26 Best Restaurants in Coyoacán, Mexico City

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We've compiled the best of the best in Coyoacán - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Café Avellaneda

$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

One of the few spots in Coyoacán with the hip factor of Roma or Condesa, this tiny artisan roaster turns out some of the best, and most interesting, coffee drinks in city as well as selling connoisseur-worthy beans to go. The classics, including single-origin pour-overs and lattes, are superb, but you'll also find tasty iced drinks, like the refreshing Greench (green tea, kefir, and soda water) and the soothing Trago Tranquila with coffee, coconut cream, pineapple, and tonic water.

Calle Higuera 40--A, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-6553–3441
Known For
  • Carefully sourced and roasted coffee beans
  • Creative iced coffee and tea elixirs
  • Meticulous brewing techniques

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Café Ruta de la Seda

$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Named for the Silk Road, this inviting café with an enchanting outdoor patio overlooking tranquil Parque Santa Catarina does indeed draw its culinary inspiration from both East and West, serving delectable kimchi omelets, Cuban sandwiches, soba noodle and toasted sesame salads, and anise–avocado leaf cakes. Most of the fair-trade ingredients, from the coffee beans and teas to the whole grains and flours used in the artisan breads and pastries, are sourced organically. If you have trouble scoring a seat, you can always try the small satellite location a couple of blocks away on Calle Ayuntamiento and Avenida Miguel Ángel de Quevedo. There's also a small food cart next door that sells organic snacks (from chocolate brownies to paletas), reusable bags, honeys and jams, and soaps, and next to that is a branch of the artisan ice-cream parlor Carmela.

Cancino Coyoacán

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Quite possibly the most beautifully designed location of this hugely popular gourmet pizza chainlet, Cancino Coyoacán is in a stunning bi-level space with brick walls, soft lighting, high ceilings, and soaring windows that offer views of tree-shaded Jardín Allende. There are wood-fired pizzas with toppings like pureed huitlacoche, Oaxaca cheese, elote, jalapeños, and Bolognese sauce with red wine and tomatoes, and there's a tempting assortment of appetizers, from blistered shishito peppers to truffled Parmesan potatoes. There's also a solid wine list, and Cancino is open later than most restaurants in the neighborhood.

Malintzin 151, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-9026--1545
Known For
  • Lovely park views from the upper level
  • House-made gnocchi and other pastas
  • Warm chocolate brownie with vanilla ice cream

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Croasán

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Drop by this smart café just steps from Museo Frida Kahlo for generous portions of creatively prepared Mexican and European breakfast and lunch fare, along with a vast selection of pastries and espresso drinks. The Yucatecan-style chilaquiles, topped with cochinita pibil and pickled onions, are a highlight in the morning, while standouts later in the day include avocado-smoked salmon toast and a Croque monsieur on a freshly baked brioche.

Ignacio Allende 168, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-4027–4639
Known For
  • Extensive selection of fresh-squeezed juices
  • Nutella-stuffed pancakes with a mixed berry jam
  • Lovely outdoor seating along a quiet street
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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El Olvidado

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Detour just a short block off Francisco Sosa to find this inviting, light-filled café that offers up gorgeous breakfast and lunch fare as well as exquisite cakes and pastries based on recipes from the owner's British grandmother, including scones with jam and nata (clotted cream), trifle, and cardamom cakes. Other menu options include lentil salad; eggs Benedict; smoked salmon, ricotta, and egg croissants; and roast beef, gouda, Dijon mustard, and caramelized onion sandwiches on rustic bread. Note that in a different part of the neighborhood, at Avenida México 36, there's a second Olvidado with counter service, a more limited menu, and a cute but tiny sitting area.

Happy Banh Mi

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

This tiny counter-service Vietnamese sandwich shop with a few tables overlooking lovely Avenida Francisco Sosa serves just a few items, all of them utterly delicious. The four banh mi options (lemongrass chicken, beef, pork, or tofu) are all made with traditional fixings (jalapeños, pickled carrots, daikon, cilantro) and perfectly crunchy baguettes, and the summer roll makes for a refreshing starter.

