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Mexico City

Mexico City

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Gate8 Global Team

Mexico City deserves 3–4 days minimum — it's one of the largest cities on Earth and arguably the best food city in the Americas right now. Base yourself in Roma Norte or Condesa (walkable, leafy, café-and-taco-stand-dense) or Polanco (upscale, museum-adjacent). Spend one day downtown around the Zócalo and its museums, one on a Teotihuacan day trip, and at least one just eating your way through a neighborhood. Budget roughly $35–65/day per person before accommodation.

Mexico City has a branding problem: most people who've never been still picture smog and traffic. What they're missing is one of the most exciting food-and-culture cities on the planet right now — world-class museums, a genuinely serious restaurant scene (multiple spots in the World's 50 Best list), and neighborhoods that feel more like Paris or Buenos Aires than the outdated stereotype. Here's how to actually do it right.

How many days do you need in Mexico City?

Three to four days is the sweet spot. One day downtown (the Zócalo, the Metropolitan Cathedral, Palacio de Bellas Artes, the Templo Mayor ruins right in the city center), one day for a Teotihuacan day trip, and one or two for neighborhoods, markets, and simply eating. CDMX rewards slower travel — it's genuinely enormous, and trying to see 'everything' in two days just means sitting in traffic.

Which neighborhood should you stay in?

NeighborhoodBest forVibe
Roma NorteFirst-timers, food, walkabilityLeafy, hip, dense with cafés and taquerías
CondesaA quieter version of RomaArt deco buildings, dog parks, brunch spots
PolancoComfort, museums, upscale diningModern, expensive, near Chapultepec Park
Centro HistóricoHistory, budget, being in the thick of itColonial, busy, closer to major sights and noisier at night
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Use Uber or Didi (the local ride-hailing app) rather than hailing a taxi on the street — it's cheaper, safer, and the price is fixed before you get in. The Metro is excellent and absurdly cheap (about 5 pesos, roughly 25 cents) but gets extremely crowded at rush hour.

What's actually worth seeing

  1. Templo Mayor — the excavated ruins of the main Aztec temple, sitting right next to the Zócalo, in the middle of the modern city. A genuinely striking reminder of what was here before the conquest.
  2. Museo Nacional de Antropología — one of the great anthropology museums in the world, in Chapultepec Park. Give it at least half a day.
  3. Frida Kahlo's Casa Azul (Blue House), in Coyoacán — buy tickets online in advance; it sells out days ahead in peak season.
  4. Xochimilco's canals — colorful trajinera boats through the last remnant of the lake system the Aztecs built the city on, best on a weekend with a group and some drinks.

Day trip: Teotihuacan

About 45 minutes north of the city, Teotihuacan's Pyramid of the Sun and Pyramid of the Moon are one of the most impressive ancient sites in the Americas — and unlike Chichen Itza, you can still climb part of them. See our full Chichen Itza and Teotihuacan guide for prices, hours, and how to beat the crowds.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Hailing a taxi off the street instead of using Uber/Didi — it's not automatically dangerous, but it's an unnecessary hassle and you'll likely overpay.
  • Trying to see downtown, Chapultepec, Coyoacán, and Xochimilco all in one day — the city is genuinely huge and traffic can turn a 'quick trip across town' into 90 minutes.
  • Drinking tap water — stick to bottled or filtered water, same as anywhere in Mexico; ice at established restaurants is normally fine.

Roma, Condesa, and Polanco all have strong options

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Where to stay in Mexico City — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Mexico City?
Three to four days is ideal — one downtown, one for a Teotihuacan day trip, and one or two for neighborhoods, markets, and food. It's a huge city and rewards a slower pace rather than a checklist sprint.
Is Mexico City safe for tourists?
The main tourist and expat neighborhoods (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Centro Histórico by day) see heavy foot traffic and are considered safe with normal big-city precautions — use Uber/Didi instead of street taxis, and don't flash valuables. It's one of the more visited and better-patrolled parts of the country for tourism.
What's the best way to get around Mexico City?
Uber and Didi (ride-hailing) for door-to-door convenience and fixed pricing; the Metro for cheap, fast cross-town trips when you don't mind crowds. Avoid hailing taxis directly off the street.

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