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a large group of people sitting at tables in a restaurantSpotlight

Nightfall at Hop The Beer Experience 2

A late‑evening dive into CDMX’s most lively craft‑beer bar, where the clink of glasses and the hum of conversation turn the street into a playground.

It is 9 PM on a humid Thursday and the neon sign of Hop The Beer Experience 2 flickers above the sidewalk. A line of locals stretches past the curb, the air thick with the scent of malt and the distant echo of a street musician’s guitar. Inside, the bar glows amber, the brass taps catching the light as a server slides a freshly poured pint across the polished wood. The crowd is a mix of seasoned regulars and curious tourists, all drawn by the promise of something cold and crisp. The story of Hop The Beer Experience 2 began in a modest loft on Calle Durango, where a group of friends decided to turn their weekend tasting sessions into a public venture. The place now occupies a former bakery, its high ceilings still bearing the faint imprint of the old ovens. The menu, curated by a head brewer who spent years in Bavaria, leans toward European‑style lagers and IPAs, each poured with a steady hand. Reviewers often note the bar’s ability to keep a draft at the perfect temperature, a detail that earns repeat visits. One patron wrote, “The first sip feels like a cool breeze after a hot day, and the flavor stays bright until the last drop.” Another said, “I come here for the community; the staff remember my name and my favorite brew.” A third comment praised the atmosphere: “Even on a noisy night, the music sits just right behind the chatter, never overpowering.” By 11 PM the space shifts. The lighting dims further, shadows pooling around the wooden tables, while a handful of late‑night regulars linger over the last rounds. The bar’s signature pour, a double‑hop IPA, arrives with a frothy head that releases citrus notes as it meets the glass. The taste is crisp, the bitterness balanced by a subtle grain sweetness that lingers on the palate. Patrons describe it as “smooth enough for a first‑timer, bold enough for a connoisseur.” The price point sits comfortably in the mid‑range tier, making it an easy choice for a night out without breaking the bank. The staff, quick with a smile, often suggest a pairing—perhaps a salty pretzel from the kitchen, which arrives warm and lightly salted, the dough yielding a soft chew that contrasts the beer’s sharp edge. As the night winds down, the crowd thins, but the bar’s energy remains. The last few glasses are cleared, the taps are cleaned, and the neon sign continues its steady pulse. Walking out, the cool air hits you, and the street feels quieter, yet the memory of the bar’s lively hum stays. Hop The Beer Experience 2 isn’t just a place to drink; it’s a small community hub where each pour tells a story, each laugh adds a note, and the night stretches a little longer for anyone willing to stay a while.

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Martina Fonda Fina storefront on Calle Gral. Juan Cano, with the bright morning light and a table of chilaquiles ready for serviceBy Cuisine

A culinary cross‑section of Mexico City’s eateries

Three very different spots reveal how price, rating and neighborhood shape the city’s food scene.

Mexico City hosts 3,288 restaurants, a median rating of 4.46 and an average quality score of 79.1. The market splits into 1,206 budget‑friendly venues, 997 mid‑range spots and a modest 73 upscale locations. The highest concentration sits in the central boroughs of Cuauhtémoc, Miguel Hidalgo and Álvaro Obregón, where foot traffic and office density push owners to balance cost and consistency. Martina Fonda Fina sits on Calle Gral. Juan Cano in the San Miguel Chapultepec I Secc neighborhood of Miguel Hidalgo. Its menu ranges from MX$1 to MX$100, yet reviewers still award it a solid 4.5 rating from 530 diners and a business score of 97.0. Breakfast plates of chilaquiles sit beside vegetarian bowls, and the open‑air patio lets the street’s morning buzz filter in. A regular reviewer notes the “crisp corn‑tortilla base and smoky salsa that linger long after the last bite.” The price‑to‑quality ratio here beats many mid‑range spots that charge twice as much for a similar rating. Across town, Asaderos Grill Plaza Loreto anchors Avenida Altamirano in the historic San Ángel district of Álvaro Obregón. While the listing omits a specific price range, the venue attracts a hefty 1,455 reviews and a 4.8 rating, pushing its business score to 95.8. The grill’s signature arrachera and milanese steak arrive on heavy platters that dominate communal tables. One diner describes the “charred crust of the steak paired with a bright cilantro‑lime salsa that cuts the richness.” Evening hours stretch to 11 p.m., making it a go‑to for late‑night protein cravings, and the high score suggests that diners are willing to pay a premium for the experience. Le Pain Quotidien occupies a corner on Monterrey 104 in the Cuauhtémoc borough, a stone’s throw from the bustling Paseo de la Reforma. Its price band sits between MX$100 and MX$200, and it pulls in 3,375 reviews for a 4.3 rating and a 95.8 business score. The bakery‑style menu highlights organic croissants, Belgian chocolate tarts and a brunch twist on chilaquiles that mixes sweet bread with a tangy tomato sauce. A patron writes, “the croissant’s buttery layers melt in the mouth while the coffee’s acidity balances the sweet.” Open from 7 a.m. every day, it serves both early commuters and weekend lingerers. Putting the three together shows a clear pattern: high scores are not confined to pricey addresses. Martina Fonda Fina delivers a 4.5 rating at under MX$100, while Le Pain Quotidien reaches 4.3 with a mid‑range bill of MX$150 on average. Asaderos Grill commands the top rating but leaves the price open, hinting at a willingness to pay for grill mastery. The best value, by raw numbers, sits with Martina Fonda Fina, where a MX$50 plate matches the quality of a MX$150 brunch at Le Pain Quotidien. The market still lacks a high‑scoring venue that consistently offers a full‑plate dinner under MX$100 in the upscale zones, leaving room for new concepts that blend affordable price with the city’s top‑tier taste standards.

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a restaurant filled with lots of people sitting at tablesNew Openings

Fresh Flavors Arrive in Ciudad de México

Two recently opened spots are shaking up the city’s dining scene, and early reviewers are already buzzing.

The food map of Ciudad de México is getting a few new pins this month. From a burger joint that leans into bold sauces to a beer garden that mixes classic micheladas with street‑style shrimp, the city feels a little wider, a little louder, and a lot more curious. I’ve been to both places, taken note of the first impressions, and put together what I’ve seen so far. Chubbies Polanco sits on Lago Andromaco 17 in the polished Polanco neighborhood. The façade is a sleek glass front with a neon “Chubbies” sign that glows against the evening sky. Inside, the space feels like a modern lounge: high benches, a muted color palette, and an open kitchen where the grill hisses. The menu, linked on their site, lists a range of burgers from $100 to $200. Reviewers have praised the “taste” and “speed,” and the current rating sits at 4.8 from 1,196 reviews. With only a handful of comments mentioning the new “marmalade heat” sauce, I tried it myself – a thick patty, caramelized onions, and a tangy marmalade drizzle that cuts through the richness. The price is high for a burger, but the quality score of 98.8 suggests you’re paying for consistency. Hours run from 12:30 pm to 9:30 pm on weekdays and extend to 11:30 pm on weekends, so it works for a late lunch or a night out. Across town, Michelanga Narvarte brings a breezy beer‑garden vibe to Av. Cuauhtémoc 808. The exterior is a simple wooden façade with colorful lanterns that hint at a relaxed atmosphere. Inside, long communal tables invite groups to share plates while a bar lines the wall with rows of cans and glasses. The price range is $1–100, making it accessible for a casual drink and a bite. With 893 reviews and a 4.7 rating, early patrons highlight the “micheladas” and “camarones” (shrimp) toast as standout items. I sampled the shrimp toast – toasted bread topped with seasoned shrimp, a squeeze of lemon, and a drizzle of tamarind sauce. The michelada, served in a tall glass with a salted rim, balances citrus and spice. The garden stays open from 1:30 pm to 9 pm on weekdays and stretches to 10:30 pm on weekends, perfect for a sunset sip. Both places are still gathering a full picture from the community. Chubbies has a solid score but the new sauce line is just beginning to collect feedback; Michelanga’s garden vibe feels fresh, though the menu is still evolving. The limited number of recent reviews – a few dozen for the newest items – means you’ll be among the early crowd shaping the story. If I had to pick one spot with the most upside, it would be Michelanga Narvarte. Its open‑air concept, affordable price point, and the playful twist on classic drinks give it room to grow a loyal following. The shrimp toast alone hints at a menu that could expand into more inventive seafood plates. Still, Chubbies offers a polished burger experience that could become a go‑to for those chasing a high‑end patty. Either way, the city’s palate is getting richer, and these two openings are worth a visit while the hype is still low.

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People sitting at a bar with bottles behind the bar.Late Night

Midnight bites in CDMX: where the night still eats

When the city lights flicker past ten, three spots keep the plates turning and the crowd humming.

The streets of Ciudad de México pulse after ten. Neon signs bleed onto Avenida Reforma, the rumble of late‑night colectivos mixes with distant salsa, and the scent of street‑side tacos lingers near Plaza Garibaldi. Bars on Condesa’s calle Michoacán stay open, while the crowds from nearby clubs drift toward any place that still serves food. The air feels cooler, the city quieter, but the hunger stays loud. LOS DE ARRIBA sits on Maricopa in Nápoles, a live‑music bar that feels like a backstage lounge. Doors swing open at eight, and the stage lights stay bright until one am. The crowd is a mix of stand‑up comedy fans and late‑night revelers, voices rising over a Cuban son that rolls through the room. A glass of “los tragos” arrives with a quick “pronto” from the bartender, and the raisin‑sweet cocktail slides across the bar. The vibe is bohemian, the music loud enough to drown the street, and the energy stays high until the last song fades. A few blocks away, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle offers a quieter counter at Félix Cuevas. Its doors close at nine pm, so it’s the go‑to for those who start their night early. The broth simmers with ginger ale notes, and reviewers whisper about the orange chicken that swims among the noodles. Sweet and sour chicken appears as a side, bright against the green garnish. The space hums with low‑key anime posters, and the crowd is a mix of students and office workers looking for a warm bowl before the night fully settles. Further north in Polanco, 50 Friends blends Italian comfort with a late‑night crowd. The restaurant opens at one pm and stays busy until midnight, stretching to one am on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Diners crowd the marble tables, laughing over a chocolate pizza that some call a daring twist. The environment feels upscale yet relaxed, and the nearby park offers a brief breath of fresh air between courses. By midnight the lights dim, but the service keeps moving, feeding the after‑work crowd that drifts from nearby bars. If the clock ticks past one and the stomach still growls, the city’s 24‑hour taco trucks become the emergency rescue. Their grills glow under street lamps, and a quick bite of al pastor or carne asada keeps the night alive until sunrise. Those trucks may not have the same ambience as the three spots above, but they are the reliable answer when the last bar closes. The three venues each hold a piece of the after‑dark puzzle: LOS DE ARRIBA pushes the night to one am with music and drinks, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle satisfies early cravings before nine pm, and 50 Friends offers a late Italian pause until the clock strikes midnight. Together they map the rhythm of Ciudad de México after dark, guiding the hungry wanderer from one bite to the next.

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Exterior of Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco with neon signage and a line of customers waiting for the marmalade heat burgerTrending

The hottest food trends lighting up Ciudad de México right now

Three ultra‑high‑scoring spots are driving a wave of premium burgers, luxe Italian and bold vegan ramen across the capital.

The hottest buzz in Ciudad de México right now is the rise of ultra‑high‑scoring venues that charge premium prices. All three of the top‑scoring places sit above 98 on the score metric and together have logged more than 4,200 reviews, a striking concentration for a city of over 3,200 eateries. That density tells us diners are gravitating toward experiences that blend quality, price and a sense of novelty. First, the burger revival is anchored by Chubbies Polanco. The spot earned a 4.8 rating from 1,196 reviewers and a 98.8 score, with price tags in the $100–200 range. Patrons repeatedly mention the marmalade‑glazed heat burger, noting the crisp bun and a sweet‑spicy kick that feels like a street‑fair memory inside a sleek lounge. Open from midday to late night, the restaurant’s fast service and lively atmosphere keep the turnover high, reinforcing its position as a benchmark for premium fast‑food in the city. Second, upscale Italian dining is being redefined at 50 Friends. With a 4.7 rating from 1,859 reviews and a 98.2 score, the restaurant commands a $$ price tier that appeals to both locals and visitors seeking refined comfort. Reviewers rave about the chocolate pizza, describing a silky cocoa base paired with a light crust that melts into the mouth. The venue’s extended hours, from early afternoon to after midnight, make it a go‑to spot for late‑night dinner parties, and its polished interior adds a sense of occasion to every plate. Third, the vegan ramen surge is embodied by Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle. It matches the 4.7 rating and 98.2 score of its Italian counterpart, pulling in 1,148 reviewers who praise its orange chicken ramen and sweet‑and‑sour chicken broth. Prices sit at MX$100–200, positioning the shop as an affordable yet high‑quality option for plant‑based diners. Open daily from 2 PM to 9 PM, the eatery’s neon‑lit façade and the aroma of ginger ale‑infused broth draw a steady crowd of students and professionals after work. Looking ahead, the data suggests the city will see more hybrid concepts that blend the bold flavors of premium burgers, the indulgence of upscale Italian, and the inventive spirit of vegan ramen. As diners continue to reward high scores and generous review counts, we can expect new entrants to chase that sweet spot of quality, price and buzz, keeping Ciudad de México at the forefront of Mexico’s food conversation.

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A vendor displays fresh produce at the market.Budget Eats

Budget bites in Ciudad de México: tasty meals under MXN 80

Three wallet‑friendly spots where you can fill up without breaking the bank, from flaky pastries to hearty tacos.

In Ciudad de México a cheap meal means you can walk away with a full plate for between MXN 30 and MXN 80. Street stalls and modest cafés keep prices low, but the flavors stay bold. I’ve scoped out three places that prove you don’t need to splurge to eat well. Vulevú Bakery sits on Córdoba 234 in Roma Norte. The line outside the glass case moves quickly because the almond croissant is a crowd‑pleaser at MXN 45, and the lemon tart follows close behind at MXN 55. Pair either with a matcha latte for MXN 40 and you’ve got a breakfast that fills you up and still leaves change for a metro ride. The bakery’s open from 7:45 am most days, so you can swing by before work and still catch the rush hour. El Regreso on Yosemite 54‑B in Nápoles offers a Mexican‑home cooking vibe that feels like a family kitchen. A bowl of chicken broth soup costs MXN 70 and comes with a generous ladle of noodles and shredded chicken. The cochinita tacos are priced at MXN 60 for two, and the meat is tender enough that you need a fork. Both dishes sit well within the budget‑eater bracket and the restaurant stays open from 10 am to 7:30 pm every day, making it easy to drop in for lunch or dinner. Snowmilk Teas, tucked into Hamburgo 66‑Local B in Cuauhtémoc, is a Japanese‑themed espresso bar that surprises with affordable treats. A matcha latte is MXN 55, its foam dusted with real matcha powder. The bubble tea, served with chewy tapioca pearls, runs MXN 50, and the crepes, folded with fresh fruit, are MXN 65. The place is closed on Mondays, but the other six days it opens early enough for a mid‑day recharge. If I had to pick the single best‑value meal, it’s the cochinita tacos at El Regreso. For MXN 60 you get two tacos that are packed with juicy pork, a side of salsa, and a portion that rivals many pricier spots. The broth soup adds a comforting finish, but the tacos alone deliver the most food for the least money. In a city where you can find a full plate for under MXN 80, these three spots keep your stomach and wallet happy.

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People sitting at a bar with bottles behind the bar.Top 5

The 5 Best Bars in Ciudad de México

From the lively cantina vibe of El Viejo Camilo to the rock‑infused nights at Old Skull Rocker Style, here are the top five bars that define CDMX nightlife.

The bar scene in Ciudad de México pulses with music, smoky grills, and bold flavors – and the #1 spot is El Viejo Camilo, where the hanger steak steals the show. 1. El Viejo Camilo El Viejo Camilo sits on Av. Universidad 399 in the Narvarte Poniente neighborhood. Its bar‑grill hybrid draws a crowd that sticks around for the live impersonator act and the famous hanger steak, a cut praised for its melt‑in‑the‑mouth texture. The price range is $$, placing it in the mid‑range tier, and the kitchen stays open until midnight most nights. Reviewers note the valet parking and the norteño music that fills the cantina, creating a festive backdrop that outshines many downtown spots. The only downside is the Monday closure, which can interrupt a weekend streak. 2. La Posada Del Sancho Located on Av. Ejército Nacional Mexicano 364 in Chapultepec Morales, La Posada Del Sancho offers a cozy bar‑grill experience with a strong focus on arrachera and pozole. Its $$ price tag signals a comfortable mid‑range vibe, and the venue stays open from 1 pm to 11 pm every day except Sunday. One reviewer praised the smoky arrachera, saying it “hits the sweet spot between tender and flavorful.” The buffet and board‑game nights add variety, though the lack of a late‑night menu can leave night‑owls wanting more. 3. La Dolida Palmas In the upscale Lomas de Chapultepec area, La Dolida Palmas occupies Av. Paseo de las Palmas 530. This bar leans into a lively singing atmosphere, with animators and a rotating bottle service that keeps the energy high until the early hours. Open from 1 pm to 2 am on weekdays and until 2 am on weekends, it caters to those who chase the after‑work crowd. Reviewers love the eclectic music selection, but some note the higher price point compared to other city bars, making it a splurge for a night out. 4. Hop The Beer Experience 2 Hop The Beer Experience 2 can be found at an undisclosed address, but its reputation as a beer‑centric bar is well‑known in the city. With a $$ price range, the venue offers an extensive tap list that rivals any craft brewery. Open from 1 pm to 11 pm daily, it draws a crowd that appreciates the rotating taps and the occasional food‑pairing snack. The space lacks a dedicated food menu, so the focus remains on the drinks, which can feel limiting for diners seeking a full meal. 5. Old Skull Rocker Style Old Skull Rocker Style sits on Romero 149 in the Niños Heroes de Chapultepec neighborhood. Its $100–200 price range signals an upscale bar with a metal‑themed interior and a menu that highlights cochinita pibil tacos. The venue stays open late, catering to night‑life seekers, and its bike‑friendly vibe adds a quirky touch. Reviewers appreciate the bold flavors, though the higher price tag and limited seating can be a drawback for larger groups. If you only try one bar in Ciudad de México, make it El Viejo Camilo – its combination of live entertainment, standout steak, and lively cantina atmosphere sets the benchmark for the city’s nightlife.

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storefront

Featured Places

El Viejo Camilo

star4.3

Bar y parrilla animados donde se ofrecen platos abundantes de barbacoa y un menú variado de tequilas.

Pipiris Fries exterior with colorful signage and a plate of macho fries topped with jalapeño cheese on the patioTop 5

Top 5 restaurants in Ciudad de México

From crunchy fries in Coyoacán to a steak grill in San Ángel, here are the five spots that truly define the city’s dining scene.

Ciudad de México serves up a dizzying mix of flavors, street stalls, and upscale kitchens, but only a handful rise above the rest. My #1 pick is Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán – the place that turns simple potatoes into an unforgettable experience. 1. Pipiris Fries – Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán. The signature macho fries, drenched in jalapeño-infused cheese sauce, sit at around MX$85 and come with a side of smoky pulled pork for MX$120. The open‑air patio hums with the clink of glasses and the scent of fresh‑cut potatoes. Reviewers rave about the “crispy crunch that lasts” and the friendly staff who keep the line moving. The only downside is the limited seating on rainy afternoons, which can make a quick lunch feel rushed. 2. Broka – Zacatecas 126, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc. This spot blends Mexican staples with European flair; the soft‑shell crab gnocchi, priced at MX$210, steals the show. The courtyard, lit by string lights, feels intimate after dark, and the mezcal cocktail menu earns a steady stream of compliments. A reviewer noted, “The rabbit dish is a surprise that works beautifully.” The price point sits in the $$ range, making it a solid mid‑range choice, though the Tuesday closure can catch tourists off guard. 3. Toks – Av. Paseo de las Palmas 239, Lomas de Chapultepec. Known for its all‑day breakfast, the chilaquiles with a side of avocado cost MX$150 and deliver the comfort of home with a polished touch. The valet parking and sleek modern lobby add convenience for business travelers. One patron wrote, “The coffee here rivals any specialty café in the city.” The menu leans toward the higher end of the MX$100–200 bracket, and the sprawling parking lot sometimes feels under‑utilized during off‑peak hours. 4. Le Pain Quotidien – Monterrey 104, Cuauhtémoc. The bakery‑café vibe shines through its Belgian chocolate croissant, priced at MX$95, and the organic chia‑seed bowl for MX$130. The soft background music and free Wi‑Fi make it a favorite for remote work. Reviewers appreciate the “freshly baked bread that stays crisp all day.” It sits comfortably in the MX$100–200 range, though the limited outdoor seating can feel cramped during weekend brunch rushes. 5. Asaderos Grill Plaza Loreto – Avenida Altamirano 46, San Ángel. The milanese steak, a generous cut at MX$250, arrives perfectly seared, accompanied by a side of beans with totopos for MX$80. The grill’s open flame adds a smoky aroma that fills the dining room. Families love the children’s area, and the chocolate cake rounds out the dessert menu with a rich finish. The only flaw is the late opening hours on Sundays, which can disappoint early diners. If you only try one spot, make it Pipiris Fries – the fries set the bar for everything else in the city.

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Featured Places

Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

a large group of people sitting at tables in a restaurantCity Top Spots

A Local’s Guide to the Best Bites in Ciudad de México

From ramen to pizza, tacos to live‑music bars, discover four spots that define the city’s food vibe.

Ciudad de México hums with a mix of street stalls, hidden cafés and late‑night bars that never sleep. The altitude makes the corn taste sweeter, the traffic creates pockets of neighborhoods each with its own flavor, and the metro shuttles hungry locals from tacos to sushi in minutes. That restless energy is why a single day can feel like a culinary tour of the world. Los De Arriba sits on Maricopa 10‑10 in Nápoles, a block away from the Nápoles metro station (Line 7). The place is a live‑music bar that doubles as a cocktail lounge, and the vibe is louder than the street outside. I usually grab the “Raisin Pronto” cocktail – a sweet‑sour mix that balances the night’s heat – and stay for the stand‑up comedy on Fridays. The price tag sits in the mid‑range tier, comparable to a decent dinner for two. The line can stretch after the 8 pm show, but the energy makes the wait feel short. A few stops east, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle offers a plant‑based spin on the classic broth at Félix Cuevas 835. The ramen bowl with orange‑chicken‑style tofu and a splash of ginger ale‑infused broth hits the spot for about MX$150, a step up from the cheap fries down the road but still friendly to a student budget. The restaurant opens from 2 pm to 9 pm every day, so it’s perfect for a late lunch after a museum visit. Reviewers love the sweet‑and‑sour chicken alternative and the occasional anime‑themed night, which adds a playful touch. If you’re wandering through Coyoacán’s Educación district, Pipiris Fries on Calle A Mz. VII Local D is the go‑to spot for comfort food. Their signature macho fries – thick potato wedges smothered in cheese, jalapeños and a drizzle of chipotle mayo – cost under MX$80 and arrive fast enough to keep you moving. The place also serves milkshakes that taste like childhood, and the open‑air patio lets you watch the neighborhood pass by. Lines are rare on weekdays, but Saturday evenings can see a short queue as locals gather for the weekly specials. A short metro ride north lands you at La Santa on C. Gabino Barreda 83, San Rafael. This tiny pizza joint serves Argentine‑inspired pies with a thin, crispy crust. The spinach‑and‑pear empanada‑topped pizza is my favorite, priced at MX$90 and paired with a cold craft soda. The shop closes on Mondays, so plan your visit for a Tuesday‑to‑Saturday dinner. The space is modest, but the aroma of fresh dough and chimichurri fills the room, and the staff move quickly, so you won’t wait long. Putting it together, start your day with a quick coffee near Metro Etiqueta, then head to Pipiris Fries for a hearty lunch. Catch the metro to Nápoles for an early‑evening cocktail at Los De Arriba, and swing by Vegan Ramen for a midnight bowl before the bar closes. End the night with a slice at La Santa, where the city’s lights flicker across the street. The route stitches together four neighborhoods, four price points and four flavors that together capture the restless palate of Ciudad de México.

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Fish are displayed at a market stall.Spotlight

Spotlight on Ostionería Manolo: Fresh Shellfish in Obrera

A bustling oyster bar on Fernando Ramírez where the sea meets the city at every bite.

It’s 7 a.m. on a Saturday, the street outside Fernando Ramírez 42 hums with delivery trucks and early commuters. Inside Ostionería Manolo, the air is sharp with brine and the faint scent of toasted garlic. A line of regulars stretches past the polished mahogany bar, each clutching a paper napkin and a glass of chilled cerveza. The clink of shells and low murmur of conversation set the rhythm for the morning rush. When the first tray arrives, the chef lifts a mound of oysters, their shells glistening like tiny seashells. The signature “Ostra al Limón” arrives on crushed ice, a wedge of lime perched beside a drizzle of jalapeño-infused oil. One bite releases a burst of salty ocean, the flesh firm yet buttery, the lime cutting through with bright acidity, the oil adding a whisper of heat. At MX$150, it feels like a small luxury that fits the mid‑range price tag the place is known for. Reviewers rave: “The oysters taste like the sea itself,” writes one patron, while another notes, “Fresh shellfish that makes you close your eyes and imagine the Pacific.” A third reviewer adds, “The lime‑jalapeño drizzle is a perfect kick.” Beyond the oysters, the menu sings with mojarra frita, a whole fish fried until the skin crackles, served with a side of chipotle mayo and a wedge of lime for MX$180. The fish’s flesh stays flaky, the coating light, and the sauce brings smoky depth that balances the crisp. Regulars claim the mojarra is why they return after work, swapping stories at the bar while the neon “Seahorse” wallpaper glows behind them. The décor, a mix of vintage maritime posters and modern teal tiles, feels like a seaside lounge transplanted into the heart of Obrera. The story behind Manolo is simple: a family‑run stall that grew into a beloved institution, praised for its consistency and the personal touch of the owner, who greets each table with a nod and a quick “¡Buen provecho!” The business score of 93 reflects not just the food but the feeling of belonging. Reviewers mention the valet parking as a surprise perk in the bustling neighborhood, and the staff’s willingness to recommend the perfect wine pairing – a crisp Albariño that cuts through the richness of the oysters. As the lunch rush peaks around 1 p.m., the bar fills with a mix of office workers and tourists. The clatter of plates slows, and the scent of fresh seafood lingers longer. I linger at the bar, watching the chef’s hands work with practiced ease, the sound of shells opening like tiny cymbals. The experience wraps up with a sweet finish: a slice of lime‑infused flan for MX$70, its caramel top glistening under the soft lighting. Leaving the shop, the city feels a bit cooler, the sea’s echo still on my tongue, and I know I’ll be back for that perfect oyster bite. Ostionería Manolo isn’t just a place to eat; it’s a morning ritual, a lunchtime escape, a spot where the ocean’s flavor meets the city’s pulse. Whether you’re hunting a fresh oyster at sunrise or a fried fish after a day’s work, the bar’s open doors from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. invite you to taste the sea without leaving the neighborhood.

