349 Best Restaurants in Mexico

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We've compiled the best of the best in Mexico - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Pizzería El Punto

$ | Centro

The pizzas at this small, simple restaurant—half a block from the Convento de Santo Domingo—are tasty and hot out of a wood-burning oven. The margarita pizza, with Gouda, chihuahua, and manchego cheeses is excellent. Save room for the moist and delicious tiramisu.

Calle Real de Guadalupe 47, San Cristóbal de las Casas, 29200, Mexico
967-678–0047
Restaurant Details
No credit cards

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Pizzería La Góndola

$

Wonderful smells waft from this small corner establishment, where scenes of old Italy and the Yucatán adorn bright yellow walls, and patrons pull padded folding chairs up to yellow-tile tables or take their orders to go. Pizza is the name of the game here, but tortas and pastas are also served.

Calle 23 208, Ticul, 97860, Mexico
997-972–0112
Known For
  • Impressive variety of pizza
  • Fun, informal vibe
  • The only nighttime dining option in town
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Planeta Vegetariano

$

Those who stumble upon this hogless heaven can pig out on tasty, meatless carne asada and a selection of main dishes that changes daily. Choose from at least three healthful main dishes, plus beans, several types of rice, and a soup at this casual buffet-only place. A fruit drink, coffee, or tea and dessert are included in the reasonable price.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Pola

$

On any given day, the flavors at this little historic-center gelato shop vary, but you can typically expect between five and ten sorbets and the same number of gelatos. In addition to classics like chocolate and chocolate chip, you'll find options inspired by regional cuisine and produce—perhaps, chocolate with chiles, flan, pineapple with chaya, or lemon with rosemary. If it's not too hot, enjoy your sorbet or gelato in Parque Santa Lucía, just a block away.

Calle 55 467D, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-923–1107
Known For
  • Locally inspired flavors
  • Excellent gelato and sorbets
  • Cheerful store

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Quiero Gelato

$ | San Miguel

“I want gelato” is the translation of the name of this shop on the southwest side of central plaza. Partake of mango-, lemon-, banana-, and other tropical-flavored cones in addition to the standard chocolate and vanilla. The place does a brisk business when families and couples turn out to enjoy the Sunday doings on the plaza.

Calle 1 Sur 58B, Cozumel, 77600, Mexico
Known For
  • Fun tropical flavors
  • Old-fashioned ice cream-parlor vibe
  • Quick service

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Raku Café

$ | La Roma

This diminutive, modern café turns out some of the finest Kyoto-sourced matcha green tea in the city as well as exceptional house-roasted coffee drinks, which are served in beautiful hand-thrown ceramic mugs. Have a seat on one of the little benches fashioned out of tree trunks or at one of the sidewalk tables ensconced within a landscaped wooden platform.

Calle Sinaloa 188, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-5553--0850
Known For
  • Matcha tea
  • Tasty sandwiches and pastries
  • Well-crafted espresso drinks and cold brew

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Repostería Los Chatos

$

For coffee and desserts there is nothing more vallartense than Repostería Los Chatos.

Restaurant & Bar La Playa

$

La Playa is one of the nicest places to have fresh seafood or beverage in Los Barriles. It’s a little pricey, but everything tastes incredibly fresh, and you can’t beat the location or beach access. It’s a fun spot to watch the kiteboarders on a windy day.

Restaurant Bar Las Gaviotas

$
Las Gaviotas is the perfect place to enjoy seafood and a cold beer with the Pacific ocean in the background. The tables and chairs are right on the beach.
Paseo del Río, Km 12, on the beach, 48294, Mexico
322-113--0380
Known For
  • Grilled fish
  • The best guacamole in Mismaloya
  • Location steps from the ocean
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Restaurant La Playita

$

Open to the ocean air, the wood-and-palm exterior of this restaurant looks right at home on Conchas Chinas Beach. The menu is a mixed bag of Mexican specialties such as chile relleno, international cuisine add-ons like chicken masala, and seafood dishes like the delicious crab enchiladas with chipotle sauce. There are wonderful views of waves crashing on or lapping at the shore at its bar El Set. If you're driving, look for the sign for Hotel Lindo Mar on the coast highway.

Carretera a Barra de Navidad, Km 2.5, 48399, Mexico
322-221--5511
Known For
  • Expansive weekend brunch buffet
  • Spectacular ocean views
  • Huevos Felix (scrambled eggs with fried corn tortillas)

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Restaurant Las Tinajas

$

The coffee is good at this sunny corner café, but it's also a great place to stop in for a meal. (Just be prepared for leisurely service.) The menu includes a wide variety of Mexican dishes, including the delicious sopa de ajo (garlic soup). The pechuga de pollo en chipotle al gratin (chicken breast with chipotle and topped with cheese) is also tasty, but if you're looking for a simpler dish, you can also order more American fare—including burgers and fries.

