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HomeTopicsDaily Essentials

Mexico City

Daily Essentials

Affordable essentials, grocery options, and setup tips.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that navigating daily essentials in Mexico City can be challenging, but with the right knowledge, you can thrive. Most newcomers are surprised by the affordability of fresh food at local markets, such as Mercado de Medelln in Roma Sur, where you can buy fresh vegetables, meat, and cheese at a fraction of supermarket prices. Watch out for food safety, especially when trying street food, and opt for busy, established stands. To get started, learn basic Spanish phrases for daily life, such as those needed for shopping and eating out. You can begin by learning 20 essential phrases to help you navigate the city comfortably. Today, take a step towards integrating into local culture by visiting Mercado de Medelln to explore the fresh food options and practice your Spanish skills.

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Mercado de Medellín for fresh food at local prices

Trust L3Updated May 7, 2026

Roma Sur · Experience date Feb 17, 2026

I shop at Mercado de Medellín in Roma Sur twice a week. Fresh vegetables, meat, and cheese at a fraction of supermarket prices. Go before 11am for the best selection. Bring cash and a bag.

Contributor: Sara

Food safety in Mexico City

Trust L1Updated Jan 11, 2026

Coyoacán · Experience date Mar 1, 2026

Mexico City food safety for expats: Street food (tacos, quesadillas, tortas): safe at busy, established stands where you see high turnover and food being cooked to order. Avoid: stands where food has been sitting unrefrigerated for long periods, or stands that look poorly maintained. Tacos at a busy taquería at peak hours: very safe — CDMX's taco culture has evolved over generations of food safety practices. Montezuma's revenge (traveller's diarrhea): expect some digestive adjustment in the first 2–4 weeks — your gut flora adapts to different microbial strains. Mitigation: take probiotics, avoid raw salads at street stands (unless washed in purified water), don't eat undercooked meat. Best safeguard: eat at places with high turnover and visible cooking. After 4–6 weeks: most expats eat freely from street food without issue.

Contributor: Anna Kowalski

Chilango slang — integrating into local culture

Trust L1Updated Apr 13, 2026

Polanco · Experience date Jan 12, 2026

Chilango (CDMX native) Spanish includes distinctive slang that helps expats integrate. Essential terms: 'Güey' or 'wey' (buddy, mate — extremely common, not offensive between friends), 'chido/chida' (cool, great), 'qué onda' (what's up), 'ahorita' (in a moment — can literally mean any time from now to never — ask for clarification), 'chamba' (work), 'fresa' (posh, preppy), 'neta' (truth, for real), 'chavo/chava' (young man/woman), 'cuate' (friend, twin), 'chilango' (person from CDMX, sometimes used pejoratively by other Mexicans). Using basic slang shows cultural respect and willingness to integrate — Mexicans are extremely warm to foreigners who make an effort with their language and culture.

Contributor: Tom Fletcher

Latest from the community

Neighbourhood safety apps and community groups

Apr 20, 2026

Narvarte · Experience date Dec 13, 2025

Staying informed about safety in your CDMX neighbourhood: Citizen (safety incident reporting app, works in CDMX), Nextdoor CDMX (neighbourhood community app, some coverage in expat areas), Facebook groups: 'Expats in Mexico City', 'Roma Norte Community', 'Condesa Expats'. WhatsApp neighbourhood groups: your portero or building manager will add you to the building and street WhatsApp group — the fastest source of local safety and service information. CDMX crime map: delitos.cdmx.gob.mx shows crime statistics by colonia. Twitter/X: following @SSPC_mx (public security) and local accounts for real-time alerts during earthquakes or major incidents. C5 CDMX: the city's emergency coordination centre, @C5CDMX on Twitter provides alerts.

Contributor: Yuki Tanaka

Air pollution in Mexico City

Apr 6, 2026

Del Valle · Experience date May 7, 2026

Mexico City's air quality has improved dramatically since the 1990s (when it was one of the world's most polluted cities) but remains a concern. Main pollutant: ground-level ozone (O3) — formed by sunlight + vehicle emissions. Worst months: March–May (dry season, more sunlight, temperature inversion). Most days: acceptable or good air quality. Contingencias ambientales (pollution alerts): announced when IMECA exceeds 150 in any zone — schools close, some vehicle restrictions are imposed. Long-term health impact: CDMX air quality is comparable to major North American and European cities today — not a significant health risk for most adults on typical days. Sensitive populations (asthma, respiratory conditions): monitor the AIRE CDMX app and reduce outdoor activity on bad days.