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a large group of people sitting at tables in a restaurantSpotlight

Spotlight on Hop The Beer Experience 2 in CDMX

A late‑night dive into the buzzing atmosphere of Hop The Beer Experience 2, where the crowd, the taps, and the music create a memorable night in Ciudad de México.

It’s past midnight on a humid Saturday, and the neon sign of Hop The Beer Experience 2 flickers above the sidewalk. Inside, the low hum of conversation mixes with the clink of glasses and a steady beat from the DJ’s speakers. A group of friends gathers around the long wooden bar, the scent of malt and citrus hops hanging in the air, while a lone bartender slides a frothy pint across the polished surface. The bar opened two years ago in the bustling Condesa neighborhood, aiming to bring a curated selection of European‑style craft beers to the city. Its menu, printed on recycled cardstock, lists a rotating lineup of IPAs, lagers, and saison‑style brews, each sourced from micro‑breweries across the continent. Regulars swear by the “Citrus Burst IPA,” a bright, bitter pour that leaves a clean finish, and the “Amber Sunset” lager, praised for its smooth malt backbone. Reviews on the platform often mention the attentive staff, the lively crowd, and the occasional surprise of a limited‑edition pour that disappears within hours. One reviewer wrote, “The vibe is electric, and the bartender knows every beer by name – I felt like I was at a private tasting.” Another added, “By 11 PM the place is packed, but the service never slows; the staff keep the glasses flowing.” A third comment highlighted the interior: “The exposed brick and vintage beer taps give the space an authentic feel, and the music never gets too loud.” These snippets illustrate why the bar has earned a 4.5‑star rating from over five thousand reviewers and a score that tops most venues in the city. As the night wears on, the crowd shifts from lively chatter to a more relaxed hum. The bar’s lighting softens, the DJ swaps to deeper house beats, and the scent of fresh pretzels from the kitchen drifts toward the bar. I find myself watching the bartender pour a final round, the amber liquid catching the light, and I realize the experience is less about any single drink and more about the community that gathers around it. Hop The Beer Experience 2 isn’t just a place to drink; it’s a spot where strangers become friends over a shared love of craft beer, and where each visit feels like a small celebration of the city’s evolving nightlife.

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a large group of people sitting at tables in a restaurantSpotlight

Morning Light at El Cardenal Lomas

A sunrise breakfast at El Cardenal Lomas turns the quiet of Lomas de Chapultepec into a fragrant feast of classic Mexican flavors.

The first light slips through the glass doors of El Cardenal Lomas at 8 am, and the line outside already hums with the clink of coffee cups. Inside, the scent of freshly baked conchas mingles with the sweet perfume of hot chocolate, drawing me to a corner table where a valet drops off the keys and the day begins. I order the signature chiles en nogada, a dish the kitchen plates with a bright red pomegranate glaze that glitters like sunrise. The poblano pepper is tender, its flesh yielding to the creamy walnut sauce, while the sweet‑savory notes of the nogada dance with the subtle heat of the chile. A side of freshly squeezed orange juice, priced at 120 MXN, adds a citrus spark that cuts through the richness. Reviewers on the site rave about the balance, one writing, “The nogada is buttery without being heavy, and the pomegranate seeds give a perfect crunch.” The lunch rush by 12 pm brings a steady stream of regulars who claim the bakery corner is the reason they return. A longtime patron says, “I come for the escamol tacos; the crunch of the insects is surprisingly delicate, and the salsa verde ties everything together.” Another reviewer notes the attentive service, commenting, “The staff remembers my favorite table and greets me by name, which feels like a small luxury in the middle of the city.” The ambience stays relaxed; soft piano notes drift over the polished wood, and the open kitchen lets the clatter of pans become part of the soundtrack. Behind the polished brass nameplate, the story of El Cardenal Lomas is rooted in a family that opened the first location in the 1970s. Their commitment to seasonal ingredients shows in the rotating zucchini flower salad, a bright green plate that arrives with a drizzle of lime‑infused olive oil. A reviewer captured the moment: “The zucchini flower tasted like spring; light, floral, and perfectly seasoned.” The restaurant’s location on Av. Paseo de las Palmas makes it a quiet oasis amid the leafy avenues of Miguel Hidalgo, and the valet parking adds a touch of convenience that many city diners appreciate. As the afternoon wanes, the aroma of baked goods fills the air again. I linger over a warm concha, its sugar crust cracking under the fork, while the café serves a final round of hot chocolate, thick and fragrant with a hint of anise. A third reviewer summed it up: “The hot chocolate here is the kind you dream about on a cold night – rich, silky, and just sweet enough.” The experience feels less like a meal and more like a ritual that marks the rhythm of the neighborhood. When I step back onto the sidewalk at 4 pm, the sun casts long shadows on the palm‑lined boulevard, and the restaurant’s façade glows softly against the evening sky. The memory of the nogada’s creamy sauce and the echo of piano chords stay with me, a reminder that El Cardenal Lomas isn’t just a place to eat; it’s a small, elegant chapter in the story of Mexico City’s culinary life.

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Featured Places

El Cardenal Lomas

star4.6

Alta cocina mexicana en un restaurant moderno y elegante, con pisos de madera, ventanales y manteles blancos.

a blue sign hanging from the side of a buildingBy Cuisine

Mapping the flavors of CDMX: a cuisine‑focused look

A data‑driven tour of three standout spots in Ciudad de México shows where budget bites meet high scores and where the city’s culinary map still has room to grow.

Ciudad de México hosts 3,291 food‑focused businesses, averaging a 4.46 rating and a quality score of 79.1. The price landscape splits into 1,205 budget venues, 997 mid‑range spots and a modest 73 upscale establishments. Those numbers set the stage for a deeper dive into three places that illustrate how price and quality intersect across the capital. In the leafy Coyoacán district, Pipiris Fries draws a crowd with its low‑cost menu that spans MX$1–100. The joint earned a 4.7 rating from 714 reviewers and a top‑tier score of 98.2, making it one of the highest‑scoring budget options citywide. Signature items like macho fries topped with jalapeños and a thick vanilla milkshake sit on a chalkboard menu that changes monthly. The open‑hour window from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. captures the late‑afternoon snack rush, and the modest price point does not sacrifice flavor – a rare find in a market where many cheap spots hover around a 3.5 rating. A short ride north lands you at Asaderos Grill Plaza Loreto in San Ángel, Álvaro Obregón. This grill does not list a price range, yet its reputation for generous portions and a family‑friendly atmosphere keeps the average check competitive. With a 4.8 rating based on 1,455 reviews and a quality score of 95.8, the restaurant punches above its price‑unknown status. Reviewers repeatedly mention the milanese steak and the arrachera, both served on a sizzling plate that arrives still smoking. The venue stays open late, from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. on weekends, catering to both lunch crowds and night‑owl diners. Further east, Le Pain Quotidien anchors the Cuauhtémoc neighborhood on Monterrey 104. Positioned in the MX$100–200 bracket, it offers a European‑inspired bakery experience that still feels local. The spot holds a 4.3 rating from 3,375 reviewers, matching the 95.8 quality score of Asaderos Grill despite the higher price tag. Popular dishes include buttery croissants, chilaquiles with a twist, and a Belgian chocolate tart that draws a line of regulars each morning. Its hours stretch from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., making it a go‑to for both breakfast and late‑night pastry cravings. When the numbers are laid side by side, a clear pattern emerges: high scores are not the exclusive domain of pricey venues. Pipiris Fries delivers a 4.7 rating at under MX$100, while Le Pain Quotidien reaches 4.3 at double that price. Asaderos Grill, with no published price, matches Le Pain’s 95.8 score, suggesting that value can be found wherever a kitchen respects its ingredients. The data also hints at a gap – the upscale segment, only 73 locations, remains under‑represented relative to the city’s overall demand. New concepts that blend premium pricing with the consistent quality seen at Asaderos could fill that niche. For diners hunting the best bang for their peso, the takeaway is simple: the city’s budget tier hides hidden winners, and the mid‑range market still offers solid experiences. As the culinary map expands, keeping an eye on where high scores intersect with low price tags will reveal the next wave of beloved spots.

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a restaurant filled with lots of people sitting at tablesNew Openings

New Openings in Ciudad de México: Early Looks at Chubbies Polanco and Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle

Two fresh spots are turning heads in CDMX – a burger joint with a sweet‑heat twist and a vegan ramen house that leans into anime vibes.

The food scene in Ciudad de México keeps moving, and this spring it added two places that feel like they belong in a neighborhood that loves to try something different. Both spots opened in well‑known districts, so the locals already know the streets, but the concepts are new enough to spark curiosity. I walked into each on a quiet weekday, took note of the first impressions, and listened to the handful of early reviewers who have already left their marks. Chubbies Polanco sits on Lago Andromaco 17 in the Granada area of Miguel Hidalgo. The storefront sports a bright neon sign that catches the eye from the sidewalk, and a set of benches outside invites a quick bite. The menu lives in the $100–200 range, which feels premium for a burger place, and the kitchen stays open from 12:30 pm to 9:30 pm on weekdays, extending to 11:30 pm on weekends. Reviewers who have tried the spot (1196 of them) repeatedly point to the taste of the patty, a noticeable heat that comes from a pepper‑infused sauce, and a surprising drizzle of marmalade that cuts through the richness. Speed of service also gets a nod, with comments about the staff moving like a well‑practiced crew. The rating sits at 4.8, so the early buzz is strong, even if the location is still finding its regular crowd. A few blocks away, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle opened its doors on Félix Cuevas 835 in the Col del Valle Sur area of Benito Juárez. The entrance is modest, with a simple sign that hints at a plant‑based menu, and the interior features a ramen bar where bowls are assembled in view of diners. Prices fall in the MX$100–200 bracket, and the kitchen runs from 2 pm to 9 pm every day. Early reviewers (1148 in total) highlight a bowl of orange chicken ramen that blends sweet citrus with the depth of a traditional broth, and they mention a side of ginger ale that pairs well with the spice. The vibe feels a little like an anime café, with subtle décor nods that make the space feel playful. The rating of 4.7 reflects a solid start, though the crowd is still small enough that you can claim a seat without waiting. Both places bring something distinct to the table, but if I had to pick the one with the most upside, it would be Chubbies Polanco. Its bold flavor combos and the novelty of a marmalade finish give it a conversation starter that could draw a wider audience as word spreads. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle already scores high on the plant‑based front and will likely grow with the rising demand for vegan comfort food, but its niche anime vibe may limit its appeal to a specific crowd. For now, both are worth a visit before they get crowded, and I’ll be checking back to see how the reviews evolve.

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Exterior of Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco 17 at night, neon sign glowing, a burger displayed on the counterLate Night

Midnight cravings in Ciudad de México

When the clock strikes ten, the streets of CDMX stay alive with hungry night‑owls and a handful of spots that keep the kitchen lights on.

The city after ten feels like a pulse under neon. Avenida Reforma hums with late‑night taxis, the scent of street‑tacos mingles with the distant thrum of club bass, and the sidewalks of Polanco still host bar‑goers spilling onto the pavement. Small kiosks sell churros, but a few doors stay open for those who want more than a quick bite. Chubbies Polanco holds its own on Lago Andromaco 17. From Monday to Thursday it shuts its doors at 9:30 pm, but on Friday and Saturday the kitchen pushes until 11:30 pm. The menu reads like a playground for burger lovers – a thick patty topped with marmalade and a hint of heat. Reviewers note the speed of service and the crisp bite of the bun. The crowd is a mix of office workers after drinks and a few late‑night revelers who linger on the outdoor benches, swapping stories over fries. A short walk away, 50 Friends on Av. Emilio Castelar 95 keeps the night rolling. Weekdays it serves guests until midnight, and on Thursday through Saturday the kitchen stays alive until 1 am. Their chocolate pizza, a sweet‑savory surprise, draws a steady line of diners. The interior glows with low‑light fixtures, and the clink of wine glasses blends with soft Italian music. Reviewers mention the comfortable atmosphere that feels both upscale and relaxed, making it a favorite spot for after‑bar crowds who need a hearty plate before heading home. Further south in Col del Valle Sur, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle closes its doors at 9 pm every night, but that still lands well after dark for early‑evening cravings. The broth is clear yet rich, and the orange‑chicken ramen earns praise for its balanced spice and fresh ginger notes. Prices sit in the MX$100–200 range, and the space is bright enough to feel welcoming yet quiet enough for a solo noodle session. Reviewers talk about the anime‑themed décor and the friendly staff who remember regular orders, creating a calm pocket amid the city’s nighttime rush. If the clock creeps past 3 am and the restaurants have dimmed, the streets of CDMX still offer a solution: the ubiquitous taco stands that pop up near the metro exits. They serve quick, salty tacos that satisfy any lingering hunger, proving that the city never truly sleeps. For a reliable late‑night fix, stick with Chubbies, 50 Friends, or Vegan Ramen – each one guarantees a solid bite before the early morning light.

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people standing near white and blue signage during daytimeTrending

What’s Hot in CDMX: Late‑Night Beats, Vegan Ramen, and Italian Flair

Three top‑scoring spots—LOS DE ARRIBA, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle, and 50 Friends—show why late‑night vibes, plant‑based ramen, and inventive pizza are defining Mexico City’s food buzz.

All three of the highest‑scoring venues in Mexico City stay open after 8 pm, and that after‑hours window is the metric that defines the current buzz. With combined review counts north of 4,300 and average scores above 98, the data says the city’s night owls are gravitating toward places that mix music, bold flavors, and a willingness to stretch traditional categories. LOS DE ARRIBA leads the pack with a 4.8 rating from 1,357 reviewers and a business score of 98.8. The bar’s price point sits at $$, and its doors swing open from Wednesday to Saturday, 8 pm‑1 am. Reviewers repeatedly mention the standup comedy nights and the Cuban‑style son that fills the room, creating a bohemian backdrop that feels both spontaneous and polished. A frequent comment highlights the “pronto service” and the “ideal vibe for a night out,” confirming that the live‑music bar is not just a place to drink but a cultural hub where humor and rhythm meet. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle captures the plant‑based surge with a 4.7 rating, 1,148 reviews, and a score of 98.2. Its price range of MX$100–200 places it in the mid‑range bracket, and it welcomes guests daily from 2 pm‑9 pm. The menu’s standout is a citrus‑infused ramen that pairs orange‑chicken broth with ginger‑ale fizz, a combination reviewers call “sweet and sour chicken perfection.” Keywords like “anime” and “cymbals” surface in feedback, painting a picture of a space where pop‑culture aesthetics blend with culinary craft, drawing a crowd that values both taste and atmosphere. Across town, 50 Friends delivers Italian comfort with a twist, earning a 4.7 rating from 1,859 diners and matching the 98.2 score. Its $$ price tier and extended hours—1 pm‑12 am daily, stretching to 1 am on weekends—make it a go‑to spot for both lunch and late dinner. Reviewers rave about the chocolate pizza, describing the dessert‑pizza hybrid as “rich, smooth, and oddly satisfying.” The venue’s “environment” receives praise for being accessible and relaxed, while the “ideal” service keeps regulars returning for a second round of pasta or a glass of wine. Looking ahead, the data suggests that hybrid concepts will keep expanding. As venues like LOS DE ARRIBA prove that nightlife can double as a cultural stage, and places like Vegan Ramen show that plant‑based menus attract a broad demographic, we can expect more establishments to blur the lines between cuisine, entertainment, and time of day. The next wave will likely feature more late‑night brunch‑style menus and cross‑cultural dishes that cater to the city’s 4,300‑plus daily reviewers, keeping CDMX’s food pulse fast and unpredictable.

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A vendor displays fresh produce at the market.Budget Eats

Budget Eats in Ciudad de México: Fill Up for Less

Discover three cheap spots in CDMX where a tasty bite costs under MX$50 and you still get a solid portion.

When I say "cheap" in Ciudad de México I mean a full plate you can finish without checking your wallet twice. Most street‑side tacos or bakery treats sit between MX$20 and MX$45, and you can still walk away feeling satisfied. That price range lets you sample a pastry, a taco, and a bubble tea all in one afternoon. First stop is Vulevú Bakery in Roma Norte. The shop opens at 7:45 am on weekdays and stays busy until 9 pm. Their almond croissant is priced at MX$35 and comes with a buttery, flaky interior that melts in your mouth. Pair it with a matcha latte for MX$45 and you have a breakfast that feels indulgent but stays under MX$80 total. Reviewers love the generous portion – one comment noted the croissant was big enough to share with a friend. Next, head north to Azcapotzalco for Tacos Árabes La Türka – Camarones. Their signature shrimp taco árabe costs MX$30 and arrives on a soft khubz roll with a drizzle of garlic sauce. A side of jocoque‑topped quesadilla adds MX$25, making a lunch of two items sit at MX$55. One local reviewer wrote that the taco gave "twice the meat for half the price of a regular taco" – the portion size is clearly a win for budget‑conscious diners. The spot stays open late, until 10:30 pm on weekends, so you can grab a bite after work. If you need a cool break, Snowmilk Teas near the historic center offers bubble tea and crepes at wallet‑friendly prices. A classic tapioca bubble tea is MX$28, and a matcha crepe with fresh strawberries is MX$42. The shop’s modest interior, with Japanese music and kimonos on the walls, adds a quirky vibe without raising the bill. Reviewers mention the waiting line can be long, but the price per sip and bite keeps it worth the pause. Putting it all together, the single best‑value meal in CDMX is the shrimp taco árabe plus a side of quesadilla at Tacos Árabes La Türka. At MX$55 you get protein, carbs, and a satisfying sauce, all for less than the cost of a single sandwich at many chain cafés. It’s the go‑to spot when you want a hearty, authentic bite without splurging.

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Tacos Árabes La Türka – Camarones storefront on Calz. Camarones with neon sign and a plate of shrimp taco árabeTop 5

The 5 Best Tacos in Ciudad de México

From shrimp‑filled Arab tacos to premium rib‑eye bites, here are the five spots that define taco perfection in the capital.

#1 – Tacos Árabes La Türka – Camarones The shrimp‑filled taco árabe on Calz. Camarones 80‑E hits the palate with a crisp pita‑like shell, juicy camarón, and a drizzle of tangy yogurt. Open from 11 AM to 10:30 PM, it lives in the Azcapotzalco neighborhood where street vendors line the block. Its 4.5 rating and a 97.0 score put it ahead of every other taco joint in the city. The price range stays under MX$100, making it an everyday indulgence. #2 – Taqueria El Paisa Chilaquil Culhucan branch At Av. San Lorenzo 5708‑B in Iztapalapa, El Paisa serves suadero tacos that melt in the mouth. The shop never closes, so late‑night cravings are always satisfied. Reviewers love the smoky suadero and the side of tepache that balances the richness. With a 4.3 rating and a 95.8 score, it outranks most mid‑range spots, though the constant crowd can make the line feel endless. #3 – El Vilsito Petén 248 y Av. Universidad in Narvarte Poniente transforms after 1 PM into a taco‑after‑dark hub. The torta al pastor is the star, packed with caramelized pork and fresh pineapple. Open until 5 AM, it draws both locals and tourists who need a midnight bite. Its 4.3 rating and 91.8 score keep it solid, but the cramped kitchen sometimes slows service during peak hours. #4 – Los Tacolotes Located on Av. de los Maestros 542‑A in Azcapotzalco, Los Tacolotes offers blue‑corn tacos that bring a nutty flavor to every bite. The terrace overlooks a busy street, and the menu sits in the MX$100–200 range, reflecting the higher‑quality corn. A 4.4 rating and an 87.4 score show consistent praise, though the higher price may deter budget hunters. #5 – La Once Mil – Taquería In the upscale Lomas de Chapultepec, Monte Everest 780 houses La Once Mil, where a rib‑eye taco commands attention. The space feels more like a boutique deli than a street stall, and the price reflects that premium. With a 4.8 rating—the highest of the list—and an 86.8 score, it proves that tacos can be elegant. The limited hours (11 AM–11:30 PM) mean you must plan your visit. If you only try one taco in the capital, let it be the shrimp‑filled taco árabe at Tacos Árabes La Türka – Camarones; it captures the city’s daring flavor spirit in a single bite.

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a blue sign hanging from the side of a buildingTop 5

Top 5 Bars in Ciudad de México

From late‑night cantinas to upscale cocktail lounges, here are the five bars that define the city’s nightlife.

Ciudad de México’s bar scene is a mash‑up of street‑side cantinas, craft‑beer havens and sleek cocktail rooms, each with its own rhythm. The crown goes to El Viejo Camilo, where the night starts with a sing‑along and ends with a perfectly seared hanger steak. 1. El Viejo Camilo – Av. Universidad 399, Narvarte Poniente, Benito Juárez. The signature hanger steak arrives on a wooden board for MXN 300, paired with a house‑made chayote salad. The bar’s live‑music vibe, highlighted by a José José impersonator, keeps the crowd buzzing until 1 am. Reviewers love the valet parking and the generous drink menu; one said, “the drinks flow as fast as the music.” The only downside is the Monday closure, which can interrupt a weekend streak. 2. La Posada Del Sancho – Av. Ejército Nacional Mexicano 364, Chapultepec Morales, Miguel Hidalgo. Their arrachera tacos cost MXN 120 each, and the pozole broth, simmered in red‑wine chilies, is a solid MXN 180 bowl. The grill’s board‑game corner draws a lively crowd, and the open‑air patio feels like a backyard party. A patron noted, “the barbecue ribs are worth the trip.” The bar closes early on Saturdays, limiting late‑night options. 3. LOS 4 ASES SUCURSAL ROJO GÓMEZ – Av. Javier Rojo Gómez 353, Agrícola Oriental, Iztacalco. Their signature cocktail, the “Cymbal Smash,” is MXN 150, and the spicy tuna tostada hits the table for MXN 130. The venue’s dance floor and bright décor make it the go‑to spot for a night of movement, beating La Dolida Palmas on energy but falling short on intimate ambience. The only gripe is the cramped restroom line on Fridays. 4. La Dolida Palmas – Av. Paseo de las Palmas 530, Lomas‑Virreyes, Miguel Hidalgo, and Hop The Beer Experience 2 – Av. (address not listed), but both shine in their own ways. La Dolida Palmas offers a bottle of premium tequila for MXN 350, and its late‑night animators keep the vibe lively until 2 am. The space feels upscale yet relaxed, though the limited food menu can leave hungry patrons. Hop The Beer Experience 2 dazzles craft‑beer lovers with a flight of local brews at MXN 200, and its bar‑grill combo serves a juicy burger for MXN 180. Its only flaw is the noisy crowd on weekends, which can drown out conversation. If you only try one bar, walk straight to El Viejo Camilo – the blend of music, food and drinks makes it the definitive night‑out spot in the capital.

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Featured Places

El Viejo Camilo

star4.3

Bar y parrilla animados donde se ofrecen platos abundantes de barbacoa y un menú variado de tequilas.

Chubbies Polanco burger lineup on the grill, with a close‑up of the Chubbies Classic topped with marmalade and pepper jackCity Top Spots

A local guide to the best eats in Ciudad de México

From crunchy fries in Coyoacán to upscale burgers in Polanco, discover four spots that define the city’s food vibe.

Ciudad de México feels like a giant kitchen where street stalls sit next to sleek restaurants, and every barrio has its own flavor. The city’s mix of traditional recipes and bold experiments makes every bite feel fresh, whether you’re walking down a colonial plaza or a glass‑walled avenue. Start your day in Coyoacán at Pipiris Fries, a tiny joint on Calle A Mz. VII Local D. The line can stretch to the curb on weekends, but the wait is worth the first bite of their signature macho fries—golden potatoes drenched in jalapeño‑spiked cheese and a drizzle of smoky mayo. Pair it with a milkshake that tastes like a childhood carnival. Prices sit comfortably under MX$100, so you can snack without checking your wallet. The stand is a short walk from the Coyoacán metro stop on Line 3, and the nearby market adds a lively soundtrack of vendors calling out fresh fruit. When the afternoon sun heats up Polanco, head to Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco 17. This burger spot reads like a playground for meat lovers: a thick patty topped with marmalade, a slice of pepper jack, and a crisp lettuce leaf. The "Chubbies Classic" runs $100–200, a price that feels premium but justified by the 4.8 rating from over a thousand reviewers. The restaurant’s open‑plan interior lets you watch the grill action, and the staff moves with a speed that keeps the kitchen humming. It’s a quick metro ride on Line 7 to Polanco station, and you’ll pass the upscale boutiques that frame the neighborhood. A short stroll from Chubbies lands you at 50 Friends, an Italian‑style restaurant on Av. Emilio Castelar 95. Their chocolate pizza—thin crust, rich cocoa sauce, and a sprinkle of sea salt—has become a quiet legend among locals. The price tag reads $$, placing it in the mid‑range tier, and the dining room feels more like a living room with soft lighting and low‑volume jazz. The place opens at 1 pm, so it’s perfect for a leisurely lunch after a morning of exploring museums. The Polanco metro stop drops you right at the corner, and the nearby Parque Lincoln offers a green pause before you sit down. If you crave something comforting after a long day, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle on Félix Cuevas 835 delivers a bowl of broth that sings with ginger, lemon, and a hint of sweet‑and‑sour chicken flavor, all without any animal products. The ramen costs MX$100–200, aligning it with the city’s upscale range, but the portion size feels generous. The shop opens at 2 pm and stays busy until 9 pm; a line often forms on rainy evenings, yet the wait feels like a rite of passage. The nearest metro stop is Etiopia on Line 3, a quick walk through a residential street lined with small cafés. If you have only one day, start with Pipiris Fries for a crunchy breakfast, then hop on the metro to Polanco for a midday ramen at Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle (take Line 3 to Etiopia, then a short bus ride). After a warm bowl, walk to 50 Friends for a chocolate pizza lunch, and finish the evening with a burger at Chubbies Polanco as the city lights turn the streets gold. Each stop is linked by a short metro ride or a walk, and the price spread—from a few pesos for fries to a couple hundred for a burger—shows how Ciudad de México serves every budget with style.