Palenque, 29960, Mexico
916-345–4970
Restaurant Details
No credit cards

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Restaurant Mia

$

Set right on Boca de Iguanas Beach, this restaurant serves the typical seafood dishes of the region. Breakfast and burgers are also available. The restaurant is part of a camping compound with cabins and swimming pool included, so many come for the food and stay for the pool.

Playa Boca de Iguanas, 48893, Mexico
315-110--8080
Known For
  • Shrimp quesadillas
  • Great shrimp burger
  • Beach and pool

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Restaurant Montecarlo

$

This outdoor restaurant is one of a handful of eateries along the lakeside in Teuchitlán. While not fancy, it offers a variety of Mexican dishes, including fish, molcajetes dishes of mixed meats, cheese, and vegetables in a stone bowl), and fajitas, and provides a grand view of the lake teeming with fish and birds including herons and pelicans. There's also a fish pond where kids can borrow a homemade rod for some catch and release. As you turn into the street, don't feel pressured by the parking attendants at the other restaurants who will make attempts to get you into their locales.

Calle Las Fuentes 5, 46760, Mexico
38-4733–0257
Known For
  • Veracruz-style octopus
  • Shrimp empanadas
  • Melted cheese

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Restaurant Safari Steak House

$

This popular steak house is a great place to enjoy a meal on a sunny day. There's a nice outdoor dining area with plants as well as toucans and other birds in cages. The menu has large tasty salads, including the so-called Kenya salad, with lettuce, nuts, pear, grapes, spinach, and Brie. Try the puntas de filete a la Mexicana (tenderloin tips with a red Mexican sauce served with rice and beans).

Blvd. Jesús Reyes Heroles 35, Tuxpan, 92800, Mexico
783-834–1070
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Restaurant Valle Azul

$

This quaint restaurant is small but cozy, and serves traditional homemade dishes and wood-oven pizzas. Sit at the outside tables and get a good view of the quiet life in the main square.

Calle Primero de Abril 6, 48400, Mexico
322-269--0646
Known For
  • Exquisite chiles rellenos
  • Cold beer
  • Handmade tortillas
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Restaurante Bar Plaza Pardo

$

From the balcony of this cheerful second-story restaurant you'll have a great view of the goings-on in the zócalo. Brightly colored cloths adorn the tables, where house specialties—including cecina con enchiladas (salted beef with spicy enchiladas) and rellenos al gusto (green chilies stuffed with chicken, cheese, or beef)—are served by the friendly staff. There's free Wi-Fi for diners, so you if you bring your laptop you can check your e-mail while you eat.

Many people stop here for a breakfast of enchiladas and refried beans before heading to El Tajín.

Enríquez 105, Papantla, 93400, Mexico
784-842–0059
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Restaurante Casino Español

$

Bullfighting posters and mirrors in elaborate frames are some of the things that make stepping into this restaurant a little like stepping back in time. Main dishes include róbalo a la cazuela (sea bass in a tomato-based sauce with shrimp). The daily prix-fixe menu consists of a soup, a plate of pasta or rice, and an entrée. Sunday sees a tasty paella.

Zamora 14, Xalapa, 91000, Mexico
228-817–7586
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No breakfast

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Restaurante El Coral

$

El Coral serves generous portions of seafood in a relaxed environment facing the beach. It's a favorite among those heading out on a tour of the Marietas Islands and for surfers who come to ride the waves at El Anclote.

Restaurante Kinich

$

At the town’s most comfortable eatery, tables draped in white linen sit under a wide palapa that's surrounded by plants and with a burbling fountain. In a small hut in the back, the cooks make tortillas by hand, and menu highlights include locally made longaniza (a tasty grilled pork sausage) and excellent sopa de lima. A small shop sells carefully selected and cleverly displayed local folk art.

Calle 27 299, Izamal, 97540, Mexico
999-900–2316
Known For
  • Longaniza (a local sausage)
  • Folk art
  • Traditional atmosphere

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Restaurante La Sirenita

$
Punta Pérula beach is filled with this type of informal seafood restaurant, just steps from the sand. Look for a table with palapa by the beach for the ultimate local experience.
Miguel Hidalgo s/n, 44520, Mexico
315-109--0345
Known For
  • Camarones a la diabla (spicy shrimp)
  • Boat tours to Isla Cocinas
  • Great views of the beach
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Restaurante Muul

$

Residents of Izamal have strong opinions on which restaurants make the best panuchos, salbutes, papadzules, and other local specialities, but Restaurante Muul is on many short lists. The atmosphere is no-frills, though the location is convenient, right on the main plaza just steps from the ex-convent.

Restaurante Peña Los Jarritos

$

This cavelike restaurant might only be open on Friday and Saturday, but it has unforgettable regional cuisine and a fun atmosphere with live music. Even simple items like the salsas and frijoles (black beans) are intensely flavored. There's an exquisite sopa de setas (soup of oyster mushrooms), or you could try the signature dish, enchiladas de picadillo con mole de olla (ground beef and raisin enchiladas with a savory local mole).

