93 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.

Frëims

$$ | La Condesa

Although there's a small indoor dining room, the big draw here is the expansive patio with a retractable glass roof, tall ivy-covered walls, and tables of varying sizes. It's a great place to relax or work on your laptop for a few hours, and there are enough tasty pressed-sandwich (try the Croque Madame), salad, and soup options to make a meal of it. Later in the day, the drinks of choice shift from espresso-related to beer, wine, and cocktails.

Amsterdam 62B, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-9130–8449
Known For
  • Late-night dining
  • Waffles and waffle sandwiches
  • Well-crafted coffee drinks
Restaurant Details
No dinner Mon. and Tues.

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French Riviera Restaurant

$

The scent of fresh-baked French baguettes and a picture-perfect display of croissants, éclairs, colorful candies, and ice creams greet you at this café-bistro just off San José del Cabo's main square. In the creperie area, the cook tucks delicate crepes around eggs and cheese, ground beef and onions, or shrimp and pesto. If you choose to eat in, salads, pizzas, and other standard fare are offered. The patisserie has a well-designed drink menu of fine wines and tequilas and a full list of organic coffee and tea-based drinks.

Gelateria Montebianco

$ | El Pueblo

Run by an Italian couple who have lived on the island since 2005, Gelateria Montebianco serves a wide variety of gelatos, as well as tasty desserts like tiramisu. It's the place to take a break and enjoy what many consider the best ice cream on the island.

Av. Matamoros 316, Isla Mujeres, 77400, Mexico
998-149–3109
Known For
  • Variety of gelatos
  • Delicious tiramisu
  • Zuppa inglese

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Giulietta e Romeo Heladería Italiana

$

Nothing beats walking down the malecón with an ice cream in hand ... or in this case, Italian gelato. Choose among 28 artisan flavors at Giulietta e Romeo.

Agustin Arriola M. 25, La Paz, Mexico
612-131--7307
Known For
  • Vegan, keto, low carb, and lactose-free options
  • Open daily until 10:30 pm
  • Delivery available

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Hecho en Mexico

$ | El Centro

When locals, be they Mexican or expat, ask each other where to eat, the answer is very often, "Let's go to Hecho!" Both the service and the food are consistently good. Choose one of the side dishes (including onion rings, garlic mashed potatoes, cactus salad, green salad, and many more) when ordering a burger, or two side dishes for the well-prepared salmon fillet, ginger chicken, or tender arrachera steak. Favorite desserts include the monster brownie topped with vanilla ice cream, peanut butter pie, and crème brûlée. On weekends musicians often serenade diners on the pretty outdoor patio, which has a retractable roof high above the café tables. One of the two inside rooms—both of which open onto the plant-filled patio—has booths; the other, larger room has tables for four or six diners.

Helados Cometa

$ | La Condesa
Pop inside this tiny café for first-rate ice cream and sorbets in interesting flavors like ginger-hibiscus, chocolate-mint, and raspberry-green tea. There are a few stools and two little tables, but the best plan is to take your purchase to enjoy by the fountain at Plaza Río de Janeiro.
Calle Colima 162, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
Known For
  • Gourmet sorbets and ice creams
  • Cute, cozy space
  • Short walk to Plaza Río de Janeiro

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Il Vicolo Panaderia

$ | Coyoacán

A friendly family with Italian and Mexican roots operates this tiny artisan bakery that's tucked inside a shop near Jardín Centenario and open only Thursday through Saturday, from mid-morning until they sell out (usually by 2 pm or so). You'll find crisp-but-chewy sundried-tomato-Parmesan and cranberry-walnut-fennel baguettes, flaky scones, soft and chewy amaretto and orange pastries, and lusciously gooey chocolate-banana cakes.

Calle Presidente Carranza 115, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-4137--4756
Known For
  • Savory and sweet breads made with simple, natural ingredients
  • Baguettes in several flavors
  • Delicious sweets
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Wed.

