MX · Mexico

What's it like to live in Mexico City?

Pros, cons, and what locals really say · 9,209,944 residents

Reddit-sourced

What locals really say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on Mexico City's subreddit.

Mexico City feels huge, layered, and constantly in motion: a place where world-class food, historic landmarks, and dense neighborhoods coexist with traffic, scams, protests, and real arguments about who gets to live where. Daily life is shaped by the metro, Metrobus, walking through tree-lined streets, and a lot of neighborhood-level variation: Roma, Condesa, Juárez, Centro, and Coyoacán can feel very different from one another. Many residents and visitors praise how kind people are, how good the food is, and how walkable and beautiful the city can be, but they also talk a lot about gentrification, safety concerns, bedbugs, traffic, and road blockages. The city’s mood is energetic and often dramatic, with public life spilling into plazas, streets, concerts, protests, and all kinds of unexpected scenes.

Pros — why people love Mexico City
  • Food10
  • People are kind and patient7
  • Walkability and transit4
  • Culture, history, and scenery6
  • Public life and spontaneity4
Cons — common complaints
  • Gentrification and rising rents7
  • Scams and petty crime4
  • Traffic and road disruptions4
  • Housing and short-term rental pressure3
  • Safety and cleanliness issues3
Daily life

Daily life feels busy, neighborhood-specific, and full of small frictions that locals learn to navigate. People use the metro and Metrobus, walk a lot, and notice practical details like front sidewalks being cleaned each morning, tree-lined streets, and the difference between safe-feeling districts and rougher edges. At the same time, ordinary life includes traffic jams, protests that block roads, the occasional scam, and ongoing tension around housing and who the city is for. Friendliness is a real theme, but so is the sense that you need street smarts and a little Spanish to move comfortably through it all.

Food scene

Mexico City’s food scene is treated as a defining part of life, not a side attraction. Redditors repeatedly rave about tacos, street food, and the sheer range of things to eat, with several saying they won’t be able to enjoy tacos the same way after visiting. The city also seems to reward curiosity: people mention eating well in tourist areas, at neighborhood spots, and from street vendors, and even complaints about a single restaurant are framed against a backdrop of generally outstanding food. For many visitors, meals are one of the main reasons the city feels unforgettable.

Nightlife & culture

Nightlife in Mexico City comes across as broad and public-facing rather than limited to a single club scene. Comments point to plazas, concerts, queer events, and casual nights out where major pop culture moments can spill into the street and draw huge crowds. The vibe seems less about one polished nightlife district and more about neighborhood bars, late dinners, music, and the possibility of stumbling into something large and festive by accident. There’s also an undercurrent of caution in nightlife-related stories, especially in tourist zones where scams or opportunistic crime can be part of the background.

Weather, for real

The weather is often described as excellent or even perfect, especially by visitors escaping colder climates. But the praise is less about official temperature readings and more about how it feels day to day: comfortable enough for walking, photography, and being outside, with a lot of comments calling it pleasant or rainy in a manageable way. Locals and frequent visitors seem to take the mildness for granted, while outsiders sound almost euphoric about the climate. When weather gets mentioned negatively, it is usually tied to rain rather than heat or cold extremes.

In their words

“If you come here, you will never eat tacos back in the states again. If you enjoy the occasional taco back home, DO NOT COME, stay safe in your blissful ignorance. It will never be the same again, you have been warned.”

r/???· 2903 votes

“One of the best food cities Ive been to.”

r/???· 1131 votes

“also, we don't judge for speaking spanish as a beginner, any effort is appreciated because we all know how hard can it be to learn another language, most friends from USA that come here try to learn, even if i speak english at certain degree, is always appreciated.”

r/???· 347 votes
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