Best Coffee Shops in Mexico City
2817 coffee shops in Mexico City. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.
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Mexico City has one of Latin America's most exciting coffee scenes, which is fitting for a country that grows some of the world's best beans. Colonia Roma and Condesa are home to exceptional specialty cafes that take Mexican terroir seriously.
Best neighborhoods: Colonia Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán, Juárez
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About coffee in Mexico City
Mexico City is in the middle of a coffee renaissance. The country has been a major coffee producer for over a century, sourcing from Veracruz, Chiapas, and Oaxaca, but specialty coffee culture in the capital developed primarily after 2010. The wave is now full and serious. Mexico City hosts dozens of credible specialty cafés, multiple respected roasters, and a barista training scene that has begun to export talent to Los Angeles and Madrid.
The story starts with Cardinal Casa de Café, founded in 2014 in Roma Norte. The roastery and café established the contemporary specialty model in the city, sourcing from Mexican producers and brewing with the kind of attention that had not been previously available in Mexico City's commercial café market. Buna 42, opened in 2015, brought a more design-forward register. Almanegra, Quentin, and Boicot Café each anchor specific neighborhoods within the broader specialty geography.
The traditional Mexican café tradition runs through the cafetería. These are simple, fast-service establishments serving a café americano or café con leche alongside a torta or pan dulce in the morning. Sanborns, the historic department store and café chain, holds part of the heritage register. The cantinas in the historic center serve coffee alongside their primary alcohol business. The combination of fast cafetería and slow specialty café gives the city two parallel coffee cultures.
The neighborhoods stratify cleanly. Roma Norte and Roma Sur hold the densest specialty culture, with the highest café-per-block ratio in the city. Condesa, just south, holds a slightly more upmarket version of the same register. Polanco holds the high-end specialty alongside luxury hotel cafés. Coyoacán and the southern neighborhoods hold a quieter register with specialty cafés sprinkled among older Mexican coffee traditions. The historic center holds the Sanborns and the older cafetería tradition more loyally than the contemporary districts.
What separates Mexico City from other major Latin American specialty cities is the production proximity. The country's coffee growing regions are within a few hundred kilometers of the capital, and many specialty roasters have direct relationships with producers in Veracruz, Chiapas, and Oaxaca. The bean often travels less distance from farm to cup than most international specialty supply chains. The result is a freshness and a directness in Mexican specialty coffee that Madrid, London, or Tokyo cannot replicate at the same prices.
The third wave in Mexico City has trained baristas at Mexican specialty cafés using Mexican beans. Cardinal's training program, the Buna apprenticeship system, and a wider network of barista schools have produced a generation of Mexican baristas who work at Mexican specialty roasters. The export of this talent to other cities has begun. The local specialty culture continues to operate at increasing density.
What surprises a visitor is the speed of change. Roma Norte in 2010 had perhaps three credible specialty cafés. By 2025 the count is well over thirty within a fifteen-minute walk of the same intersection. The pace of growth has slowed but not stopped, and specific cafés continue to open at a rate that suggests the wave is still rising rather than peaking.
COFFEE SHOPS IN MEXICO CITY — PAGE 4 OF 10
Showing shops 181-240 of 2,817 in Mexico City.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in Mexico City
Roma Norte, the central specialty heart of the city, holds the densest specialty coffee culture in Mexico City. Cardinal on Calle Coahuila, Buna 42 on Calle Orizaba, and Almanegra on Calle Tabasco are the canonical specialty addresses. Within a fifteen-minute walk, more than thirty credible specialty cafés operate. The neighborhood is the city''s creative industry hub and supports a dense café culture.
Condesa, just west of Roma Norte, holds a slightly more upmarket version of the same register. Cafés tend to be larger, design-forward, and slightly more expensive than in Roma. Lalo!, Boicot, and Maizajo (more food than coffee but with serious café service) anchor the neighborhood.
Polanco, the wealthy district north of Chapultepec, holds high-end specialty alongside luxury hotel cafés. Specialty cafés here run more expensive than in Roma but maintain similar quality. Quentin and Salvaje are the canonical Polanco specialty addresses.
Coyoacán, the historic neighborhood in the south of the city, holds a quieter register. Specialty cafés sit alongside older Mexican coffee traditions, including a cafetería culture that has operated continuously since the mid-twentieth century. The neighborhood pace is slower and the cafés tend to operate in the seated register.
The historic center, including the Centro and the streets around the Zócalo, holds the older cafetería tradition. Sanborns has multiple central locations. Older Italian-style espresso bars from the post-war migration wave operate alongside more recent additions. Tourists fill the central cafés at a rate that produces faster service but less character than the residential neighborhoods.
