Mexico City Neighborhoods

What is Roma Norte in Mexico City actually like?

Verified by DineCDMX Editors··9 min read
Tree-lined street with porfirian architecture and sidewalk cafes in the Roma Norte neighborhood of Mexico City
Tree-lined street with porfirian architecture and sidewalk cafes in the Roma Norte neighborhood of Mexico City

Roma Norte is what most first-time visitors picture when they picture Mexico City: leafy streets, Art Nouveau facades, cafés that look like they were built for a film shoot. It is also the neighborhood that has changed the fastest in the last decade. Here is the honest map.

The shape of the neighborhood

Roma Norte runs roughly between Avenida Chapultepec (south), Insurgentes (west), Cuauhtémoc (east), and Álvaro Obregón (south again). Its spine is Álvaro Obregón — wide, tree-lined, dotted with restaurants. The best walking is on the smaller cross-streets: Colima, Orizaba, Zacatecas, Guanajuato.

Where to eat

Contramar for lunch (tuna tostadas, whole fish al pastor). Rosetta for dinner (Elena Reygadas' Italian-Mexican, one of the best kitchens in the country). Máximo Bistrot for a modern seasonal menu. Panadería Rosetta on Colima for morning pastries — the guava roll is not optional.

Where to drink

Licorería Limantour (still ranked on World's 50 Best Bars). Handshake Speakeasy on Amberes just over in Juárez. Café de Nadie in the northern edge for natural wine.

Where to stay

Casa Pancha, Ignacia Guest House, Nima Local House Hotel, Círculo Mexicano (technically Centro but a short walk). If you want a full hotel with a restaurant and gym: Brick Hotel on Orizaba.

The honest note

Roma is safe, walkable, and beautiful, but it has become expensive by CDMX standards and is dense with foreigners — which some visitors love and some come to Mexico specifically to avoid. If you want somewhere quieter and more residential with equally strong food, look at San Miguel Chapultepec or Escandón on the western side.

Frequently asked

Quick answers

Is Roma Norte safe?

+

Yes. It is one of the safest colonias in Mexico City, with heavy foot traffic day and night. Standard urban precautions apply: use Uber or DiDi at night, keep your phone put away on the street, and don't leave valuables in a rental car.

Should I stay in Roma Norte or Condesa?

+

Roma Norte skews slightly more design-forward and restaurant-dense; Condesa skews leafier, quieter, more residential with better parks (Parque México, Parque España). They are adjacent — you can walk between them in 15 minutes. First-time visitors focused on food usually prefer Roma; visitors who want a slower pace prefer Condesa.

How do I get from Roma Norte to the airport?

+

Uber or DiDi, about 25–45 minutes depending on traffic and terminal. Budget 300–500 MXN. The metro (Line 5 from Pantitlán) works but with luggage it is not worth the friction.

roma nortecolonia romaneighborhoodswhere to stay