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Teotihuacan, Mexico
Teotihuacan

State of Mexico

Teotihuacan

How to visit the Teotihuacan pyramids from Mexico City: the cheap local bus, the 2026 INAH ticket, what you can and can't climb now, and whether the day trip is worth it.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Where

Mexico City, Mexico

Opening hours

Open daily 08:00โ€“17:00, last admission about 16:30; the on-site museums run roughly 09:00โ€“16:30. Open 365 days a year, but Sundays are far busier because Mexican nationals and residents enter free.

Tickets

From 1 January 2026 the INAH entry for non-national (foreign) adults is 210 pesos, about ยฃ8.50; Mexican nationals pay 105 pesos with ID. Children under 13 enter free. Parking is roughly 50โ€“100 pesos.

Time needed

2โ€“3 hours for the main pyramids and the Avenue of the Dead; up to 5โ€“6 if you want the residential compounds and the museums. Add about 1 hour 15 each way for the bus.

In short

Visiting Teotihuacan

Get there early on the cheap local bus, not an organised tour: Autobuses Teotihuacan run from Terminal Central del Norte (Metro Line 5) for about 60 pesos each way, roughly every 15โ€“30 minutes, and the ride is around 1 hour 15. Aim to be at the gate when it opens at 08:00 โ€” there is almost no shade, you're at 2,300m, and the site bakes by midday. You can no longer climb the Pyramid of the Sun, and the Pyramid of the Moon only reopened in May 2025 to its lower section (the first five platforms, 47 steps), so come for the scale of the Avenue of the Dead rather than a summit photo.

How to visit without wasting the day

The thing to fix first is how you get there. Hotel desks and tour operators will sell you a day trip for ยฃ40โ€“ยฃ70, but Teotihuacan is a do-it-yourself trip: take Metro Line 5 to Autobuses del Norte, walk to the Autobuses Teotihuacan desk on the far left of Terminal Central del Norte, and ask for โ€œLos Piramidesโ€ โ€” not the town of San Juan Teotihuacan, which is a different stop. Buses leave every 15 to 30 minutes from about 06:00, cost roughly 60 pesos each way, and take around 1 hour 15. Tell the driver you want one of the pyramid gates so youโ€™re dropped at Gate 1 or Gate 2 rather than in the town.

Then go early. The site opens at 08:00 and there is almost no shade across the whole complex โ€” youโ€™re at about 2,300m, the UV is fierce, and it bakes from late morning. Being at the gate at opening buys you the cool air, the long light down the avenue, and a couple of hours before the coach groups arrive. Avoid Sundays, when Mexican nationals and residents enter free and the crowds double, and a weekday (Tuesday to Thursday) is quieter than Saturday.

Tickets, what you can climb, and is it worth it?

Thereโ€™s only one ticket and you buy it at the gate โ€” thereโ€™s no real โ€œskip the lineโ€ to pay for here. From 1 January 2026 the INAH fee for non-national (foreign) adults is 210 pesos, about ยฃ8.50 (Teotihuacan is a Category I site, so it went up); Mexican nationals pay 105 with ID, and under-13s are free. Bring cash and small notes.

Set expectations on the climbing, because itโ€™s changed. You can no longer climb the Pyramid of the Sun โ€” thatโ€™s been banned since 2020 to slow erosion and it hasnโ€™t reopened for 2026 (thereโ€™s a fine of up to 20,000 pesos for trying). The Pyramid of the Moon reopened in May 2025 but only to its lower section โ€” the first five platforms and 47 steps, with the upper levels still closed โ€” which is honestly the better viewpoint anyway: it looks straight down the Avenue of the Dead at the Sun pyramid. Check the signs at the ticket booths on arrival, as that access is occasionally suspended for conservation.

Itโ€™s worth it for the scale, not for bagging a summit. Walking two kilometres of monumental avenue between two of the largest pyramids in the Americas is the experience, so allow two to three hours (five to six if you add the painted compounds at Tepantitla and the museums). Pack water, a hat and sunscreen โ€” there is nowhere to hide from the sun โ€” and pair it with a relaxed afternoon back in Mexico City rather than cramming another sight in once you return tired and sunburnt.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Mexico City city guide.

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Teotihuacan FAQs

Can you still climb the pyramids at Teotihuacan?
Not the big one. Climbing the Pyramid of the Sun has been banned since 2020 to stop erosion, and that hasn't changed for 2026 โ€” there's a fine of up to 20,000 pesos for trying. The Pyramid of the Moon reopened in May 2025, but only to its lower section: the first five platforms, 47 steps, with the upper levels still closed. That lower viewpoint is actually the better photo, looking straight down the Avenue of the Dead. Check the signs at the ticket booths on arrival, as access is occasionally suspended.
What's the cheapest way to get to Teotihuacan from Mexico City?
The local bus. Take Metro Line 5 to Autobuses del Norte, find the Autobuses Teotihuacan desk on the far left of Terminal Central del Norte, and ask for 'Los Piramides' (not the town of San Juan Teotihuacan). It's about 60 pesos each way, runs every 15โ€“30 minutes from around 06:00, and takes roughly 1 hour 15. Tell the driver you want a pyramid gate.
Is Teotihuacan worth it?
Yes โ€” the scale is the point. The Avenue of the Dead is two kilometres of monumental ruins and the Pyramid of the Sun is one of the largest in the Americas; standing among them is genuinely impressive even though you can no longer reach the summits. Go on a weekday, arrive at opening, and it's an easy half-day from the city.
How long do you need at Teotihuacan?
Two to three hours covers the two main pyramids and a walk down the Avenue of the Dead. Allow five to six if you want the painted residential compounds (Tepantitla, Atetelco) and the site museums, and remember the bus adds about 1 hour 15 in each direction.

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