San Rafael and Doctores, north and east of Roma, hold an emerging specialty register. Cafés in these neighborhoods serve a more local clientele and have not yet been priced upmarket the way Roma and Condesa have been.
What to expect in Mexico City
Order at the counter. Mexico City specialty cafés operate on a fast counter-service model. You walk up, order at the till, pay, and either sit or wait at the counter for the drink. Cash and card are both common. Tipping is more important than in European cafés and is conventional at fifteen percent.
Café americano is the default at most cafés. Asking for "un café" in Mexico City typically gets you a café americano, which is similar to a long espresso served in a larger cup. Café con leche is the larger preparation with steamed milk, similar to a French café au lait.
Specialty cafés operate similarly to other international specialty cafés. Single-origin pour-overs, espressos, flat whites, and lattes are all widely available. Cold brew is increasingly common, particularly during the warmer months. The Mexican specialty register tends to favor lighter roasts, particularly for pour-overs.
Prices are favorable. A flat white at a specialty café runs sixty to eighty pesos. Single-origin pour-overs typically cost seventy to one hundred pesos. The same drinks at chain cafés like Starbucks cost slightly less. Cafetería coffee at a traditional establishment runs twenty to thirty pesos.
Hours run early to evening. Most specialty cafés open by eight and close around eight. Cafetería establishments open by six. Sunday hours are typical, with slightly later opening times.
Sunday morning is the city's café peak. Roma Norte cafés fill from ten in the morning through early afternoon with customers reading newspapers, working on laptops, and meeting friends.
Spanish is the working language. Most specialty cafés have at least one English-speaking staff member.
How earning works in Mexico City
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Mexico City. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 2,817 coffee shops in Mexico City on the platform, even a casual coffee habit can complete the entry challenges in a few weeks.
The First 15 challenge pays ten dollars for fifteen check-ins at any cafe in thirty days. The Daily 50 challenge pays up to three hundred fifty dollars at the Origin tier for fifty check-ins in ninety days. The Pulled 300 challenge, the highest annual reward, pays up to ten thousand dollars at the Origin tier for three hundred unique specialty shops in eighteen months. Mexico City’s 656 specialty shops make even the top milestone challenges achievable for a serious coffee drinker.
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FURTHER READING
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
When did specialty coffee arrive in Mexico City?
Specialty coffee in Mexico City developed primarily after 2010, anchored by Cardinal Casa de Café, founded in 2014 in Roma Norte, and Buna 42, opened in 2015. The wave grew rapidly through the late 2010s and now includes dozens of credible specialty cafés and multiple roasters across Roma Norte, Condesa, Polanco, and the southern neighborhoods. The country's long history as a major coffee producer provided a sourcing foundation that other Latin American specialty cities did not have.
Where does Mexican coffee come from?
Mexican coffee is produced primarily in Veracruz, Chiapas, and Oaxaca, with smaller production in Guerrero, Hidalgo, and Puebla. The country has been a major coffee producer for over a century and remains one of the largest organic coffee producers in the world. Specialty coffee in Mexico City often sources directly from these regions, with shorter farm-to-cup distances than most international specialty supply chains. The result is a freshness in the local specialty market that exporters cannot replicate at the same prices.
What is the difference between a cafetería and a specialty café?
A cafetería is a fast-service Mexican café serving café americano or café con leche alongside pan dulce, tortas, and other quick foods. The price is low. The pace is fast. The cafés have served this role since the mid-twentieth century. A specialty café focuses on lighter roasts, single-origin sourcing, and modern brewing equipment, often with a more contemporary aesthetic. Both registers exist in Mexico City and serve different roles. The cafetería is everyday infrastructure. The specialty café is a destination.
Where is the best coffee in Mexico City?
Several specialty cafés are defensible answers. Cardinal in Roma Norte is the most consistent benchmark. Buna 42, Almanegra, and Quentin in Polanco each have devoted followings. Boicot in Condesa runs at international specialty standards. The honest reply is that Mexico City now has dozens of credible specialty cafés and the question of best is contested. Any reasonable selection of cafés in Roma Norte will produce coffee at the global specialty standard.
Is coffee expensive in Mexico City?
Coffee in Mexico City is favorably priced compared to other major specialty cities. A flat white at a specialty café runs sixty to eighty pesos. Single-origin pour-overs typically cost seventy to one hundred pesos. Cafetería coffee at a traditional establishment runs twenty to thirty pesos. The prices have risen modestly since 2020 but remain significantly lower than Madrid, London, or Tokyo for equivalent specialty drinks. The peso's exchange rate makes Mexico City one of the most accessible specialty coffee cities in the world.
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