Av. Francisco Sosa 266, Mexico City, 04010, Mexico
55-5659–4494
Known For
  • Best banh mi sandwiches in the city
  • Coconut panna cotta with lemongrass for dessert
  • Attractive sidewalk seating
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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La Barraca Valenciana

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

This casual Spanish restaurant is known both for traditional tapas like tartar de atún con ajillo, croquetas de jamón serrano, and patatas bravas, and for its Iberian take on tortas, the classic Mexican sandwich. The tortas are among the best in the city, some with Mexican touches—like the secretaria (pork leg, chorizo, and cheese)—but the specialties are the calamar (chopped baby squid in chimichurri sauce) and vegetariana (a hearty stack of roasted eggplant and melted cheese). The small, stylish café has a long selection of artisanal Mexican beers, and may be the only tortería in town with a wine list.

Los Amantes Café & Bistro

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Stroll just a block south of Jardín Centenario's inevitable crowds to find this little gem with simple red-and-white-checked tablecloths and a front window lined with tantalizing displays of fresh-made cakes and pies. Indeed, sweets—as well as finely curated teas and well-crafted espresso drinks—are the specialty here, but you'll also find excellent breakfast, lunch, and dinner options, ranging from vegetable frittatas and mollettes with beans and ham in the morning to spinach-and-artichoke casserole and salmon burgers later in the day.

Mercado de Antojitos Mexicanos

$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Just a few steps down Calle Higuera from Plaza Hidalgo, this covered, open-air market with about a dozen stalls is home to some of the best street food in the neighborhood: barbacoa tacos, squash-blossom quesadillas, fresh-squeezed juices and smoothies, and plenty more, all of it affordably priced. There's nothing trendy about this bustling space where you may have to jostle a bit for a seat, but young buskers often entertain the crowds with great music. Having trouble deciding which vendors to try? Las Dietetics quesadilla stand is one of the best, as is the pozole vendor next to it.

Calle Higuera 10, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
Known For
  • Inexpensive, old-school street food
  • Great people-watching
  • Open until 11 nightly

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Mi Compa Chava

$$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

Prepare to wait for a table at this hugely popular seafood restaurant a couple of blocks from Jardín Centenario—it's known for serving big, gorgeously plated portions of sublime ceviche and aguachile. There's also a great variety of raw bar options, including oysters on the half shell, as well as fish tacos, smoked-fish pâté, seared bluefin tuna, and more. The original location in Roma Norte is similarly outstanding (and also always packed).

Calle Presidente Carranza 109, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-9219--0294
Known For
  • Pacific-style grilled, fried, and raw seafood
  • Fried fish of the day with a seasoned-mayo dipping sauce
  • Cajeta cheesecake
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Picnic Helados

$ | Coyoacán Fodor's Choice

This simple take-out window on a quiet side street serves the best hand-crafted ice cream and sorbet in the neighborhood, always featuring just a handful of flavors that change regularly but might include coffee-cardamom, plum–goat cheese, guava-cinnamon, or matcha tea. Picnic also sells a few kinds of delicious cookies and brownies, too.

Calle Malintzin 205--2, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5510–9209
Known For
  • Interesting flavors, often with seasonal fruits
  • Cute take-out window (but no seating)
  • Chocolate brownies
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Alverre Café Bistró

$$ | Coyoacán

A cute, unpretentious local favorite, Alverre has the sort of extensive international menu that's perfect when you and your friends aren't exactly sure what you're hungry for. Excellent bets here include the bountiful jamón serrano salad with arugula and goat cheese, the oven-baked lasagna with Bolognese sauce, and enchiladas suizas with chicken, but you'll also find crepes, omelets, quiches, empanadas, pizzas, and sandwiches.

Café El Jarocho

$ | Coyoacán

A block from Plaza Hidalgo, this old-time café whose name translates to "native of Veracruz" has a nearly fanatical following. It has stood at this prime street corner in 1953—many evenings the line for coffee, hot chocolate, mochas, and doughnuts extends down the block well past midnight. There are a few other—generally less crowded—branches around the neighborhood, but the original is still the most popular.

