972 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.

Cuna

$$ Fodor's choice

This contemporary restaurant at the Wayam Mundo Imperial hotel in the García Ginerés neighborhood has floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a plant-filled terrace. Chef Maycoll Calderón allows fresh ingredients to take center stage, avoiding anything too fussy in such flavorful Italian and Latin American dishes as ceviche, arroz con pollo, pizza, and pasta. Extensive cocktail and mocktail menus make the most of the area's tropical fruits. 

Daiquiri Dick's

$$ Fodor's choice

Locals come frequently for breakfast; visitors come for the great service and consistent Mexican and international cuisine. The lunch-dinner menu has fabulous appetizers, including superb Mexican shrimp al pastor with lemon-zest beurre blanc, delicious blackened salmon fillet, and perfect, spicy tuna tacos. The tortilla soup is popular, too. Start with a signature daiquiri and move on to the extensive wine list. The open patio dining room frames a view of Playa Los Muertos, creating a beautiful, simple scene to enjoy while you sip that drink.

Av. Olas Altas 314, 48350, Mexico
322-222–0566
Known For
  • Homemade orange-almond granola
  • Grilled fish on a stick
  • Sunset views
Restaurant Details
Closed Sept.

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Deigo Ramen

$$ | La Condesa Fodor's choice

There's often a pretty sizable crowd waiting for a seat at the long, narrow bar inside this hip ramen parlor, a fast-casual version of one of the city's most beloved Japanese restaurants, Diego & Kaito, in Del Valle. One of the only spots in town that serves food 24/7, Deigo has a fairly short but sweet menu of well-prepared dishes, with chashu (pork belly, egg, and wakame seaweed) and corn-butter-miso among the favorites. There's a second location in Zona Rosa. 

Tlaxcala 165, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
Known For
  • Hearty meat and vegan ramens
  • Takoyaki octopus balls
  • Calpis, a noncarbonated Japenese soft drink

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Di Vino

$$ Fodor's choice

Clean, bright, and charming, this Italian restaurant has an inviting location on pedestrian-only Andador Cinco de Mayo, just steps away from Plaza de Armas. Customers return again and again for the creative thin-crust pizzas, pastas, and cheese and charcuterie plates served in a historic old home converted to a three-story restaurant.

Andador 5 de Mayo 12, Querétaro, 76000, Mexico
442-214–1273
Known For
  • Friendly, knowledgeable staff
  • Outstanding wine list
  • Exquisite desserts

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DoceCuarenta Coffee Roasters

$ Fodor's choice

This fabulous coffee roaster has three locations in La Paz, plus locations in Todos Santos and Cabo San Lucas. Named simply after the physical location of their first café (#1240), the brand is now synonymous with fresh coffee, great pastries, cute merch, and a welcoming atmosphere.

Don Manuel’s

$$$ | Pedregal Fodor's choice

While the Waldorf Astoria's other restaurant, El Farallon, tends to gather universal acclaim from Cabo's visitors and residents, we'd like to boldly suggest that dining at Don Manuel's is an even better experience. Open for each meal of the day, the modern Mexican cuisine served is innovative and decadent. The tranquil sound of the rolling waves is well complemented by nightly live music, the exclusivity of the restaurant makes it feel as if both nature and the band are performing just for you. A postconsumption stroll along Pedregal's nearly private beach makes for a perfect dessert.

Don Sanchez

$$$ Fodor's choice

Award-winning chef Edgar Roman brings contemporary Mexican cuisine from farm to table at Don Sanchez. Brick pillars, white linens, and a wine wall comprised of nearly 100 blends make up the more formal dining area, but dinner on the patio is a must. The cocktails and appetizers alone are worth a visit, including the Margarita Tejolote. The rustic tomato salad with heirloom tomatoes is a colorful starter to the sterling silver brisket, baked overnight in a brick oven. Seafood is locally sourced and the grass-fed beef comes directly from Sonora. Save room for the chocolate piñata, a uniquely Mexican dessert. The wine pairing dinner makes this the ideal spot to buy Mexico’s finest blends.

