Ciudad de México está a 2.240 metros sobre el nivel del mar — más alto que la mayoría de los resorts de esquí de los Alpes — lo que significa que la primera mañana te costará un poco respirar y te sorprenderá gratamente que incluso en mayo las noches requieren una chaqueta ligera. Es la ciudad más grande de América del Norte, con más de 22 millones de habitantes, y la única capital del continente construida sobre las ruinas de una ciudad azteca insular. Esa historia de capas es lo que hace que una estadía de lujo aquí sea diferente a una en Dubái o Tokio: el vestíbulo de mármol de un cinco estrellas puede estar a dos manzanas de un templo del siglo XIV.
Los atractivos que justifican el vuelo están inusualmente concentrados. El Museo Nacional de Antropología en el Bosque de Chapultepec es uno de los grandes museos del mundo — planea medio día. La Pirámide del Sol de Teotihuacán, a una hora al noreste, es más antigua que los aztecas y aún se puede escalar en 2026. La Casa Azul de Frida Kahlo requiere entradas con hora reservada con semanas de antelación. Y el Centro Histórico — el Zócalo, el Templo Mayor, el Palacio de Bellas Artes — es el mayor conjunto de patrimonio UNESCO del continente.
Los hoteles de lujo se concentran en dos barrios, y elegir bien es la decisión más importante que tomarás. El Paseo de la Reforma es el gran bulevar arbolado que va desde Chapultepec hasta el centro — como los Campos Elíseos pero con monumentos aztecas. Four Seasons, St. Regis, Ritz-Carlton, Sofitel y Marquis Reforma están aquí. Quédate para disfrutar de espacios verdes, museos y accesibilidad a pie a la bohemia Roma y Condesa. Polanco, en cambio, es el Beverly Hills de México: la Avenida Presidente Masaryk bordeada de Hermès, Tiffany y los restaurantes más premiados del país. Las Alcobas, Casa Polanco, JW Marriott, Presidente InterContinental y Camino Real están aquí. Elige Polanco para gastronomía de alta cocina, compras y una tranquilidad más residencial.
La gastronomía es la otra razón por la que la gente vuelve. Un taco al pastor de un puesto callejero cuesta unos $1, un menú de degustación en Pujol o Quintonil — ambos en los 50 Mejores del Mundo — cuesta entre $200 y 300 y una buena comida intermedia en Contramar, Maximo Bistrot o Rosetta sale por $40–70 por persona con vino. El mezcal mexicano es excepcional y está infravalorado. El agua del grifo no es potable — cada hotel proporciona agua embotellada.
Lo práctico. Los pasaportes de EE.UU., Canadá, UE, Reino Unido y Australia no necesitan visa para estancias de hasta 180 días; los pasaportes tailandeses y de la mayoría de los países de la ASEAN sí la necesitan (una visa válida de EE.UU. o Schengen funciona como sustituto). El aeropuerto MEX está a 25–45 minutos en Uber hasta Polanco o Reforma por unos $15–25. Seguridad: Polanco, Reforma, Roma Norte, Condesa y Coyoacán están bien de día y son razonablemente seguros en Uber por la noche; evita los taxis de calle, no exhibas objetos de valor en el Metro en hora punta y aléjate de Tepito. Los mejores meses son octubre a abril, cuando está seco y hace 22°C durante el día.
A continuación hemos revisado decenas de opciones para quedarnos con las 10 que los huéspedes reales puntúan con 8,8+ y que nosotros mismos reservaríamos — desde el Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, la gran dama del jardín-patio recién renovada para 2026, hasta el Camino Real Polanco, el icónico modernista de mediados de siglo de Ricardo Legorreta que te da una dirección cinco estrellas en Polanco a un precio más cercano al de cuatro estrellas.
Dónde alojarse — barrios
Ciudad de México está a 2.240 metros sobre el nivel del mar — más alto que la mayoría de los resorts de esquí de los Alpes — lo que significa que la primera mañana te costará un poco respirar y te sorprenderá gratamente que incluso en mayo las noches requieren una chaqueta ligera. Es la ciudad más grande de América del Norte, con más de 22 millones de habitantes, y la única capital del continente construida sobre las ruinas de una ciudad azteca insular. Esa historia de capas es lo que hace que una estadía de lujo aquí sea diferente a una en Dubái o Tokio: el vestíbulo de mármol de un cinco estrellas puede estar a dos manzanas de un templo del siglo XIV.
Los atractivos que justifican el vuelo están inusualmente concentrados. El Museo Nacional de Antropología en el Bosque de Chapultepec es uno de los grandes museos del mundo — planea medio día. La Pirámide del Sol de Teotihuacán, a una hora al noreste, es más antigua que los aztecas y aún se puede escalar en 2026. La Casa Azul de Frida Kahlo requiere entradas con hora reservada con semanas de antelación. Y el Centro Histórico — el Zócalo, el Templo Mayor, el Palacio de Bellas Artes — es el mayor conjunto de patrimonio UNESCO del continente.
