Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTAustin | AUS | $63 | ~2h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $65 | ~3h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $79 | ~3h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $101 | ~3h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $105 | ~4h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $107 | ~4h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $108 | ~4h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $108 | ~4h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $112 | ~4h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $116 | ~4h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $120 | ~4h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $122 | ~4h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $122 | ~4h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $127 | ~4h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $131 | ~4h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $131 | ~4h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $140 | ~4h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $142 | ~4h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $151 | ~5h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $153 | ~5h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $158 | ~5h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $158 | ~5h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $161 | ~5h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $168 | ~5h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $175 | ~5h | View → |
New York | LGA | $176 | ~5h | View → |
New York | JFK | $176 | ~5h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $182 | ~5h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $189 | ~6h | View → |
Boston | BOS | $192 | ~6h | View → |
Seattle | SEA | $196 | ~6h | View → |
About Mexico City
Mexico City is one of the great metropolises of the Americas — a 21-million-person cultural and culinary juggernaut that most Americans still wildly underestimate. This is not a beach vacation or a resort town. It's a proper world city with Michelin-starred restaurants, world-class museums, ancient Aztec ruins sitting beneath baroque cathedrals, and a nightlife scene that doesn't get started until midnight. The altitude hits at 7,350 feet, so your first day will feel strange and slightly breathless — drink water, skip the tequila shots until day two.
The food scene is the real draw and the reason chefs from New York and Copenhagen keep making pilgrimages here. Tacos al pastor at 2am at El Huequito in Centro, a $10 tasting menu lunch at one of the mercado fondas in Mercado de Medellín, or a three-hour meal at Pujol where the 1,500-day mole negro is genuinely unlike anything you've eaten — the range and quality are staggering at every price point. The culinary culture is deeply serious without being pretentious.
The city's neighborhoods each feel like distinct cities. Polanco is glossy and walkable with high-end boutiques and galleries. Roma Norte and Condesa are the hip expat-and-local zones where every other building is a coffee shop, mezcalería, or natural wine bar. Centro Histórico is chaotic and magnificent, with the Zócalo — one of the largest plazas on earth — anchoring 700 years of layered history. Coyoacán feels like a colonial village swallowed by the city, complete with Diego Rivera's studio and Frida Kahlo's blue house.
For Americans, Mexico City offers exceptional value right now despite years of peso strength. Nonstop flights from major US cities are under three hours from the south and midwest, fares regularly dip to $200-350 roundtrip, and your dollar stretches hard once you're on the ground. The main practical considerations are altitude adjustment, choosing neighborhoods strategically (stay in Roma, Condesa, or Polanco), and being smart about taxis (always use Uber or the official taxi stands). The city has genuine crime issues, but millions of tourists navigate it safely every year by following basic urban common sense.
Best Time to Fly to Mexico City
Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.
Get alerts when Mexico City flights drop to your target price.
Track Mexico City flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Option 1 — Metro Line 5 (cheapest): Exit the terminal, walk to the Terminal Aérea metro station, take Line 5 to Pantitlán, transfer to Line 9 toward Tacubaya or Line 1 toward Observatorio. Fare is about 5 pesos (~$0.25). Takes 45-60 minutes and is completely safe in daylight with light luggage, but avoid with large bags at rush hour. Option 2 — Authorized taxi (safest for arrivals): Buy a prepaid ticket at the official 'Taxi Autorizado' booths inside the arrivals hall before you exit. Fixed rates by zone — Roma/Condesa runs about 250-300 pesos ($13-16), Polanco about 220-270 pesos ($12-15). Never take an unsolicited taxi offer. Option 3 — Uber: Available at MEX and significantly cheaper than official taxis — same Roma/Condesa trip typically runs 120-180 pesos ($6-10). Use the designated rideshare pickup area on the ground floor to avoid confusion.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The neighborhood most travelers end up loving most — tree-lined streets, art deco apartment buildings, and a density of excellent taquerías, mezcalerías, and coffee shops. Área (coffee) and La Docena (oyster bar) are both walkable. Airbnbs and boutique hotels run $60-120/night and are genuinely nice.
Adjacent to Roma Norte and very similar vibe, but slightly quieter and more residential. Parque México is one of the best urban parks in Latin America — perfect for morning runs. Strong restaurant density including Contramar (the tuna tostada is obligatory) and a good selection of mid-range hotels like Condesa DF for around $150/night.
Mexico City's equivalent of the Upper East Side — Presidente Masaryk Avenue is lined with Hermès, Cartier, and Louis Vuitton. Home to Pujol, Quintonil, and the Museo Soumaya. Five-star hotels like the St. Regis and Presidente InterContinental start around $250/night. Safe, walkable, and excellent for families.
Maximum history, maximum chaos, minimum polish. The Zócalo, Templo Mayor ruins, Palacio de Bellas Artes, and the restored Mercado de San Juan are all here. Safe during the day, not recommended for late-night wandering. Budget hotels from $30/night but quality is inconsistent — Hostal Regina is reliable and central.