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Jazamango

$$$

Set next to a beautiful garden that provides many of the fruits, veggies, and herbs used in the kitchen, Jazamango is a feast for the eyes as well as the taste buds, and one of the most iconic restaurants in Todos Santos. It's helmed by well-known Mexican chef Javier Plascencia, known for his organic, sustainable approach to creating Baja-Mediterranean fusion dishes. Specialty cocktails and craft-brewed Baja beers are spotlighted at the bar, while the kitchen serves delicious dishes like lechón prensado (roast suckling pig) and a six-hour braised beef short rib. All ingredients are sourced locally; the catch of the day, for example, comes straight from Punta Lobos.

Calle Naranjos, Todos Santos, 23300, Mexico
612-688--1501
Known For
  • Atmospheric garden setting
  • Straight-from-the-earth ingredients
  • Baja craft-brewed beers
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Joe Gelato

$ | Juárez
This gelato shop features flavors that are inventive, inspired by the Mexican palate. Friendly service from the owner himself gives it a homey vibe, where you can sit and enjoy your dessert or order coffee and tea. The real deal here is the quality of the refreshing and unique flavor blends; you can mix up to three flavors in a single scoop.
Calle Versalles 78, Mexico City, Mexico
55-6842–0904
Known For
  • Homemade quality gelato
  • Unique flavors like beet and bergamot, avocado, and cacao and pistachio
  • Quiet nook for relaxing
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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La Biznaga Arte y Café

$

This colorful restaurant set in a historic building in the trendy La Cruz district is filled with hanging plants, climbing vines, and eccentric paintings and folk art. Although popular for every meal of the day, the restaurant is especially known during the day for crepes, omelets, salads, sandwiches, pizzas, and traditional Mexican dishes. Note that the restaurant is cash only.

La Sombra del Sabino

$$

Head to this friendly and festive open-air café and shop that hosts a range of musical and literary events for a delicious breakfast. The eclectic options include traditional English bangers and mash with sautéed tomatoes and mushrooms, chilaquiles verdes, and baguette French toast. Lunchtime options include healthy salads and sandwiches, and there's an extensive selection of pastries, cookies, and other baked good for dessert.

Prolongación Zaragoza 450, Tepoztlán, 62520, Mexico
739-596--0998
Known For
  • Boutique selling books, gourmet goods, natural soups, and interesting gifts
  • Live music, book readings, and cultural events
  • Brunch with mimosas
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Malcriado Café

$$ | La Condesa

Open from 8 in the morning until late every evening (it closes a little earlier on Sunday night), this unpretentiously stylish café with a covered sidewalk terrace fits the bill for a wide range of occasions. Early in the day, it's a favorite for well-crafted espresso drinks, shakshuka, and French toast, but as the day continues, patrons drop by for smoked-trout sandwiches, French onion soup, and to share a bottle of from the short but well-chosen wine list. Service can be on the leisurely—though still friendly—side, but for many who favor this spot, that's the point.

Mary Barragan Helados

$

A few blocks south of the Zócalo, there's often a line outside at this beloved ice-cream parlor known for rich and creamy frozen treats. Favorite flavors include avocado, cajeta, and hibiscus.

Calle 16 de Septiembre 1501, Puebla, 72530, Mexico
222-240--2098
Known For
  • Banana splits
  • Luscious tiramisu or Baileys Irish Cream milk shakes
  • Nieves (sorbets) in fresh fruit flavors like guayaba and passionfruit

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Mercado Roma

$ | La Roma

About 55 vendors offering everything from elevated short-order street food to refined farm-to-tables victuals operate out of this trendy food hall with a popular artisan beer bar, the Biergarten, on the third-floor rooftop space, which is also home to a whiskey bar. The first floor features stalls and a patio seating area, and a smaller mezzanine offers still more options. Some of the most popular choices include paella, sushi, mezcal, boozy paletas, churros, and French crepes.