El Auténtico Pato Manila

$ | La Roma Fodor's choice

Tucked inside the small El Mercado Amazónico on the east edge of Roma, this tiny offbeat Asian-Mexican-fusion taqueria features duck in every one of its handful of dishes, all of them addictively good. In addition to both Mexican- and Asian-style taco preparations (the Peking duck–inspired "Kim" version is especially tasty), you can enjoy ginger-duck-filled wontons and spring rolls as well as duck tortas. There's also a selection of house salsas (red wine-hibiscus, tamarind, and Thai sweet chile), and they offer a handful of artisan beers. The original location in Condesa is also excellent, and there are two others, one in Polanco and one in Coyoacán.

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 Che Gaucho

$$$ | Colonia Reforma Fodor's choice

El Che Guacho is owned by Argentinians and specializes in Argentinian cuisine. Look forward to enjoying a delicately cooked steak in a beautifully designed indoor-outdoor restaurant with glass walls that (in good weather) open to provide access to a quiet, covered, terrace garden. The bar is well stocked, the staff are friendly and knowledgeable about their menu, and the choices available are phenomenal. There is nowhere else in Oaxaca to savor the juices of such a perfectly cut, perfectly cooked, and perfectly presented steak, accompanied by a wine handpicked by the owners. It's a favorite with locals and visitors alike.

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 Guapo Grill

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's choice
Mexico City is arguably the capital of all Latin America, and for that reason you’ll see plenty of restaurants from immigrants of the region, especially South America. El Guapo Grill is Argentine to the max, so expect lots of meat and red wine. A little higher end than other eateries in the area, it has a romantic vibe, dark lighting with wooden tables, and just two televisions (for watching soccer, of course). Murals of famous Argentines (including Maradona) line the walls and tango music plays lightly in the background. It’s a great place to sit over a steak and talk, as the Argentines so love to do.
Calle Eligio Ancona 207, Mexico City, Mexico
55-6718–7771
Known For
  • Slightly upscale Argentine steak house
  • Delicious choripan (chorizo sandwich)
  • Authentic jugo de carne
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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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 Olvidado

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's choice

Detour just a short block off Francisco Sosa to find this inviting, light-filled café that offers up gorgeous breakfast and lunch fare as well as exquisite cakes and pastries based on recipes from the owner's British grandmother, including scones with jam and nata (clotted cream), trifle, and cardamom cakes. Other menu options include lentil salad; eggs Benedict; smoked salmon, ricotta, and egg croissants; and roast beef, gouda, Dijon mustard, and caramelized onion sandwiches on rustic bread. Note that in a different part of the neighborhood, at Avenida México 36, there's a second Olvidado with counter service, a more limited menu, and a cute but tiny sitting area.

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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Em

$$$$ | La Roma Fodor's choice

Occupying the intimate, refined space that was the original location of renowned Máximo Bistrot, this romantic farm-to-table restaurant is the brainchild of celebrated chef Lucho Martínez, an alum of both Máximo and Quintonil. Em's exciting menu varies according to the chef's inspiration and the season's bounty, but you might start with steak tartare with black truffles and a pain perdue brioche before graduating to braised short ribs with a rich peanut-based mole sauce or a fragrant, earthy porcini mushroom risotto.

Calle Tonalá 133, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-3543–3275
Known For
  • Romantic, intimate dining room
  • Knowledgeable waitstaff
  • Sumptuous omakase menus with well-chosen wine pairings
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch

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Ensō Omakase

$$$$ Fodor's choice

It’s San Diego that connected chefs Robert Ruiz and Drew Deckman, but it’s their commitment to sustainable seafood that turned it into a 15-course sushi collaboration like none other. More than a restaurant, it’s a total dining experience that starts with a welcome drink in the vineyard as chef Ruiz prepares the sushi bar for a maximum of eight guests. Choose from one of two seatings at 3 or 7 pm, and then sit back and taste the magic. No two visits are alike, nor is there a set menu, as the chef creates dishes based on what’s fresh and available that day. The zero-waste restaurant only purchases (or harvests) ingredients on the reservation count, so everything is consumed bite by bite. Courses are remarkably memorable, just like chef Ruiz’ past that started at age six while casting lines with his grandfather. From fishing to watching cooking shows, and eventually washing dishes in Kona, Ruiz hit a turning point when his mentor told him to live out his purpose. That purpose has taken him from Tokyo to San Diego, and now to Valle de Guadalupe where he works with local purveyors and fishermen to ensure that capture methods, species, at the right time of year are all top priorities.

