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.

Outpost

$$$ | Centro Fodor's choice

This trendy restaurant and lounge grows most of its vegetables and herbs on its rooftop garden, sourcing any remaining ingredients from its San Jose--based sister restaurant, Flora Farms. Whether you come just for drinks or a full-course meal (both are popular options), every bite and sip will taste impossibly fresh. Seating is dispersed between their dining room, chandelier patio, or rooftop terrace, each space offering a different vibe.

Panadería 220

$ | San Rafael Fodor's choice
Designed as a walk-up and take-out café, this locale is adored for its divine pastries. Despite its small space, the number of delicious beverages and baked goods they prepare is as impressive as they are delicious. It's really just a small nook, with a wooden countertop and a white tiled wall separating the counter from the kitchen. With this very limited seating, it’s best to take your order to go as you meander this quiet street of San Rafael.

Panadería Rosetta

$$ | La Roma Fodor's choice

Just a block away from the famous restaurant that inspired it, this wildly popular bakery is worth the often long wait for a table to savor a fantastic breakfast, lunch, or even a sweet treat to break up your day. The flaky pastries here are second to none—try the blueberry-lavender scones, guava rolls, or mamey-filled berliners. The savory items are just as mouthwatering, including ricotta-spinach croissants and Croque monsieurs. Traditional Mexican atole is served, plus fine espresso and tea drinks, and there's a pantry that sells gourmet groceries, from olive oil to rosemary focaccia.

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Pancho's Backyard

$$$ | San Miguel Fodor's choice

Marimbas play beside a bubbling fountain in the charming courtyard behind one of Cozumel's best folk-art shops. The English menu is geared toward tourists and priced in pesos, but regional ingredients like smoky chipotle chile make even the standard steak stand out for a true Mexican-inspired meal. Other stars include the cilantro cream soup and shrimp flambéed with tequila. Although Pancho's can be busy, the waitstaff are patient and helpful. Cruise-ship passengers seeking a taste of Mexico pack the place at lunch; dinner is a bit more serene.

Parcela Restaurante

$$ Fodor's choice

This unusual restaurant and organic farm in the lush Atongo Valley to the east of town produces artfully plated salads, such as fresh-made burrata with roasted beets, as well as heartier dishes like an earthy huitlacoche risotto with Parmesan, all made using ingredients grown on-site. Dining is in an open-air garden structure with an arched ceiling as well as at tables amid the flowers and plants, and the views of the surrounding mountains are breathtaking. The cocktails and desserts are also inspired by what's grown here—consider the chocolate brownie with pistachio, house-made chocolate sauce, and rosemary ice cream. A DJ spins music many evenings.

Av. Ignacio Zaragoza 408, Tepoztlán, 62520, Mexico
739-395–4348
Known For
  • Lush setting amid organic gardens
  • Creative herb-infused cocktails and desserts
  • Friendly and thoughtful service
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Pargot

$$ | La Roma Fodor's choice

One of the tiniest yet most beautifully designed restaurants in Roma, this strangely wonderful bistro serves boldly flavored contemporary Mexican cuisine from a short, always-changing menu created by an alum of Pujol and El Bulli. Options might include a tostada topped with smoked leeks, recado negro (a charred Yucatecan chile paste) and avocado mousse, or an infladita (a fried, puffed tortilla) filled with crabmeat and corn and topped with a puree of spring peas and mint. It's a good idea to reserve a few days ahead. 

Calle de Chiapas 46, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
56-3470--4481
Known For
  • Just a handful of tables inside and on the sidewalk (so smart to reserve ahead)
  • Sleek, minimalist design
  • Orange and natural wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Pasillo de Humo

$$$ | La Condesa Fodor's choice
Located upstairs at the bustling Parián Condesa, an arcade mostly of food stalls, Pasillo de Humo and its gorgeous atrium-style space is at once sophisticated but easygoing. The kitchen produces flavorful, authentic Oaxacan fare, including tlayudas with grasshoppers, chorizo, strips of chile, and other traditional toppings, plus octopus grilled with a hauchimole (guaje-seed mole) sauce and pork belly with fruit mole, plantains, sweet potato puree, and roasted pineapple. Do stick around for the superb desserts.

Pastelería Ideal

$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's choice

Since 1927, this venerable bakery has been supplying Chilangos with traditional European and Mexican pastries as well as savory rustic breads. Give yourself a little time to wander the aisles and make your way up to the second level to see the cake decorating area. Another location of the bakery can be found at 16 de Septiembre 18, also in Centro.

