9 Best Sights in Mexico City, Mexico

Background Illustration for Sights

Mexico City's principal sights fall into three areas. Allow a full day to cover each thoroughly, although you could race through them in four or five hours apiece. You can generally cover the first area—the Zócalo and Alameda Central—on foot. Getting around Zona Rosa, Bosque de Chapultepec, and Colonia Condesa may require a taxi ride or two (though the Chapultepec metro stop is conveniently close to the park and museums), as will Coyoacán and San Angel in southern Mexico City.

Museo del Juguete Antiguo México

Doctores Fodor's Choice

A riotously colorful and curious collection of some 45,000 toys, some dating back to the 19th century, fill this playful museum and ode to pop culture in the Doctores neighborhood. There's little rhyme or reason to the manner in which everything is arranged, other than, perhaps, the whimsical eye and sly sense of humor of the museum's founder, architect Roberto Shimizu Kinoshita. You'll find cases of Barbie dolls, model cars and planes, stuffed animals, dioramas, and tons of Lucha Libre and other elements of Mexican culture. The shop on the ground floor sells some very cool antique toys. The district is just a 15-minute walk east of Roma and although it is becoming safer and even an increasingly popular as a place to live, Doctores can be a bit dicey, especially at night or if you're walking alone. Consider taking an Uber.

Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso

Centro Histórico

Located in a colonial building with lovely patios, this former college started out in the 18th century as a Jesuit school for the sons of wealthy Mexicans. Frida Kahlo also famously studied here as an adolescent. It's now a splendid museum that showcases outstanding regional exhibitions, but the best reason to visit is the interior murals by Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and Fernando Leal.

Calle Justo Sierra 16, Mexico City, 06020, Mexico
55-3602–0000
Sight Details
MP50; free Sun.
Closed Mon.

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El Museo del Chocolate

Juárez

This museum tells the history of chocolate, referencing archaeological evidence of the magical substance from different locations across Mesoamerica. You will see what a fresh cacao pod looks like, and will be able to taste toasted seeds. Learn about the cultural significance that chocolate has played in Mexico over a millennia, as well as the role it plays in the world today. From a room dedicated to sculptures made of chocolate to utensils used to prepare chocolate to the insects that dominate its growing regions and cultivation, there is little you’ll be lacking in chocolate knowledge once you spend an afternoon here.

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Museo de Geología

Santa María la Ribera

Operated by the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the city's geology museum features multiple mammoth skulls and an entire hadrosaurid dinosaur fossil. Gems and minerals from around the world, but mostly Mexico, adorn impeccably preserved antique glass and wooden showcases. The large and expertly polished pieces of selenite from northern Mexico are particularly impressive, as is the architecture of the building itself, built in 1906. The beautiful colonial building enjoys a privileged location overlooking Santa María la Ribera’s central park.

Museo del Estanquillo

Centro Histórico

First built as a jewelry store in 1892, the belle epoque--style Esmeralda Building has had various uses over the years, including as a government office, a bank, a disco called La Opulencia, and, since 2006, as the Museo de Estanquillo, housing the eclectic collection of the great 20th-century journalist, Carlos Monsiváis. The museum takes its name from the term used through the 19th and early 20th centuries for small neighborhood convenience shops, which stocked virtually everything a person could need. It's an appropriate name for a museum dedicated to rotating exhibitions drawn from a total collection of 20,000 individual pieces. Shows might range from cartoons, stamps, and etchings to photos, lithographs, drawings, and paintings from some of the greatest names in Mexican art; the collection is as diverse and democratic as Monsiváis was in his writing. The rooftop café and bookstore offer a stunning view over the domes of San Felipe Neri la Profesa and the hubbub of Madero below.

Museo del Tiempo Tlalpan

This offbeat gem of a museum located in a handsome 19th-century former home on the west side of historic Tlalpan's Plaza de la Constitución contains an unexpectedly fascinating collection of antique clocks as well as old gramophones, movie cameras, phones, typewriters, jukeboxes, and even relatively modern gadgets from the 2000s, like old flip phones and adding machines. The owner is quite happy to show visitors around, but he does keep fairly irregular hours, so always call ahead.

Plaza de la Constitución 7, 14000, Mexico
55-4219--4082
Sight Details
MP150
By appointment only

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Museo Jardín del Agua

Polanco
Located in Chapultepec's second section, this small museum includes a fountain created by Diego Rivera and the Cárcamo de Dolores, part of Mexico City's hydraulic system. The Cárcamo de Dolores was designed by architect Ricardo Rivas and built in 1951 to commemorate the completion of the Sistema Lerma, an integral part of Mexico City's water infrastructure. Inside, you'll find an impressive mural, also by Rivera, called El Agua, Origen de la Vida (Water, Origin of Life). The fountain is one of the park's most interesting public art works, depicting the formidable Tláloc, the Aztec god of rain, in mosaic.

Museo Memoria y Tolerancia

Alameda Central
Located inside a gleaming building by Ricardo Legorreta and situated across the street from Alameda Central, this impressive museum presents a poignant, thoughtful, and appropriately disturbing examination of the Holocaust and other atrocities around the world, including the genocides in Armenia, Cambodia, Guatemala, Rawanda, the former Yugoslavia, and Darfur. Compelling rotating exhibits have shined a light on Gandhi, LGBTQ rights, migrants and refugees, and other issues related to human rights.
Av. Juárez 8, Mexico City, 06010, Mexico
55-5130–5555
Sight Details
MP130
Closed Mon.

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Museo Nacional de Culturas Populares

Coyoacán

A huge arbol de la vida (tree of life) sculpture stands in the courtyard of this museum devoted to popular culture and regional arts and crafts and located just a few steps from Plaza Hidalgo. Its exhibits rotate (there's no permanent collection), and the variety of events include children's workshops, traditional music concerts, and dance performances. On certain weekends the courtyard becomes a small crafts-and-sweets market with some worthwhile exhibitors from throughout the country displaying their wares. The museum shop stocks an exceptional selection of books on everything from Mexican art to anthropology as well as high-quality crafts.