Adolfo López Mateos 7, Cuetzalan, 73560, Mexico
233-331–0558
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.–Thurs.

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Restaurante Pineda

$

Patrons come to Restaurante Pineda for the generous portions of delicious seafood, though the beautiful ocean view is also a draw. Locals rave about the grilled octopus, oysters, and scallops, but the coconut-breaded shrimp aren't too shabby either. You'll leave the place with a full stomach and a somewhat emptier than expected wallet, but it's well worth the experience.

Carretera Los Ayala 5, Mexico
327-274--2143
Known For
  • Pricey but worth it
  • Large portions
  • Raved-about seafood

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Restaurante Ría Maya

$

Grab a seat in this palapa restaurant directly across from the water and watch the day's catch come straight from the docks. The menu features local specialties like ceviche, seafood soup, fish fillet stuffed with shrimp, and breaded seafood rolled into a ball and deep-fried. In season (July–December) you can order lobster and octopus cooked several different ways. With a seashell-strewn floor and plastic tables, it's far from fancy, but you're sure to leave satisfied. Owner Diego Núñez and his family also operate Río Lagartos Adventures and can arrange a variety of tours.

Calle 19 134, Río Lagartos, 97720, Mexico
986-100–8390
Known For
  • Quality seafood
  • Beachy vibe
  • Lobster and octopus in season

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Restaurante Yoloxochitl

$

Just above the market, with a view of the main plaza, this plant-filled restaurant makes delicious regional cuisine served by a friendly staff. The envueltos de mole (chicken-filled tortillas covered in a thick, smoky mole sauce) are an excellent choice if you want to take a break from walking around the market and enjoy a snack. There is often live traditional music at lunchtime.

Rico Suave

$ | Centro

Rico Suave boasts an impressive selection of 100% natural juices and smoothies, freshly squeezing and blending almost every fruit (and vegetable) that you can imagine. You can order breakfast or lunch here, as well; tortas (street food--style sandwiches made on bolillo bread, a baguette-style roll) are popular.

Blvd. Lázaro Cárdenas s/n, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
624-143–1043
Known For
  • Delivery service
  • Smoothies with orange
  • Tortas especiales
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Ricos Tacos Toluca

$ | Alameda Central

You'll recognize this bustling corner stall near the Mercado San Juan by the tangling garlands of chorizo hanging over its flat top. And while the taqueros here serve perfectly good tacos of many varieties, the reason you're here is the fragrant, herbal chorizo verde, or green chorizo, from the nearby city of Toluca, stained emerald with herbs and green chiles.

Lopez 103, Mexico City, 06010, Mexico
Known For
  • Fast and buzzy stall open one day a week
  • Sidewalk dining
  • City's best chorizo verde
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Ruben's

$

The delicious scent of grilling meats will entrance you from blocks away. Latin music blares from the jukebox inside, so after sundown most clients dine at the white plastic tables on the grassy front yard. The charcoal-grilled burgers, which are made of top sirloin, and the french fries, deep-fried zucchini, and baked potatoes are true-to-the-source American treats, but with a twist. The burgers are topped with cabbage, and delicious with the Benton's chipotle sauce that you'll find next to the mustard and ketchup. Try the corn soup served with a generous dollop of sour cream. For dessert there are grilled bananas glazed with cinnamon and sugar and served with fresh cream.

Blvd. Ixtapa s/n, Ixtapa, 48880, Mexico
755-553–0055
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Sabor de Oaxaca

$ | La Crucecita

This open-fronted but underventilated restaurant near the main plaza is the perfect spot to learn the ABCs of traditional Oaxacan cooking. Try one of the massive sampler plates (enough for two or three people). You can go as far as nopal (cactus) soup or a side dish of chapulines, the spicy, toasted grasshoppers that locals consider a delicacy. For the less adventurous diner, any one of the chicken dishes in gently spiced mole sauce is recommended. This is also a good place for a late-night snack of tlayudas (giant open-faced tortillas with toppings) or queso fundido (a heavenly fondue).

Calle Guamuchil 206, Bahías de Huatulco, 70987, Mexico
958-587–0060
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Saint

$ | La Condesa

Extraordinarily delicious baked goods and savory breads are dispensed at this cute French-style bakery in the south end of Condesa. Highlights include rich pain au chocolate, doughnuts bursting with strawberry jam, creamy flan, and crunchy cinnamon palmiers. Among the savory options, the flaky sourdough bread is a favorite, but there's also first-rate rye bread and baguettes.

General Benjamín Hill 146--1, Mexico City, 06170, Mexico
55-8848--1224
Known For
  • Well-made espresso drinks
  • Some of the best sourdough bread in the city
  • Chewy chocolate chip cookies

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