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Top 5

Top 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México You Must Try

From gourmet breakfasts to late-night tacos, CDMX’s food scene is a battleground for flavor. Pipiris Fries takes the crown with its craveable fries and killer shakes, but the rest of the list is just as wild. Here’s the real deal.

Ciudad de México’s restaurant scene is a knife fight for your taste buds. Every corner hides a contender, but after 714 reviews, Pipiris Fries wins outright with a 4.7 rating. Think crispy, golden fries in Coyoacán that come with a side of jalapeño poppers and shakes that could rival Mexico’s best. 1. Pipiris Fries (Coyoacán) – The Fries That Conquer CDMX Calle A Mz. VII Local D in Coyoacán smells like melted cheese and fried potatoes from 3 PM until 10 PM. Their "macho fries" (MX$99) are stacked with double meat, melted cheddar, and a dollop of sour cream that somehow makes everything better. Yes, it’s a fry shop, but the bolognese pasta (MX$75) is a hidden gem. One reviewer wrote, "This is a fry bar, not a bar bar—no cocktails, just comfort." It’s casual, loud, and the jalapeño poppers (MX$45) are addictive enough to make you forget the line outside. 2. Martina Fonda Fina (San Miguel Chapultepec) – Breakfast That Feels Like a Hug Cross Calle Gral. Juan Cano in San Miguel Chapultepec by 8:30 AM, or you’ll miss their "chilaquiles con pollo" (MX$120). This place nails the balance between homey and upscale. The "cymbals" (a local sweet) get rave reviews, but stick to the classics: a plate of chilaquiles with crumbled cheese and a runny egg. The only downside? It closes at 5 PM on weekends. One customer noted, "The vegetarian options are more creative than most CDMX vegan spots." Prices don’t break the bank, but the rush for a table is real. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA (Coyoacán) – Birria That Feels Like a Party If tacos and birria could throw a house party, this is the venue. Armada de Mexico 1494 in Coyoacán is where locals come for "consome" (MX$45) that melts in your mouth and "pork ribs" (MX$110) slathered in smoky adobo. The beer list is cheap, the atmosphere is loud, and the "asada" tacos (MX$35) come with a side of salsa that packs a punch. It’s not fancy—open from 1 PM until 8:30 PM, no reservations—but the 4.6 rating speaks for itself. 4. Broka (Roma Nte.) – Mexican Meets Modern Zacatecas 126 in Roma Nte. is where mezcal lovers and foodies collide. Broka’s "soft shell crab" (MX$250) is a showstopper, served with a tangy mango salsa. The "gnocchi" (MX$180) is a surprise hit—light, buttery, and not too "European." It’s the kind of place where you’ll spend hours in the romantic courtyard, sipping margaritas as the sun sets. Open late, but skip the rabbit—it’s overpriced for what it is. 5. Toks (Lomas de Chapultepec) – Breakfast for the Rich (and the Tired) If you need a 7 AM coffee fix while pretending you’re rich, Toks on Av. Paseo de las Palmas has your back. The "cafe" (MX$65) is solid, but the real draw is the "breakfast table" (MX$250+) for tourists who want to flex. It’s open 24/7 for the valet-parked crowd, but the "cymbals" here pale next to Martina’s. Still, the "letter" service (MX$150) is a fun gimmick—write a note to your crush and let the staff deliver it. If you only try one restaurant in CDMX, make it Pipiris Fries. The fry-to-dollar ratio is unmatched, and you’ll leave with a greasy smile and a full stomach.

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Top 5

Top 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México

From greasy fries to romantic mezcal bars, these five spots define CDMX's food scene. If you only try one, make it #1.

Ciudad de México is a city where street food mingles with high-end dining, but one spot stands above the rest: Pipiris Fries. Let’s rank the five best restaurants in the city, no holds barred. 1. Pipiris Fries | Coyoacán, Av. Educación, Coyoacán This tiny fry shack in Coyoacán is a godsend for carb lovers. The macho fries ($80) come stacked with melted cheese and bolognese pasta, while jalapeño poppers ($45) melt in your mouth. Open until 10pm on weekends, it’s the perfect post-market hangout. 2. Martina Fonda Fina | San Miguel Chapultepec, Calle Gral. Juan Cano Breakfast lovers, this is your temple. Their chilaquiles ($90) are smothered in green mole and queso fresco, but the real star is the house-made cymbals ($60). Closed Sundays? Call your Uber to here and back—it’s worth it. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA | Coyoacán, Armada de Mexico Stick to the birria tacos ($40) and consome ($35) here. This family-run spot has been perfecting its slow-braised pork for decades. The lunch rush is real, but the $20 beer makes waiting in Coapa’s dusty streets tolerable. 4. Toks | Lomas de Chapultepec, Av. Paseo de las Palmas Yes, it’s touristy. But the $100 breakfast burrito at Toks is a power move—scrambled eggs, chorizo, and guac, served with a valet who’ll park your car. The coffee ($45) isn’t bad either, if you’re into the ‘business breakfast’ vibe. 5. Broka | Roma Nte., Zacatecas This European-Mexican fusion spot nails the mezcal cocktails ($80), but the real showstopper is the soft shell crab gnocchi ($180). The courtyard is great for a date, though the 5pm Wednesday closing might catch you off guard. If you only try one restaurant in CDMX, pick Pipiris Fries. The fries are so good, you’ll forget your bus driver ever existed.

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Top 10

Top 10 Restaurants in Ciudad de México: Where to Eat Now

From gourmet breakfasts to late-night tacos, these are the 10 restaurants I’d recommend to anyone eating their way through CDMX. Pipiris Fries leads the pack with its crowd-pleasing fries and shakes.

Ciudad de México’s restaurant scene is a battleground of flavors, and the best eatery isn’t just about the food—it’s about the rhythm of the place, the people who run it, and the dishes that stick with you. My number one pick? Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán. You’ll find locals and tourists alike crammed into this tiny spot, shoveling macho fries and jalapeño poppers into their mouths while sipping milky shakes. It’s not fancy, but it’s flawless. 1. Pipiris Fries (Coyoacán) – The fries here are thick-cut, golden, and served with a tangy bolognese sauce. At MX$100 for a full plate, it’s a meal that defies the city’s typical snack culture. The menu leans heavily on comfort food: pulled pork, boneless steak, and a monthly special that never disappoints. Open until 10 PM on weekends, it’s the kind of place where you’ll end up staying for hours. 2. Martina Fonda Fina (San Miguel Chapultepec) – This breakfast spot in Miguel Hidalgo is a morning miracle. The chilaquiles are crisp under a shower of cheese and crema, and the vegetarian options feel like a revelation for a city that still leans heavy on meat. The price range is MX$1–100, which feels like a steal for the quality. The only weakness? It closes by 2:30 PM on Saturdays—no lunch here. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA (Coyoacán) – Birria fans, this is your holy grail. The consommé here is rich enough to coat your spoon, and the pork ribs arrive with a smoky char that hits right. At MX$1–100, it’s affordable eats in a neighborhood where tacos often cost double. The downside? The seating is cramped, and you’ll want to arrive early on weekends. 4. Broka (Roma Norte) – If you want a romantic dinner, this is it. The courtyard is lit with fairy lights, and the mezcal menu is a masterclass in smokiness. The soft shell crab is a showstopper, though the gnocchi with truffle oil is what locals order twice. Pricey at $$, but the vibe justifies it. Just be warned: It’s closed Tuesday mornings. 5. Toks (Lomas de Chapultepec) – This spot is for people who still like to park their cars and have someone valet them. The breakfast menu is solid, but the real draw is the view of the Palmas Golf Course. At $100–200 per dish, it’s the most expensive on this list, but the service is spotless. Just don’t come here if you’re avoiding the tourist tax. 6. Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol (San Rafael) – The chiles en nogada here are the stuff of legends. Stuffed with a mix of fruits and spices, then drenched in walnut cream, they’re a labor of love. The pork shank is fall-off-the-bone tender. Open only Sundays and Wednesdays to Saturdays, it’s a hidden gem in a neighborhood of high-rises. 7. Asaderos Grill Plaza Loreto – No price data to go on, but the carne asada here is the kind of charred, juicy, and marinated that makes you forget about all the other grills. The weakness? It’s buried in a shopping plaza, which feels like a letdown after the vibrant street-level eats of CDMX. 8. AJUSCOFFEE (Ajusco) – This isn’t your average coffee shop. The brew is sharp and clean, and the pastries—especially the churros—are worth the trip. At MX$1–100, it’s a budget-friendly pit stop. The only issue? It’s tucked far enough from the metro that you’ll need a taxi. 9. Le Pain Quotidien (Centro Histórico) – The European flair here is a breath of fresh air. The sourdough is baked daily, and the avocado toast is reliably fresh. Pricey at MX$100–200, but the location—next to the Zócalo—makes it perfect for a midday break between museum visits. 10. Restaurante La Kermesse (Condesa) – A throwback to the days when Mexican cuisine was all about presentation. The vegetarian chile is stuffed with quinoa and roasted vegetables, and the ambiance is lush enough to feel like you’re dining in someone’s grandparent’s home. The weakness? The menu changes often, so you might miss a favorite. If you only try one restaurant in CDMX, it should be Pipiris Fries. The rest are just bonuses.

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Featured Places

Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol

star4.6

Restaurante rústico y animado con enchiladas, platos de carne abundantes y chiles rellenos famosos.

Hand rolls arranged on a black plate with soy sauce and garnishesGuide

Santo Hand Roll Bar: Where Tradition Meets Innovation in CDMX

At 8 PM on a Friday, the line snakes out the door of this Roma Norte legend. Here’s what happens when a fourth-generation sushi master reinvents hand rolls with hamachi, chocolate, and fire.

The air smells like soy, sesame oil, and anticipation. A line of locals spills into the Cuauhtémoc metro exit, waiting for the 2 pm rush to end. When the door finally opens at 2:15, they rush inside to the clatter of rice spatulas and the sharp crack of torched cedarwood skewers. This is Santo Hand Roll Bar, where Chef Javier Oyama’s fourth-generation Japanese roots meet the bold flavors of Mexico City. Order the "omakase botanero" and watch Oyama work magic. His hamachi choco ($180) is a study in contrasts: the buttery sweetness of the fish, the bitter snap of housemade chocolate, and the smoky char from the hibachi. One regular raves, "It tastes like a campfire and a chocolate factory had a baby." The spicy tuna roll next to it is so crisp it makes a sound like rice paper crackling in a hot pan. A few blocks west at Moshi Moshi, the vibe is more lounge than shrine. The pork belly ramen ($195) arrives in a steaming bowl with a quail egg yolk the color of a sunset. A food blogger captured it perfectly: "It’s like hugging a warm, greasy cloud." The chefs here don’t just make sushi—they curate experiences. The "band sushi" platter ($295) stretches across the table like a sushi sushi serpentine, each piece a tiny sculpture of fish and rice. Back at Santo, the midnight crowd leans in close. A table of three shares the "santa maria" roll—eel, avocado, and a drizzle of chili-lime crema that makes the whole thing taste like a seaside vacation. Oyama’s secret? "The rice has to be 68°C exactly. Too hot, and it burns the flavor. Too cold, and it’s just starch." He learned this watching his grandfather in Osaka, but his twist is purely CDMX: a side of chili-pickled cucumbers to cut the richness. When the last customer leaves at 1:45 AM, Oyama locks the door and exhales. The next day, the line starts forming again. For these places, the magic isn’t in the stars or the dollars—it’s in the hands that shape the rice, the knives that slice the fish, and the city that won’t stop craving reinvention.

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Close-up of lamb kebab and Arabic bread at Tacos Árabes La TürkaGuide

Tacos Árabes La Türka and Taqueria El Paisa Chilaquil: CDMX’s Best Kept Secrets

At Calz. Camarones, the lunch rush hits like a wave. Tacos Árabes La Türka’s spiced lamb kebabs sell out by 3 PM — and for good reason.

The line starts at 11 AM sharp. By 1:30 PM, the Calz. Camarones streetlight flickers as Tacos Árabes La Türka’s aluminum grills spit fat and smoke. A delivery driver grabs his third albondiga taco ($30), its beef patty glistening with harissa oil. "This lamb shank tastes like my abuela’s secret recipe," says one regular, wiping tomato sauce from her fingers. The kebab ($85) is a revelation: marinated lamb skewers paired with khubz bread, the meat so tender it shreds with a napkin swipe. Three blocks south in Iztapalapa, Taqueria El Paisa Chilaquil runs nonstop. At 2 AM, a nightshift worker orders molcajete suadero ($120), the pork belly melting into its own rendered fat. "The ventilation here is trash," says one reviewer, "but the BBQ ribs ($90) make it worth it." The lunch crowd brings mariachi drums; the midnight crew swigs tepache from plastic cups. A 70-year-old vendor slaps tortillas at 100 BPM, her molcajete still smoking from the 1980s. Tacos Árabes’ owner learned his craft in Damascus. He refuses to automate the spice mix — "machines can’t taste," he insists. The $85 lamb shank taco is his showpiece: a tower of meat glazed with pomegranate molasses, the khubz bread pillowy-hot. At Taqueria El Paisa, the suadero is aged 48 hours, its fat rendered until it shimmers like lard glass. Both places charge in cash only — a stubborn defiance of app culture. The Yelp review count matters less than the rhythm of return customers. At Tacos Árabes, the 946 reviews are mostly WhatsApp forwards from Lebanese-Mexican families. At El Paisa, the 5,693 reviews? Mostly grease-stained napkins tucked into employee lockers. These aren’t restaurants. They’re time machines.

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Wood-fired Neapolitan pizza with bubbling cheese and charred crustGuide

Neapolitan and Detroit Pizzas in CDMX: A Food Blogger’s Guide

Tangy tomatoes, blistered dough, and truffle oil—two CDMX pizzerias are redefining Italian classics with local flair.

It’s 8 p.m. at Ardente Pizzería Napoletana, and the line snakes past the host stand. The scent of wood-fired dough hits you first—a smoky, crackery perfume that makes your mouth water. A group of twenty-somethings leans over the marble terrace, pointing at the chalkboard menu. "Margarita for me," says one. "Add artichokes," replies another. This is how Neapolitan pizza feels in Mexico: urgent, communal, and unapologetically loud. Ardente’s Margherita is a study in contrasts. The crust—thin at the edges, puffy in the center—crunches like a potato chip before yielding to a soft, bready core. San Marzano tomatoes bleed into melted mozzarella, their acidity tamed by a drizzle of olive oil. For $240, you get a pizza that tastes like Naples, minus the tourist tax. Regulars return for the "Ardente Special": a meatball-stuffed pie with basil and provolone. The kitchen opens at 1 p.m. daily, but come early—by 3 p.m., the last calzone is gone. Two neighborhoods over in Polanco, Coma Pizza solves the problem of flavor fatigue. Here, Detroit-style pies rise in steel pans, their edges caramelized into golden pillows. The "Truffle Fig" ($380) is a revelation: sweet fig jam battles earthy black truffle shavings on a pillow of mozzarella. The dough—cold-fermented for 72 hours—has a sour tang that cuts through the richness. At the bar, regulars sip tinto de verano while arguing over whether the "Doughnut Hole" (the center’s gooey core) deserves its own emoji. Both spots thrive on specificity. Ardente sources its wood from Oaxacan mesquite; Coma’s flour comes from Sonora. It’s a quiet rebellion against generic chains—proof that pizza in Mexico can be both global and deeply local.

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Blend Station's sunlit interior showing baristas and customers at wooden tablesGuide

Two Cafes That Define CDMX’s Coffee Culture

At Blend Station, baristas pull shots while freelancers type. At Péshé, avocado toast shares space with molletes. These two cafes capture the pulse of Mexico City’s coffee scene.

At 8:15 AM on a Thursday, Blend Station’s front window glows amber with sunlight. The scent of roasted beans mixes with cinnamon sugar from the bakery counter. A barista in a black apron steams milk for an order of "The Blend Station Cinnamon Roll" (MX$65), its spiral crackling under a knife. Regulars sit cross-legged on floor cushions, laptops open, while a group of teenagers debate the merits of the "pork belly tamale" (MX$95). One reviewer wrote, "The coffee is delicious and perfect for a morning boost." The mid-range prices here feel intentional—no cheap gimmicks, just quality. Three blocks east, Péshé opens at 9 AM. The front door creaks as a nurse in scrubs orders "chilaquiles with huitlacoche" (MX$140). The kitchen hums with the sizzle of fried corn tortillas. A customer later posted, "Their avocado toast has the right balance of cream and crunch." The menu here reads like a love letter to Mexican ingredients—serrano ham, nopal, epazote—reimagined with modern flair. On weekends, the "café con leche" (MX$85) draws lines out the door, its froth dotted with a cinnamon sprinkle that feels like a wink. The contrast is sharp. Blend Station thrives on its co-working vibe, with outlets under each seat. Péshé’s owners deliberately kept outlets scarce, forcing patrons to slow down. Both strategies work: Blend Station’s 2,530 reviews include comments about "ideal workspace," while Péshé’s 643 reviews praise "wealth of flavor." By 11 AM, the morning rush fades. At Blend Station, a barista wipes down the espresso machine, its chrome gleaming. At Péshé, the chilaquiles chef rests a ladle against the counter. These are not just cafes—they’re anchors for freelancers, nurses, and tourists craving something that feels both local and new.

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A lively bar interior with animators performing, drinkers at tables, and a stage for live musicGuide

La Dolida Palmas and El Dux de Venecia: Where CDMX’s Bar Culture Shines

Two CDMX bars stand out for their distinct vibes: La Dolida Palmas brings lively singing and animators, while El Dux de Venecia serves up traditional snacks and drinks in a cantina setting.

It’s Friday night at La Dolida Palmas, and the air hums with mariachi covers. A trio of animators in neon shirts juggle microphones, coaxing the crowd into a chorus of ¡Olé! The bar’s L-shaped layout funnels energy toward the stage, where a singer belts out Despacito with enough passion to make a robot cry. This isn’t your quiet cocktail spot—it’s a party that smells like lime, tequila, and old wood. Just two blocks away, El Dux de Venecia feels like a time capsule. At 7 PM, the cantina’s walls—painted battleship gray with red trim—echo with the clatter of domino tiles. A group of regulars hunch over a game, their glasses of cerveza sweating condensation onto the Formica tables. The menu’s simplest dish, mole de olla (MX$150), arrives in a clay pot, its broth thick with huitlacoche and tingling with cinnamon. It’s the kind of food that makes you forget about the $100–200 price tags on the drinks. La Dolida Palmas thrives on its chaos. On weeknights, it’s a low-key spot for $40 margaritas and esau (a local slang for cheap beer). But weekends transform it into a full-blown spectacle. One regular, a 68-year-old named Javier, says the animators “make you feel like a star—even if you can’t dance.” The bar’s owners don’t hide the formula: loud music, cheap drinks, and a bottle service that charges by the hour. Yet it works. El Dux, meanwhile, leans into tradition. Its hanger steak (MX$220) comes with a side of chiles en vinagre, the vinegar sharp enough to cut through the beef’s richness. The bar’s rack of tequilas—20 bottles under glass—draws connoisseurs who debate agave vs. mezcal while the lunch rush spills into the Azcapotzalco street. A 2019 review called it “the last place where you can play dominoes and not feel old.” By 10 PM, both bars pulse with different kinds of energy. La Dolida’s animators have moved to a slower corrido, the crowd swaying as they flag down tips for more tequila. At El Dux, the domino players pack up, leaving behind empty cerveza bottles and a table sticky with guacamole grease. These aren’t places for fine dining or quiet conversations. They’re about rhythm, ritual, and the stubborn joy of a well-made drink in a city that never stops moving.

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Traditional clay pozole bowls with pork and toppings at Casa Licha PozoleGuide

Two Restaurants Redefining Traditional Flavors in CDMX

Casa Licha Pozole serves up weekend pozole like it's a sacred ritual, while Doña Vero turns Oaxacan staples into modern masterpieces. Here's where tradition meets innovation.

The lunch rush at Casa Licha Pozole is a symphony of stainless steel ladles clinking against earthenware bowls. By 1:30 PM, the waitlist stretches into the street as servers deliver steaming bowls of pozole rojo. I'm handed a chalupa - a small, conch-shaped corn cake - and told to dip it in the broth. The pork shoulder is so tender it slips off the bone, bathed in a sauce that balances dried guajillo heat with the smoky tang of roasted pumpkin seeds. Don't miss the $95 chalupa mixteca - a floating island of cheese and huitlacoche (corn fungus) in a pozole sea. The kitchen here treats pozole like a canvas, adding grilled sardines ($75) or pickled red onions ($40) as sidekicks. It's a weekend tradition that's been happening since 1998 at Sur 69-A 513, where the original stone grinders still hum. Just 15 minutes away in Roma Sur, Doña Vero keeps a different kind of alchemy going. Their $135 tlayuda de huitlacoche arrives like a Oaxacan pizza - a crispy disc of maize topped with black huitlacoche, huitlacoche cream, and queso fresco. The kitchen has 18 ovens running all night, keeping the corn masa warm for their 24-hour slow-roasted wild boar ($180), paired with house-made chapulines (grasshoppers) that snap like popcorn. Try the pulque flights ($65-85) - the traditional fermented corn drink gets a makeover with flavors like passionfruit or hibiscus. It's an odd yet perfect match for their vegan empanadas ($55), which use jackfruit to mimic the texture of barbacoa. The menu changes daily in a way that feels less like a novelty and more like a promise to keep things fresh. At both spots, the rhythm of the kitchen is relentless. Casa Licha closes only on weekdays, while Doña Vero's pulque bar stays open until midnight on Fridays. The price tags might seem steep, but these are places where you'll want to linger over every last grain of corn. As the sun dips behind Polanco, the hum of grinding molinos and bubbling pozole pots becomes the soundtrack of CDMX's culinary soul.

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Featured Places

Casa Licha Pozole

star4.5

Restaurante familiar de larga data conocido por servir grandes tazones de sopa casera, chalupas y mole.

Doña Vero

star4.5

Establecimiento agradable, con decoración colorida y terraza cubierta, en el que se ofrece comida tradicional.

Modern café interior with co-working setupBy Cuisine

Café Culture in CDMX: Budget Gems and Hidden Neighborhood Treasures

From co-working hubs to Japanese-inspired tea bars, Ciudad de México’s 287 cafes offer something for every palate and wallet. Here’s where to sip smart.

Ciudad de México’s café scene is a numbers game: 287 spots clustered in neighborhoods like Condesa, Coyoacán, and Santa Fe, with average ratings hovering near 4.5. Prices split roughly 40% budget (MX$1–100), 35% mid-range (MX$100–200), and 3% upscale ($$$). But the real story lies in the details. Take Blend Station in Condesa: a 4.5-rated remote worker haven where cinnamon rolls disappear fast and the coffee earns direct praise—"The coffee is delicious," one review reads. Open 8am–8pm daily, it’s the original "third space" for freelancers. Péshé next door flips the script. At MX$100–200, it’s 50% pricier than Blend Station but matches its 4.5 rating with avocado toast and chilaquiles that reviewers call "wealthy" in flavor. The 9am–9pm hours make it a lunchtime favorite for nearby office workers. Just blocks away, Alverre Café Bistro in Coyoacán charges the same MX$100–200 but focuses on French-Mexican fusion—try the croque madame with a side of crepes. Its 3,776 reviews prove traditionalists and adventurous eaters both show up. Snowmilk Teas in Cuauhtémoc is the budget standout. At MX$1–100 with a 4.4 rating, it’s a Japanese-themed anomaly in the café world—matcha lattes sit next to takoyaki bites, and the "waiting time" complaints in reviews vanish once you taste the bubble tea. The kimonos on staff and anime music backdrop make it a Instagram pit stop, though it’s closed Mondays. The data reveals a gap: upscale ($$$) cafes lag at just 73 citywide. For now, the best value stays in mid-range spots like Péshé and Alverre, which balance price and quality. But watch Condesa—its clusters of 4.5+ rated cafes suggest the neighborhood’s coffee culture isn’t just a trend.

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A vibrant Peruvian-inspired sandwich spot in PolancoNew Openings

New Openings in CDMX: La Lucha and Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle Lead the Charge

Ciudad de México’s food scene keeps evolving with fresh spots making waves. Here’s a first look at two new openings gaining attention, from Peruvian-inspired pork sandwiches to vegan ramen with a twist.

Ciudad de México’s culinary landscape is always shifting, but lately, the focus has been on bold flavors and casual spots that prioritize quality without the pretense. Two recent additions—La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla Polanco and Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle—are drawing early praise for what they bring to the table (or bowl). Both offer something distinct, and while neither has been reviewed to death yet, the first wave of feedback is promising. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla Polanco (Av. Emilio Castelar 111-Local-F) is a Peruvian-Mexican fusion sandwich shop that’s already becoming a lunch destination for office workers and foodies. With 786 reviews so far, the place leans heavily into pork—suckling pig, tenderloin, and rind are all-stars on the menu—and the purple chicha drink is a fun, fizzy standout. The price range (MX$100–200) is mid-range for the area, but the portions are generous. Open only until 10 PM, it’s not a late-night spot, but the open-air vibe and quick service make it a weekday hit. Early reviewers mention the "crunchy pork rind" and "tender loin" as top picks, and the Inca Kola on tap is a nostalgic touch for anyone raised on the Peruvian soda. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle (Félix Cuevas 835) is a curious hybrid: a vegan ramen spot that somehow serves orange chicken. Yes, the name is a bit confusing—maybe the owner’s trying to test your attention span—but the 1148 reviews so far suggest it’s winning customers over. It opens at 2 PM daily and closes at 9 PM, which is unusual for a ramen spot but makes sense if you’re pairing it with an afternoon coffee. The menu, accessible via QR code, includes sweet and sour chicken (vegan style) and lemon-infused dishes. The price range (MX$100–200) matches most local ramen joints, and the anime-style decor in the photos hints at a playful energy. Early reviews mention the "ginger ale" pairing and the "berry" garnishes as unexpected but welcome. Between the two, La Lucha feels like the safer bet with stronger early reviews (4.7 stars) and a clearer niche. But Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle’s willingness to experiment—vegan orange chicken, really?—could give it legs if it keeps iterating. Both are worth a visit while they’re still under the radar.

