Mexico City hero

Distrito Federal

Mexico City

World-class culture, walkable neighborhoods, and a remote-work powerhouse.

Cost of living

~$1800/mo

Avg rent

~$1200/mo

Internet

110 Mbps

Expats

~150,000 Americans

Overview

Mexico City is the largest Spanish-speaking city in the world and the cultural engine of Latin America. For Americans moving abroad it offers a rare combination: a metropolis the size of New York with the cost of a mid-tier US college town, a tech scene that's exploding, and weather that hovers at 70°F nearly every day of the year. The central neighborhoods — Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán — feel almost European, with tree-lined boulevards, weekend markets, and the densest concentration of world-class restaurants outside Tokyo.

Why Americans are moving here

  • Direct flights to 30+ US cities, often under $300 roundtrip
  • Spring weather year-round (no AC, no heating, no humidity)
  • Massive expat + remote-work community already on the ground
  • $1,200-1,800 USD/month covers a comfortable life in Roma or Condesa
  • World-class healthcare at ~30% of US cost, with English-speaking doctors

Neighborhood breakdown

Roma Norte

$900-1,800/mo

Bohemian, walkable, café-dense, art-deco architecture · Walkability: Excellent

The most-requested neighborhood for Americans in CDMX. Wide tree-lined streets, weekend tianguis, world-class restaurants every block, and the highest concentration of remote workers in Mexico. Walking distance to Condesa, three Metro stations, and the bike-share network.

Roma Sur

$700-1,300/mo

Quieter sister of Roma Norte, residential, family-friendly · Walkability: Good

Roma Sur is what Roma Norte was 10 years ago — same architecture and street trees, fewer tourists, lower rents. Mercado Medellín on the eastern edge is one of the best food markets in the city.

Condesa

$1,000-2,200/mo

Polished, leafy, dog-friendly, Parque México at its heart · Walkability: Excellent

Condesa wraps around two of CDMX's prettiest parks — México and España — and feels like the city's living room on a Sunday. Slightly more polished and more expensive than Roma. Skewed older and more international.

Polanco

$1,500-3,500/mo

Upscale, embassies, high-end retail, gated calm · Walkability: Good (Av. Masaryk corridor)

Mexico City's Beverly Hills. Avenue Masaryk is the luxury shopping spine. Heavy embassy + executive concentration, very safe, very expensive. Good fit for corporate transferees or families wanting an international school catchment.

Santa Fe

$1,200-2,800/mo

Modern business district, car-required, high-rise corporate · Walkability: Poor — car-dependent

CDMX's corporate financial district. Modern high-rises, the country's largest mall (Centro Santa Fe). Cons: hilly, isolated. Pros: cleaner air, newer infrastructure, top-rated international schools.

Coyoacán

$700-1,400/mo

Colonial cobblestones, Frida Kahlo's neighborhood, slower pace · Walkability: Excellent in centro

South of Roma, Coyoacán feels like a small Mexican town inside the megacity. Cobblestone plazas, the Frida Kahlo Museum, weekend live music. UNAM is here, so it skews younger + academic.

San Ángel

$800-1,800/mo

Colonial mansions, Saturday art bazaar, family-friendly · Walkability: Good in centro

Adjacent to Coyoacán, San Ángel is one of CDMX's oldest neighborhoods — colonial-era mansions, the Saturday Bazaar Sábado art market. Popular with families and older expats.

Narvarte

$600-1,100/mo

Mid-century residential, food trucks + cantinas, undiscovered · Walkability: Good

Sandwiched between Roma Sur and Del Valle, Narvarte is what locals call 'the next Roma.' Mid-century apartment buildings, thriving food scene, rents 30-40% below Roma. Trending fast.

Del Valle

$700-1,400/mo

Wide avenues, mid-class residential, family-friendly · Walkability: Good

South of Narvarte, Del Valle is solidly middle-class CDMX — wide avenues, parks, quiet residential feel. Good fit for families or anyone wanting more space at lower rents.

Doctores

$500-900/mo

Gritty, transitional, lucha libre, very affordable · Walkability: Mixed

Doctores is Roma Norte's grittier neighbor to the east. The historic Arena México (lucha libre cathedral) is here. Gentrifying fast — worth a serious look on a $500-900 rent budget.

Centro Histórico

$600-1,200/mo

UNESCO World Heritage, colonial-era buildings, dense + intense · Walkability: Excellent

The historic core — Zócalo, Templo Mayor, Palacio de Bellas Artes. Living here means waking up inside a UNESCO site. Noisy, gets quiet after 9pm.

