In Mérida, a cheap meal usually means you can fill up for MX$30 to MX$50. Street tacos, a coffee and a pastry all fall in that range, and you still get generous portions. The city’s market‑style prices let you sample local flavors without draining your wallet.

Starbucks on Paseo Montejo sits in a colonial house with a quiet patio. The address is P.º de Montejo 465, Centro. Their menu starts at $1, so a regular coffee can be yours for just a couple of pesos. Pair it with a panini from the counter – the price tag stays under $5. Open from 6 am every day, the place is a reliable spot for a cheap breakfast before you head out to explore the historic center.

A short walk from the main plaza is Bakery, baked goods Family at C. 90 524‑x 73. Their shelves hold puff pastries, donuts and a slice of tres leches cake. Prices begin at $1, and most pastries sit around $2‑$3. The bakery stays open until 9:30 pm, making it a solid choice for an afternoon snack or a light dinner when you’re on a budget. Reviewers love the flaky croissant and the brioche wreath, noting the portions are satisfying for the price.
If you want a true locals‑only experience, head to Taquería Yucatán on C. 18 96. The taco joint opens at 8 am and serves corn tortillas stuffed with guisada, blood sausage, and even a yucatec twist on the classic panucho. Prices range from MX$1 upward, and a single taco typically costs about MX$2. Reviewers praise the generous filling – you often get two tacos for the price of one elsewhere. The place closes early on weekends, so swing by for lunch and you’ll leave with a full belly and spare change.
Putting it all together, the best value meal in Mérida comes from Taquería Yucatán: a plate of two panuchos for MX$4 gives you a hearty portion of seasoned meat, pickled onions and a splash of lime. That dish beats the coffee‑and‑pastry combo at the other spots in both price and satiety, making it the top pick for budget‑savvy travelers.