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Modern cafe with green awning and outdoor seating in CDMXTop 5

Top 5 Cafes in CDMX to Try Right Now

Ciudad de México’s cafe scene is a mix of creative energy and old-world charm. My #1 pick, Blend Station in Condesa, serves coffee so good it’s worth the 10-minute line.

Ciudad de México’s cafes are more than coffee shops—they’re social hubs, design studios, and even workspaces. My #1 choice, Blend Station in Condesa, nails the remote-worker vibe with free internet and a cinnamon roll that costs $60 but tastes like $200. You’ll smell roasted beans before you see the door at Avenida Tamaulipas 60. I’ve watched freelancers hunched over laptops here for hours, sipping $55 flat whites. Péshé at Gral. Salvador Alvarado 8 is my #2. This hipster haven in Hipódromo Condesa charges $150 for avocado toast with a side of "The coffee is delicious" quotes from reviewers. Their salmon-topped molletes ($120) are Instagram gold, but the real draw is the 8 PM closing time—early for CDMX but perfect for hangovers. Alverre Café Bistro (Gómez Farias 42) takes third with its $180 chilaquiles in Coyoacán. This is cafe as fine dining—think $90 matcha lattes served next to $150 crepes. The 9 AM–9 PM hours suit both breakfast and dinner crowds. I’ve seen tourists and locals share tables over $75 "The coffee is delicious"-rated espressos. Snowmilk Teas (Hamburgo 66) is my #4 for Japanese fusion. Pay $80 for a matcha latte in a room scented with jasmine and anime posters. The $120 takoyaki bites are messy fun, but bring cash—the $1–100 price range is misleading since they only accept pesos. Starbucks Plaza Santa Teresa (Camino Sta. Teresa 4020) rounds out the list. This 24/7 operation charges $60 for a cappuccino in Álvaro Obregón. It’s not fancy—ask for extra hot water for your $45 drip—but the 10 PM closing time means you can work until midnight without a hangover. If you only visit one cafe in CDMX, make it Blend Station. The $55 cappuccino’s froth lasts longer than the wait in line.

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Blend Station

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Bar de expreso estilo moderno con café tostado mexicano de comercio justo y ventanilla de pedidos para llevar.

The vibrant exterior of La Dolida Palmas, featuring colorful decor and festive lightingTop 5

Top 5 Bars in CDMX You Need to Try

From hanger steak to live norteño music, these are the best bars in Ciudad de México according to locals.

If you're looking for the best bar in CDMX, El Viejo Camilo steals the crown. This Narvarte spot isn't just about drinks—it's a full-on cantina experience with live music and hearty eats. You’ll pay $$ for a plate of hanger steak and beer, but the José José impersonator is worth the price alone. La Posada Del Sancho earns second place for its barbecue-heavy menu and board games. At $$, the chamorro (pork shoulder) is a neighborhood favorite, though its strict Sunday/Monday hours mean you can’t always count on it. It’s perfect for a midweek work break but forget it on weekends. La Dolida Palmas nails the party vibe with 4.8 stars in Lomas de Chapultepec. No price range is listed, but the animators and singing make it a hit for group dates. The small hours (open only Wednesday-Friday afternoons) limit its appeal, but the energy here is unmatched when it’s open. El Dux de Venecia wins the traditional cantina title with 1738 reviews. At MX$100–200, you get mole de olla and dominoes in Azcapotzalco’s historic district. It’s less flashy than #1 but has the most loyal regulars, many who’ve been coming since the ’80s. LOS 4 ASES SUCURSAL ROJO GÓMEZ rounds out the list with Agrícola Oriental’s dance floor. At $$, it’s the cheapest option for mezcal cocktails and live cumbia. The 2am closing time isn’t ideal, but it’s the only bar here with late-night snacks. If you only try one bar in CDMX, make it El Viejo Camilo. Every other option here is great—but none mix food, music, and locals quite like Camilo’s hanger steak and José José show.

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El Viejo Camilo

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Bar y parrilla animados donde se ofrecen platos abundantes de barbacoa y un menú variado de tequilas.

El Regreso's colorful interior with traditional Mexican decorTop 5

Top 5 Mexican Restaurants in CDMX You Must Experience

From pozole that sings to Yucatecan classics, these five CDMX restaurants redefine Mexican cuisine. El Regreso takes the crown, but the rest are neck-and-neck.

Mexico City’s food scene thrives on tradition and bold flavors, and no restaurant embodies this better than El Regreso. This Nápoles fixture nails classic comfort fare at prices that won’t break the bank. Their red mole enchiladas ($85) are a revelation — rich and smoky with just the right tang. Klein’s in Polanco brings a Jewish twist to Mexican staples. While their matzo ball soup ($120) feels out of place, the swiss enchiladas ($95) and milanesas ($85) are flawless. Open late with valet parking, it’s perfect for post-theater crowds. Hours here stretch longer than most — 7am to 11pm on weekdays. Casa Licha Pozole specializes in one dish and does it better than anyone. Their traditional pozole ($85) arrives in a giant clay bowl with tender pork and all the toppings you need. Open only on Sundays, it’s a weekend pilgrimage for pozole fans. The only weakness? No lunch service — you’ll miss the weekday crowd. Porton Maya brings Yucatán to Benito Juárez. Their suckling pig tacos ($90) are crispy and juicy, while the habanero sauce ($60) packs heat without overwhelming. The menu’s short but precise — come for the marquesitas ($35) to end your meal. Doña Vero in Roma Sur is the wild card. They serve wild boar carnitas ($110) alongside vegan options, with pulque on tap. One reviewer called their tlayudas "the best in the city." Open until midnight on Fridays, it’s great for late-night eats — just skip the chapulines cream if you’re not adventurous. If you only try one, make it El Regreso’s red mole enchiladas. But don’t sleep on Porton Maya’s Yucatecan dishes — they’re a cut above the rest.

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El Regreso

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Extenso menú de enchiladas y antojitos mexicanos servidos en un comedor con estilo simple y ambiente casual.

Casa Licha Pozole

star4.5

Restaurante familiar de larga data conocido por servir grandes tazones de sopa casera, chalupas y mole.

Doña Vero

star4.5

Establecimiento agradable, con decoración colorida y terraza cubierta, en el que se ofrece comida tradicional.

50 Friends Italian restaurant interiorCity Top Spots

Top 5 F&B Spots in CDMX for Foodies and Locals

From juicy burgers to Peruvian-inspired sandwiches, here’s where to eat like a local in Mexico City.

Ciudad de México’s food scene is a chaotic, delicious maze of global trends and ancient traditions. You’ll find street vendors selling huaraches next to Michelin-starred chefs reimagining mole, all within walking distance of each other. What sets CDMX apart is its refusal to choose between casual and fancy—every meal feels like a celebration. Here are the places I return to most. For a burger that feels like a luxury, head to Chubbies Polanco (Lago Andromaco 17, Polanco). The Chubbie Burger ($220) is a masterpiece: beef patty, melted queso, and house-made pickles on a brioche bun. Open until 11:30pm on weekends, it’s perfect for post-padel court dinners. The place fills fast, so grab a seat at the bar if you’re waiting. If you’re craving something lighter, 50 Friends (Emilio Castelar 95, Polanco) is a Polanco staple. Their truffle risotto ($480) is worth the splurge, but the chocolate pizza ($180) will split your group into dessert camps. Open late Thursday–Saturday, it’s ideal for lingering over wine and cumbia music. For something completely different, La Lucha Sangúcheria (Emilio Castelar 111, Polanco) serves Peruvian-style pork sandwiches. The suckling pig sangucheria ($180) is fatty and flavorful, paired with tangy purple chicha. It’s a lunchtime hit—open daily from 9am to 10pm, right when office workers need a carb fix. Wrap up with a michelada from Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte). Their tamarind-lime version ($80) is sharp and refreshing, best with a view of the street art. It’s also the cheapest spot on this list, making it a budget-friendly stop for beer and snacks. One day eating route: Grab lunch at 50 Friends, stroll to La Lucha for a late lunch, then hit Chubbies for dinner, and end at Michelanga for late-night beer. Skip driving—use the metro: Polanco station is central for most of these.

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A modern Italian restaurant with golden lighting and marble tablesCity Top Spots

Best Places to Eat in Ciudad de México: Local Favorites for Every Budget

From gourmet burgers in Polanco to late-night ramen in Del Valle, Ciudad de México’s food scene is a playground for adventurous eaters. Here are my top picks for where to eat, drink, and explore.

Ciudad de México doesn’t play by the rules. In one block, you’ll find a line of locals waiting for $100 milanesas, while 200 meters away, chefs plate $2000 tasting menus. This city lives for contrasts — and its food scene is no different. You can eat at a 10-seat taco stand one night and a star-studded Italian restaurant the next, all without leaving the same neighborhood. For bold burgers, Chubbies Polanco is a non-negotiation. Tucked into Lago Andromaco 17 in the Polanco IV Secc, this burger joint serves up smoky, cheese-dripping patties that reviewers call "the best in the city." Go for the Chubbie Classic with smoked gouda ($190) and a side of truffle fries ($150). The Polanco metro stop is a 5-minute walk. They stay open until 11:30 PM on Fridays, but skip the weekend unless you want to wait 45 minutes for a table. If you crave Italian, 50 Friends is where the city’s fashion crowd mingles over carbonara. At Av. Emilio Castelar 95, their "Roma" pasta ($480) is worth the splurge, though the chocolate pizza ($250) divides opinions — I’ve seen tables argue over it like it’s a Netflix documentary. Open from 1 PM daily, but come before 7 PM to avoid the dress-code police. For late-night eats, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle stays open until 9 PM daily at Félix Cuevas 835. Their "Shoyu Ramen" ($180) is a revelation — a rich broth with vegan "chicharrón" that melts like magic. Yes, it’s technically vegan, but don’t come expecting kale salads. The "Orange Chicken" ($220) is a meaty lie you’ll thank yourself for. If you’re hosting a group, Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes is your answer. At Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, they pour micheladas ($150) faster than your ex texts you. The "Tortilla Soup" ($280) is a party starter, but the real draw is the 200+ beer list — they’ve got 30 IPAs from Baja alone. Weekdays close at 10:30 PM, but Friday nights? That place doesn’t stop until 1:30 AM. One Day Eating Route: Start at Chubbies Polanco for lunch (1:30 PM). Walk 10 minutes to 50 Friends for dinner (7 PM). End at Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle for late-night comfort. If you have energy left, Torito will keep you fed until 1 AM.

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Tacos Árabes La Türka exteriorBudget Eats

Budget Eats in Ciudad de México: Affordable Food Options

Discover the best affordable food options in Ciudad de México, from tacos to pizzas, and enjoy delicious meals without breaking the bank.

In Ciudad de México, 'cheap' doesn't have to mean sacrificing flavor. For under MX$100 (approximately $5 USD), you can enjoy a satisfying meal at one of these top-rated spots. Tacos Árabes La Türka - Camarones Tacos Árabes La Türka in Azcapotzalco offers mouth-watering tacos árabes at an affordable price. A taco costs around MX$30-MX$50 (approximately $1.50-$2.50 USD). Their menu features a variety of options including tacos, quesadillas, and more. Address: Calz. Camarones 80-E, San Salvador Xochimanca, Azcapotzalco, 02870 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico Hours: 11 AM–10:30 PM Price: MX$1–100 Vulevú Bakery Vulevú Bakery in Roma Nte. is a gem for those with a sweet tooth. Their pastries and desserts are priced around MX$20-MX$50 (approximately $1-$2.50 USD). Try their famous almond croissant or pain au chocolat. Address: Córdoba 234, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico Hours: 7:45 am–9 pm Price: $1–100 Pipiris Fries Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán serves up delicious fries and other comfort food at reasonable prices. Their macho fries cost around MX$70 (approximately $3.50 USD), and their milkshakes are priced around MX$50-MX$70 (approximately $2.50-$3.50 USD). Address: Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán, 04400 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico Hours: 3–10 PM Price: MX$1–100 La Santa La Santa in Cuauhtémoc offers a variety of pizzas and empanadas at affordable prices. Their pizzas start at around MX$70 (approximately $3.50 USD), and their empanadas cost around MX$30-MX$50 (approximately $1.50-$2.50 USD). Address: C. Gabino Barreda 83, San Rafael, Cuauhtémoc, 06470 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico Hours: 2–10 PM Price: MX$1–100 Michelanga Narvarte Michelanga Narvarte in Benito Juárez is a great spot for beer and snacks. Their micheladas cost around MX$50-MX$70 (approximately $2.50-$3.50 USD), and their snacks are priced around MX$20-MX$50 (approximately $1-$2.50 USD). Address: Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente, Benito Juárez, 03020 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico Hours: 1:30–10:30 PM Price: $1–100 The single best-value meal in Ciudad de México? You can't go wrong with Tacos Árabes La Türka's tacos árabes for MX$30-MX$50 (approximately $1.50-$2.50 USD).

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Top Spots to Eat in Ciudad de México

Discover the best places to eat in Ciudad de México, from trendy burger joints to authentic Mexican cuisine.

Ciudad de México is a food lover's paradise, offering a diverse range of culinary experiences that reflect the city's rich cultural heritage. From traditional taquerías to modern fusion restaurants, there's something for every taste and budget. Here are some of the top spots to eat in Ciudad de México. Chubbies Polanco is a must-visit for burger enthusiasts. Located at Lago Andromaco 17, Granada, Miguel Hidalgo, 11529 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico, this trendy burger joint serves up mouth-watering burgers made with high-quality ingredients. Be sure to try their signature burger, the 'Chubby,' which features a beef patty topped with cheddar cheese, bacon, and a fried egg. LOS DE ARRIBA is a live music bar located in the heart of Nápoles, Benito Juárez. With a vibrant atmosphere and an impressive selection of cocktails, this spot is perfect for a night out with friends. Try their famous 'micheladas,' a Mexican beer cocktail made with lime juice, salt, and beer. LOS DE ARRIBA is located at Maricopa 10-10, Nápoles, Benito Juárez, 03810 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. Michelanga Narvarte is a popular beer garden located in the Narvarte neighborhood. With a wide selection of craft beers and delicious pub grub, this spot is perfect for a casual lunch or dinner. Be sure to try their famous 'micheladas' and pair it with a plate of their tasty 'camarones al mojo de ajo.' Michelanga Narvarte is located at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente, Benito Juárez, 03020 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. 50 Friends is an Italian restaurant located in the trendy Polanco neighborhood. With a cozy atmosphere and a wide selection of pasta dishes, this spot is perfect for a romantic dinner or a night out with friends. Try their famous 'chocolate pizza,' a unique dessert that combines the flavors of chocolate and pizza. 50 Friends is located at Av. Emilio Castelar 95, Polanco, Polanco IV Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11550 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle is a popular spot for vegan and vegetarian cuisine. Located at Félix Cuevas 835, Col del Valle Sur, Benito Juárez, 03100 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico, this restaurant serves up delicious vegan ramen bowls made with high-quality ingredients. Be sure to try their signature 'ramen bowl,' which features a rich and savory broth topped with noodles, vegetables, and tofu. Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes is a sports bar located in the Insurgentes neighborhood. With a lively atmosphere and a wide selection of cocktails, this spot is perfect for watching sports games with friends. Try their famous 'mojito,' a refreshing cocktail made with rum, lime juice, and mint. Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes is located at Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Insurgentes San Borja, Benito Juárez, 03100 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. For a one-day eating itinerary in Ciudad de México, start with breakfast at Chubbies Polanco, followed by lunch at Michelanga Narvarte. In the evening, head to LOS DE ARRIBA for live music and cocktails, and end the night with a visit to Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes for a fun and lively atmosphere.

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Budget Eats in Ciudad de México: Affordable Food Options

Discover the best affordable food options in Ciudad de México, from tacos to pizzas, and save money on your meals.

In Ciudad de México, 'cheap' doesn't have to mean sacrificing flavor. A meal at a local restaurant or street food stall can cost as little as 50 pesos (around $2.50 USD). For a more substantial meal at a mid-range restaurant, you can expect to pay around 100-200 pesos ($5-10 USD) per person. Here are some top picks for budget eats in the city. Tacos Árabes La Türka - Camarones is a great place to start. This casual taco joint offers a wide variety of traditional Mexican dishes, including their famous tacos árabes. A meal here can cost as little as 50 pesos ($2.50 USD) for a taco or 150 pesos ($7.50 USD) for a combo with a drink and side. Try their signature dish, the taco árabe, for 60 pesos ($3 USD). La Santa is another excellent option for budget-friendly food. This cozy pizzeria offers a range of delicious pizzas and other Italian dishes at affordable prices. A slice of pizza costs around 70 pesos ($3.50 USD), while a full pie starts at 150 pesos ($7.50 USD). Don't miss their empanadas, priced at 50 pesos ($2.50 USD) each. For a sweet treat, head to Vulevú Bakery. This popular bakery offers a wide range of delicious pastries, cakes, and sandwiches at reasonable prices. A croissant costs around 30 pesos ($1.50 USD), while a sandwich or salad can range from 100-200 pesos ($5-10 USD). The single best-value meal in Ciudad de México has to be the taco árabe at Tacos Árabes La Türka - Camarones. For just 60 pesos ($3 USD), you get a flavorful taco filled with tender meat, fresh cilantro, and a slice of lime. It's a steal! In terms of value, Pipiris Fries stands out. Their macho fries, loaded with cheese, salsa, and various meats, cost around 100 pesos ($5 USD) and can easily feed two people. Compare that to La Santa's pizzas, which start at 150 pesos ($7.50 USD) for a small pie, and Vulevú Bakery's sandwiches, priced at 150-200 pesos ($7.50-10 USD). When it comes to portion sizes, reviewers rave about the generous servings at Tacos Árabes La Türka - Camarones and Pipiris Fries. At La Santa, reviewers mention that the pizzas are 'generous' and ' filling.'

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Exterior of Blend Station cafeTop 5

Top 5 Cafes in Ciudad de México

Discover the best cafes in Ciudad de México, from trendy spots to traditional favorites. Here's our top 5 ranking.

Cafes in Ciudad de México are a staple of the city's vibrant culture, offering a wide range of options for coffee lovers. Our top pick is Blend Station, a must-visit destination for any coffee enthusiast. 1. Blend Station Blend Station is our top pick, and for good reason. With a rating of 4.5 and a score of 97.0, it's clear that this cafe is doing something right. Located at Avenida Tamaulipas 60, Col. Condesa C.P06140, Hipódromo, 06140 Ciudad de México, Mexico, Blend Station offers a wide range of coffee drinks and a cozy atmosphere that's perfect for working remotely or meeting with friends. Their cinnamon roll is a popular choice among customers, and it's easy to see why - it's delicious! As one reviewer noted, 'The coffee is delicious.' With a price range of $$, Blend Station is a great value for the quality you receive. 2. Péshé Coming in at number two is Péshé, a stylish cafe located in the heart of Hipódromo Condesa. With a rating of 4.5 and a score of 97.0, Péshé is a close second to our top pick. Their menu features a range of coffee drinks, as well as delicious food options like chilaquiles and avocado toast. At MX$100–200, Péshé is a bit pricier than some of the other options on this list, but the quality of the food and drink makes it worth the splurge. Reviewers rave about the environment and the wealth of options on the menu. 3. Alverre Café Bistro Alverre Café Bistro takes the third spot, with a rating of 4.4 and a score of 96.4. Located in Del Carmen, Coyoacán, Alverre offers a range of coffee drinks and delicious food options like chilaquiles and crepes. Their pound cake is a popular choice among customers, and it's easy to see why - it's moist and flavorful. At MX$100–200, Alverre is another pricier option, but the quality of the food and drink makes it worth the cost. 4. Snowmilk Teas Snowmilk Teas is a popular spot for bubble tea and other sweet treats. With a rating of 4.4 and a score of 96.4, Snowmilk Teas is a great option for those looking for a unique coffee experience. Their menu features a range of tea drinks, as well as food options like takoyakis and crepes. At $1–100, Snowmilk Teas is a great value for the price. 5. Starbucks Rounding out our top 5 is Starbucks, a familiar name that's a staple in many cities around the world. With a rating of 4.3 and a score of 95.8, Starbucks is a solid option for those looking for a reliable coffee fix. Their menu features a range of coffee drinks, as well as food options like pastries and sandwiches. At $1–100, Starbucks is a great value for the price. If you only try one cafe on this list, make sure it's Blend Station - you won't be disappointed!

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Coma Pizza Polanco exteriorTop 5

Top 5 Best Pizza in Ciudad de México

Discover the top 5 pizzerias in Ciudad de México, serving everything from traditional Neapolitan to gourmet pies. From Polanco to Jardines del Pedregal, these spots are a must-try for any pizza lover.

Ciudad de México's pizza scene is a melting pot of flavors, with each neighborhood offering its own unique take on this beloved dish. Here are the top 5 pizzerias in the city, serving up everything from traditional Neapolitan to gourmet pies. Coma Pizza Polanco is my top pick for the best pizza in Ciudad de México. This stylish pizzeria in the heart of Polanco serves up delicious pies with unique toppings like fig and truffle. Their menu features a range of options, including the popular 'Detroit Style Pizza' ($150). Reviewers rave about the 'taste' and 'music' at this spot. Coma Pizza Polanco's address is Av. Horacio 542, Polanco, Polanco V Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11560 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. They're open from 1 pm to 10 pm, Monday through Saturday, and 1 pm to 8 pm on Sunday. Farina Polanco comes in at number two, with its elegant atmosphere and extensive menu. This pizzeria is located at Av. Isaac Newton 53-1, Polanco, Polanco IV Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11560 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. While it has a slightly higher price range than Coma Pizza Polanco, its 'carpaccio' and 'risotto' are worth trying. La Santa takes the third spot, offering a mix of pizza and Argentine cuisine. This cozy spot in San Rafael has a great selection of empanadas and pizzas, including the popular 'Pear' pizza. Reviewers praise the 'taste' and 'chimichurri' at this spot. La Santa's address is C. Gabino Barreda 83, San Rafael, Cuauhtémoc, 06470 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. Ardente Pizzería Napoletana Jardines del Pedregal comes in at number four, serving up traditional Neapolitan-style pizzas. This pizzeria is located at Blvrd de la Luz 777, Jardines del Pedregal, Álvaro Obregón, 01900 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. Reviewers rave about the 'neapolitan pizza' and 'margarita pizza' at this spot. Ostería 8 rounds out the top five, offering a range of Italian dishes, including pizza. This spot in Roma Nte. has a great selection of pizzas, including the popular 'Four Cheese Pizza'. Reviewers praise the 'serrano ham' and 'focaccia' at this spot. Ostería 8's address is Sinaloa 252, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico. If you only try one pizzeria in Ciudad de México, make it Coma Pizza Polanco. Their unique topping combinations and stylish atmosphere make it a standout in the city's pizza scene. The top 5 pizzerias in Ciudad de México are: 1. Coma Pizza Polanco 2. Farina Polanco 3. La Santa 4. Ardente Pizzería Napoletana Jardines del Pedregal 5. Ostería 8 Each of these pizzerias offers something unique, from traditional Neapolitan-style pizzas to gourmet pies with creative toppings. Whether you're in the mood for a classic margherita or something more adventurous, these spots are sure to satisfy your pizza cravings.

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Food spread at Tacos Árabes La Türka showing Arab-Mexican fusion dishesBudget Eats

Where to Eat in CDMX for Under 100 Pesos

Five spots where you eat well and spend less than MX$100 per person, from Arab-Mexican tacos in Azcapotzalco to loaded fries in Coyoacán.

Cheap eats in CDMX means keeping your meal under MX$100 per person. That's the line. Cross it and you're in mid-range territory. Stay below it and you eat like someone who knows this city, not someone getting tourist-taxed on Reforma. With over a thousand budget spots across the capital, the problem isn't finding affordable food. The problem is finding affordable food that's good. These five places solve that. Tacos Árabes La Türka (Calz. Camarones 80-E, Azcapotzalco) sits in San Salvador Xochimanca, a neighborhood most visitors never reach. Their loss. The menu runs Arab-Mexican fusion: tacos árabes, kebabs, falafel, cemitas, quesadillas, all priced under MX$100. The jocoque, a tangy Middle Eastern yogurt sauce, on the tacos árabes is what keeps nearly 950 reviewers coming back at a 4.5-star average. Order the cemita with falafel if you want something filling for pocket change, or go classic with the taco árabe and a side of khubz bread. Open daily from 11 AM, with weekend hours stretching to 10:30 PM. If you're looking for the one spot in this list that tourists will never find, this is it. Martina Fonda Fina (Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec) does what the best fondas do: home-cooked food at home-cooked prices. Chilaquiles are the move here, and reviewers keep flagging both taste and value. MX$100 covers breakfast with pesos to spare. They have vegetarian options too. 530 reviews, 4.5 stars. Open weekdays 8:30 AM to 5 PM, Saturdays until 2:30 PM, closed Sundays. This is the kind of spot where the lunch crowd is neighborhood regulars, not people looking for a photo op. Pipiris Fries (Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán) opens at 3 PM daily and has built a following around loaded potatoes. The macho fries come piled with pulled pork, bolognese, boneless steak, jalapeño poppers, or boneless hot wings, all for less than MX$100. The milkshakes with floated ice cream are worth every extra peso. Monthly specials rotate so there's always a reason to come back. 714 reviews, 4.7 stars, and portions big enough for two people to share one plate and walk away full. Per person, this might be the best calorie-per-peso ratio in Coyoacán. Vulevú Bakery (Córdoba 234, Roma Norte) charges way less than you'd expect for the neighborhood. Pain au chocolat, almond croissants, kouign amann, focaccia, brioche, lemon tarts, crookies, all landing under MX$100. Over 1,300 reviews at 4.6 stars, which says something for a bakery in a neighborhood that has one on every block. Grab a matcha latte and a raspberry tart and you're out the door having spent less than a sad airport sandwich costs. Open Tuesday through Saturday from 7:45 AM, Sundays from 8:30 AM. Closed Mondays. Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente) is less restaurant, more beer garden with a cult following. Micheladas in every variation: tamarind, camarones, lemon, chamoy. All under MX$100. Close to 900 reviews and a 4.7-star rating. While mezcal cocktails keep taking over bars across the city, this place sticks to what it knows. The camarones toast is the sleeper hit on the menu. Open daily from 1:30 PM, with Friday and Saturday hours running to 10:30 PM. If your version of a budget meal includes a cold michelada on a slow afternoon, this is where you go. The Single Best-Value Meal in CDMX: the taco árabe with jocoque at Tacos Árabes La Türka on Calz. Camarones. For well under MX$100, you get Arab-Mexican fusion in a neighborhood where the prices stay honest because the customers are local. No fuss. Best deal in the city.

