323 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.

Antojería Nacional

$ Fodor's Choice

Decorated with brightly colored papeles picados and tables with Talavera tile tops, friendly and traditional Antojería Nacional is a bit of a contrast with the many hip and modern spots in this neighborhood of Cholula close to the campus of Universidad de las Americas. The specialty of this hugely popular spot is traditional street food—tortas milanesas, chicken pelonas, chorizo gorditas, and more.

Calle 10 Oriente 210, Cholula, 72810, Mexico
222-934--4492
Known For
  • Refreshing, and spicy on request, michelada cocktails
  • Artfully prepared, boldly flavored renditions of classic Mexican snacks and street foods
  • Lively multigenerational mix of locals, students, and tourists
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Azul Condesa

$$$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice

When it comes to authentic Mexican food, chef and food historian Ricardo Muñoz Zurita literally wrote the book with his Diccionario Enciclopédico de la Gastronomía Mexicana (Encyclopedia of Mexican Food). Here in his art-filled, elegant Condesa restaurant, you can sample some of his superb regional Mexican dishes, such as beef drizzled in a smoky Oaxacan mole that takes three days to make, Veracruz-style fish, or ancient Mayan dishes from the Yucatán. In addition, there is always a seasonal month-long menu highlighting cuisine from a different state of Mexico or some other theme related to the country's regional cuisine, with recipes by guest chefs as well as Muñoz. Azul has two additional locations in El Centro Histórico.

Azul Histórico

$$$$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's Choice

An oasis in the middle of the chaos of Centro Histórico, you'll find excellent service and elegant versions of traditional Mexican dishes here. A variety of dishes from around the country are expertly prepared under the watchful eye of renowned chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Burritos Gorditos

$ | San Miguel Fodor's Choice

If you’ve got a hankering for a hole-in-the-wall place that serves cheap, delicious meals, Burritos Gorditos fits the bill for breakfast and lunch. The made-to-order shrimp burritos are excellent and big enough to split, and a solid assortment of tacos and salads is available, but no alcohol is served. Seating is limited (which is why locals call ahead for takeout or delivery).  If the tables are full, place your order and wait for one to open up or eat outside on the wall.

Café de Tacuba

$$$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's Choice

An essential, if touristy, breakfast, lunch, dinner, or snack stop downtown, this Mexican classic opened in 1912 in a section of an old convent. At the entrance to the main dining room are huge 18th-century oil paintings depicting the invention of mole poblano, a complex sauce featuring a variety of chiles and chocolate that was created by the nuns in the Santa Rosa Convent in Puebla. A student group dressed in medieval capes and hats usually serenades diners Wednesday through Sunday afternoon.

Cantina La Valenciana

$$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice
While one side of the cantina speaks more to drinking, party-heavy crowds and the other to family outings focused on watching soccer, they merge as one on evenings and weekends with live cumbia and salsa. The building has been on this popular stretch of Narvarte for more than 100 years, with more than 50 years under the same ownership, making it a true neighborhood cantina. The arched walls and tiled columns harken back to an antique era of Mexican architecture. Portraits of Mexican movie stars line the walls while cordial servers keep this place classic and classy.

Cantina Salón París

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice
A large cantina with a sizeable lunch and dinner crowd, Salon París is an emblematic fixture of the neighborhood. A focused menu features Mexican bar food (think tortas, shrimp soup, and steaks) and varied liquor options (specifically Mexican beer, international rums, tequilas, and digestive liqueurs like Campari and Fernet). Roving musicians will play a song or two for a fee, and if not, the jukebox is always rolling with Mexican classics. There are many televisions, usually featuring soccer games from all over the world.
Jaime Torres Bodet 152, Mexico City, Mexico
55-5541–7319
Known For
  • Chamorro (braised pork shanks) on Thursday
  • Tlacoyos (traditional corn masa stuffed with beans or cheese, cooked on a grill, topped with cheese and salsa)
  • Live music and soccer games on the television

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Casa Manzano Restaurante

$$ Fodor's Choice

This sprawling, open-air restaurant in an affluent neighborhood northeast of downtown has a lush garden setting that makes it a perfect choice for a relaxing meal on a balmy day, of which there are many in Cuernavaca. The farm-to-table-inspired menu features a mix of classic and contemporary dishes, such as shrimp tacos with a mildly spicy sambal salsa, aguachile with tangy passionfruit sauce, or pasta with classic fettuccine carbonara.

