 75 are upscale), and mexican food follows the same pattern. The question isn't how many there are. It's what they're actually doing.
The category label flattens something that shouldn't be flat. Porton Maya on Calzada Santa Cruz 78 in Portales Norte is a Yucatecan operation: cochinita pibil, panuchos, lime soup, habanero sauce, motuleños eggs, and stuffed cheese. Doña Vero at Monterrey 313 in Roma Sur runs Oaxacan — tlayudas, chapulines, pulque, wild boar meat, and craft beer alongside vegan options. Casa Licha Pozole on Sur 69-A in Iztapalapa concentrates on Guerrero-style cooking: chalupas, mixiote, chilate, cacao. Open only on weekends, somehow accumulated over 3,000 reviews. All three score 97.0, all carry a 4.5-star average. Three completely distinct regions of Mexico, one rating tier.
The budget counterargument to Polanco is El Regreso on Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles. It scores 97.0 with a 4.5-star rating from nearly 1,900 reviewers. Price: under MX$100 per person. The kitchen runs moles, swiss enchiladas, chile en nogada, Pollo al Cilantro, and consommé. Now look at Klein's at Av. Presidente Masaryk 360B in Polanco — kosher-certified, running bagels, matzo ball soup, salami, and pancakes alongside Mexican breakfast — 4.5 stars, score 97.0, price MX$100-200. Same score. Different neighborhood. The gap between those two price tiers is what Polanco charges for the address, the valet parking, and the Masaryk foot traffic. The quality signal, by every metric available here, is identical.
El Cardenal Lomas carries the highest star rating in this group at 4.6 stars, and the most reviews by a considerable margin — over 8,400 ratings. That volume is a different kind of signal than a 4.6 from a few hundred people. It means the kitchen has been consistent across years, seasons, staff changes. Sabor Provincia is a quieter surprise in the under-MX$100 tier: a 4.2-star rating with a score of 94.1, which places it above numerous mid-range competitors on the quality index. No detailed address in the dataset, but the score alone makes it worth seeking out.
Downtown, Taquería Parrilla Leonesa Centro on Bolívar 29-A in Centro Histórico covers chile en nogada, tacos al pastor, arrachera, ribeye steak, tortilla soup, and horchata water — seven days a week from 8am — with live mariachi on the floor. At mid-range pricing and 4.4 stars from over 1,400 reviews, it's the reliable Centro anchor that visitors eating in the historic district keep coming back to.
The sharpest value in this category is concentrated in Benito Juárez. El Regreso in Nápoles and Porton Maya in Portales Norte both sit at the top score tier at under MX$100, which makes the delegación a quiet center of gravity for quality mexican food at prices that have nothing to do with the Condesa-Roma premium. What's absent from the top of the table is modern tasting-menu territory — the style of cooking that interprets regional ingredients through a contemporary lens. That gap between excellent neighborhood comida and destination dining is real, and it's wide open.





