107 Best Bars 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.

Antolina

La Condesa Fodor's choice

This stylish mezcaleria and gastropub has a smartly decorated tile-floor interior as well as plenty of sidewalk tables. In addition to artisanal mezcal and cocktails, there's a great wine and craft beer selection and well-prepared modern Mexican food to snack on.

Bar Berta

Fodor's choice

At what's said to be Taxco's oldest bar (it opened in the 1930s), a tequila, lime, and club soda concoction called a Berta is the specialty. Watch out for Taxco's high curbs and ankle-turning cobblestones after you down a few of those. You can also sample local mezcal here.

Caimán

La Condesa Fodor's choice

This sleek and rather spare cocktail and natural-wine bar on the ground floor of Casa Nuevo Leon hotel stands out for its long list of expertly prepared cocktails and its well-chosen selection of very interesting wines, including pét-nats and still wines from Baja's Valle de Guadalupe, along with selections from Georgia, Portugal, New Zealand, and other vino-centric parts of the world. There's also a tempting selection of seafood-focused bar bites, including anchovy toast, smoked-oyster pâté, and crab-salad sandwiches.

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College Bar Querétaro

Fodor's choice

The name of this lively lounge in the city center's bustling La Cruz district may give you pause if you last attended college in the previous century, but College Bar actually appeals to a wide range of ages thanks to its pretty rooftop lounge with great views and an extensive menu of legitimately tasty pub fare, including pizzas, Cobb salads, and gigantic burgers. Musicians entertain the crowds, and TV monitors air soccer as well as NFL football games.

Covadonga

La Roma Fodor's choice

This grand, cavernous 1940s-era cantina has a long antique bar to one side and a kitchen serving up tasty Asturian Spanish fare. It's filled nightly with the sounds of the tercera edad (a polite phrase for the elder generation) playing exuberant games of dominoes and millennials chatting about their adventures at Roma's latest gallery opening.

El Solar

Fodor's choice

This oceanfront bar is just the way a beach bar is supposed to be—small, hip, and laid-back—making it a real pleasure to enjoy a beer while watching the waves of Playa Camarones. There's live music on Friday night and a DJ on Saturday. There's always a good vibe, and if you feel like having a bite, you can always ask the waiter to bring you some food from their next-door sister restaurant, El Barracuda.

Habita

Fodor's choice

The Habita Hotel rooftop showcases a magnificent view of the city from its hip open-air bar and terrace. The lounge area with its fireplace is a great place to chill out without catching a chill. Sipping a selection from the range of mezcals on offer will also do the trick. On some nights, you can watch vintage movies projected onto the building across the street.

Hanky Panky Cocktail Bar

Juárez Fodor's choice
If you’re looking for it, you’ll eventually find it, but you won’t find it if you aren’t looking for it. With a strict, secret location, Hanky Panky is one of Mexico City’s few Prohibition-era-style speakeasies. Award-winning mixologists come and go from here to highlight their specialties abroad, while always bringing something back with them. Reservations are required, and when you arrive, you’ll have to ask around (as in up and down the block) in order to find the entrance—it's part of the charm. Inside is dark, with leather booths and a 10-seat bar. Many cocktails are based on Mexican mixology magic, though there’s plenty of international flavors as well; you won't be disappointed with something spicy.

La Calaca

Coyoacán Fodor's choice

Talented mariachis, a long drinks list, and very tasty (though slightly expensive for the neighborhood) contemporary Mexican food are among the draws of this trendy modern cantina across the street from Jardín Centenario. But the biggest boast is the gracious setting: the main dining and drinking area is in a scenic courtyard with giant trees and a glass roof. There's a cozier bar upstairs, and next to the entrance, La Calaca has a cute little shop that sells fun gifts, crafts, and artwork.

La Jalisciense

Fodor's choice

Since 1870, this convivial cantina has been a favorite spot for socializing, drinking, and dining on hearty Spanish fare in historic Tlalpan. The long, narrow space with an ornate wooden bar, vintage artwork, and brick archways is lively day or night. You can order delicious tortas and other items to go from a small take-out window up front and enjoy eating them on a picnic bench in nearby Plaza de la Constitución.