Cuauhtémoc 134, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5554–5418
Known For
  • Hot chocolate and mochas
  • Colorful people-watching
  • Crafts vendors selling their wares out front

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Cochinita Country Coyoacán

$$ | Coyoacán

In a creaky old house that practically backs up to Museo Frida Kahlo, this unpretentious restaurant with friendly servers and reasonable prices serves well-crafted, authentic Yucatecan cuisine, including classics like rich and flavorful papadzules (tortillas stuffed with hard-boiled eggs and smothered in a pumpkin seed-tomato sauce) and tender cochinita pibil. Be sure to start with a cup of sopa de lima (a soup of shredded chicken, tortillas, and lime), and perhaps an order of panuchos (fried tortillas stuffed with beans and topped with different meats and sauces). Note that this is the restaurant's second location, having opened here in 2021; the original, in Del Valle, has been going strong since 1982.

Ignacio Allende 161, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5661--2840
Known For
  • Charming outdoor seating along the sidewalk
  • Eggs with longaniza sausage from Valladolid for breakfast
  • Several delicious vegetarian options
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Corazón de Maguey

$$$ | Coyoacán

A stylish bi-level bistro and mezcal bar with a prime views across Jardín Centenario, Corazón de Maguey is a pleasing setting for artfully presented regional Mexican fare and creative cocktails. You could easily put together a meal of several starters—the guacamole with chapulines and a sampler of five moles with tortillas among them—or opt for one of the substantial main dishes, such as Acapulco-style seared octopus with fried plantains, jicama, and pineapple, or tender Oaxacan tlayudas with arrachera (a grilled, thin steak) marinated in a guajillo chile sauce.

Parque Centenario 9A, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-7406--8199
Known For
  • Superb cocktails using the acclaimed Alipús house brand mezcal
  • Great views of Jardín Centenario from the landscaped patio
  • Lime merengue with house-made lime ice cream

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El Beneficio de la Duda

$$ | Coyoacán

This dapper all-day café with white-brick walls, colorful peltre dishware, and fresh flowers on every table is in a semi-residential section of Coyoacán, well-removed from the crowds and an easy stroll from Museo Frida Kahlo. The owner uses organic coffees and, as much as possible, locally sourced ingredients in the European-influenced Mexican fare, which includes superb chilaquiles (order them with both the green and red sauces), panfried potatoes with paprika and chipotle aioli, and ham-gruyere croissant sandwiches. If you're having trouble finding a seat, there's a smaller location (it's actually the original) around the corner.

El Entrevero

$$$ | Coyoacán

Although a Uruguayan owns this fashionable eatery on Coyoacán's lively Jardín Centenario, the menu will be familiar to fans of Argentine cuisine: the superb provoleta (grilled provolone cheese with oregano), for example, and the stellar steaks. Uruguay's Italian heritage appears on the menu as well, with good pizzas and gnocchi with a creamy gorgonzola sauce. Breakfast is served on weekends.

Jardín Centenario 14, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-5659–0066
Known For
  • Aged steaks
  • Clericot (a classic Argentine drink of red wine, sugar, lemon juice, and soda water)
  • Dulce de leche imported from Uruguay

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El Sheik

$$ | Coyoacán

The flavorful Lebanese cuisine—including baked eggs, raw kibbeh, falafel, grilled kofta, dolmas, and cucumber salad—at this charming restaurant with amiable servers is perfect for filling up before or after a stroll or run in nearby Viveros park. If you're not sure what to order, the best approach is the extensive sampler platter, or dine here on the weekend, when there's a huge buffet offering. Many items are available to go, including jocoque, baba ghanoush, dolmas, and all of the sweets.

Calle Madrid 129, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5659--3311
Known For
  • Boldly flavored mint tea, Turkish coffee, and lassi drinks
  • Generous weekend buffet offering a huge sampling of dishes
  • Scrumptious Arabic cookies and other desserts

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El Tajín

$$ | Coyoacán

Named after El Tajín pyramid in Veracruz state and a longtime proponent of the "slow food" movement, this elegant lunch spot inside Jardin Cultural Del Centro Veracruzano sizzles with pre-Hispanic influences. Innovative appetizers include chilpachole, a delicate crab-soup with epazote and macha chile paste, while main dishes might include rabbit in a guajillo mole sauce and octopus cooked in its own ink with red wine, olives, and almonds.