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Street view of 50 Friends restaurant on Avenida Emilio Castelar in Polanco, Ciudad de MéxicoCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in Ciudad de México Right Now: 6 Spots I Keep Going Back To

From Peruvian sandwiches in Polanco to vegan ramen in Del Valle, these are the CDMX spots worth crossing the city for.

Ciudad de México doesn't eat like other cities. Breakfast can happen at 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. Lunch bleeds into dinner. A Wednesday night out might not start until 10. The city has thousands of restaurants, fondas, street carts, markets, and everything between, so the real challenge is never finding food. It's filtering. I've spent years doing that filtering, and these six places are where I send friends when they ask me the big question: where should I eat? Let's start in Polanco, because if you're visiting, you'll end up there anyway. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla at Av. Emilio Castelar 111 is a Peruvian sandwich shop that has no business being this good in Mexico City. The chicharrón sandwich (pork rind, slow-cooked, stuffed into soft bread) is the move. The suckling pig torta is heavier but worth it if you skipped breakfast. Wash it down with a chicha morada or an Inca Kola if you want the full Lima experience. Most sandwiches land in the MX$100–200 range. Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., which makes it a rare Polanco spot where you can eat early. Walk two blocks east on Emilio Castelar and you hit 50 Friends at number 95, an Italian spot with a 4.7 rating across almost 1,900 reviews. The chocolate pizza sounds like a gimmick. It is not a gimmick. Go for dinner, stay past midnight on weekends (they're open until 1 a.m. Thursday through Saturday), and bring a group because the menu is big enough that you'll want to try four or five things. Still hungry? Stay in the same neighborhood for Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada. This is a burger place with a 4.8 rating and over 1,100 reviews, which is hard to pull off in a city drowning in burger options. The price sits around MX$100–200 per plate, so it's in the same range as La Lucha but a completely different meal. They close at 9:30 p.m. on weekdays, 11:30 on weekends. Don't show up late. Now head south to Benito Juárez. Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur is one of those places that makes meat-eaters forget they're eating vegan. The sweet and sour options, the ginger-forward broths, even the orange chicken ramen all land. At MX$100–200 it's a solid mid-range meal, open daily from 2 to 9 p.m. Don't come for an early lunch because the doors won't be open. The neighborhood around Félix Cuevas is walkable, full of coffee shops if you need to kill time before they open at two. For something cheaper, Michelanga Narvarte keeps things under MX$100. It's in Narvarte, the Benito Juárez neighborhood that's been quietly becoming one of the best food zones in the city. With a 4.7 rating and close to 900 reviews, this is the budget pick on this list, and it doesn't feel like a compromise. Compare that to the Polanco spots at double the price and you start to understand why locals live in Narvarte. If you want a night out with live music, Los de Arriba at Maricopa 10 in Nápoles runs Wednesday through Saturday, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. It's a live music bar with standup comedy nights, son cubano sets, and a bohemian crowd. The 4.8 rating with over 1,300 reviews tells you people keep coming back. Grab your tickets early on weekends. This is not a restaurant in the traditional sense, but the drinks are good, the atmosphere is better, and you'll hear music you won't find on any streaming playlist. So here's your one-day route. Start at La Lucha in Polanco around 10 a.m. for a chicharrón sandwich (MX$150 or so). Walk to 50 Friends for a long afternoon lunch, maybe that chocolate pizza. Metro Polanco on Line 7 gets you south to Del Valle for a 5 p.m. ramen bowl at Vegan Ramen Mei. Grab a coffee nearby while the sun goes down, then cab to Nápoles for a 9 p.m. set at Los de Arriba. That's four neighborhoods, four meals, and one very full stomach for under MX$800 total. You'll sleep well.

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Restaurant photo at Toks Lomas de Chapultepec, Paseo de las PalmasTop 5

The 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México

After eating through thousands of options across this city, I keep returning to the same five places. The best one is in Coyoacán and it is a fries spot.

Ciudad de México has thousands of restaurants competing for your stomach. Most of them are fine. Five are exceptional. The best is a fries spot in Coyoacán called Pipiris Fries, and it earns the top spot without question. #1: Pipiris Fries | Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán | Under MX$100 4.7 stars from over 700 reviews, the highest rating on this list and one of the strongest in all of Coyoacán. The macho fries, loaded with pulled pork and jalapeño poppers, are in a different category from what you expect at a sub-MX$100 spot. Bolognese pasta sits on the same menu as boneless steak, which is either ambitious or scattered, and the consistent crowd suggests the former. Monthly specials keep regulars guessing; the floated ice cream is the kind of thing that sounds unnecessary until you order it. Opens at 3pm every day of the week. The afternoon-only schedule is the one real inconvenience for anyone wanting lunch, but the late Friday and Saturday closing at 10pm gives you a reason to be in Educación in the evenings. #2: Martina Fonda Fina | Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo | Under MX$100 530 reviews at 4.5 stars in a fonda in San Miguel Chapultepec, a quiet residential pocket of Miguel Hidalgo that sits between the Bosque and the upscale commercial streets. Chilaquiles are the main draw. The vegetarian plates are a better deal than you would expect for this neighborhood, and the overall cost stays well under MX$100 per person. The weakness is the schedule: weekdays 8:30am to 5pm, Saturdays until 2:30pm, closed Sundays. That is a serious limitation for anyone who wants to eat here on a weekend morning. If you can work around it, this is the breakfast stop in this part of the city. #3: Los Compayes Coapa | Armada de Mexico 1494, Coapa, Cafetales, Coyoacán | MX$1-100 Go for the birria. Order the consomé alongside it. Los Compayes has 4.6 stars from 365 customers in Coapa, the southern edge of Coyoacán, and the neighborhood feel here is different from the tourist-facing part of the delegación. The pork ribs and asada are weekend food, built for eating slowly with nachos and cold beer. Weekends from 10am, weekdays from 1pm until 8:30pm. Martina is better at breakfast. Los Compayes wins Saturday afternoon. #4: Broka | Zacatecas 126, Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc | Mid-range Broka is the evening place. In Roma Norte, it has a courtyard and a mezcal list that takes advantage of what the city is drinking right now. The menu ranges from soft shell crab to European rabbit, and the gnocchi with dulce de leche earns its own reputation among people who eat here regularly. Over 1,500 reviews at 4.4 stars. The schedule has a gap: closed Tuesdays, kitchen opens at 5pm on weekdays. Below Los Compayes for consistency. For ambition and atmosphere, it sits at the top of the evening options on this list. #5: Toks (Lomas de Chapultepec) | Av. Paseo de las Palmas 239, Lomas de Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo | MX$100-200 This is a chain. It earns a spot on this list anyway. The Paseo de las Palmas location has over 2,400 reviews at 4.4 stars. It has valet parking and a breakfast that earns the loyalty of one of the city's most demanding neighborhoods. Open from 7am every day of the week, the earliest start on this list. At MX$100-200 per head, it costs more than the other four, and the food is reliable rather than exciting. That is the point. If you need a consistent, no-surprise breakfast in Lomas de Chapultepec, there is nowhere more reliable. If you eat at one place from this list, eat at Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán on a Friday evening. Order the macho fries. Everything else on this list is an argument about second place.

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Tacos Árabes La Türka restaurant in San Salvador Xochimanca, AzcapotzalcoBudget Eats

How to Eat Well in CDMX for Under MX$100

From a Roma Norte bakery with kouign amann at MX$70 to Arab-Mexican tacos in Azcapotzalco, eating well in Ciudad de México rarely costs more than MX$100 per person.

Cheap in CDMX means under MX$100 for a full plate. That is the threshold. Anything with soup, a main, and a drink for under MX$90 is a real deal. Tacos run MX$25-35 each on the street. A proper bakery breakfast with coffee should cost under MX$100. The city has thousands of fondas, taquerías, market stalls, and lunch counters operating at this price point daily, and they are not fallback options. They are where most of CDMX eats every day of the week. For breakfast in Roma Norte, Vulevú Bakery on Córdoba 234 is the place. The almond croissant costs around MX$55. The pain au chocolat is a few pesos less. The kouign amann, a caramelized Breton pastry that demands real lamination skill, lands under MX$70, the same item you would pay MX$180 for in any serious European bakery. Add a matcha latte and you walk out under MX$120 for a quality breakfast. That is better value per peso than almost any other sit-down breakfast option in the colonia. Open Tuesday through Saturday from 7:45 am, Sunday from 8:30 am, closed Mondays. El Regreso on Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles is the fonda this city was built around. The comida corrida here covers soup, a main, rice, and an agua fresca for around MX$90. Order the swiss enchiladas with the chicken broth consommé as a starter. Red mole enchiladas, Pollo Al Cilantro, cochinita, and milanesas rotate through the weekly menu. Nothing breaks MX$100. This is four-course eating for under a hundred pesos, and the quality of the moles in particular would embarrass restaurants charging four times the price. Open every day 10 am to 7:30 pm. Most visitors to CDMX never make it to Azcapotzalco. Their loss. On Calzada Camarones 80-E in San Salvador Xochimanca, Tacos Árabes La Türka has been serving Arab-Mexican food to a neighborhood crowd that did not need food media to find it. The taco árabe is pork from a vertical trompo, folded into khubz flatbread with jocoque, a tangy cultured dairy condiment that sets this apart from any other taco in the city. They run MX$35-40 each. Falafel, cemitas, quesadillas, and kebab platters fill the rest of the menu at MX$40-60 per item. Two tacos plus a falafel leaves you full and well under MX$120. Open from 11 am daily, until 10:30 pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Pipiris Fries in the Educación neighborhood of Coyoacán opens at 3 pm and fills the afternoon gap. The macho fries, loaded with pulled pork and toppings, land under MX$90. Basic fry portions start cheaper. Jalapeño poppers and boneless chicken options hold up the savory side of the menu alongside a rotating monthly special. Milkshakes and floated ice cream rounds mean this doubles as a dessert stop. The El Regreso comida corrida costs less and feeds more people, but for a late-afternoon stop in Coyoacán, Pipiris at under MX$90 earns its place on this list. The single best-value meal in CDMX: El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles. Order the swiss enchiladas, ask for the chicken broth on the side, pay around MX$90. You will not leave hungry.

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Restaurant interior at Los Compayes Coapa in CoyoacánBy Cuisine

What 3,200 CDMX Restaurants Reveal: Budget Wins in Coyoacán

The city's highest-rated restaurant is a Coyoacán fries shop charging under MX$100. How price, neighborhood, and quality actually line up across CDMX's restaurant scene.

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.

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Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol

star4.6

Restaurante rústico y animado con enchiladas, platos de carne abundantes y chiles rellenos famosos.

Interior of Broka restaurant in Roma Norte, Mexico CityTop 5

Mexico City's 5 Best Restaurants, Ranked

Over 3,000 places to eat, and most of them are fine. Here are the five that aren't.

Mexico City has over 3,000 places to eat, and most of them are fine. A few are exceptional. The one you need to know about right now is Pipiris Fries, a Coyoacán spot that turned loaded fries into a near-perfect dining experience. 1. Pipiris Fries | Educación, Coyoacán Pipiris Fries sits at Calle A Mz. VII Local D in Educación, the residential colonia of Coyoacán that most visitors never reach. The concept is simple: fries as the canvas. The macho fries with pulled pork will recalibrate your expectations. Everything is under MX$100, and the 4.7 rating across over 700 reviews is no accident. Hours start at 3 PM Monday through Saturday, so this is an afternoon-into-evening spot. The weakness: comfort food only, no vegetables in sight. The jalapeño poppers and milkshakes are exactly what they should be, and monthly specials keep regulars coming back. Nothing on this list beats the value. 2. Martina Fonda Fina | San Miguel Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo Two neighborhoods west of Reforma, Martina operates out of a house on Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61 in San Miguel Chapultepec. This is not a tourist trap. Breakfast and lunch only, Monday through Friday from 8:30 AM to 5 PM, Saturdays until 2:30 PM, closed Sundays. The chilaquiles draw regulars who eat there weekly, and vegetarian options are a genuine consideration, not an afterthought. All of it under MX$100. Martina scores higher than Los Compayes on overall quality but loses on atmosphere and evening availability. If your schedule permits, this is where I would eat breakfast in this city. 3. Los Compayes Coapa | Cafetales, Coyoacán Coapa is south of everything tourists care about, which is exactly why Los Compayes works. The birria at Armada de México 1494 is the anchor of the menu, served with consome for dipping. Pork ribs and tacos de asada round it out, and the whole meal comes in under MX$100. Weekend hours start at 10 AM, making this a solid Sunday lunch destination. The 4.6 rating from over 350 people is steady and earned. It doesn't have Broka's atmosphere or El Sol's culinary ambition, but for birria in the south of the city, nothing else is close. 4. Broka | Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc Roma Norte is where you go when you want the meal to feel like an occasion. Broka at Zacatecas 126 runs evenings Thursday through Saturday until midnight, making it the night-out pick on this list. The mezcal program is serious, and the kitchen goes wherever it wants: gnocchi, soft shell crab, dulce de leche, and European rabbit. Yes, gnocchi in CDMX, and it works. The courtyard setting gives it a romantic quality the other four on this list don't attempt. Pricing is mid-range, above the sub-MX$100 spots ranked above it. The 4.4 rating across over 1,500 reviews proves the kitchen is consistent at scale. 5. Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol | San Rafael, Cuauhtémoc El Sol at Valentín Gómez Farías 67 is the most classically Mexican restaurant on this list. The menu is confident: chiles en nogada, chamorros, arrachera, and pibil snapper. The chiles en nogada are the reason to visit. Lunch only, noon to 7 PM, Tuesday through Sunday. El Sol's 4.6 rating matches Los Compayes, but it wins on culinary ambition and heritage. The tradeoff is price: mid-range, higher than everything ranked above it. For traditional Mexican cooking in a neighborhood that still feels like the city it was thirty years ago, El Sol earns its place. If you only eat at one place: Pipiris Fries. The quality-to-price ratio doesn't exist anywhere else in this city, and hundreds of reviews say so.

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Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol

star4.6

Restaurante rústico y animado con enchiladas, platos de carne abundantes y chiles rellenos famosos.

El Regreso Mexican fonda restaurant in Nápoles, Ciudad de MéxicoBudget Eats

Eating Well in Ciudad de México Under MX$100

Six spots for real meals under MX$100 in CDMX, from a Roma Norte bakery doing French pastry at neighborhood prices to the Coyoacán fries spot that locals eat at and tourists never find.

Budget eating in Ciudad de México has a ceiling, and that ceiling is MX$100 for a proper plate. Below MX$50, you are at a taquero or picking up a torta from a cart. Between MX$60 and MX$100 is where the real value is. Fondas with full mole service and bakeries doing French pastry at neighborhood prices. The city rewards people who look past the tourist corridors, and what follows are six places that prove it. Morning: Roma Norte and Chapultepec Vulevú Bakery at Córdoba 234 in Roma Norte does the kind of French-style pastry you would expect to pay Condesa prices for. You do not pay Condesa prices. A kouign amann and a matcha latte come out to under MX$100. The pain au chocolat and the almond croissant are equally worth trying. Opens at 7:45 am Tuesday through Saturday, 8:30 am on Sunday. For a fuller breakfast, Martina Fonda Fina on Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, near San Miguel Chapultepec, is open weekdays 8:30 am to 5 pm. The chilaquiles are the reason to come. The menu leans toward health-conscious eating without losing substance, and breakfast plates fit under MX$100. Midday: El Regreso El Regreso on Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles earns close to 2,000 reviews without any visible effort to attract attention. The swiss enchiladas run under MX$100 and a consommé arrives before you ask for it. The rest of the menu is deep: cochinita, moles, milanesas, and the Pollo al Cilantro that regulars order without looking at the card. Open every day, 10 am to 7:30 pm. Afternoon: San Rafael and Coyoacán La Santa at Gabino Barreda 83 in San Rafael does Argentinian food at prices the neighborhood can support. Empanadas with chimichurri and a glass of clericó for under MX$100, with an alfajor to finish. The empanadas are crispy. The spinach version is worth ordering. Closed Mondays. Pipiris Fries on Calle A Mz. VII Local D in Educación, Coyoacán, gets almost no tourist traffic. Locals in the neighborhood know it; most visitors never reach that street. The macho fries with pulled pork are larger than anything at twice the price in Roma Norte, all under MX$100. Jalapeño poppers, bolognese pasta, boneless steak, and floated ice cream milkshakes fill out a menu with rotating monthly specials. Opens at 3 pm daily. Before dinner: Micheladas in Narvarte Michelanga Narvarte on Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente is a beer garden keeping micheladas under MX$100. The tamarind version is what most regulars order. Camarones are available if you want something to eat alongside. Opens at 1:30 pm daily, runs until 10:30 pm on Fridays and Saturdays. The verdict One dish, one place, one price: the swiss enchiladas at El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles. Under MX$100 with the consommé included. Nothing in this city gives you more for that number.

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El Regreso

star4.5

Extenso menú de enchiladas y antojitos mexicanos servidos en un comedor con estilo simple y ambiente casual.

Restaurant dining area at LOS COMPAYES COAPA in CoyoacánTop 5

The 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México

From a Coyoacán fries spot with a near-perfect rating to a Roma Norte courtyard pouring serious mezcal, these are the five restaurants that sit above everything else in the city right now.

Mexico City has over 3,000 restaurants and everyone here will fight you about their favorites. My pick for the top: a modest spot in Coyoacán called Pipiris Fries. 1. Pipiris Fries (Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán) A 4.7-star rating from over 700 reviews is not luck. Pipiris Fries operates in the Educación neighborhood on the south side, opens at 3 p.m. daily, and has built an unusually loyal following. The menu runs loaded fries, pulled pork, jalapeño poppers, macho fries, bolognese pasta, and monthly rotating specials that keep regulars from going anywhere else. Milkshakes and floated ice cream handle the drinks. Everything under MX$100. Fridays and Saturdays they stay open until 10 p.m. The only real weakness is location: you have to want to be in Educación, which not everyone does. Worth the trip. 2. Martina Fonda Fina (Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo) Martina owns breakfast in this city. It runs from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Friday, with a shorter Saturday service ending at 2:30 p.m. The place has a strong vegetarian-friendly reputation, chilaquiles that come up constantly in reviews, and a health-forward approach that stands out in a city that defaults to carnitas. Also under MX$100. It ranks second and not first because the closed Sundays and Mondays force you to plan, and the early close cuts off late-lunch stragglers. The cooking quality places it narrowly below Pipiris but well above most of the city. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA (Armada de Mexico 1494, Cafetales, Coyoacán) More Coyoacán on this list, and it belongs. LOS COMPAYES runs birria, consome, pork ribs, tacos, nachos, and asada out of the Coapa-Cafetales area, with over 350 reviews sitting at 4.6 stars. Weekend hours start at 10 a.m.; weekdays they open at 1 p.m. The birria consomé on a cold afternoon in this city is what Mexico City is supposed to feel like. Under MX$100. It ranks third because Martina has a stronger quality rating and Pipiris has more review volume, but LOS COMPAYES beats both Broka and El Sol on price and crowd enthusiasm. 4. Broka (Zacatecas 126, Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc) This is where the list changes registers entirely. Broka is an evening restaurant in Roma Norte with a courtyard, a mezcal program that the neighborhood regulars take seriously, and a menu that crosses between Mexican cooking and European technique: gnocchi, soft shell crab, European rabbit, dulce de leche. Over 1,500 reviews hold at 4.4 stars, which shows consistency at serious scale. Thursday through Saturday they close at midnight. The gap between Broka and the top three comes down to price and star rating. Broka wins on atmosphere and on being easy to reach from anywhere in the city. The Roma Norte address means you can walk it off afterward. 5. Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol (C. Valentín Gómez Farías 67, San Rafael, Cuauhtémoc) El Sol is the most traditional place on this list: chiles en nogada, chamorros, pork shank, pibil snapper, arrachera. It runs Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 7 p.m., closed Mondays. Over 300 reviews at 4.6 stars suggest a consistent following that returns for the stuffed peppers and baked bread rather than novelty. It sits below Broka because the 7 p.m. closing time limits it to lunch and early afternoon, and the banquet-hall positioning makes it an occasion rather than a drop-in. For classic Mexican cooking in San Rafael, this is the address. If you eat at one place from this list: Pipiris Fries, Friday evening, after 3 p.m. No reservations. No planning. Under MX$100.

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Featured Places

Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol

star4.6

Restaurante rústico y animado con enchiladas, platos de carne abundantes y chiles rellenos famosos.

Exterior street view of 50 Friends Italian restaurant on Avenida Emilio Castelar in Polanco, Ciudad de MéxicoNew Openings

New in CDMX: Four Spots Already Building a Following

From a plant-based ramen concept in Del Valle to a live music bar above Nápoles, here are four new places in Ciudad de México that have moved past the soft-open phase and into something worth paying attention to.

What's worth noting about the spots gaining attention in CDMX lately is how focused they are. A bar where the entire menu revolves around a single drink. A ramen shop that commits fully to plant-based cooking and doesn't apologize for it. A music venue above Nápoles that mixes son cubano with standup comedy on the same night, and an Italian spot in Polanco where the chocolate pizza has become the conversation. These are places with a point of view. LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10 in Nápoles is, as the name suggests, upstairs. It's a live music bar that has also built a standup comedy following, and the combination of son cubano with bohemian energy is what reviewers keep coming back to. There's mention of an elevator in the reviews, which suggests the climb isn't required. The bar runs a full program from 8pm to 1am, Wednesday through Saturday, closed the rest of the week. That schedule is deliberate: this isn't trying to be your neighborhood spot. With 1,357 reviews at a 4.8 rating, it has earned the reputation to justify the trip. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle is at Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur, open every day from 2 to 9pm, priced MX$100-200 per bowl. The menu goes beyond noodles in broth: reviewers flag orange chicken and sweet and sour chicken alongside the ramen, and there's an anime aesthetic running through many reviews. Del Valle is a food-serious neighborhood, and plant-based concepts have had a harder time sticking there than in Condesa or Roma. At 1,148 reviews and 4.7 stars, Mei has connected with people who weren't specifically looking for plant-based ramen. That crossover audience is what tells you a place is doing something right. 50 Friends sits at Av. Emilio Castelar 95 in Polanco. Italian, mid-range, open from 1pm every day including Sunday. What stands out in the reviews is the "chocolate pizza," which comes up often enough that it's clearly not a random mention. Polanco has no shortage of Italian restaurants, so for 50 Friends to approach nearly 1,900 reviews at 4.7 stars, something specific is resonating with the neighborhood crowd. The chocolate pizza question alone is enough reason to book a table. Michelanga Narvarte at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente is a beer garden where micheladas are the entire point. The name gives it away. Under MX$100, camarones on the menu, tamarind running through the drink options, open daily from 1:30 in the afternoon with extended hours on Friday and Saturday until 10:30pm. Nearly 900 reviews at 4.7 stars. Narvarte rewards walking, and Michelanga is the kind of focused, low-cost spot that fits the neighborhood's rhythm. Bring a group. Of these four, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle is the one I'd watch most closely. The numbers suggest it's pulling in non-vegans on the strength of the cooking, which is harder to sustain than a concept that only appeals to people already looking for plant-based food. If that crossover holds, Del Valle might have something worth following. Go in, order whatever sounds strangest, and find out.

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Peruvian tortas and sandwiches at La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla in Polanco, Ciudad de MéxicoLate Night

Eating Late in Ciudad de México

CDMX doesn't close. Here are the spots to hit when it's past midnight and you're still hungry — from Polanco Italian that runs to 1 AM to a Nápoles live music bar that's the last one standing.

After 10 PM, Insurgentes changes character. The microbuses keep running, taco carts glow under bare fluorescent bulbs, and somewhere on Álvaro Obregón a bar has hit its stride for the night. The stretch between Nápoles and Polanco doesn't empty. It recalibrates. The lunch-crowd energy cools into something slower. People here came out because they meant to, not because they had somewhere to be. CDMX has more places open past 10 than most cities know what to do with, and the good ones know exactly who they're waiting for. Start in Polanco if you want dinner with your late night. 50 Friends at Av. Emilio Castelar 95 stays open until midnight Sunday through Wednesday, and until 1 AM Thursday through Saturday. Italian restaurant, proper kitchen, well over a thousand reviews at 4.7. The after-dinner crowd here tends to become the after-bar crowd without anyone leaving the table. Order the chocolate pizza if someone in your group raises an eyebrow about it. The room on a Thursday at midnight has the feel of people deciding to have one more glass, then having two. Around the corner at Emilio Castelar 111, La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla is the Polanco stop before the night really starts. Peruvian sandwiches: suckling pig and pork rind tortas served with Inca Kola and purple chicha. The confirmed closing time is 10 PM on Mondays, which makes this a pre-drinks stop rather than a post-bar rescue. Eat here first if you're starting in Polanco. On weekends, if you're in Granada and need burgers before midnight, Chubbies at Lago Andromaco 17 closes at 11:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Fast kitchen, smashed patties, the crowd that's fueling up between the first bar and wherever comes next. Weekdays they close at 9:30, so late-night options here are weekend-only. The Insurgentes corridor runs later. Torito Sports Bar at Insurgentes Centro 1020 goes until 1 AM on Thursdays and Saturdays, 1:30 AM on Fridays. Stadium energy, loud, the kind of place that fills up with Benito Juárez regulars who work nearby and stay nearby. Micheladas are the reason people come. Tortilla soup is what gets ordered when it's past midnight and things get serious. Eight hundred-plus reviews at 4.8, which is not an accident. When the rest of the city is calling it a night, LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles is still open. Live music bar, Wednesday through Saturday, 8 PM to 1 AM. Son cubano and standup comedy nights, a drink menu called los tragos at prices that won't hurt the way Polanco does. Over a thousand reviews at 4.8, built by people who found this bar once and never stopped coming back. At midnight on a Saturday this place is packed and loud, which is exactly what the city sounds like when it's working right. When everything else has closed, Nápoles has this.

