Guadalajara doesn't do tacos like Mexico City does. Here, tacos share the table with tortas ahogadas, birria bubbles in clay pots down every block, and the best taco experiences happen in full-service restaurants where a mariachi band drowns out your conversation. My pick for the top spot? A rowdy, music-filled institution on Avenida Vallarta that has been feeding this city since before you heard of it: Casa Bariachi.
#1. Casa Bariachi
This is the one. At Av. Ignacio L Vallarta 2221 in Arcos Vallarta, Casa Bariachi has racked up over 13,000 Google reviews for a reason. Walk in at 2 PM on a random Tuesday and you'll find folk dancers spinning between tables, a full mariachi band cranking out corridos, volcanic molcajetes trailing smoke, and waiters weaving through all of it. The arrachera tacos are the anchor: thick-cut flank steak, charred right, folded into soft corn tortillas. But the chamorro (braised pork shank) might be the smarter order. Get it whole, pull the meat apart yourself, build your own tacos from the wreckage. With mid-range pricing and hours from 1 PM to 3 AM every single day, nobody else on this list touches the full package. This is where Guadalajara eats.
#2. Almaena Restaurante
Over in Providencia at Av Providencia 2388, Almaena has the highest rating on this list at 4.8 stars from close to 800 reviews. The barbacoa tacos are why you come. Slow-cooked, shredded with care, with enough salsa options to keep your table busy for twenty minutes before you take a first bite. The broader menu leans brunch: chilaquiles, enfrijoladas, avocado toast, carrot waffles. But those barbacoa tacos could go head-to-head with any taquería in Guadalajara on their own terms. So why does Casa Bariachi beat it? Atmosphere and range. Almaena is quieter, more polished, with a children's play area that signals a family crowd. Plates run $100 to $200 pesos. Open 8 AM to 10 PM weekdays, closing at 6 PM on Sundays.
#3. El Arte RESTAURANTE/CAFÉ
In Zona Centro at C. Maestranza 1, El Arte makes tacos gobernador (governor tacos) with the kind of care Sinaloa would sign off on. Shrimp and melted cheese inside a crispy tortilla. These are the tacos that keep people coming back across over 4,000 reviews. The rest of the menu holds up: swiss enchiladas and aztec soup work for lunch, ranchero eggs handle breakfast. Reviewers consistently mention the generous portions and the view from this old Centro location. At 4.4 stars and $100 to $200 pesos per plate, open 8 AM to 11 PM daily, El Arte is the most accessible entry on this list. Late-night taco gobernador at 10:30 PM in the Centro? Done.
#4. La Panga del Impostor
La Panga del Impostor takes the fourth spot with a 4.4 rating from over 1,500 reviews. Plates run $100 to $200 pesos. The name translates to "The Impostor's Fishing Boat," and with quality scores that match the top tier of restaurants in this city, it holds its own against serious competition.
#5. Restaurant Café El Gato Café
The wildcard. Calle Francisco I. Madero 833 in Colonia Americana. El Gato Café is where robot cat waiters deliver your food to the table. Sounds gimmicky, but over 3,400 reviews and a 4.7 rating say the kitchen keeps up. The menu covers everything from carbonara pasta to cheesecake, with board games on the tables and robot cats patrolling the floor. This isn't a traditional taco spot, and I won't pretend it is. But Guadalajara's food scene rewards curiosity, and El Gato earns a visit even on a taco-focused crawl. $100 to $200 pesos per plate. Closed Mondays.
If you only try one place on this list, make it Casa Bariachi. Go on a Friday night, order the arrachera tacos and a molcajete, let the mariachi play, and stay past midnight. That's Guadalajara eating at its peak.
Read Full Article