Carretera Ensenada--Tecate, Km 85.5, Valle de Guadalupe, 22766, Mexico
646-210–8635
Known For
  • Sustainable seafood advocate
  • Intimate dining experience with exclusive wines
  • Local, seasonal ingredients
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.
Two seatings at 3 and 7 pm

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Entremar

$$$ | Polanco Fodor's choice

Located in the shadows of Parque Uruguay, Entremar is the lesser-known sister restaurant of the popular Roma Norte seafood restaurant Contramar; both share the same menu as well as the same attentive service. Luckily, it's much easier to get a table at Entremar, but you'll still be enjoying the same high-quality dishes like the pescado contramar, a filet of fish seasoned on one side with red adobo rub and parsley on the other.

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.

Esquina Barragán

$$ | San Rafael Fodor's choice

Black-and-white tiles give this bright space an impeccably clean and welcoming vibe. With its own house mezcal, wines, and beers, it can also be a place to gather for a drink or grab a light dinner. You can sit at the long wood bars facing either the barista zone or the street and the lovely Jardín de Arte, which separates San Rafael from the Colonia Cuautémoc.

Estanquillo El 32

$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's choice
This is a place where the neighborhood elders gather during the day to eat their tamales and drink their coffee, but where you’ll find mostly young, artist types in the evenings. With a wide variety of Mexican artisanal beers and an impressive stock of unique mezcals as well as Mexican coffee, the space is open to the street, like a former garage, and has a couple very well-behaved house dogs keeping everything in check. Books and zines are available to peruse as you enjoy your meal, which ranges from breakfast to dinner. A patio space full of plants adds to the relaxed ambience.

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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Fauna

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Imagine a restaurant where communal tables sit among sunflowers, where rosemary sprigs burn like incense, and where chefs are free to create an experimental menu. That’s Fauna, tucked within the Bruma property and run by prodigy-chef David Castro Hussong, who consistently pours out culinary magic. He’s like a pilot that doesn’t know his destination but ends up taking you to a place you never dreamed existed. Let him take control by going straight to the "Fauna Feast" tasting menu ($110/$165 with wine pairing) that may include abalone with pumpkin seeds, chocolate clams, scallops with eggplant puree, crispy pork with sauerkraut, shredded lamb with chili sauce, charred cabbage bathed in butter, and honey semifreddo that will leave your taste buds dumbfounded. At first glance prices may seem high, but portions are substantial, presentation is impressive, and the contemporary Mexican cuisine will blow your mind.

Carretera Ensenada–Tecate, Km 73, Valle de Guadalupe, 22760, Mexico
646-103–6403
Known For
  • Ever-changing menu with highlights like tender lamb
  • Summer garden setting and winter cozy dining room with sheepskin chairs
  • Impressive presentation

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The Fish Sushi

$$ | Centro Fodor's choice

Delivering a similar quality to their contemporaries but at a more accessible price point, this sushi spot is still a bit under the radar, but that won't be for long. If you go, don't be fooled by the nondescript exterior: you're in the right place, and it's worth going inside! There's also a speakeasy next-door (and accessible through the kitchen) called Hideaway with a lovely selection of mezcal.

Miguel Hidalgo at Cinco de Mayo, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
624-143--4636
Known For
  • Fresh, affordable sushi
  • Vegetarian options
  • Box lunches
Restaurant Details
Closed Sat. No lunch

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Flora's Field Kitchen at Flora Farms

$$$ Fodor's choice

This alfresco dining experience is built right in the center of the self-sustaining Flora Farms. It's a charming oasis featuring a farm-to-table restaurant, spa, gift shop, cooking school, organic market, and culinary cottages (private homes), all under the Flora Farms brand. Meals are homemade including produce and meat (chicken and pork) grown on the property and bread baked on-site. Wholly organic meals include favorites like fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy, massive pork chops fired in the wood-burning oven, butternut squash ravioli, and a selection of pizzas and seasonal salads. Even the sausages served with sweet potato chips are homemade. The adjacent Farm Bar serves unique takes on classic cocktails delivered in Mason jars, like the "Farmarita" with heirloom carrot infusion or the "Pelo de Perro" (Dog's Hair), a Bloody Mary featuring heirloom tomato water. Flora's is a wonderful learning experience for families by day and a romantic spot for couples by night. There's live music events and movie nights scheduled throughout the year, and cooking classes Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10:30 to 2 pm (cost from $2,465 MX includes cocktail and lunch).