Plaza de la Constitución 6, 14000, Mexico
55-3498--4174

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La Mascota

Centro Histórico Fodor's choice

One of Centro's most atmospheric cantinas, La Mascota seems perpetually packed, even when in reality only a few tables are full. Cheerful, bright, and frenetic, it's also among the relatively few remaining cantinas to offer free botanas (snacks), listed on a short rotating menu, with every drink.

Mesones 20, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5709–3414

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La Paloma Azul

Benito Juárez Fodor's choice

Specializing in one thing and one thing only (pulque, the fermented nectar of the agave plant), his bar is decorated with wall paintings of Mexico’s pre-Columbian past. The pulque (about 4.5% ABV) comes in a variety of flavors to sample, and be sure to enjoy the ever-revolving cast of characters here, including students, neighborhood fixtures, and older folks. 

Licorería Limantour

La Roma Fodor's choice

Much-lauded and regularly named among the world's 10 best cocktail bars, Limantour looks nevertheless remarkably approachable—a narrow, neatly designed space with one of the city's first truly serious mixology programs (hence its phenomenal reputation). The surprisingly affordable drinks, like the herbal Green Park (with gin, celery bitters, basil, lime, and egg white) and the Machete (San Cosme mezcal with tangerine liqueur, grapefruit and lime extract, agave syrup, and spearmint), delight the senses and explain why ardent cocktail aficionados flock here. You'll find tasty bar snacks, too.

Av. Álvaro Obregón 106, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-5264--4122

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Maison Artemisia

La Roma Fodor's choice

A small group of French and Mexican friends created this inviting, cosmopolitan bar with a top-flight mixology program that features local botanicals and bitters as well as a house-brand Absinthe distilled in Paris. The relatively short cocktail menu changes weekly but always features some novel creations. There's live jazz, blues, soul, and other music once or twice a week. Downstairs, you'll find sister establishment, Loup Bar, which specializes in natural wines.

Manada Bar

Benito Juárez Fodor's choice

Craft cocktails are served in this tiny but fashionable bar ideal for a date or catching up with a close friend. Owned by tour guide Anais Martinez, the space has a hip and charming allure, with a location in the welcoming and laid-back neighborhood of Narvarte Oriente. Small snacks are available to accompany the fine cocktails and wine. 

Pulqueria Los Insurgentes

La Roma Fodor's choice

Behind the colorfully muraled facade of this wildly popular pulqueria, you'll find three floors to enjoy plain and flavored (blackberry, guayaba, mamey, apricot, mango) versions of the milky millennia-old beverage distilled from the fermented sap of the very agave plants that give us mezcal and tequila. The most popular seating area, especially on warm evenings, is the expansive roof-deck. Top DJs and occasional live bands provide a nice beat to the socializing. And if you're not much for pulque, fear not: there's a full selection of liquor and beer, plus nachos, tacos, burgers, and the like.

Rayo

La Roma Fodor's choice

Reservations are a good idea, especially on weekends, at this beautiful bar perched on the rooftop of a dapper early 20th-century town house that houses the similarly trendy restaurant Fonico on the ground floor. You can sample the superb, inventive cocktails before deciding on which one you'd like to order. 

Bar Félix

La Roma

A favored fixture along the voguey nightlife row that is Avenida Álvaro Obregón, Félix is a popular, dimly lit cocktail bar at first glance. Head down the side hallway to the back, however, and you'll find a chatter-filled garden pizzeria that rakes in sizable crowds until late into the evening—the pies here are pretty tasty, too.

Bar Mancera

Centro Histórico

Dim and elegant with a long wooden bar, stained glass, and high-backed chairs, Bar Mancera is perhaps the best preserved of all Centro's early 20th-century watering holes. Founded in 1912, just two years after the beginning of the Mexican Revolution, this is the perfect place to sit back with a tequila or a beer and imagine yourself living in the optimistic days after the fighting had ended and a new political order had emerged.

Venustiano Carranza 49, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5521–9755

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Bar Milán

Juárez

The young and the hip favor this bar, a 10-minute walk northeast of Zona Rosa. Upon entering, you need to change pesos into milagros (miracles), which are notes necessary to buy drinks throughout the night. The trick is to remember to change them back before last call.