Contributor: Ling Wei

Mexico City weather — what to expect

Apr 2, 2026

Condesa · Experience date Jan 11, 2026

Mexico City weather is one of its greatest attractions — consistently mild due to its high altitude (2,240m). Dry season (November–May): sunny days, cool mornings (8–14°C), warm afternoons (20–26°C), clear skies. Rainy season (June–October): afternoon thunderstorms almost daily, usually 1–3 hours of heavy rain, then clearing. Temperature is stable — 18–24°C year-round in afternoons. What to pack: a light jacket or cardigan for evenings (it drops to 10–14°C even in summer), an umbrella or rain jacket for the rainy season (afternoons only). No air conditioning needed in most homes. Very little seasonal variation — one of the most temperate climates of any major world city. March–May: dusty, occasional air quality issues from pollution + dry conditions.

Contributor: Maria Santos

Private health insurance options for CDMX expats

Mar 11, 2026

Polanco · Experience date Nov 18, 2025

Health insurance for CDMX expats: International insurance (Cigna Global, Allianz Care, Aetna International) — covers Mexico and your home country, $150–400 USD/month. Mexican domestic insurance (AXA, GNP Seguros, MetLife Mexico) — covers Mexico only, $800–2,000 MXN/month ($40–100 USD). Budget option: SafetyWing Nomad Insurance ($40–60 USD/month) — used by digital nomads, covers emergency hospitalisation, evacuation. IMSS Voluntary (IMSS Voluntario): expats can voluntarily join IMSS for $3,800–5,000 MXN/year — access to all IMSS facilities. Most CDMX expat communities recommend: SafetyWing for short-term stays + good savings fund, or AXA Mexico for comprehensive local coverage. Private consultations at ABC or Médica Sur: accessible without insurance given the low base cost.

Contributor: Kenji Nakamura

CDMX cultural life — museums, music, and festivals

Mar 6, 2026

Condesa · Experience date Jan 19, 2026

Cultural life in Mexico City is rich and largely affordable. Major museums: Museo Nacional de Antropología (world-class, Chapultepec — $90 MXN entry), Museo de Arte Moderno, Palacio de Bellas Artes (concerts and exhibitions, Centro — $90 MXN), Museo Frida Kahlo (La Casa Azul, Coyoacán — $270 MXN, book in advance). Music: Palacio de Bellas Artes classical concerts, Arena Ciudad de México (major touring acts), Foro Sol, El Plaza Condesa (live music venue in Condesa), bar live music throughout Roma/Condesa. Free cultural events: Sunday free museum days (most national museums are free on Sundays for Mexican nationals — foreigners still pay, but reduced rates on Sundays). Festivals: Día de los Muertos (November 1–2, extraordinary citywide celebration), Semana Santa, Grito de Independencia (September 15–16).

Contributor: Emma Larsson

Traditional markets — tianguis and mercados

Mar 3, 2026

Del Valle · Experience date Feb 7, 2026

Mexico City's market culture is a defining aspect of daily life. Mercados permanentes: permanent covered markets in every neighbourhood — Mercado Medellín (Roma Sur, excellent for expats), Mercado Coyoacán, Mercado San Juan (Cuauhtémoc, international and specialty foods). Tianguis: weekly outdoor markets that set up on different days in each neighbourhood. Ask your neighbours or portero which day the local tianguis visits your block. Prices: significantly lower than supermarkets — tomatoes at $10 MXN/kg at tianguis vs $25 MXN at Superama. Food safety: cook or peel produce bought at open markets — wash with purified water. Mercado Roma (Roma Norte): premium food market with international vendors, popular with expats, slightly higher prices than traditional mercados.

Contributor: Anna Kowalski

Learning to navigate CDMX colonias

Mar 3, 2026

Coyoacán · Experience date Mar 22, 2026

Mexico City is divided into 16 delegaciones (boroughs) and hundreds of colonias (neighbourhoods). For expats: the colonias you'll use most are in the Cuauhtémoc, Benito Juárez, and Miguel Hidalgo delegaciones. Key colonias: Roma Norte, Roma Sur, Condesa, Polanco, Del Valle, Narvarte, Doctores, Juárez, Centro Histórico, Santa Fe (financial district). Navigation tip: use Google Maps — CDMX is well-mapped. Addresses: include the colonia name (e.g., 'Álvaro Obregón 143, Roma Norte, CDMX'). When getting an Uber: always type the full address with colonia name to avoid being taken to another street of the same name in a different colonia — duplicate street names across colonias are common.

Contributor: Chloe Bennett
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