Lomas de Chapultepec

$1,800-4,000+/mo

Old-money residential, gated, embassies, very quiet · Walkability: Poor — car required

Old-money CDMX. Large lots, gated estates, embassies. Quiet, very safe, very expensive. Better fit for executive transferees + retirees than remote workers.

Interlomas

$1,200-2,500/mo

Modern suburb, high-rises, family-oriented, car-required · Walkability: Poor

Northwest CDMX, technically in Estado de México. Modern high-rise apartments, top international schools, several major hospitals. Popular with families on corporate packages.

Tlalpan

$600-1,200/mo

Southern, parks + colonial centro, slower pace · Walkability: Good in centro

Far south, Tlalpan has a colonial plaza, lots of green space, and feels removed from the megacity intensity. Better for retirees or people who want a real Mexican neighborhood.

Visa & legal notes

DisclaimerThis is general information only, not legal advice. Consult a licensed professional for your specific situation.

Temporary Resident visa is the standard path — requires showing ~$3,200/mo in savings or ~$2,000/mo in income for 6-12 months. Apply at your nearest Mexican consulate in the US (NOT inside Mexico). Once approved you have 30 days to enter and 30 days from entry to complete INM processing in CDMX.

Healthcare

DisclaimerThis is general information only, not medical advice. Consult a licensed professional for your specific situation.

ABC Medical Center (Observatorio + Santa Fe) and Médica Sur are the expat-favorite private hospitals — international standards, US-trained doctors, costs ~25% of US equivalent. IMSS public coverage is available to temporary residents (~$500/yr) but waits are long.

Expat community

Among the largest in the world — InterNations CDMX hosts weekly events; Facebook groups 'Expats in Mexico City' (45k+) and 'Roma Condesa Expats' are active daily.

Pros & cons

PROS

  • + Best food scene in the Americas
  • + Real walkable neighborhoods + bike infrastructure
  • + Connectivity to every US hub
  • + Massive English-speaking professional network

CONS

  • − Traffic + air quality on bad days
  • − Earthquakes (real but manageable)
  • − Petty crime in non-central zones

Frequently asked

Is Mexico City safe for Americans?

The central colonias (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán, Centro) are generally as safe as a major US city — exercise standard urban awareness. Petty theft is the main risk; violent crime against expats is rare in these zones.

Can I drink the tap water?

Most expats don't. Filter pitchers (Brita) or a 20L garrafón delivery (~$3/week) is standard. Restaurants in central CDMX serve filtered ice + water.

Do I need a car in Mexico City?

If you live in Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán, or Centro — absolutely not. Metro + Uber + bike-share covers everything.

How fast is internet in CDMX?

Izzi and Totalplay both offer 100-500 Mbps fiber in central neighborhoods for $30-50/month.

What's the cost of living for one person?

$1,500-2,200 USD/month is comfortable in Roma or Condesa, including rent, groceries, restaurants, transport, utilities, and gym/coworking.

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A peek inside

Three sections from the full guide

Budget & Finances

Mexico City offers exceptional value for expats, with costs 60-70% lower than major US cities. The peso's stability around 18-20 MXN/USD makes budgeting predictable.

labellow usdmid usdhigh usdnotes
Rent 1BR centro$400$650$1,200Roma Norte/Condesa premium
Rent 2BR good nbhd$600$950$1,800Polanco/Santa Fe top tier
Utilities + Internet$80$120$180Fiber 100Mbps included
Groceries (single)$150$220$350Markets vs Superama
Eating out (per meal)$3$8$25Street food to fine dining
Transport (monthly)$20$80$200Metro vs Uber/taxi mix
Gym / Coworking$25$60$120Smart Fit vs premium spaces

City Scorecard

cost of living

8/10

safety

4/10

healthcare

6/10

climate

7/10

walkability

6/10

social life

9/10

expat community

8/10

english friendly

5/10

food scene

10/10

internet

7/10

family friendly

6/10

lgbtq friendly

7/10

Top neighborhoods

Roma Norte

$800–$1800/mo

Hip, walkable, expat central

Airbnb saturation, gentrified

Condesa

$700–$1600/mo

Park life, restaurants, nightlife

Tourist heavy, parking scarce

Polanco

$1200–$3000/mo

Upscale, business district

Premium shopping, embassy area

+ 8 more sections (Safety, Healthcare, Housing, Quality of Life, Social, Education, Employment, Moving, Internet, Food) + 5 mover profiles.

The complete edition

Want the complete Mexico City guide?

Budget tables, neighborhood breakdowns, healthcare costs, school recommendations, the 90-day move plan, and a full scorecard across 12 dimensions.

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