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10 neighborhoods selected in this guide.
Coyoacán is a bohemian neighbourhood with cobblestone streets, colonial plazas, and a vibrant cultural scene. Home to Frida Kahlo's Casa Azul and Leon Trotsky's exile house.

Polanco is Mexico City's most affluent neighbourhood, home to designer boutiques, world-class restaurants, embassy row, and the Soumaya and Jumex museums.
Juárez / Zona Rosa is Mexico City's most cosmopolitan district — a neon-lit stretch of LGBTQ+ nightlife, Korean barbecue restaurants, Art Deco apartment buildings and Paseo de la Reforma landmarks. By day it's a shopping and café neighbourhood; by night it transforms into the city's most diverse party zone.
La Condesa is a leafy, walkable neighbourhood defined by its Art Deco architecture, elliptical streets, and two central parks.
San Ángel is a quiet colonial-era enclave in southern Mexico City with cobblestone streets, monastery gardens, and one of the city's best Saturday artisan markets.
San Ángel is a colonial-era southern neighbourhood of cobblestone streets, bougainvillea-draped walls, flower markets and the famous Saturday Bazaar — an open-air art market where painters, sculptors and artisans sell their work in the plaza. The neighbourhood's Carmelite monastery, the Museo del Carmen, adds a cultural layer with mummified monks in the crypt..
Roma Norte is a tree-lined neighbourhood renowned for its early-20th-century European-inspired architecture, independent boutiques, coveted restaurants, and a palpable creative energy.
Santa María la Ribera is a late-19th-century residential neighbourhood centred on the exotic Moorish Kiosk — originally built for a World's Fair and reassembled here in 1910. The leafy alameda plaza has become a magnet for indie cafés, galleries and craft-beer bars.
Doctores is a gritty downtown neighbourhood whose main attraction is the legendary Arena México — the world's largest lucha libre wrestling venue. Beyond the Friday-night bouts, Doctores offers authentic cantinas, street-art murals and cheap taco stands.

Mexico City's Centro Histórico is a UNESCO World Heritage Site encompassing over 1,500 colonial and pre-Columbian buildings within a compact grid anchored by the Zócalo.