Eating Well Under MX$100: CDMX's Best Budget Spots
Budget Eats

Eating Well Under MX$100: CDMX's Best Budget Spots

From mole enchiladas in Nápoles to pain au chocolat in Roma Norte, eating well in CDMX doesn't require spending much. Here's where MX$100 gets you a proper meal.

In CDMX, MX$100 is the threshold. Under that number, you can eat a full comida at a decent fonda, get two French-style pastries with coffee, load up on proper loaded fries, or drink a serious michelada. Over MX$150 and you're in mid-range territory. The city has well over a thousand budget restaurants competing for the same customers, so the quality floor is higher than most cities charging these prices. For breakfast, Martina Fonda Fina on Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61 in San Miguel Chapultepec is the spot most visitors miss entirely. The neighborhood sits just west of the Bosque de Chapultepec but draws almost no tourist foot traffic, which keeps this place operating squarely for locals. Opens at 8:30am Monday through Friday (Saturdays until 2:30pm), with a menu built around chilaquiles, vegetarian options, and health-conscious cooking. Meals under MX$100, every day of the week. Vulevú Bakery at Córdoba 234 in Roma Norte is the best bakery value in the city. The pain au chocolat and kouign amann are what people keep returning for; the almond croissant and the crookie (a croissant-cookie hybrid that makes more sense once you eat one) round out the pastry options. Individual items plus a matcha latte sit comfortably under MX$100. Open Tuesday through Sunday from 7:45am (Sundays from 8:30am, closed Mondays). The focaccia handles the savory side. El Regreso on Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles is where this list makes its case. The kitchen runs swiss enchiladas, red mole enchiladas, chile en nogada, cochinita pibil, milanesas, and a soup program that regulars cite alongside the consommé and Pollo al Cilantro. All of it under MX$100. Open every day from 10am to 7:30pm. Nearly 1,900 reviews at 4.5 stars, earned over years of cooking at prices the neighborhood hasn't outgrown. Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán (Calle A, Mz. VII, Local D, Educación) opens at 3pm on weekdays. This is afternoon food: macho fries loaded with toppings, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, bolognese pasta, milkshakes. Everything under MX$100, and the 714-review count from a residential address in Coyoacán tells you the portions are earning their keep. Friday and Saturday hours extend to 10pm, making it a late-night fallback in a colonia that mostly shuts down early. For the afternoon drink, Michelanga Narvarte at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente does micheladas right. The signature is the tamarind build; the camarones version is the one for those who want it savory. All under MX$100, poured into proper glasses. Beer garden format, casual crowd, open from 1:30pm daily and until 10:30pm on weekends. Best value in the city: the red mole enchiladas at El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles. Under MX$100. Proper Mexico City cooking, the kind that takes all morning to build and costs a fraction of what it would anywhere that serves it with tablecloths.

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Enchilada plate at El Regreso, a classic Mexican fonda in Nápoles, Ciudad de MéxicoBudget Eats

The MX$100 Rule: Budget Eats Across Ciudad de México

In CDMX, MX$100 is the ceiling that separates real neighborhood food from everything else. These five spots stay well under it.

In CDMX, MX$100 is the number. Below it: full plates, real kitchens, places that have been feeding the neighborhood for decades. Above it you're still eating affordably, but the character changes. Every spot here keeps you under that ceiling — and the best ones give you significant change. El Regreso — Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles This is the spot tourists almost never find, and that's exactly what makes it worth the trip to Benito Juárez. El Regreso is a Mexican fonda in the working-lunch tradition: swiss enchiladas, red mole enchiladas, chile en nogada when the season arrives, cochinita, milanesas, soups, and Pollo al Cilantro. Everything under MX$100. Across the city, a plate of chile en nogada at a proper restaurant runs MX$200–350 — here it stays in the budget tier. That price gap is the whole argument. Open daily 10am–7:30pm. Martina Fonda Fina — Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec Breakfast here is serious. Chilaquiles, vegetarian options, and a menu that keeps coming up in reviews alongside words like "accessible" and "cost" — the language of regulars who've done the math. For a full breakfast under MX$100 in a neighborhood where prices creep up year by year, Martina is holding the line. Closed Sundays, closes at 2:30pm on Saturdays — come on a weekday, come early. Vulevú Bakery — Córdoba 234, Roma Norte French-style pastries in Roma Norte is a category where the price can run wherever the baker feels like taking it. Vulevú stays in the budget tier. Almond croissant, kouign amann, pain au chocolat, focaccia, lemon tart, raspberry tart — all under MX$100. A croissant and matcha latte here costs significantly less than the equivalent at the neighborhood's flashier cafés, and the quality is genuinely good. With 1,389 reviews and a 4.6 rating, the baking speaks for itself. Open Tuesday–Saturday from 7:45am, Sunday from 8:30am. Pipiris Fries — Calle A Mz. VII, Educación, Coyoacán Macho fries, bolognese pasta, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, milkshakes — and a 4.7 rating from 714 reviewers. Pipiris is the kind of place where the score and the concept don't obviously match until you're actually eating there. Opens at 3pm, which is the right hour for this. Monthly specials rotate, so what you get isn't always the same. All under MX$100. Michelanga Narvarte — Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente One product: micheladas. Specifically, micheladas with camarones, in drinking glasses loaded with lemon and tamarind. Under MX$100. Open from 1:30pm, until 10:30pm on weekends. With 893 reviews and a 4.7 rating, Michelanga has become the default afternoon stop for the Narvarte crowd — while mezcal bars multiply everywhere else in the city, this corner of Cuauhtémoc is still doing the classic michelada and doing it right. The best single value meal in CDMX right now: Chile en nogada at El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles. Under MX$100. When it's in season, this is the dish. Anywhere else in the city it costs two or three times as much. That's the deal.

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