Los hoteles de lujo se concentran en dos barrios, y elegir bien es la decisión más importante que tomarás. El Paseo de la Reforma es el gran bulevar arbolado que va desde Chapultepec hasta el centro — como los Campos Elíseos pero con monumentos aztecas. Four Seasons, St. Regis, Ritz-Carlton, Sofitel y Marquis Reforma están aquí. Quédate para disfrutar de espacios verdes, museos y accesibilidad a pie a la bohemia Roma y Condesa. Polanco, en cambio, es el Beverly Hills de México: la Avenida Presidente Masaryk bordeada de Hermès, Tiffany y los restaurantes más premiados del país. Las Alcobas, Casa Polanco, JW Marriott, Presidente InterContinental y Camino Real están aquí. Elige Polanco para gastronomía de alta cocina, compras y una tranquilidad más residencial.
La gastronomía es la otra razón por la que la gente vuelve. Un taco al pastor de un puesto callejero cuesta unos $1, un menú de degustación en Pujol o Quintonil — ambos en los 50 Mejores del Mundo — cuesta entre $200 y 300 y una buena comida intermedia en Contramar, Maximo Bistrot o Rosetta sale por $40–70 por persona con vino. El mezcal mexicano es excepcional y está infravalorado. El agua del grifo no es potable — cada hotel proporciona agua embotellada.
Lo práctico. Los pasaportes de EE.UU., Canadá, UE, Reino Unido y Australia no necesitan visa para estancias de hasta 180 días; los pasaportes tailandeses y de la mayoría de los países de la ASEAN sí la necesitan (una visa válida de EE.UU. o Schengen funciona como sustituto). El aeropuerto MEX está a 25–45 minutos en Uber hasta Polanco o Reforma por unos $15–25. Seguridad: Polanco, Reforma, Roma Norte, Condesa y Coyoacán están bien de día y son razonablemente seguros en Uber por la noche; evita los taxis de calle, no exhibas objetos de valor en el Metro en hora punta y aléjate de Tepito. Los mejores meses son octubre a abril, cuando está seco y hace 22°C durante el día.
A continuación hemos revisado decenas de opciones para quedarnos con las 10 que los huéspedes reales puntúan con 8,8+ y que nosotros mismos reservaríamos — desde el Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, la gran dama del jardín-patio recién renovada para 2026, hasta el Camino Real Polanco, el icónico modernista de mediados de siglo de Ricardo Legorreta que te da una dirección cinco estrellas en Polanco a un precio más cercano al de cuatro estrellas.
Elegimos primero por ubicación y barrio, luego por puntuaciones reales de huéspedes en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com, características únicas y relación calidad-precio.
Reseñas · 10 mejores hoteles
Toca un estilo de viaje — la lista se reordena para mostrar la mejor opción primero.
No. 1 #1 legendary luxury · right on Paseo de la Reforma ★9.1 Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City
📍 Right on Paseo de la Reforma in the Juárez district — about a 5-minute walk to Bosque de Chapultepec park, and roughly an 8 to 10-minute walk to Sevilla metro station (Line 1).
Picture a low-slung luxury hotel that hides a green garden in its core, right on the busiest and prettiest avenue in Mexico City — that is the Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, a low-rise Mexican-colonial building where every room wing wraps around a central garden courtyard with a fountain, big trees and birdsong. Close the door behind you and you nearly forget you are in a megacity. It sits right on Paseo de la Reforma, under a 5-minute walk to the vast Bosque de Chapultepec and the renowned National Museum of Anthropology. In 2026 the hotel renovated all its rooms with designer Bibiana Huber, blending Mexican craft and local materials with contemporary luxury. Real guest reviews agree on the warm, legendary service, the excellent breakfast and a rare calm in the middle of town. It scores 9.1/10 and suits couples, luxury travelers and business guests who want a central address and quiet at once.
- Shaded central garden courtyard with trees, a fountain and birdsong — calm in the middle of town
- Right on Paseo de la Reforma, a 5-minute walk to Chapultepec park
- Warm, legendary Four Seasons service plus rooms renovated in 2026
- Low building, most rooms face the garden, so no high-up city or Reforma view
- Highest room price in the city, plus pricey food, drinks and spa
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No. 2 #2 luxury · César Pelli glass tower on Reforma ★9.1 The St. Regis Mexico City
📍 On Paseo de la Reforma in the Cuauhtémoc district — about a 5-minute walk to the El Ángel de la Independencia monument, and roughly 10 minutes on foot to Insurgentes metro station (pink Line 1).
Picture a slim 31-floor glass tower standing over Paseo de la Reforma, the main artery of Mexico City — that is the St. Regis Mexico City, designed by César Pelli, the same architect who built Kuala Lumpur's Petronas Towers. What sets it apart is that every room comes with a St. Regis Butler, the brand's signature 24-hour personal butler, plus floor-to-ceiling windows that frame the entire length of Reforma and the city skyline. All 189 rooms and suites are generous and dressed in warm, contemporary luxury. For downtime there is the Remède Spa, which reviewers praise for its relaxing treatments, and an indoor pool to soak away a long day. The location is a winner too — a few minutes on foot to the El Ángel de la Independencia monument, the city's icon, and close to the Reforma financial district. Guests single out the butler service and the staff above all else. Overall 9.1/10, best for couples, business travelers and luxury seekers who want a knockout city view with high-end service in the heart of Reforma.