Mercado Roma Coyoacán

$$ | Coyoacán

The hip Mercado Roma has replicated its success on a slightly smaller scale with this attractive, three-story food hall a couple of blocks from both Avendia Francisco Sosa and the swanky Oasis Coyoacán shopping mall and cinema. You'll find a good variety of options, including mini-outposts of some popular restaurants around town (including El Auténtico Pato Manila and Butcher & Sons, which occupies the entire top floor), serving everything from pizza and burgers to kebabs and Thai curry bowls.

México Lindo y Sabroso

$ | Presa

As you sit at umbrella-shaded tables in a gracious courtyard framed by bougainvillea, serenaded by Mexican music, you'll be transported back to a simpler Mexico. The margaritas are good, and the menu is interesting, from a well-developed pozole verde (a rich soup made with hominy) to juicy cochinita pibíl (pork baked in banana leaf) with black beans and the traditional pickled onions. The enchiladasMéxico Lindo and enchiladas mineras are also crowd-pleasers. The restaurant is out in the quiet residential neighborhood of La Presa de la Olla, a nice neighborhood for a walk, and it opens at 9 am for breakfast if you're out early.

It can get chilly in winter; make sure to wear warm clothing.

Paseo de la Presa 154, Guanajuato, 36000, Mexico
473-731–0529
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Neveria Roxy

$ | La Condesa

Throughout the day, Condesa's traditional Mexican ice-cream parlor—and its several other locations around the city—packs in kids and hipsters alike with its nieve (sorbet) flavors like maracuyá (passionfruit) and tuna (prickly pear cactus fruit) and its helado (ice cream) flavors, including rompope (eggnog) and macadamia. Popular since it opened in 1946, it's distinctly old-school, with teal vinyl chairs, white tables, and bright fluorescent lights, but the quality is first-rate. Roxy enjoys a friendly competition with another beloved ice-cream chain, Tepoznieves.

Fernando Montes de Oca 89, Mexico City, 06140, Mexico
55-5286–1258
Known For
  • Old-school ambience
  • Lots of regional Mexican fruit flavors
  • Ice-cream sundaes

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Niddo

$$$ | Juárez

This bustling café open for breakfast and dinner, with a few sidewalk tables and an art deco aesthetic turns out tasty, globally influenced victuals throughout the day, including bagels and lox, eggs shakshuka, chilaquiles, and fluffy pancakes with a rotating array of toppings in the morning to a variety of creative sandwiches, pastas, and salads later in the day. There's also an impressive array of pastries, desserts, and espresso drinks as well as mimosas and other cocktails.

Dresde 2, Mexico City, 06600, Mexico
55-5525–0262
Known For
  • First-rate espresso drinks
  • Diverse breakfast and brunch fare
  • Delicious brownies, cookies, and pastries

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Nieve de Olla

$ | La Condesa

All of the delicious homemade ice cream at this popular, eco-conscious dessert spot is served in waffle cones or bowls with edible spoons---no plastics or inorganic materials are used here. There are always about a dozen flavors on hand, including seasonal specials like cempasúchil (marigold) and pineapple-basil as well as regular favorites like lemon pie and marzipan.

Alfonso Reyes 122, Mexico City, 06170, Mexico
55-2748--0380
Known For
  • Good people-watching from the sidewalk tables
  • Unusual seasonal ice cream flavors
  • Eco-friendly practices and materials

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Pastefam Caramel

$ | Coyoacán
Skip the more touristy bakeries near Coyoacán's main plazas and head to this cute traditional shop on tree-lined Calle Londres, a short walk from Museo Frida Kahlo. The chocolatines, cinnamon rolls, and almond pastries are fresh, delicious, and generously portioned, and you'll also find savory poblano and other breads.
Corina 117, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5601–3472
Known For
  • Affordable, generously sized pastries and cakes
  • Locals snacking on the white iron benches out front
  • Coffee or juices available from the bakery's adjacent beverage counter