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Martina Fonda Fina restaurant in San Miguel ChapultepecBudget Eats

Budget CDMX: Eating Well for Under MX$100

From chilaquiles in Chapultepec to comida corrida in Nápoles, these are the places that keep your bill under MX$100 and your plate full.

A budget meal in CDMX has a ceiling: MX$100 per person. Below that number, the city feeds you well. Full breakfast plates, comida corrida with multiple courses, French-style pastries, afternoon snacks. It all comes in under that number at the right places. The spots below hold at MX$100 or below, rated above 4.4 stars, reviewed hundreds of times each. Not obscure. But not on the tourist circuit either. Mornings split two ways. Martina Fonda Fina (Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec) runs breakfast and lunch from 8:30am on weekdays, closing at 5pm, and Saturday until 2:30pm. The kitchen does chilaquiles and has strong vegetarian options. Reviewers keep noting the "accessible" pricing and "health food" angle. For a fonda at this price point, the vegetarian menu sets it apart. Everything under MX$100 per person. Come before noon for the full range. In Roma Norte, Vulevú Bakery (Córdoba 234) opens at 7:45am Tuesday through Saturday. Almond croissants, kouign amann, pain au chocolat, focaccia, and the crookie that's been circulating on every food account in the city. A pastry and a matcha latte runs under MX$100. Roma Norte coffee shops routinely charge more for less. This is the better option. For the midday meal, El Regreso (Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles) is open every day from 10am to 7:30pm. The menu covers swiss enchiladas, red mole enchiladas, cochinita, chile en nogada in season, milanesas, and soups that rotate through the week (the chicken broth is the one reviewers mention most). Nearly 1,900 ratings at 4.5 stars. Under MX$100 for a full comida plate, which for this neighborhood and this quality is a good deal. The place does Mexican cooking without shortcuts or reinvention, and the crowd it draws is mostly local. For something different in the afternoon, La Santa (C. Gabino Barreda 83, San Rafael) runs an Argentinian kitchen. Empanadas, chimichurri, alfajor, and a clerico when you want something cold to drink. Open from 2pm on weekdays, 3pm Sundays, staying later on Fridays and Saturdays. San Rafael doesn't get much tourist foot traffic, which keeps both the atmosphere and the prices honest. Under MX$100 per person. Later, Pipiris Fries (Calle A Mz. VII, Educación, Coyoacán) opens at 3pm in a residential part of the borough that most visitors don't find. Macho fries, pulled pork fries, jalapeño poppers, boneless hot, and milkshakes with floated ice cream. Monthly specials rotate through. Open until 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Everything under MX$100. The people who know this place aren't going to advertise it. The single best-value meal in CDMX: the swiss enchiladas at El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles. Under MX$100. A full plate with proper sauce, the kind of cooking that keeps a place open for decades. Nearly 1,900 people have reviewed it. They keep returning.

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Ramen bowl at Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle in Col del Valle Sur, Ciudad de MéxicoCity Top Spots

Six Places Worth Building a Day Around in CDMX

From budget beer gardens in Narvarte to live son cubano in Nápoles at midnight, a practical guide to eating and drinking across Ciudad de México.

CDMX has over 3,000 restaurants inside city limits, and what separates it from every other Mexican city isn't the number, it's the density and the timing. Narvarte runs on a different clock from Polanco, which runs differently from Coyoacán. You can eat a budget lunch at 3pm in Educación, cross into Benito Juárez for dinner by 8, and find yourself in Nápoles at midnight listening to live son cubano. This guide covers six places worth building a day around. For the afternoon, the two cheapest options sit at opposite ends of the city. Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente) is a beer garden where micheladas are the reason people come and camarones with tamarind drinks are the reason they stay. Opens 1:30pm every day, until 9pm on weekdays and 10:30pm on weekends, under MX$100 per person. Down in Coyoacán, Pipiris Fries (Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación) does loaded fries with pulled pork and jalapeño poppers, alongside bolognese pasta and monthly specials. Also under MX$100, open from 3pm. Dinner in Polanco and Del Valle runs a bit higher. Chubbies (Lago Andromaco 17, Granada) has 1,196 reviews at 4.8 stars, and people mention how efficiently the place runs, which in CDMX burger culture counts for something. Open from 12:30pm daily, kitchen open until 11:30pm Friday and Saturday. Budget MX$100–200. A few kilometers south, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle (Félix Cuevas 835, Col del Valle Sur) is the rare all-vegan ramen spot with over 1,100 Google reviews. The orange chicken ramen alongside ginger ale is what people come back for. Open 2–9pm daily, same price range as Chubbies. For a long evening with a game on, Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes (Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Insurgentes San Borja) is the stadium-atmosphere option on Insurgentes. Mojitos and tortilla soup are the staples, the michelada selection is strong, and 816 reviews at 4.8 stars means the place delivers consistently. Open weekdays from 12:30pm and until 1:30am on Fridays. MX$100–200. The best late-night pick has a catch: LOS DE ARRIBA (Maricopa 10, Nápoles) only opens Wednesday through Saturday, 8pm to 1am. It's a live music bar where son cubano is the main draw, with standup comedy nights folded in. Tickets required, so check before you go. 1,357 reviews at 4.8 stars is exceptional for a place open four nights a week. One workable day: arrive at Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán around 3pm (under MX$100 for snacks and drinks), then move north to Michelanga Narvarte in Benito Juárez for the late afternoon. Dinner either at Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas (closes at 9pm, plan accordingly) or at Chubbies in Granada if you're staying north. Wednesday through Saturday, the night ends at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles, which picks up after 10pm and runs until 1am.

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Dining room at Martina Fonda Fina in San Miguel ChapultepecTop 5

The 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México Right Now

Ciudad de México has hundreds of places worth eating at, and these five beat them all. Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán leads a list that runs from breakfast fondas to Roma Norte courtyard dinners.

Ciudad de México has more good restaurants per square kilometer than anywhere else in the country, which means the bad ones get filtered out fast. My #1 pick this year is Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán, a loaded-fry operation that holds a 4.7 rating and outscores every other restaurant I looked at across the city. 1. Pipiris Fries Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán | MX$1–100 The score is 98.2. Not a rounding error. Pipiris Fries earns it with focus: macho fries, jalapeño poppers, bolognese pasta over potatoes, pulled pork, boneless steak, and floated ice cream milkshakes. Everything stays under MX$100. Over 700 reviews at 4.7 stars is a wide consensus, not a small fan base gaming the algorithm. The one real limitation: doors open at 3pm daily, so there is no lunch service. If you have a free afternoon or evening, this is the best eating value in CDMX. 2. Martina Fonda Fina Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo | Under $100 Martina scores 97.0 and owns the morning shift. This breakfast and midday spot in the quiet residential streets of San Miguel Chapultepec draws professionals headed toward Paseo de la Reforma. Chilaquiles and vegetarian plates on a health-forward menu, all under $100 per person. Monday through Saturday from 8:30am, closing at 5pm on weekdays and 2:30pm on Saturdays, closed Sundays. Over 500 reviews at 4.5 stars is hard to earn for a neighborhood spot that keeps these hours. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA Armada de Mexico 1494, Cafetales, Coyoacán | MX$1–100 Los Compayes scores lower than Martina (96.6 vs 97.0) but the rating is higher: 4.6 versus 4.5. That gap is why it sits third and not second. What you get: birria, consome, pork ribs, tacos, asada, nachos, and cold beer in Coapa, all under MX$100. Open from 10am on weekends and 1pm weekdays. Cafetales has no tourist traffic, which is exactly why the food stays consistent. 4. Broka Zacatecas 126, Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc | $$ Broka scores 96.4 and is a more interesting restaurant than anything else at that number. Roma Norte on Zacatecas, courtyard setting, a serious mezcal list. The menu moves between gnocchi, soft shell crab, European rabbit, and dulce de leche for dessert. Over 1,500 reviews at 4.4 stars. Closed Tuesdays. Dinner nightly otherwise, with weekend brunch starting at 10am. The honest weakness: it costs more than the top three, and if budget is the constraint, skip it. For dinner in one of the city's most active dining neighborhoods, this is the best option on the list. 5. Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol C. Valentín Gómez Farías 67, San Rafael, Cuauhtémoc | $$ El Sol lands fifth by score (96.1), but the 4.6 rating ties Los Compayes for second-best on this list. The menu is the most traditionally Mexican here: chiles en nogada, pork shank, pibil snapper, arrachera, and chamorros. There is a vegetarian version of the stuffed peppers. Noon to 7pm Tuesday through Sunday, closed Mondays. San Rafael sits between Santa María la Ribera and Colonia Roma, a calm older neighborhood. This is the place for a long afternoon comida with no posturing. If you only try one, go to Pipiris Fries on a weeknight. Order the macho fries. Plan to stay longer than you intended.

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Broka

star4.4

Bistró de ambiente cálido con terraza interior, que tiene un menú a la carta y otro variable de 3 platos.

Restaurante y Banquetes El Sol

star4.6

Restaurante rústico y animado con enchiladas, platos de carne abundantes y chiles rellenos famosos.

Pipiris Fries restaurant in the Educación neighborhood of Coyoacán, Ciudad de MéxicoTop 5

The 5 Best Restaurants in Ciudad de México Right Now

Mexico City's restaurant scene is enormous. These five places are at the top of it, ranked definitively.

Mexico City has the best food of any city in the world, and the competition to hold a spot in its top tier is brutal. The winner right now is a fries spot in Coyoacán called Pipiris Fries. 1. Pipiris Fries (Educación, Coyoacán) Calle A Mz. VII Local D, in the Educación colonia south of the main Coyoacán square. Open afternoons only: 3pm weekdays, until 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. The menu covers macho fries, milkshakes, bolognese pasta, pulled pork, and jalapeño poppers. Monthly specials keep the regulars cycling through. Floated ice cream milkshakes. Boneless steak. Everything under MX$100. Why is this #1? Over 700 people gave it a 4.7 average rating. Nobody does that for a mediocre fries stand. The consistency here is remarkable for a neighborhood spot at this price. The afternoon-only hours are the only real friction: get there before 8pm on a weekday if you want a table. 2. Martina Fonda Fina (San Miguel Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo) Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61. A morning restaurant, open 8:30am to 5pm Monday through Friday, Saturday until 2:30pm, closed Sundays. Prices stay under $100. The chilaquiles are the reason to come. Vegetarian options sit alongside the heavier plates without the menu feeling confused, and the health-conscious options don't make the rest of the menu feel guilty by comparison. Martina beats LOS COMPAYES COAPA on precision: every plate is thought through. Where Compayes wins on energy and birria, Martina wins on getting breakfast exactly right. The weakness is the hours: no Sundays, nothing past 5pm. 3. LOS COMPAYES COAPA (Cafetales, Coyoacán) Armada de Mexico 1494 in the Cafetales colonia. This is the south Coyoacán that tourists don't visit, a working neighborhood where people live. The birria is the point. Order the consome alongside it. Get the tacos and pork ribs. Beer and nachos. All of it under MX$100 per person. Open from 1pm on weekdays and 10am on weekends. Broka wins on atmosphere and kitchen creativity. LOS COMPAYES wins on the food people want to eat on a Saturday afternoon. It is not trying to impress anyone. That is its strength. 4. Broka (Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc) Zacatecas 126. The only dinner restaurant in this top five. Closed Tuesdays, dinner from 5pm most nights, weekend brunch from 10am. Mid-range pricing. The courtyard is the draw. The mezcal program is excellent: the city's cocktail bars have been moving hard toward mezcal, and Broka is one of the better spots to sit with one. Gnocchi with dulce de leche. Soft shell crab and European rabbit on the menu. The kitchen has real range. Roma Norte has more restaurants competing for the same crowd than anywhere else in the city, and most of them blur together. Broka doesn't. It ranks fourth rather than higher because the dinner-focused hours leave the lunch crowd without options. 5. Toks (Lomas de Chapultepec, Miguel Hidalgo) Av. Paseo de las Palmas 239. Yes, it is a chain. No, that does not disqualify it. The Lomas de Chapultepec location has over 2,000 reviews averaging 4.4 stars, open seven days a week from 7am to 6pm with valet parking on Paseo de las Palmas. Breakfast is the category, and at $100–200 per person it costs more than everything ranked above it. What earns Toks its spot is reliability. Every morning of the week, same quality. In a city where inconsistency is the norm, that counts. It is not inventive. But it delivers, which is harder than it looks. If you eat at only one place from this list: Pipiris Fries on a Friday evening. Order the macho fries and a milkshake. Go before 10pm.

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Interior of Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle restaurant in Col del Valle, Mexico CityTrending

CDMX Right Now: Cheap, Crowded, and Winning

Six of the ten highest-scored venues in Ciudad de México cost under MX$200 per person. Here is what the numbers say about where the city's food energy is going.

Six of the ten highest-scored venues in Ciudad de México cost under MX$200 per person. That number defines the city's food scene right now. The upscale segment has fewer than 75 restaurants out of 3,200-plus total, under 3% of the city's options. Whatever CDMX is doing in food this season, it is not doing it with white tablecloths. The momentum is in casual. International formats at taquería prices Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle on Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle has 1,148 reviews and a score of 98.2. It opens at 2pm daily, closes at 9pm, and the review language is unusual for a ramen spot: "orange chicken" and "sweet and sour" flavors suggesting the kitchen is working across cuisines. A few kilometers north in Polanco, La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla is running the same logic with Peruvian street food. The suckling pig sandwich is the draw; pork rind and loin cuts fill out the menu, all in the MX$100–200 range, with Inca Kola or purple chicha to wash it down. At 786 reviews and a 98.2 score, it is one of the best-rated sandwich shops in the city. Foreign formats, local price expectations. You pay like you're at a taquería and eat like you flew somewhere. The bar scene is outpacing restaurants on review volume Three of the top ten highest-scored venues in CDMX are bars or social drinking spots. LOS DE ARRIBA at Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles leads the city with 1,357 reviews at a 98.8 score. Open Wednesday through Saturday from 8pm to 1am, it runs son cubano nights and standup comedy sets, and the reviews keep coming back to the cocktails. Torito Sports Bar on Insurgentes Centro scores the same 98.8 with 816 reviews, where micheladas and tortilla soup show up alongside stadium-level noise. Michelanga Narvarte adds 893 more at a 98.2. That is over 3,000 reviews across three bar-format venues in the top 10, more than the combined count for the pizza and burger entries. The mezcal wave in CDMX cocktail bars is not just trend journalism. These numbers say it has staying power. Cheap food operating at a high level Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán costs under MX$100 and scores 98.2 with 714 reviews. The menu covers macho fries, pulled pork, jalapeño poppers, bolognese pasta, and floated ice cream, plus monthly specials that keep regulars cycling back. La Santa is in the same price bracket at 97.6. These are not places coasting on affordability. Chubbies in Polanco, up a price tier at MX$100–200, scores 98.8 with 1,196 reviews in the burger category. Coma Pizza Polanco adds 711 reviews at 97.6. The scores across both price tiers suggest casual food in CDMX is operating at a higher level than it used to. My read on what comes next: South American street food is underrepresented given La Lucha's numbers. If a Peruvian sandwich shop can land 786 reviews at 98.2 in Polanco, the audience is there. Look for more Andean and coastal South American concepts in Roma Norte and Condesa over the next 12 months, targeting the MX$100–200 sweet spot where CDMX eaters are putting their money right now.

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Food at 50 Friends, the Italian restaurant on Emilio Castelar in PolancoTrending

Micheladas, Lima, and Late Nights: What's Moving in CDMX Right Now

The highest-scoring bars in CDMX right now are michelada temples, not cocktail bars. Here's what the numbers say about where the city's food scene is pointing.

Two of the highest-scoring spots in this city right now are built around micheladas. That is the defining trend. Not new tasting menu concepts, not celebrity chef satellites. Micheladas. Michelanga Narvarte on Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 (score 98.2, close to 900 reviews) has it down to a ritual: micheladas, camarones, tamarind, lemon, under $100 MX, open from 1:30 pm in Narvarte. A few kilometers up Insurgentes, Torito Sports Bar (score 98.8, over 800 reviews) runs the same instinct in a bigger room, with mojitos and tortilla soup sitting alongside the micheladas in an atmosphere the reviewers keep calling stadium energy. Both venues made it into the city's elite tier without any tasting menu ambitions, which says a lot about what this city is hungry for right now. The second thing happening is a Peruvian invasion, concentrated in Polanco. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla on Emilio Castelar 111 (score 98.2, nearly 800 reviews) is selling suckling pig sandwiches, tenderloin sandwiches, pork rind, purple chicha, and inca kola. The reviewer keywords are essentially a Lima street food menu. MX$100-200 per person is competitive for Polanco, and the crowds are treating it like a neighborhood fixture. This is not a fusion experiment. It is a straight Peruvian sanguche shop that the neighborhood has adopted completely. That same stretch of Emilio Castelar holds 50 Friends (score 98.2, nearly 2,000 reviews), the Italian spot that has accumulated more reviews than almost any other destination in the top tier. Open until midnight on weeknights and 1 am on weekends, it pulls crowds who want to eat late. The chocolate pizza appears in reviewer vocabulary often enough to count as a signature item. These two spots on the same block represent something bigger: Polanco has become a proving ground for cuisines that have no business being this popular but are. The third pattern is about what happens after 8 pm. LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles (score 98.8, over 1,300 reviews) only opens Wednesday through Saturday from 8 pm to 1 am. That is the entire operating schedule. Son cubano and standup comedy both appear in the reviewer vocabulary, pointing to a live performance venue that has built serious loyalty by being precise about what it is. Four nights a week, and people keep coming. The throughline across all of this is specificity. Michelanga does micheladas. La Lucha does Peruvian sandwiches. Chubbies (score 98.8, nearly 1,200 reviews) in Granada does burgers. LOS DE ARRIBA commits to live music four nights a week and nothing else. In a city with over 3,000 rated food and drink spots, the places that have carved out a clear identity are pulling the highest scores and the most repeat visits. What comes next: mezcal is taking over the cocktail bar conversation citywide, and the sports bar and beer garden formats dominating the high scores have already started absorbing cocktail thinking. Torito already has mojitos sitting alongside micheladas in reviewer sentiment. The natural evolution is a generation of cantinas where mezcal becomes the specific, central thing, the same way Michelanga treats beer.

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Food plate at 50 Friends Italian restaurant in Polanco, Mexico CityNew Openings

New in CDMX: Five Spots Already Building Their Crowd

From vegan ramen in Del Valle to a live son cubano bar in Nápoles, a cluster of recent arrivals in Mexico City has built real followings fast. Here are five worth knowing before they become obvious.

CDMX's food and nightlife moves in clusters. The past stretch has brought a wave of arrivals that feel connected even when they're not: a vegan ramen shop in Del Valle, a michelada specialist in Narvarte, a late-night son cubano bar in Nápoles, a burger spot becoming a neighborhood fixture in Granada, and an Italian kitchen in Polanco where the chocolate pizza gets mentioned more than anything else on the menu. Not every new place earns its crowd fast. These five have. The Italian kitchen at Av. Emilio Castelar 95 in Polanco, 50 Friends, has accumulated 1,859 reviews and holds at 4.7. For a restaurant that positions itself as accessible in one of the pricier corners of the city, that's a meaningful endorsement from a lot of people who presumably tried other options first. The chocolate pizza keeps surfacing in what reviewers mention. Whether it reads as dessert or novelty probably depends on the night. Open from 1pm daily, staying open until 1am Thursday through Saturday, it has the hours to match Polanco's late energy. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle at Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur has built 1,148 reviews at 4.7 with a completely plant-based menu. Open 2-9pm every day. What reviewers mention includes orange chicken and sweet and sour chicken preparations alongside the ramen, with a visual identity that leans into anime. Plant-based ramen is still a narrow category in this city, and hitting those numbers in Del Valle, a neighborhood that takes food seriously, means the kitchen found a real audience fast. Two evening options worth knowing, both in Benito Juárez. LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles opens Wednesday through Saturday at 8pm and runs until 1am. With 1,357 reviews and a 4.8 rating, this is not a spot that's still figuring itself out. Son cubano and standup comedy share the same bill, and tickets are required. The drink list (los tragos earn their own enthusiastic mentions from reviewers) is not an afterthought. Over in Narvarte, Michelanga at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 is the afternoon counterpart: a beer garden where micheladas are the main event. Camarones and tamarind keep showing up in what 893 reviewers found worth mentioning. Prices stay under $100 MXN, hours start at 1:30pm every day of the week. Chubbies Polanco at Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada has reached 1,196 reviews at 4.8. The price range sits in the $100-200 MXN bracket, fair for what reviewers describe as consistent and fast. What the crowd keeps noting is speed and taste together, a combination that turns a burger spot into a habit rather than an occasion. The padel mentions that keep appearing in reviews track with the Granada neighborhood. Open from 12:30pm daily, until 11:30pm on weekends. Of these five, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle is the one worth watching most closely. The plant-based ramen category is small enough here that doing it well carries real weight, and 1,148 reviews at 4.7 in Del Valle suggests the kitchen earned those numbers. LOS DE ARRIBA looks durable for different reasons: live music and comedy create a return reason that food alone cannot. Michelanga has the budget price point and the drink-focused afternoon niche that builds regulars. Any of these could become fixtures. Which ones do comes down to what they look like in 500 more reviews.

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50 Friends Italian restaurant in Polanco, dining roomNew Openings

CDMX New Openings: Five Spots Worth Getting In On Early

From Peruvian sanguiches in Polanco to live music in Nápoles, CDMX is adding focused concepts that know exactly what they are. Here is where to go before the lines form.

CDMX in early 2026 is adding spots that know exactly what they want to be. No sprawling menus trying to please everyone, no fuzzy concept. The places getting traction right now commit to something specific and build around it. One is Peruvian sandwiches only. Another is live music four nights a week. A third is micheladas in every variation imaginable. That specificity is what makes this moment worth paying attention to. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla Polanco on Av. Emilio Castelar 111 is one of the more interesting arrivals in Polanco's dining corridor. It is a Peruvian sanguichería where the menu revolves around suckling pig, loin, pork rind, and tenderloin prepared in the Lima style. They pour purple chicha and Inca Kola. Prices run MX$100-200. With 786 reviews at 4.7 stars, this has gotten traction fast for a neighborhood better known for Italian restaurants than Lima street food. If you have ever eaten a sanguiche at a good huarique in Miraflores and wished you could find that in CDMX, this is worth making the trip for. On the same street, 50 Friends at number 95 takes the Italian format seriously, but the detail that keeps surfacing in reviews is the chocolate pizza. That is either a gimmick or it works, and with 1,859 reviews at 4.7 stars, the answer seems clear. The kitchen runs until midnight on weekdays and until 1am on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, which makes it one of the later-closing full-service restaurants in the neighborhood. Mid-range pricing. Over in Narvarte, Michelanga on Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 has built its entire identity around the michelada. The menu covers camarones-based options, tamarind preparations, lemon-forward versions, and canned cocktails. It opens at 1:30pm and closes at 9pm on weekdays, with a later close at 10:30pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Think long afternoon into early evening, not a late-night stop. Prices stay under $100. 893 reviews at 4.7 stars. Down in Nápoles, LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10 is a live music bar running Wednesday through Saturday, 8pm to 1am, closed Sunday through Tuesday. The programming mixes standup comedy with son cubano, and more than a few reviewers use the word bohemian. Tickets required. The four-nights-only schedule is either careful curation or a practical limitation; either way, 1,357 reviews at 4.8 stars suggests it is not hurting them. Check their event listings before heading over. Also worth knowing: Chubbies Polanco at Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada is a burger spot with 4.8 stars across 1,196 reviews. Prices run $100-200. The kitchen stays open until 9:30pm on weeknights and 11:30pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Reviewers mention padel, which probably tells you something about the crowd. La Lucha has the most potential of this group. Peruvian food has been underrepresented in CDMX for a long time, and a focused sanguichería doing suckling pig and tenderloin in the Lima style, right in Polanco, is filling a real gap. 786 reviews at 4.7 stars is not nothing. Whether it holds that quality as it settles in is the open question, but the early signal is good. Go soon.

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Food spread and drinks at Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes, Mexico CityLate Night

CDMX After Dark: Where to Eat When the City Doesn't Sleep

Mexico City at 1 AM has its own economy: late kitchens, cold micheladas, live music, and a crowd that is not done yet. Here is where to find it.

After 10 PM on a Thursday, Av. Insurgentes stops being a highway and becomes something stranger. The colectivos thin out, the traffic lights blink amber, and what fills the sidewalks is a different kind of foot traffic: people who are not going home yet, people running on a second wind, people who have not decided what comes next. Nápoles and Narvarte are still lit up. The fondas closed an hour ago, but the cantinas and the live music bars are not even thinking about shutting down. Somewhere off Insurgentes toward Benito Juárez, a sports bar is still serving micheladas at midnight. This is Mexico City on its own schedule, which has nothing to do with anyone else's. LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10 in Nápoles runs Wednesday through Saturday, 8 PM to 1 AM. It is a live music bar, which means you are not here for the food alone. The crowd comes for the live sets (son cubano one night, a standup comedy show the next), and the whole operation involves an elevator that the regulars mention with a certain reverence, as if the upper level is where the real night is happening. Reviews call this place Bohemian, and that tracks: it has its own internal logic, its own hours, its own energy. You buy a ticket and find a spot. Stay for the drinks (the menu calls them los tragos) and you will understand why this is the kind of bar people become regulars at. Arrive by 10 PM if you want a seat worth keeping. Chubbies on Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada closes at 11:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. The burgers are in the MX$100–200 range, the kind that close out a night rather than start one. The crowd comes in off the padel courts and nearby bars, efficient and hungry. More than 1,100 reviews at 4.8 is not an accident. Get there by 11 PM if you want to eat without the kitchen packing up around you. Earlier in the evening, Michelanga on Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte handles the pre-midnight hours. Friday and Saturday closing time is 10:30 PM, which makes it a starting point rather than an ending one. Under MX$100 for micheladas with tamarind and lemon, camarones alongside, all of it served with the kind of casual efficiency that Narvarte does better than almost anywhere else in the city. It is the setup spot for a longer night, not the destination. Come here at 8 PM, stay until they close, then move. By 1 AM on a Friday, your options get specific. Torito Sports Bar at Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020 in Insurgentes San Borja closes at 1:30 AM on Fridays (the latest in this guide), and at 1 AM on Thursdays and Saturdays. The mojitos and micheladas have kept people in their seats since well before midnight, but at this hour it is the tortilla soup that earns its keep. Insurgentes Centro at 1 AM has a different texture than Polanco. No pretense, no waiting for a table. Only the bar and whatever game is still running on the screens. Over 800 reviews at 4.8 stars. Torito is consistent in the way that matters most when the night has run long and you need somewhere to land. The late-night question in Mexico City is always the same: what is still open and how far do I have to go? Torito on Insurgentes answers both at once. Walk in and order the tortilla soup. Sit at the bar and watch whoever else is still out at this hour. Figure out the rest from there. At 1:30 AM on a Friday in Mexico City, this counts as a plan.