Casa Nela

$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's Choice

For more than 60 years, the shop Aquí es Oaxaca has anchored this block of Calle Santísima that serves as Centro's unofficial Little Oaxaca, selling tamales as well as the mole pastes and cured meats known in the region. When visitors started asking for full meals, Casa Nela was born, and so up a distressingly narrow flight of spiral stairs you'll find Oaxacan classics served in surprisingly peaceful surroundings.

Soledad 42, Mexico City, 06060, Mexico
55-5542–3754
Known For
  • Traditional mole negro
  • Tlayudas, a typical Oaxcan dish
  • Nice view over Calle Santísima
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Casa Oaxaca

$$$ | Centro Historico Fodor's Choice

Chef Alejandro Ruiz is behind some of the most creative food in southern Mexico—rack of lamb in pineapple-and-vanilla sauce and venison tamales with mole are just a few examples. Wild game is featured heavily on the menu, though the kitchen also has a way with red snapper. Not one course falls short here: appetizers incorporate local herbs and greens, and desserts such as a guava tart with rose-petal sorbet perfectly balance citrus and sweetness. The specialty cocktails are excellent, especially the sangria. The room is modern, open, airy, with white stucco walls, simple wooden tables and chairs, and a beamed ceiling. It's casual and effortlessly romantic. The restaurant shares a building with one of the finest art galleries in town, Galería Quetzalli, so you can browse after you eat.

Comedor Jacinta

$$ | Polanco Fodor's Choice

Inspired by his mother's cooking, chef Edgar Núñez (of Sud777 fame) opened the unpretentious Comedor Jacinta in 2016. Like most comedores, Jacinta offers a typical comida corrida, or set lunch menu, alongside a fully vegetarian option.

Conejo en la Luna Teotihuacán

$$ Fodor's Choice

Although best known for the artisanal mezcals produced by its widely known and well-regarded Conejo en La Luna label, this bustling restaurant with a long, covered patio is a great option for grabbing a meal before or after your time visiting the adjacent pyramids. It's one of the area's better breakfast options, with a nice range of classic Mexican egg and chilaquiles dishes, and later in the day you can enjoy hearty fare like lamb barbecue (on weekends only), escamoles (ant larvae) sauteed in herb butter, and tacos filled with cecina (locally produced cured beef). It's open until 6 on weekdays and 7 on weekends, making a potential early-dinner option after exploring the ruins. There's a second location in CDMX's Condesa neighborhood.

El Cardenal

$$ | San Angel Fodor's Choice

Although not as historic as the original in El Centro (there are four locations in all), this beloved outpost of one of the city's most highly regarded traditional Mexican restaurants occupies a courtly redbrick mansion with high ceilings and expansive terraces, a setting that's ideal for a leisurely weekend brunch before shopping around nearby Plaza San Jacinto. The menu is extensive and includes consistently well-executed renditions of such regional specialties as chilaquiles rojo with cecina, Oaxacan-style chicken mole, pan de elote with clotted cream, and chiles en nogada (in September). It's open daily, but closes at 6:30 pm. Ask to be seated on the main level, ideally out on the terrace, rather than in the dark and less enchanting downstairs space.

El Chile Gordo

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

On the inland side of the barrier island, a charming little house painted sky-blue and cherry-red contains El Cuyo's best restaurant. Here, Oscar Flores, who presides in the kitchen, and his English wife, Cathy Sissens, lead guests—never more than 20 on any night—on a nine-course journey through Mexico's culinary regions, with Cathy sharing some background on each mole, ceviche, or taco that's served. The owners can accommodate most dietary restrictions; just let them know when you make reservations, which are required. 

Calle Laguna 220, 97707, Mexico
999-169–9714
Known For
  • Beautiful, intimate setting
  • Excellent Mexican dishes
  • Warm and welcoming hosts
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues.
Reservations essential

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El Farolito Polanco

$ | Polanco Fodor's Choice

In operation since 1962, you'll find an impressive array of tacos, tortas, agua frescas, and more here. Sit at the counter and watch the chefs whip up meals at an impressive speed.