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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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Repostería Los Chatos

$

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

Rock 'n Java Caribbean Bar & Grill

$$ | San Miguel

A favorite of expats and locals, this restaurant has an extensive breakfast menu that includes whole-wheat French toast and cheese crepes. For lunch or dinner try the vegetarian tacos, linguine with clams, or one of the many salads. Pies, cakes, and pastries are baked on-site daily. You can savor your healthy meal or sweet snack (and take advantage of free Wi-Fi) while enjoying a sea view through the back windows. New Rock 'n Java spots—Noodle Bar and Sushi and Tex-Mex Island Grill (both in the nearby Mega Shopping Center)—round out the offerings of this popular Cozumel brand. Pay in pesos for a lower bill—the exchange rate here is not the best.

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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Signora Mariola

$$ | Polanco

The perfect spot for a quick coffee or pastry, Signora Mariola is a tiny place with very few tables placed on the sidewalk outside, so be prepared to take your meal to go as you stroll through Polanco. The croissants and bread are to die for, and the Mexican breakfasts are tasty and light.

Tierra Garat

$ | San Angel

With an airy design, comfortable seating, good Wi-Fi, and large windows that let in plenty of light, this branch of the popular local coffee franchise is ideal for meeting up with friends, getting some work done on your laptop, or grabbing a quick snack or meal. Tierra Garat offers an extensive range of espresso drinks but particularly excels with its sweet chai teas, flavored hot chocolates, and frozen drinks—it's a favorite for anyone with a sweet tooth. In addition to this location a bit north of San Ángel's historic center, you'll find about 40 other branches throughout the city, including some especially inviting cafés in Coyoacán, Juárez, Polanco, and Roma Norte. 

Av. de los Insurgentes Sur 1722, Mexico City, 01030, Mexico
55-6588--1950
Known For
  • Inviting atmosphere for reading or working
  • Hot chocolates, chais, and other dessert drinks
  • Late hours

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Toscana Grill

$$$

This Italian restaurant stands out for its elegance, excellent service, extraordinary steaks, and noteworthy pizzas and cocktails. There's a great brunch on weekends and live music every night.

Tsubomi

$ | La Roma

This cozy bakery/café is a source of singularly delicious Japanese and European treats, both savory and sweet, as well as more substantial fare like grilled teriyaki chicken and curry and rice. Matcha cakes, orange pastries, and perfectly crafted baguettes and sandwiches are among the top options. They also custom design cakes and cookies with a variety of fun motifs, from Day of the Dead to lucha libre.

Calle Tonalá 346, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-1334--4352
Known For
  • Baguette and rustic-bread sandwiches with Japanese and European fillings
  • Good bet for a meal if in the southern end of Roma
  • Colorfully frosted cakes and pastries
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Turtle Bay Café & Bakery

$$$

This funky café, where expats and locals congregate, serves up smoothies, baked goods, tacos, homemade ice cream, and everything in between. The breakfast menu spans acai bowls, eggs Benedict, pancakes, and fruit plates, and for lunch and dinner you'll find blackened fish tacos, coconut shrimp, burgers, and vegetable wraps. Set back from the little plaza, the colorful garden is a pleasant place to have a coffee, and its location by the ecological center makes it the closest thing Akumal has to a downtown. If you fall in love with a local stray, the owner will help you get the paperwork to take your new pet home. The restaurant is open until 10 pm and has free Wi-Fi. This is the only place in town where happy-hour specials include food. Stop by between 4 and 6 pm any day of the week for pizza, taco, and drink specials.

Ufficio by Pan di Bacco

$$

Refuel with a coffee and pizza of Neapolitan roots at the Koral Center food hall. Order a takeaway tiramisu and choose your coffee beans for a premium espresso. If you need something more substantial, head next door to Pan di Bacco for a proper Italian dinner.