Av. Miguel Ángel de Quevedo 687, Mexico City, 04320, Mexico
55-5659–5759
Known For
  • Lovely setting overlooking a garden courtyard
  • Impressive wine list
  • Artfully prepared pre-Hispanic Mexican cuisine
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Il Vicolo Panaderia

$ | Coyoacán

A friendly family with Italian and Mexican roots operates this tiny artisan bakery that's tucked inside a shop near Jardín Centenario and open only Thursday through Saturday, from mid-morning until they sell out (usually by 2 pm or so). You'll find crisp-but-chewy sundried-tomato-Parmesan and cranberry-walnut-fennel baguettes, flaky scones, soft and chewy amaretto and orange pastries, and lusciously gooey chocolate-banana cakes.

Calle Presidente Carranza 115, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-4137--4756
Known For
  • Savory and sweet breads made with simple, natural ingredients
  • Baguettes in several flavors
  • Delicious sweets
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Wed.

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Kahwen Café

$ | Coyoacán

This cozy café is perfect for a pick-me-up from the well-curated list of artisan coffees and wines, all of them from highly respected producers found throughout Mexico. Just a couple of blocks from Jardín Centenario and Plaza Hidalgo, Kahwen is a happily chill space far from the crowds.

Francisco Ortega 17, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
Known For
  • Pet-friendly seating
  • First-rate coffee beans available for purchase
  • Friendly, knowledgeable staff

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Los Danzantes

$$$ | Coyoacán

On the fancy side for the neighborhood, this outpost of a famed Mexican fusion restaurant in Oaxaca occupies a handsome two-story space overlooking Jardín Centenario. Artfully plated dishes like guajolote (organic wild turkey) smothered in mole poblano and negro sauces, and achiote-marinated huachinango (Gulf red snapper) with plantains, avocado, and cotija cheese reflect the kitchen's creative approach, although service can be a tad stiff, especially for laid-back Coyoacán.

Parque Centenario 12, Mexico City, 04000, Mexico
55-4356--7185
Known For
  • Regional Mexican cuisine with an emphasis on Oaxaca
  • Romantic patio with retractable awning overlooking Jardín Centenario
  • Impressive wine and mezcal lists

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Mercado Roma Coyoacán

$$ | Coyoacán

The hip Mercado Roma has replicated its success on a slightly smaller scale with this attractive, three-story food hall a couple of blocks from both Avendia Francisco Sosa and the swanky Oasis Coyoacán shopping mall and cinema. You'll find a good variety of options, including mini-outposts of some popular restaurants around town (including El Auténtico Pato Manila and Butcher & Sons, which occupies the entire top floor), serving everything from pizza and burgers to kebabs and Thai curry bowls.

Merendero Las Lupitas

$$ | Coyoacán

Eclectic paintings of Mexican scenes, colorful tilework and papel picado banners, and ladderback rush-seated chairs capture the traditional vibe of this cozy restaurant that opened here in 1959 on a lovely corner of Avenida Francisco Sosa. The charming setting is the top reason to dine here, but home-style machaca with eggs, chorizo gorditos, carne asada, and other Norteño-style dishes are affordable and tasty.

Calle Jardín Santa Catarina 4, Mexico City, 04010, Mexico
55-5554–3353
Known For
  • Northern Mexico–style ("Norteño") comfort food
  • Historic setting overlooking a famous church
  • Atole (a traditional Mesoamerican corn-masa beverage served warm)

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Pastefam Caramel

$ | Coyoacán
Skip the more touristy bakeries near Coyoacán's main plazas and head to this cute traditional shop on tree-lined Calle Londres, a short walk from Museo Frida Kahlo. The chocolatines, cinnamon rolls, and almond pastries are fresh, delicious, and generously portioned, and you'll also find savory poblano and other breads.
Corina 117, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
55-5601–3472
Known For
  • Affordable, generously sized pastries and cakes
  • Locals snacking on the white iron benches out front
  • Coffee or juices available from the bakery's adjacent beverage counter

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Super Tacos Chupacabras

$ | Coyoacán

Open all night and drawing a particularly spirited crowd during the wee hours, this no-frills taco stand named for the vampire-ish "goat sucker" of Latin American folklore serves joyfully messy, overstuffed pastor, chorizo, beef, cecina, and other meaty tacos for around just MP25 apiece. The casual seating area, set below a highway overpass, has several metal picnic tables.

Av. Río Churubusco 187, Mexico City, 04100, Mexico
Known For
  • Generous array of free fixings (potatoes, grilled onions, jicama, salsas, and more)
  • Late-night dining
  • Steps from Torre Mítikah and Coyoacán metro

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