Travel Center

Travel center

As the recipient of 12 million visitors each year, Mexico City offers a wide range of tourist, cultural and first class services

Shopping

The latest fashions and styles are easy to come by in Mexico City, where you will find the enormous modern shopping malls and small fashion boutiques to be among the best in the world.

Visitors can discover great value and unique gifts in apparel and clothing, home furnishings, jewelry and accessories, handicrafts, furniture and art. Mexico City shopping opportunities are sure to meet the interests of all shoppers.

Global luxury fashion, jewelry and automobile brands have established boutiques in Mexico City, catering to both the city's wealthy professional class as well as visitors.

Polanco

Head to Polanco, and you may think you are strolling Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. Here is where you can find some of the most exclusive boutiques and famous designer stores lining the cosmopolitan President Masaryk Avenue. Make sure to take a break from the shopping with lunch at a picturesque sidewalk café or an upscale restaurant.

Bazar del Sabado

Enjoy the Saturday market in San Angel, a charming colonial neighborhood just south of Mexico City. Browse high-quality handicrafts, antiques and woodwork, ceramics, and textiles from hundreds of vendors.

Mercado Artesanal La Ciudadela

The Mercado Artesanal La Ciudadela is the place to find traditional Mexican crafts and the best bargains in Mexico City. The market is open every day and has more than 200 stalls for you to browse. Some stands will even ship your purchases internationally.

Centro Santa Fe

The Santa Fe Mall is one of the largest shopping complexes in Latin America. With something for everyone in the family, the mall houses department stores and an exclusive selection of high-quality shops, fine dining restaurants, movie theaters and more.

Expat Voices: Orfeo Quagliata

Voices from the city:

Expat Voices: Orfeo Quagliata

In his hands, glassmaking requires new verbs: fuse, slump, oil, slice. With these actions, he has invented a trinity of techniques he dubs “Jimiz Brainz,” “Cellz,” and “Sporz,” and which he uses to produce the hundreds of jewelry designs for which his studio in Naucalpan, Mexico City is best known, as well as bowls, glasses, and decorative pieces for the home. read more

The Whiskey

A chic, big city, hotel bar with wireless internet and an ample drink list, especially martinis. Come Wednesday through Saturday after 10 pm to hear good DJs and rub shoulders with politicians, actors and models.

Address: W Hotel, Campos Elíseos 252
Phone: 9138-1800

Daily: 12 pm-2 am

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February 10 – May 03, 2012

Traveling Film Festival “Ambulante”

This travelling documentary film festival serves as a forum for ground-breaking Mexican documentaries. read more

April 12 – April 29, 2012 Zocalo--La corrala del mitote,

Perfomance of Shakespeare’s Henry IV

A powerful performance of Shakespeare’s Henry IV that demonstrates rivalries and moral dilemmas were as relevant in the past as they are today. Takes place at 6:30 PM on Thursday, Friday and Sunday and at 1 PM on Saturday and Sunday. read more

April 21 – June 24, 2012 Orquesta Filharmonica de la Ciudad de Mexico - Tlalpan

Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra Performances

Mexico City’s world-renowned Philharmonic Orchestra will perform music by classical composers including Beethoven, Mozart, Debussy, Strauss, Mendelssohn, and other great names in music history. read more

May 24 – May 26, 2012 World Trade Center, Mexico City

Habitat Expo

A popular interior design and architecture exhibition that features close to 210 exhibitors. read more

May 26, 2012 Roma and Condesa neighborhoods, Mexico City

Roma Condesa Cultural Corridor

Experience the city’s avant-garde art and design and flavorful cuisine by visiting participating exhibits and restaurants. read more

Surprising Fact

Mexico City hosted 10,039,833 guests in its hotels during 2009. Of that number, 8,035,206 were Mexican national tourists and 2,004,628 were foreign travelers.

Overheard

Metrobús also offers a remarkable example of how to put a new transport system into place in a relatively short time, how to foster cooperation over competition in a city known for its rough-and-tumble politics, and how to create a public-private transport system that does not rely on massive public subsidies. In other words, not business as usual.

— Cristine Russell, The Atlantic

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