43 Best Restaurants in Yucatán and Campeche States, Mexico

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

Museo de la Gastronomía Yucateca

$$

The menu here is as an encyclopedic take on Yucatecan cuisine, with everything from salbutes to start to manjar blanco (a milk-based delicacy) for dessert. Before sitting down to eat in the courtyard or one of the rooms that open onto it, explore the modest displays on regional food in the colonial-style building and Maya-style houses in the garden. There are also cooking demonstrations, including those using the traditional method for cooking cochinita pibil, buried in a pit in the ground.

Calle 62 466, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-518–1645
Known For
  • Traditional Yucatecan dishes
  • An elegant setting in a colonial-style building
  • Cooking demonstrations

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Pan & Koffee

$

This bakery just a few blocks north of Parque Santa Ana is a great place to start your day with a light breakfast of a pastry and a coffee. It has a small garden and plenty of seating if you want to linger for awhile at your laptop. The decor is an inviting updated colonial style with pasta-tile floors and more contemporary touches, such as the steel staircase leading up to the second-story seating. You'll only wish it didn't close so early—at 1 pm during the week and 2 pm on the weekends. 

Pancho Maiz

$

Don't let the bare walls and basic furniture fool you—this restaurant, a few blocks east of Parque Mejorada, offers one of Mérida's best dining experiences. Chefs Xóchitl Valdés and Selena Cárdenas have impressed gourmets with their celebration of corn, the basis of many of the dishes served here. Before you leave, stop in at the adjacent store, which sells local honey and honey products, from candies to shampoo. 

Calle 59 437A, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-750–3589
Known For
  • Oaxacan favorites
  • Freshest and best ingredients
  • Excellent value
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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Pancho's

$$$ | Centro

In the evening this patio restaurant is bathed in candlelight and the glow from tiny white lights decorating the tropical shrubs. Much of the menu, as well as the decor, is geared toward tourists—you can even buy a Pancho's T-shirt on your way out. Although you won't find authentic Yucatecan dishes at this lively spot, the tasty tacos, fajitas, burritos, and other dishes will be pleasantly recognizable to those familiar with Mexican food served north of the border. Waiters—dressed in white muslin shirts and pants of the Revolution era—recommend the shrimp flambéed in tequila, and the tequila in general. Happy hour is weekdays from 6 to 8 pm.

Calle 59 No. 509, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-923–0942
Restaurant Details
No lunch.

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Pizzería La Góndola

$

Wonderful smells waft from this small corner establishment, where scenes of old Italy and the Yucatán adorn bright yellow walls, and patrons pull padded folding chairs up to yellow-tile tables or take their orders to go. Pizza is the name of the game here, but tortas and pastas are also served.

Calle 23 208, Ticul, 97860, Mexico
997-972–0112
Known For
  • Impressive variety of pizza
  • Fun, informal vibe
  • The only nighttime dining option in town
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Pola

$

On any given day, the flavors at this little historic-center gelato shop vary, but you can typically expect between five and ten sorbets and the same number of gelatos. In addition to classics like chocolate and chocolate chip, you'll find options inspired by regional cuisine and produce—perhaps, chocolate with chiles, flan, pineapple with chaya, or lemon with rosemary. If it's not too hot, enjoy your sorbet or gelato in Parque Santa Lucía, just a block away.

Calle 55 467D, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-923–1107
Known For
  • Locally inspired flavors
  • Excellent gelato and sorbets
  • Cheerful store

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Restaurante Kinich

$

At the town’s most comfortable eatery, tables draped in white linen sit under a wide palapa that's surrounded by plants and with a burbling fountain. In a small hut in the back, the cooks make tortillas by hand, and menu highlights include locally made longaniza (a tasty grilled pork sausage) and excellent sopa de lima. A small shop sells carefully selected and cleverly displayed local folk art.

