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Money, Safety and eSIM in Mexico

Money, Safety and eSIM in Mexico

Home Mexico Practical InfoMoney, Safety and eSIM in Mexico
Gate8 Global Team

Mexico's currency is the peso (MXN); carry some cash for markets, street food, and small towns, cards work widely in tourist zones. Safety varies enormously by region — the Caribbean coast, central Mexico City, and Oaxaca are heavily touristed and considered safe with normal precautions, while some other states have genuinely elevated organized-crime violence largely unconnected to typical tourist routes. Check your government's current state-level advisory rather than treating 'Mexico' as one uniform risk level.

The practical questions that actually matter once you land: how to handle cash and cards, an honest (not fear-mongering, not naive) read on safety, and how to get connected without paying absurd roaming fees.

Money and ATMs

The Mexican peso (MXN) is the currency everywhere. Check a live exchange rate before your trip since it moves. Cards are widely accepted at hotels, restaurants, and shops in tourist areas, but cash is still king at markets, small taquerías, local buses, and smaller towns. Use ATMs attached to banks rather than standalone street ATMs where possible, and cover the keypad when entering your PIN — the same basic precaution that applies in most countries.

Payment methodWhere it works best
Cash (pesos)Street food, local markets, small towns, tips
Credit/debit cardHotels, restaurants, malls, larger shops in tourist areas
Mobile payment appsIncreasingly common in bigger cities, less so in rural areas

Is Mexico safe? A balanced answer

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This is the question every guide either overstates or dodges. The honest version: Mexico's safety situation varies hugely by region and is largely driven by organized-crime activity concentrated in specific states and specific circumstances — it is not evenly spread across the whole country, and it's rarely aimed at tourists. The destinations most visitors actually go to — the Caribbean coast (Cancun, Riviera Maya, Tulum), central Mexico City's main visitor neighborhoods, and Oaxaca's historic center — see heavy tourism-police presence and welcome tens of millions of visitors a year with a strong safety track record for standard tourist activity. Some other states genuinely do see serious violence connected to organized crime, largely unrelated to tourist routes but still worth avoiding. Check your government's current state-by-state travel advisory (the US, UK, and Canadian government sites all publish one) before adding any destination outside the standard tourist corridors, and don't assume a headline about 'Mexico' automatically applies to the beach or city you're actually visiting.

The lower-stakes, more universal stuff worth knowing: don't hail taxis off the street (use Uber/Didi or a hotel-arranged taxi instead), keep valuables out of sight in crowded markets and bus stations, and stick to well-lit, populated areas at night, same as any major-city travel anywhere.

eSIM and staying connected

eSIM works well and is the easiest option if your phone supports it — providers like Airalo and Holafly sell data plans from around $6–20 for 7–15 days, active before you land. A physical local SIM (Telcel or AT&T Mexico, sold at airports, convenience stores, and phone shops) costs roughly $10–20 for two weeks of solid data and coverage, including in fairly remote areas.

Water and food safety basics

  • Don't drink tap water directly — bottled or purified water is cheap and sold everywhere, including convenience stores (OXXO) on nearly every corner.
  • Ice at established restaurants and hotels is normally fine (typically made from purified water); be a bit more cautious at very informal roadside stalls if you're not sure.
  • See our food guide for more on eating street food safely without missing the best part of the trip.

Questions people actually ask

Is Mexico safe for tourists in 2026?
In the areas most visitors actually go — the Caribbean coast, central Mexico City, Oaxaca's historic center — yes, with the same common-sense precautions used in any major-city or resort destination. Safety issues elsewhere in the country are real but concentrated in specific states and mostly tied to organized crime rather than tourists; check your government's current state-by-state advisory before venturing beyond standard tourist routes.
What currency should I bring to Mexico?
You don't need to bring pesos from home — bank-attached ATMs are widely available and give a reasonable rate. Bring a card with no foreign-transaction fee if your bank offers one, and carry some cash for markets and small vendors.
Should I get an eSIM or a local SIM card in Mexico?
Both work well. eSIM is more convenient if your phone supports it (activate before you land). A physical SIM from Telcel or AT&T Mexico is similarly priced and has strong coverage, including in more remote areas where eSIM partner networks sometimes have gaps.

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