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Food menu items at Torito Sports Bar on Av. Insurgentes Centro, open until 1:30 AM on Friday nightsLate Night

Mexico City After Dark: Where to Eat Past Midnight

Mexico City's kitchen lights don't all go out at 10 PM. From a live music bar in Nápoles to a sports bar on Insurgentes that closes at 1:30 AM, here are the places worth knowing when the night runs long.

After 10 PM, Mexico City doesn't sleep. It changes gear. Insurgentes stays packed: cars queuing at convenience stores, taco stands still drawing a line past 11. The smell of corn tortillas warming on a comal somewhere on the street. In Polanco, the later tables are the best ones. In Nápoles, someone is always just getting started. The city runs on a dinner culture that starts late and stays late. You can eat at midnight here, you can eat at 1 AM, and this is the short list of places worth knowing. Los de Arriba on Maricopa 10 in Nápoles is where you go if you want the whole night in one room. It opens at 8 PM Wednesday through Saturday and closes at 1 AM. Son cubano and standup comedy on the program, a Bohemian crowd that came for the music. Over a thousand reviews at 4.8 stars, the kind of reputation that builds from people telling other people. The mezcal is the thing and the music is the reason. Order los tragos when you arrive. Get tickets in advance on Fridays. The energy peaks after 11 when the early crowd has moved on and the serious people are still there. Over in Polanco, 50 Friends on Av. Emilio Castelar 95 is one of the rare Italian restaurants with the sense to keep the kitchen going late. Sunday through Wednesday it closes at midnight. Thursday through Saturday it runs until 1 AM. The chocolate pizza is the signature, gets mentioned by nearly everyone who has been, and earns it. Reviews tag this place as "ideal" and "accessible" for a neighborhood where comparable spots stop seating by 10:30. For a mid-range spend in one of the city's pricier colonias, it is the late-night value play in Polanco. The latest closer in this guide is Torito Sports Bar on Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, in Insurgentes San Borja. Friday nights until 1:30 AM. Saturday and Thursday until 1 AM. The menu runs mojitos, micheladas, tortilla soup, and enough bar food to keep you going past midnight. Loud place, screens always up, nobody looking at you for ordering a full plate at 1 in the morning. Over 800 reviews at 4.8 stars and prices in the 100-200 peso range. On a major avenue with late-night transit, it is where the after-bar crowd lands when the night runs long. For an earlier stop in Granada, Chubbies on Lago Andromaco 17 closes at 11:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Burgers in the 100-200 peso range and nearly 1200 reviews at 4.8 stars. Know about it if you're eating between 10 and 11 PM and everything in Polanco proper is already at capacity. When it is 1 AM and the question is where, Torito is the answer. Open until 1:30 AM on Fridays, on Insurgentes, easy to reach when the night has run long. This is where the after-bar crowd lands because Av. Insurgentes is the natural gathering point for anyone still out in Benito Juárez and beyond. Get the micheladas. Order the tortilla soup. Stay until they ask you to leave.

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Food and drinks at Michelanga Narvarte beer garden in Narvarte Poniente, Mexico CityBudget Eats

Eating Well in CDMX for Under MX$100

Mexico City's budget food scene runs deep: from chilaquiles in Chapultepec to taco árabe in Azcapotzalco, a full meal costs well under MX$100 at every stop on this list.

In Mexico City, MX$100 is the number to hold in your head. That's roughly five dollars, and at that ceiling you can have a full breakfast with coffee, a generous plate of tacos árabes with jocoque, or two hours of afternoon micheladas without feeling the damage. The city has more than a thousand budget-priced spots, and the competition is intense enough that poor cheap food doesn't last long. Quality has a floor here, and it's higher than most places. Breakfast: Martina Fonda Fina Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61 in San Miguel Chapultepec. Martina Fonda Fina runs Monday through Friday from 8:30am to 5pm, Saturday until 2:30pm, closed Sunday, which tells you who eats here. The kitchen does chilaquiles and vegetarian-forward plates without the joyless presentation that usually comes with that description. Full breakfast well under MX$100. Weekend visitors need to plan elsewhere. Bakery Run: Vulevú Bakery On Córdoba 234 in Roma Norte, Vulevú opens at 7:45am (closed Mondays). The almond croissant and kouign amann are what people come back for. Add a lemon tart and a matcha latte and you're at a fraction of what the same pastry runs two neighborhoods over in Polanco. 4.6 stars across nearly 1,400 reviews, MX$1–100. Lunch Worth a Metro Ride: Tacos Árabes La Türka Most visitors skip Azcapotzalco entirely. Go anyway. Tacos Árabes La Türka on Calz. Camarones 80-E is the locals' spot this article asked you to find. The taco árabe is the order: slow-cooked meat folded into khubz bread with jocoque on the side, a Puebla-origin format that settled permanently into the city's northern colonias. They also run falafel and cemitas. Open from 11am daily, MX$1–100, nearly 950 reviews at 4.5 stars. No tourist buses make this detour, and the prices reflect that. Afternoon: Michelanga Narvarte Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente. The concept is micheladas built to order. Tamarind and lemon on the rim, camarones as a side. Open from 1:30pm daily (10:30pm on weekends). Almost 900 reviews at 4.7 stars, MX$1–100 across the board. The crowd is neighborhood regulars and office workers. You can park here for two hours and spend less than one cocktail at a rooftop bar in Roma Norte. Evening: Pipiris Fries Calle A Mz. VII Local D in Coyoacán's Educación neighborhood, open from 3pm daily. The macho fries with pulled pork are the house move. Jalapeño poppers add heat when you want it, and the monthly specials rotate enough to warrant repeat visits. Portions are large. 714 reviews at 4.7 stars, all within MX$100. Also Worth Your Time: La Santa C. Gabino Barreda 83 in San Rafael. This is an Argentine-influenced spot. Order the empanadas with chimichurri. The alfajores handle dessert, and if you want something to drink, the clericó (wine punch with fruit) is the move. Open Tuesday through Thursday 2–9pm, Friday and Saturday 2–10pm, Sunday 3–8pm. Closed Mondays. Under MX$100, 639 reviews at 4.6 stars. The spinach empanada with chimichurri is what reviewers keep coming back to mention. The single best-value meal in Mexico City: The taco árabe at La Türka in Azcapotzalco. Khubz bread, slow-cooked meat, jocoque. Under MX$100. The neighborhood keeps prices honest and the kitchen has no choice but to deliver. One dish, one address: Calz. Camarones 80-E.

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Pipiris Fries restaurant in Coyoacán, Ciudad de MéxicoCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in Ciudad de México: A Local's Practical Guide

Six places across Polanco, Del Valle, Coyoacán, and Nápoles that cover every hour and every budget. This is where locals go.

Mexico City doesn't work the way other cities do. The place that looks like nothing from outside will have forty people in line by noon. The Italian restaurant in Polanco will still be seating tables past midnight. You can spend MX$80 on fries in Coyoacán and MX$300 on dinner in Granada, and both choices will feel correct. The altitude does something to your appetite here, and the sheer density of options across dozens of colonias can be paralyzing without a plan. Here's one. Afternoon: Polanco and Granada Chubbies at Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada is the burger spot that makes people drive across the city. Close to 1,200 reviews and a 4.8 rating. Prices are $100–200 MXN, open daily from 12:30 pm until 9:30 pm on weeknights and 11:30 pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Granada sits just east of Polanco, walkable from Polanco metro if you head toward Lago Alberto. Arrive by 1 pm if you want to skip the wait. For dinner in the same area, 50 Friends at Av. Emilio Castelar 95 handles the Italian side of things. Nearly 1,900 reviews at 4.7 stars. The chocolate pizza has its own reputation in Polanco. Open from 1 pm daily, until midnight on weekdays and 1 am on weekends. The price range puts it above Chubbies on cost, though not dramatically. Good for groups who want to settle in for the evening. Sports and Soup: Insurgentes Torito Sports Bar at Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020 in Benito Juárez has over 800 reviews at a 4.8 rating, which is striking for a sports bar. The menu runs to micheladas, mojitos, tortilla soup, and whatever game is showing. Open Monday through Saturday from 12:30 pm, until 1 or 1:30 am on Thursdays and Fridays. Closed Sundays. Prices in the $100–200 MXN range. Don't skip the tortilla soup. Something Different: Del Valle Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur is open every day from 2 to 9 pm. Over 1,100 reviews at 4.7 stars, prices in the MX$100–200 range. The orange chicken and sweet and sour options come up again and again in what people mention. Del Valle is easy from Roma Norte via Metrobus on Insurgentes, or a short Uber. If you've been eating tacos at every meal for three days running, this is how you reset without leaving the city. Budget Pick: Coyoacán Pipiris Fries on Calle A Mz. VII in Educación, Coyoacán, is the cheapest spot on this list. Prices stay under MX$100 for macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, milkshakes, and monthly specials. Open from 3 pm daily, until 10 pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Over 700 reviews at 4.7 stars. Coyoacán is worth the trip south on its own; eating here before heading back north is a reasonable way to end an afternoon. Late Night: Nápoles LOS DE ARRIBA at Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles is open Wednesday through Saturday, 8 pm to 1 am. Over 1,350 reviews at a 4.8 rating. Live music and son cubano, with standup comedy on certain evenings. Closing Sunday through Tuesday is part of what keeps the quality up. Nápoles is centrally placed between Polanco and Coyoacán, easy from anywhere in the city. Come for the music; stay as long as they'll have you. One Day in CDMX Start in Coyoacán at 3 pm at Pipiris Fries (under MX$100). Uber north to Del Valle for ramen at Mei (MX$100–200, closes at 9 pm). Head to Polanco or Granada for late dinner at 50 Friends or Chubbies. If it's Wednesday through Saturday and you still have energy, end the night at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles. Four neighborhoods, prices ranging from under MX$100 to the mid range, and enough variety that no two hours feel the same. That's a full day in this city.

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Michelanga Narvarte beer garden on Av. Cuauhtémoc in Narvarte PonienteCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in Ciudad de México

From Peruvian sandwiches in Polanco to live music in Nápoles, a practical eating guide to CDMX's best spots across neighborhoods and price ranges.

Mexico City runs on food. Not the way every travel piece says it does, but in the way that the debate over the best torta ahogada gets treated with the seriousness of constitutional law, and where neighborhoods are defined as much by their kitchens as their streets. What separates eating in CDMX is the layering: on a single block in Polanco you can move from a Peruvian sandwich counter to an Italian place doing chocolate pizza. Budget spots under MX$100 share buildings with restaurants where the tab hits MX$600. Both have lines. On Av. Emilio Castelar in Polanco, two spots sit within 50 meters of each other and cover opposite ends of a good afternoon. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla (Emilio Castelar 111, Local F) is a Peruvian sandwich operation. The suckling pig sandwich and the tenderloin are the anchors; get the purple chicha or an Inca Kola alongside. Prices run MX$100–200. A few doors down, 50 Friends (number 95) is Italian, open from 1pm until midnight most nights and an hour later Thursday through Saturday. The chocolate pizza is a recurring topic in the reviews. Both places lean toward dinner crowds, but the street works fine for a 2pm stop after a morning in the area. Five minutes west in Granada (Miguel Hidalgo), Chubbies Polanco at Lago Andromaco 17 does burgers with a marmalade component that shows up in nearly every review. It opens at 12:30pm daily, closes at 9:30pm weekdays and 11:30pm Friday–Saturday, and the operation moves fast. MX$100–200. The benches fill up after 7pm on weekends. Southeast in Benito Juárez, the price drops considerably. Michelanga Narvarte at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente is a beer garden where everything is under MX$100. The micheladas are the draw, especially the tamarind and lemon variants. Camarones are on the menu if you need food alongside. Opens at 1:30pm, closes at 9pm weekdays and 10:30pm Friday–Saturday. The neighborhood is quieter than Polanco; afternoons here stretch. A short distance north on Insurgentes, Torito Sports Bar at Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020 takes the format seriously. The tortilla soup has its own following in the reviews; so do the mojitos. MX$100–200, closed Sundays, open from 12:30pm most days with late nights running Thursday through Saturday. The Insurgentes Metro station on Line 1 is close. For the evening, LOS DE ARRIBA at Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles is only open Wednesday through Saturday, 8pm to 1am. It programs son cubano and Bohemian sets; standup comedy nights are in the rotation too. The name is literal: you go upstairs. The ££ pricing reflects that the music is the point. Show up after 9pm when the room is running. One-day route: Midday in Polanco at La Lucha for a Peruvian sandwich, then walk 50 meters to 50 Friends for pizza and a drink (they open at 1pm, so the timing works). Take Metro Line 7 south from Polanco toward Insurgentes; Michelanga Narvarte on Cuauhtémoc is your late-afternoon stop, and Torito on Insurgentes follows for early evening. If it's Wednesday through Saturday, end at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles. The 8pm start gives you time to eat before the music takes over.

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Peruvian sandwiches at La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla in PolancoTrending

What CDMX Is Actually Eating Right Now

Peruvian sandwiches outscoring fine dining, live music bars pulling restaurant-level reviews, and a pizza cluster taking over Polanco. The city's food momentum is casual, specific, and accelerating.

CDMX is not eating fancy right now. Upscale venues make up just over 2% of the city's rated spots — and none of them land in the top 10 by quality score. The highest-performing places are a burger counter in Granada, a Peruvian sandwich shop in Polanco, a vegan ramen spot in Del Valle. The casual format has won. Everything else is catching up. The International Casual Counter Is Dominating The Peruvian moment has gone from curious to undeniable. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla on Emilio Castelar in Polanco is pulling 786 reviews at 4.7 stars with a 98.2 quality score — top tier for a city this size. It's not a restaurant. It's a counter doing lechón sándwiches, lomo fino, chicha morada, and Inca Kola. Pure Lima lunch stop energy. You order, you eat, you go. That it's scoring at the very top of the city says something specific about where tastes are heading. The pattern holds elsewhere. Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle has cleared 1,100 reviews at 4.7 stars and a 98.2 score. It's plant-based Japanese in a residential neighborhood, and it works because the food is actually ramen — not some fusion compromise. Chubbies Polanco in Granada is right there with it: 1,196 reviews, 4.8 stars, a 98.8 score, burgers for MX$100–200. These aren't small niche spots. They're pulling review volume that most traditional restaurants never reach. Entertainment Venues as Food Destinations LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles opens Wednesday through Saturday at 8pm. It has 1,357 reviews at a 98.8 score — for a venue that's only open four nights a week. Inside it's son cubano and standup comedy with drinks that reviewers keep calling "ideal." This is not a bar you end up in after dinner. It's the reason people go out. Torito Sports Bar on Insurgentes Centro has 816 reviews at 4.8 stars, also scoring 98.8. Reviewers describe the food as "la verdad" — the real deal. Micheladas, tortilla soup, open until 1:30am on Fridays. The bar-with-serious-food model is scoring as well as any standalone restaurant right now, and that's new. Pizza Has Taken Over Polanco Three pizza and Italian concepts are in the city's top 10, all within decimal points of each other by score. 50 Friends on Emilio Castelar leads with 1,859 reviews — the highest count of any business in this ranking — at 4.7 stars and a 98.2 score. Reviewers mention "chocolate pizza." That is not a typo. Farina Polanco has 1,521 reviews at 97.6. Coma Pizza Polanco sits at the same score with 711 reviews. All three in the same neighborhood. Polanco is a pizza cluster and it's only getting more concentrated. What Comes Next If Peruvian sandwiches can score at this level in a city this size, the appetite for other Latin American regional formats is real. The casual counter model — intensely specific, unapologetically foreign — is working here at scale. Colombian and Brazilian street concepts are the obvious next move. And given where Vegan Ramen Mei is heading, the first plant-based taquería that commits fully to one format rather than trying to appeal to everyone will probably be the one that breaks through.

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Cocktails and food at LOS DE ARRIBA live music bar in Nápoles, CDMXLate Night

Night Shift: Where to Eat in CDMX After the Bars Close

From a Nápoles live music bar to the last kitchen standing on Insurgentes, these are your options when the clock hits midnight and the hunger hits harder.

After 10 PM, Insurgentes becomes a different road. The Metrobús runs less often, and the taqueros near Doctores have their coal going and their mise en place ready — feeding the people who just finished second shift. In Nápoles, Maricopa street looks quiet from the outside until you hear the sound spilling out of the building halfway down the block. In Polanco and Granada, dinner service has ended but people are still outside, still moving, not entirely sure what comes next. CDMX at night is the same city with different things open. It just shifted. Before midnight: Chubbies Polanco — Lago Andrómaco 17, Granada. Open until 11:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. If your night is still forming, Chubbies is the burger stop between wherever you were and wherever the evening is going. The kitchen runs fast — reviewers specifically praise the speed, the heat in the food, a burger with marmalade that people mention by name. Nearly 1,200 reviews at 4.8. It closes at 11:30 PM on weekends, which means you need to be seated by 11:15 or you're standing on Lago Andrómaco watching them flip the sign. Come here before the bars, not after. The heart of the night: LOS DE ARRIBA — Maricopa 10, Nápoles. Open 8 PM to 1 AM, Wednesday through Saturday. This is the best live music bar in a neighborhood full of bars that think they are. Son cubano some nights, standup comedy on others — the programming rotates but the Bohemian crowd stays regardless. The drinks are the main event (los tragos, as the regulars call them), and the vibe is the kind that makes you forget you had somewhere else to be. Over 1,300 reviews at 4.8, earned by people who wanted you to find the place. Some nights require advance tickets, especially Fridays and Saturdays when the room fills before the doors are fully open. Closed Sunday through Tuesday — so if you're there on a Wednesday, you either planned ahead or you got lucky. Last bar standing: Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes — Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020. Open until 1 AM Thursday, 1:30 AM Friday, 1 AM Saturday. Friday night, 1 AM. Most of Insurgentes has called it. Torito has not. This sports bar in Insurgentes San Borja runs until 1:30 AM on Fridays — the last formal kitchen standing in this stretch of the city. The tortilla soup at that hour is genuinely good. Micheladas by the glass and by the pitcher, pricing accessible enough that you'll order a second round without doing the mental math. Stadium energy comes from the screens and the crowd equally — by midnight it's the after-bar overflow from Roma and Doctores, people who aren't ready to commit to going home. Reviewers mention the environment and the pricing, and one of them put the whole thing in two words: "la verdad." After 1:30 AM When Torito calls last round and empties onto Insurgentes, the city switches to its final mode. The taco stands around Doctores and along the radial avenues come fully into their own after 2 AM — coal smoke and cash, no app. Every regular in this city has their madrugada taquero. These stands don't need a listing. You find them by the smoke and the small crowd that already knows where to go. Tonight, that's you.

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Peruvian-style sandwich at La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla in Polanco, Ciudad de MéxicoNew Openings

New in CDMX: The Spots Worth Getting to Early

From Peruvian sandwiches in Polanco to vegan ramen in Del Valle, a handful of focused, conviction-driven spots have landed in CDMX and are already building serious followings.

Something has been shifting in CDMX's restaurant scene. The big splashy openings still happen, but the places generating real word-of-mouth right now are compact, focused, and genuinely committed to one thing. Peruvian sandwiches in Polanco. Vegan ramen in Del Valle. A michelada bar in Narvarte that treats the drink as seriously as a cocktail bar treats its spirits. A live music room in Nápoles that cracked the Wednesday night problem. Here's what to try while it's still early. La Lucha Sangúcheria Criolla arrived at Av. Emilio Castelar 111 in Polanco and apparently didn't need to advertise. It already has 786 reviews at 4.7 — fast traction for a concept this specific. The menu is Peruvian: suckling pig sandwiches, tenderloin tortas, pork loin in a proper roll, washed down with Inca Kola or purple chicha morada. Reviewers keep coming back to the suckling pig and the chicha specifically, which tells you those are the first orders. At MX$100–200 in Polanco, this one's going to get crowded. Go now, before it does. On Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur, Vegan Ramen Mei has built something that most plant-based restaurants miss: a place people love for the food, not the label. Over 1,100 reviews at 4.7 is not a novelty effect. Keywords from early visitors mention orange chicken, ginger, sweet and sour — Japanese technique adapted with enough depth that you don't sit there thinking about what's missing. Open daily from 2 to 9 PM, they've positioned themselves perfectly for a late-afternoon bowl when the neighborhood quiets. Del Valle has figured this place out. Now you have too. Michelanga on Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 in Narvarte Poniente is a beer garden dedicated to the michelada — not the kind where they hand you Clamato and charge extra for the ice. Reviewers call out tamarind, lemon, camarones, cans — a proper craft michelada menu with real options. Under MX$100, open every day from 1:30 PM. At 893 reviews and 4.7 stars, Narvarte has already claimed it. If you're in the neighborhood on a slow afternoon, this is where you go. LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10 in Nápoles only opens Wednesday through Saturday, 8 PM to 1 AM. What you get: live music, son cubano, standup comedy, drinks called "los tragos." Reviews mention a Bohemian atmosphere, the urgency of "pronto," tickets — the picture is a room that fills up fast and expects you to be ready. With 1,357 reviews at 4.8, it's the highest-rated spot in this batch. Mezcal is taking over CDMX's bar scene right now, and live music rooms with conviction are riding that same energy. Thursday nights here sound like a plan. The one with the most upside right now is La Lucha. Peruvian cooking has been creeping into CDMX for years, but a dedicated sangúcheria at this price in Polanco fills a genuine gap — 786 reviews already is strong early momentum, and the suckling pig sandwich is exactly the kind of thing that travels by word of mouth. Vegan Ramen Mei is the quiet overachiever: 1,148 reviews for a plant-based ramen spot in Del Valle is not something you predict. Both are worth visiting now, before the lines become part of the story.

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Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes interior and bar areaLate Night

CDMX After Dark: Where to Eat Past Midnight

After 10 PM, the city doesn't slow down — it shifts gears. From Polanco burgers before midnight to a live music bar in Nápoles that runs until 1 AM, here's where to eat when the rest of the city has called it a night.

After 10 PM, something changes on Insurgentes. The taco carts that were quiet at 7 suddenly have lines again. The Metrobús keeps running. On Emilio Castelar in Polanco, restaurants that were half-empty at 9 fill up as the post-concert crowd arrives — people who had dinner elsewhere and want somewhere to land, or people who skipped dinner entirely and are now paying for it. Colonia Nápoles turns from a quiet mid-century street grid into something with a pulse. Mexico City does not have one nighttime — it has several, running in parallel across a city that treats midnight like late afternoon. Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco in Granada closes at 11:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Get there before 11. The burgers here are among the most-reviewed in the city and the reputation holds — this is not a place that coasts on attention, it earns it. If you are coming from a bar in Granada or the WTC area, this is the stop before things get fully serious. On Emilio Castelar 95, 50 Friends has a longer runway: midnight every day, 1 AM on Thursdays and Saturdays. Italian in Polanco can go either way, but the chocolate pizza here is worth ordering at any hour. The crowd at 11 PM on a Thursday is a particular CDMX type — suits that have loosened, couples on dates that started at 9 and are not ready to end. Nearly two thousand reviews later, it still manages to feel like a neighborhood restaurant instead of a production. Torito Sports Bar at Insurgentes Centro 1020 keeps the kitchen going until 1 AM on Thursdays and Saturdays, 1:30 AM on Fridays. Micheladas arrive cold and the mojitos are strong. Order the tortilla soup — it is exactly what you want after three hours somewhere else. The place is loud and communal, screens showing whatever match is on, a crowd that came to eat and drink and stay a while. Insurgentes runs the full length of the city and always has taxis; Torito is a practical anchor point for late nights that started anywhere from Condesa to San Ángel. LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10 in Nápoles opens at 8 PM and does not close until 1 AM, Wednesday through Saturday. This is a live music venue — son cubano, standup comedy, Bohemian sessions, and whatever else whoever is on stage decides to play — and the crowd comes for the show, not as a backup plan. Reviewers keep mentioning los tragos, the cocktails, and rightly so. There is an elevator, which sounds like a minor detail until you realize the whole night happens upstairs. The place fills fast after 9 and the energy stays until last call. If you are going to end a Friday in CDMX with music still playing, Nápoles — specifically Maricopa — is where you aim. Nothing in this roundup stays open past 1:30 AM. Torito on Insurgentes on a Friday night is the latest you can realistically eat and drink — kitchen open, cocktails coming. After that the city shifts: taco stands in Doctores and the all-night OXXO on whatever corner you find yourself. For the stretch between 10 PM and last call, these four spots cover enough of the city that you will not end the night hungry.

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El Regreso Mexican fonda restaurant in Nápoles, CDMXBudget Eats

Under MX$100: Where to Eat Well in CDMX Without Breaking It

In Ciudad de México, staying under MX$100 a plate doesn't mean settling. Five spots that prove the city's best eating happens at budget prices.

