The Western Hemisphere's most exciting food capital, at perfect spring-like elevation, with neighborhoods you'll want to live in.
Mexico City is the most underestimated capital in the Americas. The reputation lags about 15 years behind reality — it is now safer than several US cities, packed with world-class restaurants and art, and laid out in walkable European-feeling neighborhoods. The food alone justifies the trip: tacos al pastor at midnight in Condesa, hand-shaped tortillas at a Roma Norte fonda, mole that takes 27 ingredients and three days to make.
At 2,250m elevation, the climate is permanent spring — daytime highs of 22-25°C year-round, evenings cool enough for a sweater. You may feel the altitude on day one (mild headache, easier to get drunk). It passes in 48 hours. Pace day one accordingly and drink water.
Compared to Lisbon or Barcelona, you're paying about 40% less for similar quality. A great tasting menu runs $50, a fonda lunch $4, a beautifully renovated Roma Norte hotel $80. The dollar still goes very far here.
Beyond the obvious highlights, here are six spots locals actually use and most guidebooks miss:
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Mexico City has a subtropical highland climate. Here's the month-by-month breakdown:
Our pick: November through April — the dry season. December-February is peak: cool mornings, warm sunny afternoons, blue skies. Day of the Dead (late October to early November) is magical but books out months in advance.
Benito Juárez (MEX) is in the city — 30 minutes by metro to Centro for less than a dollar, or 25 minutes by Uber for $10-15. From Houston/Dallas/LA, flights run $250-450 RT. From the East Coast $350-550 RT. From Europe $700-1,100 RT with one stop. The metro is excellent for getting around the city: $0.30 a ride.
Roma Norte and Condesa are the perfect first-trip neighborhoods — leafy, walkable, packed with cafés and restaurants. Polanco is the upscale side (Pujol, Quintonil). Coyoacán suits returning visitors who want a quieter colonial feel. Avoid Centro Histórico as a base — atmospheric but quiet at night and louder during the day.
Headline acts: Teotihuacán pyramids (1 hour by bus, go early), Frida Kahlo Museum (book online weeks ahead), Anthropology Museum (the best in the Americas, plan 4 hours), Mercado de la Merced for chaos, a lucha libre wrestling night at Arena México on Friday or Tuesday. Food: book Pujol or Quintonil 2+ months out; for street food, walk Condesa or Roma after 8pm.
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Yes — in the central tourist neighborhoods (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Centro, Coyoacán) it's safer than many US cities. Standard precautions: use Uber not street cabs, don't flash valuables, avoid unfamiliar areas after midnight. Solo female travelers report CDMX as comfortable.
November to April — the dry season. November (Day of the Dead) and December-February are perfect: dry, sunny, 22-25°C days. The rainy season June-September brings afternoon thunderstorms but mornings are usually clear.
Five days is ideal — three for the city (Centro, Roma/Condesa, Coyoacán), one for Teotihuacán pyramids, one flex day for Xochimilco or museums. Three days feels rushed; ten days lets you add Puebla or Oaxaca day/overnight trips.
It helps, especially outside Polanco and the tourist hotels. English is spoken in upscale restaurants and at major museums but not at fondas, markets, or small cafés. Learn 'por favor', 'gracias', and basic food vocab — locals are patient and warm with effort.
No — stick to bottled or filtered water for drinking and brushing teeth in the first few days. Ice in established restaurants is made from filtered water and is fine. Most hotels and Airbnbs supply filtered water free.
CDMX sits at 2,250m. Most visitors feel mild altitude on day one — headache, easier to get drunk, breath catches on stairs. It passes by day three. Hydrate aggressively, ease into walking, and skip alcohol the first night if you're sensitive.