A neighborhood-village hybrid about 30 minutes south of Roma by Uber ($4-6). Home to the Frida Kahlo Museum (book tickets weeks in advance), Diego Rivera's studio, and a charming central square with great street food on weekends. Doesn't make sense as a base for most visitors but is a mandatory half-day trip.
Just west of Centro, Juárez has undergone serious gentrification and now rivals Roma for restaurant and bar density at slightly lower prices. Zona Rosa (its sub-neighborhood) is the heart of LGBTQ+ nightlife. Great for travelers who want to be central without paying Polanco prices.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$12 hostel dorm in Roma or Condesa, $15 food (tacos al pastor for breakfast $3, comida corrida lunch $5, street food dinner $7), $5 metro and Uber splits, $8 one major museum or free entry on Sundays, $15 one mezcal at a bar
$70 boutique hotel or nice Airbnb in Roma/Condesa, $40 food (sit-down brunch $12, full lunch at a proper restaurant $15, dinner with drinks $13), $15 Uber rides, $15 paid museum admissions or a cooking class share cost
$200 five-star hotel in Polanco (St. Regis or W), $100 food (breakfast at hotel, dinner at Pujol or Quintonil with wine pairing), $30 private driver for the day, $50 spa treatment or premium experience like a private tour of Teotihuacán
What to Eat in Mexico City
Tacos al pastor at El Huequito (Calle Bolívar 58, Centro) — the original al pastor taquería in Mexico City since 1959. Order a dorado (crisped on the griddle), eat standing up, pay about 25 pesos per taco. Open until 3am.
The tuna tostada at Contramar (Calle Durango 200, Roma) — two salsas (red and green) on a crisp tostada with raw tuna. The single most copied dish in Mexican restaurant history. Book a table two weeks out; lunch only, closed Mondays.
Comida corrida at Mercado de Medellín — any of the fondas inside this Roma market serve a three-course set lunch (soup, main, agua fresca) for 80-120 pesos (~$4-6) between noon and 4pm. This is how locals actually eat lunch on weekdays.
Mole negro at any serious cocina económica in Centro, or the 1,500-day aged mole negro at Pujol if budget allows. The version at La Casa de las Enchiladas (Eje Central) is honest and costs $7 for a full plate with rice and beans.
Tlayuda with chapulines at Guzina Oaxaca (Presidente Masaryk 513, Polanco) — a giant crisped corn tortilla topped with black bean paste, Oaxacan cheese, and toasted grasshoppers. Entry point into insect cuisine without the gimmick factor.
Flying from the US to Mexico City
Airlines & Routes
- →Aeromexico nonstop from JFK, LAX, ORD, DFW, IAH, MIA, SFO, ATL, PHX, DEN
- →United nonstop from IAH (Houston Hub), ORD, EWR, DEN, LAX
- →American nonstop from DFW, MIA, LAX, JFK, PHX
- →Delta nonstop from LAX, JFK, ATL
- →Southwest nonstop from DAL, HOU, MDW, BWI, DEN, PHX, LAX
- →Volaris nonstop from LAX, SFO, ORD, DFW, IAH, LAS, PHX, SAN (often cheapest option)
- →VivaAerobus nonstop from LAX, IAH, ORD, MIA (budget carrier, basic fares often $150-250 RT)
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Mexico City is a big city with real crime — treat it like you would Chicago or New Orleans, not like a rural resort town. The core tourist neighborhoods (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán, daytime Centro) are genuinely safe for normal tourist activity. Never hail taxis off the street — use Uber exclusively or buy pre-paid tickets at official airport taxi booths. Keep your phone out of sight when walking; phone snatching is the most common crime targeting tourists. Don't wear flashy jewelry or carry an obvious camera around your neck in Centro or on the metro. ATMs: use machines inside bank branches during business hours, not standalone street ATMs at night. Don't take the metro between roughly 7-9am or 6-8pm if you have luggage — the crush is intense and pickpocketing is common in those conditions. Altitude sickness is real at 7,350 feet — drink a liter of water before your first alcoholic drink and take it easy on day one. The tap water is not safe to drink; bottled or filtered water only.
Book the Frida Kahlo Museum (Casa Azul) tickets directly on their official website at least 3-4 weeks ahead — they sell out constantly and there's no same-day purchase option. More importantly: Sunday is free museum day at all federally-funded museums in Mexico, including the Museo Nacional de Antropología (normally $5 admission but worth $50). The catch is everyone knows this, so arrive at the Antropología museum right at 9am opening on Sunday and you'll beat the crowds by 90 minutes before the lines form.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Mexico City?
The cheapest route to Mexico City from the US is typically from Austin (AUS), with estimated round-trip prices around $63. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Mexico City?
The best time to visit Mexico City is October, November, December, January, February, March, April. October-April is dry season (60-75°F). May-September is rainy season (afternoon storms). Best weather is November-February. Avoid September-October (heaviest rain).
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Mexico City?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 180 days (tourism). Easy entry.
How long is the flight from the US to Mexico City?
Flight time from the US to Mexico City (MEX) is approximately 2 hours from Austin. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to their destination.
Related Reading
Track flights to Mexico City
Set a price alert for your preferred route and we'll notify you when fares drop.
Get Price Alerts