El Hidalguense

$$ | La Roma Fodor's Choice

This laid-back restaurant has been serving Hidalgo-style lamb barbacoa to grateful Mexico City residents since the 1990s. Friday through Monday afternoon only, fresh lamb from owner Moisés Rodríguez’s Hidalgo farm is roasted for 12 hours over mesquite and oak in an underground pit, then served in charred agave leaves. An order of barbacoa comes with everything you need to make tacos you'll remember for days; be sure to order the consommé, flavored with meat drippings, chile, and lime, and wash it all down with a glass of pulque. Though this is a barbacoa favorite, the mixiotes (pit-barbecued meats)—another Hidalguense specialty—are fantastic as well.

El Mirador de Chapultepec

$$$ | Polanco Fodor's Choice

Set in a handsome old building on a sliver of city blocks wedged between Parque Chapultepec and the Circuito Bicentenario freeway (you may find it easier to Uber than walk here), El Mirador is a venerable old cantina that's been drawing a crowd of regulars since Porfirio Díaz was in office—1904 to be exact. In a dining room of paneled walls and white napery, well-dressed waiters whisk about with plates of pork tongue stewed in a rich chipotle-tomato sauce and tribilín, a flavorful dish of raw beef, fish, and shrimp marinated ceviche-style in olive oil, lime, onions, and roasted chiles. When you're feeling a little trendied-out by Condesa and Roma, this is a relaxing and rewarding antidote.

Av. Chapultepec 606, Mexico City, 11850, Mexico
55-5286--2161
Known For
  • People-watching in the colorful side bar
  • Slightly formal, clubby ambience
  • Old-school traditional Mexican favorite

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El Mirador Oceanview Restaurant

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This cliffside restaurant offers the most spectacular view in Todos Santosthe excellent Mexican cuisine is an added bonus. Sunset is the most popular time to dine, so be sure to make a reservation in advance if you want seating. If you're looking for the perfect place to celebrate a special occasion, like a birthday, anniversary, or simply "la vida," this is it.

El Moro

$$$ | San Miguel Fodor's Choice

You'll have to work hard to find El Moro, but your perseverance will be rewarded with one of the better meals—consisting of a wide range of seafood and beef dishes—in Cozumel. After dinner, try a taste of xtabentun, a traditional Yucatecan liqueur made of fermented honey and anise seeds. This family-owned, open-air restaurant has been feeding hungry locals and tourists for years. Brothers Ray, Efren, and Heiser strive to make you feel welcome, so the service is excellent—and the portions are large.

El Príncipe Tutul-Xiu

$ Fodor's Choice

Shaded by a giant palapa roof, this open-air restaurant is an inviting spot for lunch or an early dinner (it closes at 7 pm). Though you'll find the same Yucatecan dishes (pollo pibil, sopa de lima) here as elsewhere, the preparation is excellent. Best of all is the poc chuc—little bites of pork marinated in sour orange, garlic, and chiles and grilled over charcoal. There is also a Mérida location if you don't want to make the trip to the original one. 

El Turix

$ Fodor's Choice

Polanco's most beloved taquería serves tacos, tortas, and panuchos of cochinita pibíl, the Yucatecan specialty of achiote-marinated pork. People from all walks of life, from hipsters to construction workers to businesswomen, line up throughout the day for a quick fix, topped with the habanero salsa and pickled red onion (and Montejo beer) typical of the Yucatán. If you can grab a table, get the sopa de lima, a mildly tart chicken soup made with the region's tiny limes. It's common to see a line here, so be prepared for a short wait.

Emilio Castelar 212, 11560, Mexico
55-5280–6449
Known For
  • Authentic atmosphere
  • No-nonsense service
  • Best cochinita pibíl in the neighborhood

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Espadín

$$ | La Rinconada Fodor's Choice

Don’t let the location down a dusty dirt road scare you from dining at this breezy restaurant in the boutique hotel Villas Carrizalillo. Perched on a terraced cliff overlooking the white-sand crescent of Carrizalillo Beach, Espadín offers a winning combination of sophisticated cuisine and stunning ocean views (try to arrive at sunset). Even at its busiest, the ambience is pure romance, thanks to the soaring palapa roof, fresh flowers, and attentive service. Popular menu choices include perfectly grilled whole red snapper, a delicate roasted beet–and–Oaxacan cheese salad, and chicken in a fragrant mole negro. Finish your meal off with an artisanal mezcal. On weekends, there's often a guitarist playing soft ballads. It's open all day for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

A 10% gratuity is included in the bill.