República de Uruguay 74, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5512–2522
Known For
  • Dizzyingly enormous selection of desserts
  • Christmas cookies and roscas de reyes (king cakes)
  • Ornately decorated cakes

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Pelicanos Restaurant & Marina

$$ Fodor's choice

Enjoy fresh seafood on the shaded patio of this family-owned restaurant in the heart of town. Try fish prepared al ajo (in a garlicky butter sauce), breaded, grilled, or tikin–xic style (marinated with adobo de achiote and sour oranges). Pelicanos also offers a variety of four-hour excursions that include fishing, snorkeling, then cooking the daily catch at the restaurant.

Peter's Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Although it has only six tables, Peter's has an impressive menu that gives international dishes a Mexican twist—think foie gras with apple and yam bean salad or smoked salmon with potato-chipotle mash. Portions are generous, flavors are outstanding, and prices aren’t too bad. For something lighter, try the Claudia salad, a mix of field greens with raspberry vinaigrette. The key lime pie with tequila sorbet provides a refreshing finish, but, for a local's secret, request the off-the-menu chocolate brownie and ice cream drizzled with habañero honey. Everyone seems to know each other here—Peter’s is popular with expats. You’ll feel welcome, too.

Av. Bonampak, Sm 3, Cancún, 77500, Mexico
998-251–9310
Known For
  • Key lime pie
  • Cozy, intimate atmosphere
  • Expat hangout
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. June–Nov. No lunch

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Picnic Helados

$ | Coyoacán Fodor's choice

This simple take-out window on a quiet side street serves the best hand-crafted ice cream and sorbet in the neighborhood, always featuring just a handful of flavors that change regularly but might include coffee-cardamom, plum–goat cheese, guava-cinnamon, or matcha tea. Picnic also sells a few kinds of delicious cookies and brownies, too.

Calle Malintzin 205--2, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5510–9209
Known For
  • Interesting flavors, often with seasonal fruits
  • Cute take-out window (but no seating)
  • Chocolate brownies
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Piloncillo y Cascabel

$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's choice
On a verdant corner in Narvarte, this neatly decorated space has plenty of room and a quickly rotating lunch crowd. Known for its lines down the block, diners come for an updated take on traditional Mexican cuisine and reasonable prices. The outdoor seating is nice in this leafy neighborhood.

Pitahayas

$$$ Fodor's choice

Set under a soaring palapa overlooking the rollicking surf, this restaurant above the beach in the Hacienda del Mar Los Cabos blends Asian and Polynesian ingredients with local products for a menu that showcases well-executed Pacific Rim fusion. Seafood-heavy dishes are the specialty. Try the blackened fisherman's option accompanied with Brussels sprouts, or the shrimp papillote (cooked in parchment paper) with squash blossom and laguna negra sauce. For an impressive presentation and fresh flavor, the surf and turf with either shrimp or lobster, comes with almond and habanero butter, creamy spinach, and filet mignon. Also on offer is one of the largest wine selections in all of Mexico with nearly 3,000 bottles, as well as private (and quite impressive) dining in the wine cellar for 10 people. 

Carretera Transpeninsular, Km 10, The Corridor, 23410, Mexico
624-145–6113
Known For
  • Mexican-Asian fusion
  • Outstanding wine cellar
  • A classic of Los Cabos dining scene

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Pitiona

$$$ | Centro Historico Fodor's choice

This culinary laboratory is famed for developing new dishes using both inventive techniques and traditional ingredients. Everything served here is sourced locally and used imaginatively to create a contemporary Oaxacan cuisine. The head chef, Jose Manuel Baños, heads of team of leading culinary talents to prepare the finest and most delicate meals available in city. The beautifully restored restaurant also features a mezcal tasting bar and both indoor and outdoor eating areas. The six- and nine-course tasting menus, showcasing the best of the best in Oaxacan cookery, are highly recommended.

Pizza Local

$$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's choice
Most visitors to Mexico City don’t come here in search of New York--style pizza, but that’s not to say a fine pie isn’t appreciated in the city. Mexican pizza is typically light on the sauce, but Pizza Local is the rare exception with thin-crust options such as roasted tomato and garlic or classic, charcuterie-style pepperoni (also a rarity in the city). The ambience is laid-back, with a very special back patio that’s at once rollicking and romantic, depending on the night.
Uxmal 88, Mexico City, Mexico
55-4632–1669
Known For
  • Pizza that even a New Yorker could love
  • Thin-crust pies
  • Pretty patio for outdoor dining
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Plank

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The name says it all at this New York–inspired restaurant where entrées are grilled on wooden planks or Himalayan salt blocks. The smoky flavors of cedar, maple, hickory, and oak come through in signature dishes like grilled salmon or beef filet in mushroom sauce. Sides of roasted cauliflower and grilled asparagus are served in mini cast-iron skillets, and flatbreads are topped with Brie cheese, cherry tomatoes, and arugula leaves. Cocktails such as the Margarita Golden add smolder to your meal. This is the place to celebrate birthdays, as the entire staff will burst out in song with cake and sparklers.

