Where to stay in Mexico City
Book Roma Norte for walkable food and lit streets, Condesa for greener quieter nights, or Juarez for the same scene at lower nightly rates.
Ad ยท affiliate link โ at no extra cost to you.
In short
Where to stay in Mexico City
For a first Mexico City trip, stay in Roma Norte unless you have a clear reason not to. It has the densest run of good restaurants and cafes in the city, leafy streets that stay lit and busy after dark, and easy Uber access everywhere. Choose Condesa next door for greener, quieter nights, Juarez for slightly better value within walking reach of the same scene, Polanco only if you want a polished luxury-and-museum base, and the Centro Historico only as a budget sightseeing base you pair with evenings out elsewhere.
The short version
- Best all-rounder: Roma Norte.
- Best value: Juarez, a few streets from Roma's restaurants for less.
- Best atmosphere: Condesa, wrapped around Parque Mexico and Parque Espana.
- Best for nightlife: Roma Norte and Condesa's Avenida Tamaulipas bar strip.
- Avoid using Polanco or the after-dark Centro Historico as your default first-trip base.
Best areas to book
Roma Norte
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe cleanest first-timer choice and the one most people should book: the highest density of good restaurants and cafes in the city, jacaranda-lined streets, and drags like Alvaro Obregon and Calle Orizaba that stay lit and walkable late. It is not the cheapest, but it saves you an Uber to dinner every single night.
Best for: First-timers, food-led trips, walkable evenings
Condesa
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeRoma's greener, quieter neighbour, built around Parque Mexico and Parque Espana with a livelier late bar scene along Avenida Tamaulipas. Slightly more residential and often a touch cheaper than Roma Norte; the better pick if you want parks and morning runs over wall-to-wall restaurants.
Best for: Couples, green space, nightlife on Tamaulipas
Juarez / Zona Rosa
ยฃ valueThe value play right next to Roma: walk to Roma Norte's restaurants in 10-15 minutes for noticeably less on the room. Juarez itself has a fast-improving cafe and gallery scene around Calle Havre, while the adjoining Zona Rosa is louder and the city's main gay nightlife district. Pick the Juarez streets over the rowdier Zona Rosa core if you want sleep.
Best for: Value, central walking, LGBTQ+ nightlife
Polanco
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe luxury and museum base: embassies, the Avenida Presidente Masaryk designer strip, fine dining and visible private security. Impeccably safe and a short hop to the Anthropology Museum and Chapultepec, but it reads corporate rather than characterful. Choose it for comfort and the museums, not for atmosphere or value.
Best for: Luxury stays, museum-first trips, families wanting calm
Coyoacan
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeCobbled colonial streets, leafy plazas and Frida Kahlo's Casa Azul, with a slower village feel a long way south of the action. Lovely for a few quiet nights and unbeatable if Coyoacan and the southern sights are your priority, but you will Uber 25-40 minutes back to the Roma/Condesa dinner scene most evenings.
Best for: Slow stays, Casa Azul, repeat visitors
Centro Historico
ยฃ valueOn top of the Zocalo, the cathedral, Templo Mayor and the big museums, with the cheapest beds in the city. Brilliant for maximising daytime sightseeing on foot, but it empties and feels less comfortable after dark, so treat it as a budget sightseeing base and head to Roma or Condesa for dinner.
Best for: Sightseeing-first travellers, budget
The simple choice
If you are booking in a hurry, filter for Roma Norte first, then compare Condesa if prices look high or you want quieter, greener streets. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: defaulting to a Polanco business hotel that turns up first in search but leaves you taxiing to everything good, or staying in the Centro to save money and finding the neighbourhood dead by 9pm.
Compare Roma Norte and Condesa staysSafety and noise
The central neighbourhoods you will actually stay in - Roma, Condesa, Juarez, Polanco and Coyoacan - are visited safely by huge numbers of travellers; GOV.UK's serious cartel-violence warnings target specific northern and Pacific states, not central Mexico City. The everyday risk is pickpocketing and phone-snatching, so a quieter Roma or Condesa side street usually beats a room over a Tamaulipas bar or in the Zona Rosa party core, especially if you are arriving late or travelling with children. Confirm the regional advice on GOV.UK before you book.
Use Uber over hailed street taxis from the airport and at night - GOV.UK warns against unlicensed cabs, and a tracked card-paid ride to Roma or Condesa is about ยฃ8-11.
Budget vs splurge
A mid-range double in Roma Norte or Condesa typically runs around ยฃ70-130 a night, with smart boutique stays climbing well above that. Juarez and the Centro Historico are where the budget rooms and hostels sit, often ยฃ40-60 for a private room, while Polanco is the priciest base in the city. Because Roma, Condesa and Juarez all sit within a 15-minute walk of each other, the smart move is to book the cheaper edge and walk into Roma for dinner rather than pay the Roma Norte premium on the room itself.
Book the essentials
Where to stay
Tours & tickets
Keep planning Mexico City
Where to stay in Mexico City FAQs
Roma Norte or Condesa - which is better for a first trip?
Is the Centro Historico a good place to stay?
Should I stay in Polanco?
Ready to book?
Find hotels in Mexico City