Calle 27 299, Izamal, 97540, Mexico
999-900–2316
Known For
  • Longaniza (a local sausage)
  • Folk art
  • Traditional atmosphere

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Restaurante Muul

$

Residents of Izamal have strong opinions on which restaurants make the best panuchos, salbutes, papadzules, and other local specialities, but Restaurante Muul is on many short lists. The atmosphere is no-frills, though the location is convenient, right on the main plaza just steps from the ex-convent.

Restaurante Ría Maya

$

Grab a seat in this palapa restaurant directly across from the water and watch the day's catch come straight from the docks. The menu features local specialties like ceviche, seafood soup, fish fillet stuffed with shrimp, and breaded seafood rolled into a ball and deep-fried. In season (July–December) you can order lobster and octopus cooked several different ways. With a seashell-strewn floor and plastic tables, it's far from fancy, but you're sure to leave satisfied. Owner Diego Núñez and his family also operate Río Lagartos Adventures and can arrange a variety of tours.

Calle 19 134, Río Lagartos, 97720, Mexico
986-100–8390
Known For
  • Quality seafood
  • Beachy vibe
  • Lobster and octopus in season

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Rosas & Xocolate Restaurant

$$$

This elegant restaurant at the inn of the same name is beautifully designed in hues of pink and brown, with long-stem roses on every table. Chef David Segovia's menu is an haute interpretation of Mexican and Yucatecan cuisines, with sauces incorporating local chiles, tamarind, and hibiscus (or jamaica) flowers. There are also pastas, salads, and sandwiches if you'd like a lighter meal. You can sit in the formal dining room, the more casual open-air patio, or the rooftop bar. 

Trotter's Grill House

$$$

Menu highlights at this beautifully designed, upscale restaurant include tuna steak in a black-pepper crust and Angus beef served with rosemary potatoes. A glass wall separates the formal indoor dining room from the less-formal patio seating area, which is surrounded by lush vegetation that helps you forget that you are on a bustling avenue. Although steaks are the specialty, you'll also find plenty of delicious tapas and salads, and the starters alone make Trotter's worth visiting—try the octopus carpaccio or foie gras.

Circuito Colonias, Mérida, 97127, Mexico
999-927–2320
Known For
  • Contemporary decor
  • Steaks
  • Excellent starters
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Wayan'e

$

This oasis of carnivorous delights serves tortas—Mexico's answer to the sandwich—and tacos at four locations in Mérida. In addition to ham and cheese tortas, you can get pork loin in smoky chipotle-chile sauce, chorizo sausage, turkey strips sautéed with onions and peppers, and several other delicious combos guaranteed to go straight to your arteries. If you don't speak Spanish, just point to one of 20 types of ingredients while they heat up your tortilla. Not a meat lover? Try some unusual combos, like chopped cactus pads sautéed with mushrooms, or scrambled eggs with chaya or string beans. All of the Wayan'e locations are casual and unassuming, with plastic tables and chairs, but most diners gather around the counter where the food is handed over. The restaurant closes when the food runs out, which is usually around 2 pm.

Calle 59 408, Mérida, 97000, Mexico
999-938–0676
Known For
  • Fun, informal vibe
  • Astounding taco selection
  • Torta-style sandwiches
Restaurant Details
No dinner. Closed Sun.
Reservations not accepted

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Zarabanda Restaurante

$$

Near the main square, this unpretentious family-run restaurant is one of the oldest (and most affordable) eateries on the island, and it's considered one of the best places to try island-style food. There are quite a few tasty seafood dishes, including a huge mariscada for two that includes a fish fillet, a whole fish, a lobster, and octopus on a bed of shredded lettuce. The delicious seafood soup includes the freshest seasonal seafood and is an island classic. People come here for the food and not the ambience, so grab a seat at a plastic table, listen to the Mexican music, and take your pick from the extensive menu.

Calle Palomino s/n, Isla Holbox, 77310, Mexico
984-875–2094
Restaurant Details
No credit cards

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