Expendio de Maiz Sin Nombre

$ | La Roma Fodor's Choice

The owners of this tiny Roma kitchen with volcanic-rock floors and walls are devoted to preserving Mexico's ancient culinary traditions, including the nixtamalización process of grinding corn into tortilla dough, which is used to create exquisite yet simple breakfast and lunch fare that changes day to day, according to what's in season. You might enjoy anything from corn tacos filled with fresh cheese, hoja santa (a peppery Mexican herb), and squash blossom, to a blue-corn tortilla topped with avocado, ants, and salsa. They also carry a beer made from corn, produced by the city's Dängo craft brewery.

Av. Yucatan 84, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-6508–2722
Known For
  • Corn tortillas produced following centuries-old Mesoamerican traditions
  • Seasonally changing breakfast and lunch fare
  • Covered sidewalk seating
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Fonda Margarita

$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice

Everyone from postclubbing revelers to early morning workers to ardent foodies (the late Anthony Bourdain was a big fan) wait in line for a chance to feast on the hearty guisados served in this legendary breakfast joint. Come with a big appetite, and try a few specialties, such as refritos huevos (eggs whipped with refried beans), chilaquiles with salsa verde, and eggs stewed with longaniza sausage. Many of the best dishes sell out well before Fonda Margarita closes at 11:30 am, and there's usually a line by 8, so try to get here early.

Adolfo Prieto 1364B, Mexico City, 03100, Mexico
55-5559–6358
Known For
  • Stick-to-your-ribs breakfast fare
  • No-frills dining room with communal seating
  • Early closure at noon so get here early
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch or dinner

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Fonda Mi Lupita

$$ | Alameda Central Fodor's Choice
Some of the best mole to be found in central Mexico City comes out of a giant clay pot that, at first glance, looks bigger than the entire dining room of this modest, family-run fonda. Opened in 1957, Fonda Mi Lupita specializes in mole from the eastern side of Mexico state, where the dish leans toward the rich, savory flavors of mulato chilies. You'd be hard pressed to find a better rendition anywhere nearby.

Gonzalitos

$$ | La Roma Fodor's Choice

This itty-bitty taqueria on a less swanky block of famous Calle Colima has a big following for its hearty tacos prepared in the style of Monterrey. There are just a few options on the decidedly meaty menu, all of them delicious, with the chiccharón with tangy salsa verde a particular standout. 

Hacienda Teya

$$ Fodor's Choice

A henequen plantation in the 17th century, this beautiful hacienda just outside Mérida serves some of the best regional food around, primarily attracting well-to-do Meridanos for a leisurely lunch (let that be your guide on what to wear). Start with sopa de lima, then move on to standout mains like poc chuc (slices of pork in a sour-orange sauce) or cochinita pibil—both served with homemade tortillas—perhaps followed by dessert, which comes with a complimentary digestif. After your meal, stroll through the gardens where peacocks roam. If you’d like to spend the night, the hacienda has six handsome suites, but you'll need to book ahead for weekends and holidays. There are also two locations of Hacienda Teya in the heart of Mérida: one at the Paseo 60 mall and the other on Calle 60, across from Parque Santa Lucia.

Carretera 180, Mérida, 97370, Mexico
999-988–0800
Known For
  • Largest wine selection in town
  • Country setting with lovely gardens
  • Elegant atmosphere
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Jardin Nebulosa

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Chic, fancy, and delicious, Jardin Nebulosa seems to be out of place for its environment. Unusual dishes—many of Aztec origin—are made with mostly seasonal and locally harvested ingredients. Wash everything down with a craft beer.

La Chata

$ | Centro Fodor's Choice

At high meal times, travelers will find lines of locals and tourists alike extending out the door of this traditional Mexican restaurant in El Centro. While the decor is plain, the food is among the best in the city. Items worth testing include the queso fundido (cheese fondue) and the enchiladas. If you're staying in West Guadalajara, there's a second restaurant at 405 Terranova in Providencia.

Av. Ramón Corona 126, Guadalajara, 44100, Mexico
33-3613–1315
Known For
  • Queso fundido
  • Enchiladas
  • Second location in West Guadalajara

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La Cueva del Chango

$$ Fodor's Choice

This Playa institution, in a funky jungle garden with fountains, palmettos, and a rambling koi pond, is a favorite breakfast spot. The well-prepared, authentic Mexican selections include multiple styles of chilaquiles, a tart mix of meat, sauce, and egg on a bed of tortillas that will have you skipping lunch. It's popular for lunch and dinner as well.