
Where to Sleep in Mexico City
Matters More Than You Think
We've hosted hundreds of travelers who booked the wrong neighborhood, spent half their trip in Ubers, and missed what makes this city extraordinary. Here's the honest breakdown.
Mexico City isn't one city. It's twenty cities stitched together. Where you sleep determines what version of CDMX you actually experience — not just your commute, but who you meet, what you eat for breakfast, and how much of the real city you see.
Before picking a colonia, answer these honestly: Do you want to walk everywhere, or are you fine with metro and Uber? Are you here for food and nightlife, museums, or day trips? Traveling solo and want to meet people, or with a partner wanting quiet? And what's your daily budget — your neighborhood changes your cost of living more than you'd expect.
"Where you sleep in Mexico City shapes who you meet, what you eat for breakfast, and how much of the real city you actually see."
Juárez
Juárez is where we chose to open Wanderlust District, and it wasn't random. It sits at the intersection of everything: five minutes from Paseo de la Reforma, walking distance to Roma, next door to Zona Rosa, and a straight shot to Chapultepec Park and the best museum corridor in Latin America.
The neighborhood is growing fast — Soho House opened here, galleries are multiplying, speakeasies are appearing behind unmarked doors, and the restaurant and coffee shop scene is genuinely exciting without being insufferable about it. Multicultural, relaxed, and genuinely mixed. Less trendy than Roma, which means prices are saner and the people are more interesting.
Roma Norte
Roma Norte is what people picture when they imagine the "hip Mexico City" from that Netflix show. The food scene alone justifies a visit — but no guide tells you the downside: leaving Roma is painful. Traffic going north toward Reforma or west toward Chapultepec adds 20–30 minutes to any trip.
Staying here will increase your daily expenses — cheap, good food is becoming hard to find as the neighborhood gets more expensive with every year.
Condesa
Condesa and Roma share a border but feel completely different. Condesa is slower, greener, more residential — and once was the most talked-about neighborhood in the city. It's still beautiful to walk around, especially around Parque México and the art deco streets.
But the energy has shifted. Most new restaurants, bars, and businesses are opening in Roma and Juárez now. Condesa is where you go for a long Sunday walk. It's less and less where people want to be based.
Centro Histórico
The Zócalo, Templo Mayor, Palacio de Bellas Artes — Centro is essential as a day trip. Locals mostly go for shopping, and it gets very crowded. As a place to sleep, it's a different story.
It clears out at night. If you stay here, you'll feel trapped in your accommodation once it gets dark — the streets empty fast and the energy disappears with them. Most travelers are better staying in Juárez or Roma and visiting Centro for the afternoon.
Coyoacán
Coyoacán feels like a small colonial town dropped into the south of the city. Casa Azul — Frida Kahlo's house — is here, along with the best Sunday market in CDMX and Café El Jarocho, always a line, always worth it.
The problem: it's far, and you're isolated from most of what draws people to CDMX. Best experienced as a day trip.
| Neighborhood | Best for | Walk | Cost | Vibe |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Juárez | Most travelers | ★★★★★ | $$ | Local + international |
| Roma Norte | Foodies, couples | ★★★★ | $$$ | Trendy, buzzy |
| Condesa | Couples, expats | ★★★★ | $$$ | Leafy, calm |
| Centro | Day trips | ★★★ | $ | Raw, authentic |
| Coyoacán | Day trips | ★★ | $$ | Slow, colonial |
The spots we don't publish
The taco stand two blocks from us that no tourist has found. The rooftop bar with no sign. The Sunday morning route our guests call the best hour they spent in CDMX. These don't go on the internet — they go in your welcome packet when you check in.
Book a stay to unlock themCommon questions
Is it safe to stay in Mexico City?
Yes — Juárez, Roma, Condesa, and Coyoacán are all safe for travelers. Like any major city, stay aware of your surroundings at night. Centro is fine during the day.
Which neighborhood is closest to the airport?
The airport (AICM Terminal 1 & 2) is closest to Centro. From Juárez, budget 30–40 min by metro or 20–30 min by Uber.
Where should a solo traveler stay?
Juárez. Central, walkable, and at Wanderlust District you'll meet people from day one without trying. Roma works too but costs more.
Can I walk between Roma and Juárez?
Easily — they're adjacent, separated by Insurgentes. About 15–20 minutes. Most of our guests do it every day.
What about digital nomads — is there good WiFi?
Wanderlust District has fast WiFi throughout and we attract a lot of remote workers. Juárez is also full of great cafés to work from within walking distance.
Read the guide.
Then live it.
Dorms and private rooms in Juárez. Breakfast every morning. The rest we'll tell you when you arrive.


