Latin America's biggest metropolis is also its most livable for temporary residents — if you pick the right colonia and understand the 180-day entry game. Here's the whole picture.
Yes, if you want big-city energy at 60% of US prices. Mexico City offers world-class food at every budget, a walkable core (Roma–Condesa–Juárez), $0.30 metro rides, 200–500 Mbps fiber everywhere that matters, and direct flights to every US hub in its own (mostly) US-Central time zone. Trade-offs: 2,240 m altitude, spring smog season, afternoon rains May–October, and a tourist-entry stamp that is no longer automatically 180 days.
| Zone | What it is |
|---|---|
| Roma Norte / Roma Sur | The epicenter: cafés, galleries, nightlife; most nomads land here first |
| Condesa / Hipódromo | Leafy Art-Deco streets around Parque México; quieter than Roma, same walkability |
| Polanco | Embassy/luxury district; Michelin dining; corporate stays |
| Juárez / Cuauhtémoc | Roma's edgier neighbor; better value, same access |
| Coyoacán / Del Valle / Nápoles | Where chilangos actually live: local, greener, 30–50% cheaper |
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Mexico's tourist entry (FMM) is up to 180 days — the number is written by the officer at the airport, and since 2022 arrivals without proof of plans commonly receive 30–90 days. Bring printed proof of accommodation and onward flight, ask politely for the days you need, and CHECK the stamp before leaving the desk. Extensions inside the country are not a thing; overstays carry fines at exit.
Staying 6+ months reliably (or repeatedly)? The Residente Temporal visa is the clean route: applied at a consulate outside Mexico, granted on economic solvency — roughly USD $3,700–4,500/month of income over the last 6 months or ~$62,000–75,000 in savings (thresholds vary by consulate and update each January; verify with the consulate you'll use).
| Altitude | 2,240 m — expect 2–5 days of adjustment; go easy on mezcal week one |
| Dry season (Nov–Apr) | Cloudless mornings, 24–27°C days, 8–12°C nights — pack layers |
| Rainy season (May–Oct) | Sunny mornings, hard rain ~4–7 pm; streets flood briefly; carry a light shell |
| Smog season (Feb–May) | Contingencia days limit driving; sensitive lungs check IMECA index |
| Earthquakes | Seismic alert sirens give ~60s warning; every building has assembly points — learn yours day one |
| Water | Tap water is not drinkable; garrafón delivery (20L, 45–60 MXN) or filter — most furnished rentals include a dispenser |
| Months | What it's like | Pricing reality |
|---|---|---|
| Jan–Feb | Dry, cool nights (6–10°C), clearest skies | High season; book 6+ weeks out |
| Mar–Apr | Jacarandás bloom; warming; smog builds | Shoulder; Semana Santa empties offices |
| May | Hottest month (30°C+); first rains break it | Rents soften as rains start |
| Jun–Sep | Green city; hard rain 4–7 pm daily | Low season — best monthly deals |
| Oct–Nov | Rains taper; Día de Muertos (late Oct–Nov 2) | Muertos week surges 30–50% — book far ahead |
| Dec | Festive, cool, dry; posadas everywhere | City half-empties around the 20th |
Day 1 — connectivity and cash. Buy a Telcel prepaid SIM at any OXXO (passport, ~200–300 MXN for 20+ GB, activated in minutes) or install a Telcel/AT&T eSIM before landing. Withdraw pesos at a bank-branch ATM (BBVA, Banorte inside a bank, never a standalone corner machine) and always decline the machine's "convert to your currency" offer — it costs 5–8%.
Day 2 — movement. Buy a Tarjeta de Movilidad Integrada (15 MXN) at any metro station; it works on Metro, Metrobús and Ecobici. Install DiDi and Uber (both work, DiDi often 10–20% cheaper), plus Rappi for delivery. Walk your colonia's perimeter in daylight — you'll learn more in an hour than from any guide.
Day 3 — home systems. Confirm your garrafón water-delivery rhythm with your host (most buildings have a regular truck; 45–60 MXN per 20L). Locate your nearest mercado, Farmacias del Ahorro/Guadalajara (consultorio doctors see walk-ins for ~50–100 MXN), and lavandería (wash-and-fold ~20–30 MXN/kg — nobody owns a washing machine here, and that's fine).
| Trip | From CDMX | Why go |
|---|---|---|
| Teotihuacán | 1 hr | The pyramids at 8 am before the buses; go midweek if you can |
| Tepoztlán | 1.5 hr | Mystic pueblo mágico below a cliff-top temple; weekend market |
| Valle de Bravo | 2.5 hr | Lake, sailing, paragliding — where CDMX's money weekends |
| Puebla + Cholula | 2 hr | Talavera, mole poblano, and the world's widest pyramid |
1. Phone stays in the front pocket on the metro and out of sight at sidewalk tables — snatch theft is the crime that actually happens. 2. At night, app-taxis door to door; never street-hail. 3. Card at restaurants: the terminal comes to you — a card that disappears from view shouldn't. 4. Tip 10–15% at table service (it's real income here). 5. In the rain window (May–Oct, 4–7 pm), be where you want to be by 3:45 — the downpour is punctual and biblical.
Entry is granted at the border for up to 180 days, but since 2022 the length is at the officer's discretion — many visitors now receive 30–90 days unless they show proof of onward travel and accommodation. For guaranteed long stays, the Temporary Resident visa (income-based, applied for at a consulate) is the reliable route.
In the neighborhoods long-stay visitors actually choose — Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Juárez, Del Valle, Coyoacán — daytime safety is comparable to large US cities and violent crime against foreigners is rare. Standard big-city rules apply: registered taxis or apps at night, phone awareness on the street and metro.
In 2026, furnished monthly one-bedrooms run roughly $900–2,000 USD in Roma/Condesa, $1,500–2,800 in Polanco, and $550–1,200 in excellent-value areas like Del Valle, Nápoles, Coyoacán and Santa María la Ribera.
CDMX sits at 2,240 m (7,350 ft). Most people feel mild breathlessness and poorer sleep for 2–5 days. Hydrate, go easy on alcohol the first week, and plan lighter workouts initially.
November–April is dry season with brilliant blue mornings. May–October brings reliable afternoon downpours (usually 4–7 pm) but lush parks and fewer tourists. February–May is the smoggiest stretch; air quality is best June–January.
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