Milán 18, Mexico City, 11580, Mexico
55-5592–0031

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Bar Ranita

Attached to the Rana Cansada Hotel, Bar Ranita is a favorite among rowdy expats. The prices are unbeatable, and the margaritas pack a powerful punch.

Calle 10 Norte, Playa del Carmen, 77710, Mexico
984-873–0389

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Blanco Colima

La Roma

Ensconced within one of the most opulent Porfirian mansions in Roma, this urbane bar is a dramatic setting for well-crafted cocktails and tasty tapas. Located in the mansion's former courtyard, the bar is just one element of the building's rambling series of dining spaces (which also includes an oyster bar and a more formal high-end farm-to-table restaurant), but it's also arguably the most delightful of the venues to pass time in.

Calle Colima 168, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-5511–7527

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Blue Bar

The lounge in the Camino Real Hotel, southeast of Polanco, has a sophisticated crowd, mellow music, and good martinis—a relaxing stop if you're staying in the hotel or just passing through. Lighting and overall color schemes are, as you probably guessed, blue tinged. There are several seating areas; furnishings are eclectic but are heavy on mid-century modern pieces. One area has a translucent floor that's lighted from below and set over water—very cool, very blue.

Mariano Escobedo 700, 11590, Mexico

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Bósforo Mezcaleria

Alameda Central
There's only one thing in Mexico City about which there is neither controversy nor argument: Bosforo is the absolute best place in town for mezcal (as the weekend crowds can attest). The music is trippy, the vibe is sexy, and the selection of mezcals, many served from unmarked bottles by small producers, comes from across the country. No place in town—and few places in all of Mexico—offers such a rich variety of flavors and styles. Dark, steamy, and nearly always packed, this is a place to surrender and drink whatever comes your way.
Luis Moya 31, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5512–1991

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Burros Bar

Right on the sand across from Parque Lázaro Cárdenas, this restaurant-bar has bargain brewskis and equally inexpensive fruity margaritas by the pitcher. The seafood is less than inspired, but nachos and other munchies are good accompaniments to the drinks. Watch the waves and listen to Bob Marley and the Gipsy Kings among lots of gringo couples and a few middle-age Mexican vacationers.

Av. Olas Altas 280, at Calle Lázaro Cárdenas, 48380, Mexico
322-222–0112

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Cabaret La Perla

Centro Histórico

The tiny, gritty Cabaret La Perla dates from 1946 and is now one of several popular gay bars lining the western end of Calle República de Cuba. Weekend drag shows are some of the city's best, with performances focusing on Mexican pop divas. 

Cactus Restaurant

This is a townie hangout joint, but then again, that’s everywhere in the East Cape. Cactus is one of your best bets in the entire region for nightlife; it can get a little sloppy as it gets late, but you are guaranteed to befriend a friendly expat or 10 on any given visit. There’s karaoke every Saturday, though a bigger crowd usually congregates on an outdoor patio with a billiards table.

Mercado La Costa, Los Barriles, Mexico
624-117--9754

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Cantina Tío Pepe

Alameda Central

One of a handful of cantinas competing for the title of oldest in Mexico (it was founded over a century ago), Tío Pepe is about as atmospheric as it gets. A Tiffany-style stained glass window, a heavy wooden bar running the length of the room, swinging wooden doors, and unflattering fluorescent lights add up to make this the paradigmatic Mexico City cantina.

Av. Independencia 26, Mexico City, 06050, Mexico
55-8044--5884

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Cantina29 at Casa Don Rodrigo

Come here for the ambience and cocktails (the food has mixed reviews) like the blackberry mojito or house margarita. Once the home of the owner’s grandparents, the building dates back to 1927 and its original brick walls are still intact, adorned with historic family photographs. The courtyard, strung with lanterns and fairy lights, is a pleasant place to enjoy the live mariachi. Happy hour from 4 to 5 pm on mojitos, margaritas and sangrias. 

Blvd. Antonio Mijares 29, 23400, Mexico
624-142–0418
Nightlife Details
Closed Sun.

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Centenario 107

Coyoacán

Midway between Coyoacán's plazas and the Cineteca Nacional film center, this spacious, conversation-filled bar and grill stands out for its extensive selection of both Mexican and international craft beers on tap and by the bottle. But there's also a big all-day-and-night food menu featuring pretty tasty pizzas, burgers, pastas, sandwiches, and the like.