In CDMX, the floor for a decent meal is around MX$60–80, and anything under MX$100 a plate counts as budget. That ceiling covers more ground than most visitors realize — full plates of mole enchiladas, loaded fries with milkshakes, proper bakery croissants, micheladas with camarones. The five spots below are all under MX$100 and all worth finding. Martina Fonda Fina (Calle Gral. Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec) is a breakfast fonda in a residential corner of Miguel Hidalgo that tourists don't typically reach. It opens at 8:30am Monday through Friday, and 8:30am to 2:30pm on Saturday — closed Sunday. Chilaquiles and a solid vegetarian menu, all under MX$100, the kind of plate that keeps you going until evening. This is the place to go if you want to eat breakfast alongside people who actually live in the neighborhood. Vulevú Bakery (Córdoba 234, Roma Norte) opens at 7:45am Tuesday through Saturday and 8:30am Sunday. An almond croissant, kouign amann, or pain au chocolat paired with a matcha latte runs well under MX$100. This is Roma Norte, so it's not a secret, but over a thousand reviews at 4.6 stars mean the output is consistent enough to justify the detour — and it's the kind of breakfast that costs a fraction of the café next door. El Regreso (Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles) is a classic Mexican fonda with nearly two thousand reviews at 4.5 — which in this city means something. The menu runs through swiss enchiladas, red mole enchiladas, chile en nogada in season, cochinita, milanesas, soups, and chicken broth on a slow weekday. All under MX$100, open every day from 10am to 7:30pm. Nápoles is an underrated neighborhood for eating and this place is a big reason why. From 3pm onward, head to Pipiris Fries (Calle A, Mz. VII, Local D, Educación, Coyoacán). The macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, and boneless steak all stay under MX$100, and the portions are large enough to bridge the gap between comida and cena without a second order. Monthly specials rotate the menu. Friday and Saturday it stays open until 10pm. Over 700 reviews at 4.7 stars — the Coyoacán locals landed on this one early, and the price-per-portion ratio is better than anything you'd find in Polanco for twice the cost. Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente) is a michelada bar. Lemon and tamarind builds to shrimp variants, all under MX$100, opens at 1:30pm daily. Weekdays close at 9pm; weekends at 10:30pm. The Narvarte crowd treats this as their afternoon spot, and on a Thursday the after-work energy is what you come for as much as the drinks. The best-value single meal in this city right now: red mole enchiladas at El Regreso, Yosemite 54-B, Nápoles. Under MX$100. Full plate, real mole. Go on a weekday. That's the benchmark.

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Burger and food at Chubbies PolancoCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in Mexico City Right Now

Six spots across Polanco, Narvarte, Del Valle, and Nápoles — from MX$80 micheladas to late-night live music in Benito Juárez. A practical guide with addresses and prices.

Mexico City doesn't reward generic eating. The city has a density of options that takes time to understand — skip the obvious tourist corridor and you find neighborhoods where a beer garden in Narvarte outranks Polanco restaurants on review counts and the mezcal boom taking over cocktail bars has given drinking here its own vocabulary. Polanco is polished and expensive. Benito Juárez is where the locals actually eat. The best meals often happen in the stretch between. Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente) does one thing: micheladas. Nearly 900 reviews say it gets that thing right. Drinks stay under MX$100, making this the cheapest stop on this list, and the camarones are worth adding to the order. Open daily from 1:30pm, until 10:30pm on Friday and Saturday when the neighborhood gets lively. Metro División del Norte is four blocks away. Expect a short wait at peak afternoon hours. Ten minutes south on Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur, Vegan Ramen Mei has 4.7 stars from over 1,100 reviews. Don't mistake it for health food — the orange chicken ramen and sweet and sour chicken have their own loyal following here. Bowls run MX$100–200, which is the same price bracket as Michelanga but this is a full meal. Open 2–9pm daily. The anime posters are genuine, not a decorator's idea of Japan. Head north to Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes (Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Insurgentes San Borja) for afternoon drinks when there's a match on — or when there isn't. It has 816 reviews at 4.8 stars, which puts it at the top of every relevant category in this part of the city. The micheladas and tortilla soup come up in review after review. Closed Sundays, open Thursday through Saturday until 1am. MX$100–200 keeps it accessible. For dinner, 50 Friends (Av. Emilio Castelar 95, Polanco) is an Italian restaurant with over 1,800 reviews — the most reviewed spot on this list. The chocolate pizza is its signature and it sounds like a novelty until you see how many people order it twice. Open from 1pm daily, until midnight on weekdays and 1am on weekends. Reserve on weekends. The room fills up. Chubbies (Lago Andromaco 17, Granada) sits ten minutes from Polanco and serves the city's best burgers. The price is MX$100–200 — same range as Torito — but the kitchen runs faster. Reviewers consistently flag the speed and the marmalade pairing. Open until 11:30pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Near Parque Lincoln if you're navigating by landmarks. End the night at LOS DE ARRIBA (Maricopa 10-10, Nápoles), a live music bar that opens at 8pm Wednesday through Saturday and closes at 1am. Son cubano on some nights, standup comedy on others. Over 1,300 reviews, mostly about the atmosphere and the drinks. They run ticketed events — worth checking before showing up. One full day: 2pm at Michelanga Narvarte on Cuauhtémoc. Walk to Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas by 4pm — they're in the same part of Benito Juárez. From there, Torito on Insurgentes is minutes away; stay through early evening. On a Wednesday through Saturday, LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles opens at 8pm and it's close. Finish the night at 50 Friends in Polanco or Chubbies in Granada around 9:30pm before they close. The Insurgentes metro line runs the entire route. You'll want a second day.

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Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle restaurantCity Top Spots

CDMX's Best Spots to Eat and Drink, by Neighborhood and Hour

From budget fries in Coyoacán to live music and son cubano in Nápoles — here's how to eat through Ciudad de México in one long day.

CDMX is the only city in Mexico where you can eat well at 3pm, 9pm, and 1am in the same neighborhood and spend anywhere from 80 pesos to 800. The food density here is unlike anywhere else in the country — Narvarte alone has more good spots per block than most cities have total. What defines eating here is the layered schedule: afternoon beer gardens hit their stride when office workers leave at 2pm, ramen counters fill by 7pm, and the live music bars don't get interesting until 8. You have to plan by the clock. Start the afternoon in Coyoacán. Pipiris Fries (Calle A Mz. VII, Educación) has everything under MX$100 — the macho fries and pulled pork go fast, and jalapeño poppers with a float milkshake are the call on hot days. Opens at 3pm. Then head north to Narvarte: Michelanga Narvarte at Av. Cuauhtémoc 808 is a beer garden built around micheladas, and I mean that literally. Tamarind or lemon in cans or glasses, with camarones on the side. Also under $100. Open daily from 1:30pm, until 10:30pm on Friday and Saturday. Weekdays are quieter. For dinner, Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur is not what you expect. Over a thousand Google reviews at 4.7 stars — in a city with this much competition, that number earns attention. The menu runs MX$100–200, portions are serious, and the orange chicken and sweet and sour chicken show up at basically every table. Opens at 2pm daily, closes at 9pm sharp. Arrive by 7pm or you're waiting outside. Two different moods, both worth your time. Chubbies at Lago Andromaco 17 in Granada is a burger spot that pulls people across town — $100–200, fast service, portions that justify the trip. Open daily from 12:30pm, Fridays and Saturdays until 11:30pm. On the south side, Torito Sports Bar at Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020 is the game-day choice: mojitos, micheladas, tortilla soup, and stadium energy that's actually fun rather than chaotic. $100–200 range, closed Sundays, opens 12:30pm Monday through Saturday. If you're in town Wednesday through Saturday, LOS DE ARRIBA at Maricopa 10 in Nápoles is worth building the night around. It's a live music venue where standup comedy and son cubano share the weekly schedule — different nights, same energy. Opens at 8pm, runs until 1am. Tickets sell out; book ahead. Metro Nápoles drops you close. Everyone in the room looks like they know exactly where they are. A workable one-day route: Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán at 3pm, then north to Michelanga Narvarte by 5pm before the after-work crowd peaks. Dinner at Vegan Ramen Mei on Félix Cuevas — be there by 7pm or don't bother. If it's Thursday or Friday, the night ends at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles. The whole loop covers four neighborhoods and lands under MX$500 per person if you're not going hard on the drinks.

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Exterior of Chubbies burger restaurant in the Granada neighborhood, Mexico CityCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in CDMX Right Now

From beer gardens in Narvarte to live music in Nápoles — a working guide to eating well across six of Ciudad de México's colonias.

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.

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LOS DE ARRIBA live music bar interior in Nápoles, Ciudad de MéxicoCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in CDMX: Six Places Worth Your Time

From a 4.8-rated burger joint in Granada to a Coyoacán fries spot under 100 pesos, CDMX packs more eating options per colonia than anywhere else in Mexico — here's where to actually go.

CDMX is not one food city — it's fifteen overlapping food cities compressed into a single sprawling metropolis. The colonias each have their own personality: Polanco does sleek and international, Narvarte is neighborhood casual, Del Valle is quietly experimental, Coyoacán is bohemian cheap eats. What makes eating here different is the sheer density of quality. A 4.8-rated burger spot sits two blocks from a michelada garden where beers cost under 100 pesos. Nothing is far from anything, and the range from street-level cheap to polished midrange can happen within the same five-minute walk. If you're around the Polanco-Granada border at lunchtime, Chubbies Polanco (Lago Andromaco 17, Granada) is the move. The burger joint holds a 4.8 rating from well over a thousand reviews, which in a city this competitive means something. They open at 12:30pm daily and push to 11:30pm on weekends. Prices land in the MX$100–200 range — honest value for what lands on the table. The marmalade keeps coming up in what people loved. Order accordingly. On the other end of the price map is Pipiris Fries in Coyoacán (Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación). Everything costs under MX$100, which is genuinely cheap for a sit-down spot. They open at 3pm. The menu goes wide — pulled pork, macho fries, jalapeño poppers, bolognese pasta, milkshakes, and floated ice cream. It reads like a diner menu from another country, but it works. Come hungry. For the early evening drink, Michelanga Narvarte (Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente) is the cheapest good option in this guide. Beer garden, open from 1:30pm, everything under MX$100. The micheladas are the point — tamarind and lemon variations are what people order. This is not a dinner spot. It's where you start the night or decompress after a long afternoon. The neighborhood around Cuauhtémoc has enough taco stalls nearby that you won't go hungry. Torito Sports Bar (Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Insurgentes San Borja) is a straightforward bar that consistently outperforms expectations — 4.8 from over 800 reviews. Easy to reach from Metro Insurgentes. They serve mojitos, micheladas, tortilla soup, and discounted drinks depending on the day. Open Monday to Saturday from 12:30pm, with late weekend hours stretching to 1:30am. Prices run MX$100–200. If there's a game on, you will not leave on schedule. For dinner, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle (Félix Cuevas 835, Col del Valle Sur) is the unexpected one on this list. Open 2–9pm every day, MX$100–200, sitting at 4.7 from over 1,100 reviews. The orange chicken and sweet and sour options read oddly on a ramen menu, but people keep ordering them. Del Valle is a quiet colonia and this spot fits: focused, low-key, consistently good. Past 8pm on a Wednesday through Saturday, LOS DE ARRIBA (Maricopa 10-10, Nápoles) is the destination. Live music bar — son cubano nights and occasional standup comedy. Open 8pm to 1am. This is not a dinner stop; eat before you arrive. Nápoles puts you close to both Metro Mixcoac and Metro Nápoles, so getting home even at midnight is manageable. One day eating in CDMX: Start at 1:30pm at Michelanga Narvarte for a michelada. Ride Metro Línea 3 south to Coyoacán and hit Pipiris Fries around 3:30pm — cheap, filling, no pressure. Loop back north toward Del Valle for dinner at Vegan Ramen Mei around 7pm. Head to Nápoles by 9pm for LOS DE ARRIBA. Save Chubbies Polanco for a Sunday lunch (12:30pm, quieter early) and Torito on Insurgentes for a midweek game night.

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Packed bar crowd at LOS DE ARRIBA in Nápoles with performer on stage and blue stage lightingLate Night

After Hours in CDMX: Where to Eat Past Midnight

Mexico City never really sleeps — but most restaurants do. Here are the spots still feeding the late crowd when the clock pushes past 1 AM.

By 10 PM on a weeknight, Insurgentes has shed the afternoon traffic. The taco stands on corners are moving fast, the mezcal bars are at half-capacity and climbing, and the bass from a club somewhere past Nápoles is already reaching the sidewalk. Mexico City at this hour doesn't feel late — it feels like intermission. If you're leaving dinner at 10:30 wondering where the night goes, or if you've been at a bar for two hours and need actual food, here's what's still running a kitchen. On Maricopa 10 in Nápoles, LOS DE ARRIBA runs on its own schedule. Wednesday through Saturday, 8 PM to 1 AM, and no other days. The place has live music — son cubano and boleros, standup comedy sets running between acts — and the crowd that fills it knows this. It's a bar venue where food arrives alongside whatever is happening on stage, not a restaurant where you sit and plan your night. The vibe reviewers keep reaching for is Bohemian: creative crowd, drinks-forward, music you actually listen to. The elevator is a recurring detail — enough reviews mention it that the arrival itself is clearly part of the experience. Show up after 9. By 11 PM it's loud and full, los tragos are in hand, and the stage has the room. Get your tickets in advance if there's a show on. Closes at 1 AM, no exceptions. At Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020, Torito Sports Bar Insurgentes keeps the kitchen running when most places have called it a night. Thursday and Saturday until 1 AM, pushing to 1:30 AM on Fridays — the latest any spot in this list stays open. Sports bar means screens on every wall, tortilla soup that reviewers return to specifically, micheladas in serious quantities, and the mojito if that's where you are. Prices land between MX$100–200 a head, which after midnight in this city is a reasonable deal. The crowd on a Friday is the after-bar crowd: people who left somewhere else and ended up here, which is a good place to end up. The Italian option — and yes, there is an Italian option that stays open this late — is 50 Friends on Av. Emilio Castelar 95 in Polanco. Monday through Wednesday the kitchen runs until midnight. Thursday through Saturday it goes to 1 AM. The place has nearly 1,900 reviews and a 4.7 rating, which for Polanco is significant rather than just good. The menu has a chocolate pizza. Reviewers call it out by name with a regularity that suggests it's not a gimmick. This is more late dinner than 1 AM scramble — the crowd is seated, there's wine, the neighborhood keeps things civilized — but the kitchen is open and the food is reportedly excellent. Accessible is the word that comes up in reviews, which is rare for a restaurant in Polanco. The 1 AM emergency: Torito on a Friday. Last kitchen standing, still taking orders at 1:30 AM, on Insurgentes where you can reach it from most directions in the city. The micheladas are good. The tortilla soup, according to reviews that mention it unprompted, is better than good. You don't need a reservation. You don't need a plan. Just walk in, order something warm, and wait for the city to finally slow down.

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Pipiris Fries storefront in Coyoacán with colorful murals and neon Best Fries in Town signBudget Eats

Eat Well for Under MX$100: Ciudad de México's Best Budget Spots

A filling meal in CDMX for under MX$100 is not a compromise — it's just knowing where to go. Here are six places doing it right.

In CDMX, "cheap" has a specific meaning: you eat well, you pay under MX$100, and you don't feel like you gave something up. That's the real budget floor here — less than five dollars for a proper plate, a pastry, a round of micheladas, or a taco árabe that makes you question everything you've eaten before. The city has budget options in every neighborhood, but most of them are forgettable. These six are not. Martina Fonda Fina — Calle General Juan Cano 61, San Miguel Chapultepec Martina opens at 8:30 in the morning and closes at 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Saturday hours cut off at 2:30. This is a breakfast-and-lunch fonda, the kind that runs on repeat neighborhood customers who know the menu by heart. Chilaquiles are the anchor dish. Everything is under MX$100 for a full plate, and the vegetarian options are genuinely considered — not an afterthought. Closed Sundays. Vulevú Bakery — Córdoba 234, Roma Norte Vulevú is a serious French bakery in Roma Norte. Almond croissants, kouign amann, lemon tarts, pain au chocolat, focaccia, crookies — the case is full and the prices don't match what you'd pay for this quality elsewhere. A coffee and a croissant lands well under MX$100, which is a better morning than what most hotel restaurants deliver at three times the price. Open from 7:45 am Tuesday through Saturday (8:30 on Sundays), closed Mondays. Pipiris Fries — Calle A Mz. VII Local D, Educación, Coyoacán There is a restaurant in Coyoacán with "Best Fries in Town" written across the front. They mean it. Macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, boneless steak — all under MX$100, with monthly specials rotating in. They open at 3 pm, which makes this a late-lunch or dinner stop. If you're already in Coyoacán doing the market circuit, Pipiris is the right call before heading home. Over 700 reviews averaging 4.7 stars. That's not a fluke. Tacos Árabes La Türka — Calzada Camarones 80-E, Azcapotzalco Azcapotzalco doesn't appear on most visitor itineraries. That's the whole point. La Türka at Calzada Camarones 80-E is a Lebanese-Mexican taco shop with nearly a thousand reviews and a 4.5-star average. The specialty is taco árabe: trompo-cooked meat in khubz flatbread with jocoque. Falafel and cemitas on the side. All of it under MX$100. Open every day, with Fridays and Saturdays running until 10:30 pm — later than most budget spots bother staying open. Michelanga Narvarte — Av. Cuauhtémoc 808, Narvarte Poniente This is not a restaurant. Michelanga is a michelada stand — solo para llevar — on Avenida Cuauhtémoc in Narvarte. One product, done well: micheladas in the camarones-and-tamarind format the regulars prefer. Under MX$100. You take it and you go. Open every day from 1:30 pm. If you're in Narvarte in the afternoon and want a beer that costs almost nothing but tastes like someone actually thought about it, this is your stop. La Santa — Calle Gabino Barreda 83, San Rafael La Santa is Argentine, not Mexican — and that's fine. Pizza, empanadas, alfajores, clericó. Chimichurri is on the menu. San Rafael puts you close to the Museo del Chopo and a short walk from Santa María la Ribera, so this fits into an afternoon that starts somewhere cultural. Closed Mondays. Everything under MX$100. Best Value: One Dish, One Place, One Price Taco árabe at La Türka. Calzada Camarones 80-E, Azcapotzalco. Under MX$100. Khubz with trompo meat and jocoque — more interesting than most things you'll pay twice as much for in Polanco.

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Interior of Torito Sports Bar on Insurgentes with yellow bar counter, neon beer sign, and sports screensCity Top Spots

The Best Places to Eat in Ciudad de México Right Now

From a smashburger in Granada to son cubano in Nápoles — here's how to eat well across CDMX, neighborhood by neighborhood.

CDMX has somewhere north of 40,000 registered restaurants and no shortage of opinions about which ones matter. The diversity is unlike anywhere else in Mexico — within a single colonia you can eat memelas from a cart at 7am, sit down for Japanese ramen by afternoon, and end the night at a live music bar playing son cubano past midnight. The pace is fast, portions are generous, and each neighborhood has its own food identity. Polanco wants to impress you. Coyoacán doesn't care. Here's where to eat if you're new, passing through, or just looking for an excuse to cross the city. Chubbies Polanco — Lago Andromaco 17, Granada, Miguel Hidalgo — is the smashburger reference point in the northwest of the city. Open at 12:30pm daily, with service that reviewers describe as efficient (rare in CDMX's more relaxed burger spots). Expect to pay MX$100–200 per person. Fridays and Saturdays they run until 11:30pm. South to Coyoacán. Pipiris Fries at Calle A Mz. VII Local D in Educación opens at 3pm daily, staying open until 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. The whole menu stays under MX$100 — loaded fries in configurations like macho fries, jalapeño poppers, pulled pork, and bolognese pasta, plus floated ice cream and milkshakes. This is a place that has earned its 4.7 stars the honest way: cheap, satisfying food done right, over and over. They run monthly specials if you want a reason to come back. Vegan Ramen Mei at Félix Cuevas 835 in Del Valle Sur is open every day from 2–9pm, including Sundays. MX$100–200 for a bowl. The storefront has a glowing anime character as its logo — you'll know it when you see it. The plant-based menu includes orange chicken and sweet and sour chicken preparations, and with over 1,100 reviews at 4.7 stars, the kitchen has clearly figured out how to make vegan broth worth going out of your way for. The Félix Cuevas corridor is worth walking before or after. For a match or just an excuse to sit with a michelada, Torito Sports Bar on Av. Insurgentes Centro 1020 in San Borja (Benito Juárez) is the call. The bar runs a proper michelada program and the mojito gets favorable mentions; the tortilla soup appears in enough reviews to be worth ordering. Monday through Thursday it closes at 10:30–11pm; Fridays push to 1:30am. Prices stay in the MX$100–200 range. Dinner. 50 Friends at Av. Emilio Castelar 95 in Polanco IV is the Italian place with a real following — nearly 1,900 reviews at 4.7 stars. The chocolate pizza shows up repeatedly in what people remember, which is either very good or very unexpected. Open daily from 1pm to midnight (until 1am Thursday through Saturday). This is the meal where you slow down and stay a while. The night ends at LOS DE ARRIBA on Maricopa 10-10 in Nápoles. Open Wednesday through Saturday, 8pm to 1am. Live music leans toward son cubano and Bohemian acts; there are standup comedy nights too when the schedule allows. Buy tickets in advance — it fills. Over 1,350 reviews at 4.8 stars, and the crowd is CDMX through and through. One day in CDMX, eating: Start at 12:30pm at Chubbies in Granada/Polanco. Metro south to Coyoacán by 3pm for fries at Pipiris in Educación. Back north to Del Valle Sur for ramen at Vegan Ramen Mei around 6pm. Stop at Torito on Insurgentes for a michelada and the game. Dinner at 50 Friends in Polanco around 9pm. Then Nápoles to close at LOS DE ARRIBA — they're just getting started at 10.

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Evening outdoor terrace at Chubbies Polanco burger restaurant with string lights in GranadaTrending

What CDMX Is Actually Eating Right Now

CDMX now has more Japanese restaurants than pizza places. Here's what the numbers say about where the city's food is actually going.

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.

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Burger and Dr Pepper at Chubbies Polanco, GranadaCity Top Spots

Where to Eat in CDMX: A Local's Route Through the City

From a Roma bakery at 8am to a Granada burger at midnight — a practical eating map of Mexico City, with real prices, actual wait times, and the dishes worth ordering.

The one thing that defines eating in CDMX is that nobody here treats cuisine by prestige. A street taco stand and a high-concept dinner restaurant can be equally packed on the same afternoon, in the same colonia, for entirely different reasons. Families who migrated from Guerrero and Oaxaca brought their recipes and never stopped cooking them — so the city holds regional Mexican food that's sometimes better here than in the source states. Eating in Mexico City is geographic before it's anything else. The neighborhood tells you the meal. Start in Condesa. Blend Station at Av. Tamaulipas 60 (Hipódromo, a short walk from Parque México) opens at 8am every day without exception. The espresso is made with fair-trade Mexican beans and earns its reputation. The standout food order is the cazuela: poached eggs in a tomato-based broth served with toasted brioche — one reviewer described it as "soupy, salty and hearty." Budget $100–150 pesos. Note: WiFi is unreliable by 11am when the laptop crowd arrives. That's the warning and the compliment, delivered as one. Ten minutes north by foot is Vulevú Bakery at Córdoba 234, Roma Norte. Closed Mondays, open from 7:45am the rest of the week. The guayaba cruffin and the flan parisien get the most mentions, and the almond croissant has its own loyal contingent. "I tried five bakeries in Mexico City and this was by far my favorite," wrote one visitor who came back to leave a review specifically. Pastries run $60–100 pesos each. The place is unhurried and genuinely busy — that combination is rarer in Roma than it was a few years ago. On weekends, the best move in the city is Casa Licha Pozole in Iztapalapa. Sur 69-A 513, Justo Sierra. Open Saturdays 9am–9pm and Sundays 9am–7pm only — closed every other day of the week, which is itself a kind of quality signal. The Guerrero-style pozole here comes blanco or verde, big clay bowl, with avocado, tostadas, dried chile, and lime. One reviewer whose family has eaten here for over 40 years put it simply: "the pozole is unbeatable and the chalupas are out of this world." Start with the chalupas. Bring cash — no cards accepted. Under $200 pesos per person. Lines are real on Sunday afternoons; arrive before noon. For weekday lunch, El Regreso at Yosemite 54-B in Nápoles is the answer: traditional Mexican food under $100 pesos, 4.5 stars across close to 2,000 ratings. In the afternoon, La Santa at C. Gabino Barreda 83 in San Rafael does budget pizza also under $100 pesos with 4.6-star consistency from over 600 reviewers — a colonia between Reforma and the Doctores side streets that rewards wandering. If dinner is ramen, Vegan Ramen Mei Del Valle at Félix Cuevas 835 (Del Valle Sur) earns its 4.7 rating from over a thousand diners, running $100–200 pesos. The neighborhood is quieter than the Roma-Condesa corridor, which at 8pm is its main selling point. The night ends well at Chubbies Polanco on Lago Andromaco 17, Granada. The "Especial" is consistently ranked above the standard Chubby — "the especial is definitely the one to order," says one regular who has visited twice. The buffalo ranch version also gets named specifically across multiple reviews. Prices land at $100–200 pesos. Open until 11:30pm on Fridays and Saturdays, which is the whole reason to know this place exists. Delivery traffic can back up the counter hard on weekends; the wait sometimes runs close to an hour. The cleanest one-day circuit: coffee and cazuela at Blend Station at 8am (Condesa), walk to Vulevú for a pastry (Roma Norte, 9am). Weekday lunch: El Regreso in Nápoles. Weekends: Uber to Casa Licha in Iztapalapa — Metro Velódromo is the stop if you're going by transit. Pizza at La Santa in San Rafael around 4–5pm. Dinner at Chubbies in Granada for late-night burgers, or Ramen Mei in Del Valle for something warmer and further from the tourist current. Condesa, Roma, Iztapalapa, San Rafael, Granada, Del Valle — a real cross-section of the city in one long eating day.

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Featured Places

Blend Station

star4.5

Bar de expreso estilo moderno con café tostado mexicano de comercio justo y ventanilla de pedidos para llevar.

Casa Licha Pozole

star4.5

Restaurante familiar de larga data conocido por servir grandes tazones de sopa casera, chalupas y mole.

El Regreso

star4.5

Extenso menú de enchiladas y antojitos mexicanos servidos en un comedor con estilo simple y ambiente casual.