Calle 16, Playa del Carmen, 77710, Mexico
984-452–0458
Known For
  • Entrées grilled on wooden planks
  • Meats smoked in white cedar for over 12 hours
  • Grilled salmon
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Puerto Madero

$$$$ | Zona Hotelera Fodor's choice

Modeled after the dock warehouses that have been converted into modern eateries in Argentina's Puerto Madero, this steak-and-seafood restaurant gets rave reviews from locals. The grilled octopus seasoned with paprika is exceptional, as are the thin tuna rolls filled with Alaskan crab meat and Maine lobster. The sushi menu lists swanky appetizers. If the restaurant is too loud inside, ask for a table outside on the patio overlooking the lagoon. Reservations are recommended on weekends.

Pulpo Negro

$$$ Fodor's choice

Walk a couple blocks south of Tepotzotlán's main plaza, which is lined with mostly unmemorable restaurants, to reach this beautifully designed modern Italian spot set in a handsome old building with towering windows and brick walls. The extensive menu features creative pastas, pizzas, and sandwiches served on house-baked artisan breads---try the linguine with shrimp and octopus sauteed in garlic or the Argentinean-style choripán sandwich, with chorizo, a mix of cheeses, and chimichurri sauce. 

Ignacio Manuel Altamirano 8, Tepotzotlán, 54605, Mexico
55-1100--8846
Known For
  • Delicious breakfasts
  • Inventive craft cocktails
  • House-made sodas with unusual flavors, like basil-jasmine-cardamom
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Quintonil

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Named after a wild green herb often found in milpas, a Mesoamerican crop-growing system, Quintonil was opened in 2012 by chef-owner Jorge Vallejo. Today, Vallejo eschews fussiness to let the local ingredients shine: smoked trout from nearby Zitácuaro or a salad of greens and herbs from the floating gardens of Xochimilco. The discreet, refined restaurant is locally focused all the way up to the rooftop garden.

Isaac Newton 55, 11560, Mexico
55-5280–1660
Known For
  • Accessible fine dining
  • Thoughtful ingredient pairings
  • Prix-fixe menu only
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential
Children under 12 discouraged

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Qūentin Café

$ | La Condesa Fodor's choice

With a more charming setting than the original location in Roma, this buzzy third-wave coffeehouse is set along leafy Avendia Amsterdam and offers comfy seating in its plant-filled interior and on the sidewalk. The baristas are knowledgeable and professional, whether crafting a carajillo (a refreshing cocktail with iced espresso and Licor 43, a fragrant herbal liqueur), a cascara (tea brewed with coffee cherries), or a single-origin pour-over.

Av. Amsterdam 67A, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-7312–6188
Known For
  • Carefully sourced small-batch coffees from around the world
  • Artisanal chocolates and pastries
  • Coffee-based cocktails

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Restaurante Amaro

$$ Fodor's choice

The patio of this historic home glows with candlelight in the evening, but during the day, things feel a lot more casual. Although the menu has a few fish or meat dishes (cochinita pibil, say, or butterfly chicken breast in a cream sauce), the emphasis is on vegetarian dishes such as chaya soup (made from a green plant similar to spinach), stuffed mushrooms, spinach lasagna, and avocado pizza. Prices are reasonable, and service is excellent. Expect live music in the open-air courtyard daily between 8:30 pm and midnight.

Restaurante Casa Colibrí

$$ Fodor's choice

Although there's a charming downstairs seating area, the rooftop terrace of this delightful bistro serving creative Mexican dishes as well as pizzas and gastropub fare is hard to beat, with its views overlooking the town's central plaza and the steep cliffs that frame Malinalco. Highlights from the diverse menu include a tiradito of raw cecina with serrano chiles, marinated wild-boar tacos, and trout topped with pineapples, ham, and cheese in a lightly spicy sauce. Among the pizzas, the Yucateca-inspired pie with tender cochinita pibil and cured purple onions is a favorite. Save room for the traditional corn cake with whipped cream and berries for dessert.

Rokai

$$ | Cuauhtémoc Fodor's choice

An immediate success since it opened on a quiet side street in Colonia Cuauhtémoc, tiny Rokai is perhaps the most authentic Japanese restaurant in a city where cream cheese, chipotle mayo, and bottled hot sauce adorn many a sushi roll. Japanese chefs Hiroshi Kawahito and Daisuke Maeda use immaculately fresh fish brought in daily from Mexico's various coasts, primarily Baja California and Oaxaca, and turn it into sushi and sashimi, as well as cooked dishes. There's also a ramen restaurant next door, bearing the same name and ownership.

Río Ebro 87, Mexico City, 06500, Mexico
55-5207–7543
Known For
  • Traditional omakase tasting menu that is a bargain for the quality
  • Reservations typically needed
  • Vegetarian ramen dishes

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Rosa Amaranto

$$ Fodor's choice

This stylish restaurant set on the rooftop terrace of the enchanting Hotel Boutique Pueblo Lindo offers not only some of the best views in town, but also delicious, beautifully presented modern Mexican dishes. Start the day with huevos rancheros, fresh seasonal fruit, and one of the decadent house-baked pastries; later in the day, try the grilled fish of the day with pureed potatoes and a mango salsa, or enchiladas with chicken and hibiscus flowers. Everything is prepared with care and using fresh, often seasonal ingredients. 

Rosetta

$$$$ | La Roma Fodor's choice

Regarded as one of the best female chefs in the world, Elena Reygadas worked for years at London's Michelin-starred Italian restaurant Locando Locatelli before moving back to her hometown to open Rosetta in a stunning early 1900s belle epoque mansion. Despite the perfect risottos and handmade pastas in varying shapes, what her cuisine primarily takes from Italy is reliance on local and seasonal ingredients (the olive oil is from Baja California, the burrata cheese made in the town of Atlixco)—but much of the food has a creative Mexican heart. Breads both sweet and savory are baked in-house, and sold from Panadería Rosetta bakery, which has two locations nearby.

Calle Colima 166, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-5533–7804
Known For
  • Superb modern Italian fare
  • Drinks in the swanky upstairs cocktail bar, Salon Rosetta
  • Rosemary--olive oil ice cream with fresh herbs for dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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Salón Gallos

$$ Fodor's choice

An oat-processing facility, in an area that's busy by day but quiet at night, has been converted into an innovative cultural complex. In addition to this restaurant offering creatively updated Yucatecan dishes, you'll also find several bars, a gallery, an arthouse cinema, and a pop-up space that typically features the work of a local artisan or collective.

San Pedro Tortas and Cemitas

$ Fodor's choice

Across the street from the dramatic spires of Parroquia de San Andrés Cholula, this simple sandwich shop serves delicious versions of classic tortas as well as Puebla's beloved version of these hearty sandwiches, the cemita. Try it with chicken milanesa (with thinly pounded and breaded chicken) or local sausage with all the fixings, including cheese, avocado, jalapeños, and chipotles in adobado sauce.

Seared

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Opened by three-Michelin-starred chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, this signature restaurant at One&Only Palmilla is one of the priciest spots in Los Cabos, but it's also one of the best. Boasting hand-selected cuts of steak and freshly caught Pacific seafood, the menu showcases everything from caviar to Kobe beef. Their premier wines from around the world pair beautifully with such entrées as grilled lamb chops and steamed red snapper. Appetizers like black truffle pizza and roasted foie gras pastrami will make you swoon. For a sweet finish, try the strawberry pavlova or coconut custard. Live guitar takes this fine-dining restaurant to the next level in romance, but expect to pay heavily for the memorable evening. Feeling more casual? Adjacent to Seared is Suviche Bar, which offers fresh sushi and Mexican ceviches incorporating both local and Asian flavors, and chic cocktails.

Carretera Transpeninsular, Km 7.5, The Corridor, 23400, Mexico
624-146–7000
Known For
  • Fine cuts of beef
  • Elaborate wine list
  • Remarkable appetizers
Restaurant Details
Elegant resort attire

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Siembra Comedor

$$$$ | Polanco Fodor's choice

At Siembra Comedor, the diverse dishes are elevated and delectable, with both the decor and the menu heavily centering around corn. Whether you choose tacos, octopus, or a rib eye, your meal won't disappoint. A few doors down from the restaurant is Siembra Taqueria (Newton 256), a good spot for a quick bite if your time is more limited.

Sonora al Sur

$$ Fodor's choice

Combine prime cuts from Sonora (Mexico's finest meat-producing state), a chef that has found the secret to grilling the perfect barbecue, and affordable rates, and you'll get this local favorite. The restaurant now has an indoor area with a/c, making it a comfortable place where to eat year round.

Blvd. Nuevo Vallarta 64, Mexico
322-297–0376
Known For
  • All-you-can-eat buffet
  • Local favorite
  • Delicious barbecue

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