- César Pelli glass tower with full Reforma views
- 24-hour personal butler in every room, heavily praised in reviews
- Central Reforma location, walk to El Ángel
- High rates with several add-on charges
- Classic, restrained design rather than flashy for the price
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No. 3 #3 best view · skyscraper above Chapultepec park ★9.2 The Ritz-Carlton, Mexico City
📍 Right on Paseo de la Reforma, facing Bosque de Chapultepec park, with rooms on floors 37-47 of the Chapultepec Uno tower. Chapultepec metro station (Line 1) is about an 8-10 minute walk.
Picture waking up nearly 40 floors up, pulling the curtain and finding the green sweep of Bosque de Chapultepec running to the horizon against the towers along Paseo de la Reforma. That is what The Ritz-Carlton, Mexico City gives you, and no other hotel in town comes close. It opened in 2021 across floors 37 to 47 of the new Chapultepec Uno skyscraper, which rises 58 storeys as one of the tallest buildings in Mexico City, so every one of the 153 rooms and suites floats above the city behind floor-to-ceiling glass. The decor is contemporary and warm, with Mexican artwork woven in. There is a top-floor Club Lounge, a spa built for unhurried treatments, and an indoor pool looking out over the skyline. You can walk straight across to Chapultepec park and the National Museum of Anthropology. Real guest reviews line up on the view, the attentive service and the spotless rooms. It scores 9.2/10 and suits couples, luxury travelers and business guests who want a high city view as the main draw.
- Rooms on floors 37-47 with panoramic views of Chapultepec park and Reforma
- New 2021 tower, so the contemporary rooms feel brand-new and spotless
- Top-floor Club Lounge plus a spa and an indoor pool with city views
- Prices and extras run high, especially valet parking and food
- Sits inside an office-condo tower, so the entrance is hard to find the first time
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No. 4 #4 luxury boutique · heart of Polanco ★9.4 📍 On Av. Presidente Masaryk in the heart of Polanco — walk to the brand-name boutiques and well-known restaurants across the whole district, with Polanco metro station (Line 7) about a 12 to 15 minute walk.
Picture a 35-room boutique hotel tucked onto Av. Presidente Masaryk, the most upscale shopping street in Mexico City, in the heart of Polanco — that is Las Alcobas, a Luxury Collection Hotel, designed throughout by the renowned studio Yabu Pushelberg. The draw here is not grand scale but a polished, private-home warmth: dark walnut, marble and soft leather give every corner a premium feel. Two restaurants share the building, Dulce Patria (contemporary Mexican from chef Martha Ortiz) and Anatol (Mediterranean and international), alongside a small, private spa. What reviewers praise most is the service — staff remember guests by name and look after them like old friends, and many call it the most memorable hotel of their trip. Travel + Leisure has ranked it among the top of its World's Best City Hotels. The whole district's shops and restaurants are walkable. Overall 9.4/10, ideal for couples and luxury travelers who value close service and tasteful design over hotel size.
- 35-room boutique, Yabu Pushelberg design polished in every corner
- Close, warm service praised near-unanimously in reviews
- Heart of Polanco, walk to top restaurants and brand-name shops
- High price and some room types are not very spacious
- Far from the metro, so you rely mainly on taxi/Uber
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No. 5 #5 luxury · across from El Ángel + the highest rooftop in the city ★8.9 Sofitel Mexico City Reforma
📍 On Paseo de la Reforma in the Cuauhtémoc area, standing directly opposite the El Ángel de la Independencia monument; Insurgentes metro station (Pink Line L1) is about an 8-minute walk.
Picture a slim high-rise that blends French polish with a contemporary Mexican accent, standing on Paseo de la Reforma directly opposite the El Ángel de la Independencia monument that symbolizes Mexico City. That is the Sofitel Mexico City Reforma, the brand's flagship here, and it carries French art de vivre into the local culture with real taste. The 275 rooms and suites are spacious and contemporary, warm tones set against Mexican art, and many open onto views of Reforma and the golden Ángel column. The talking point is Cityzen Rooftop Bar on the 38th floor, said to be the highest in the city, with a 360-degree skyline that turns heads after dark. Add an outdoor saltwater pool with a city view, plus a Sofitel Spa, and a location where you cross the street to a landmark. Reviews agree on the sharp design and the rooftop. It lands at 8.9/10, best for couples, business travelers, and design-minded luxury seekers.
- Distinctive French-Mexican design unlike anything nearby
- Cityzen Rooftop Bar on floor 38 with a sweeping view
- Across from El Ángel, mid-Reforma location
- Avenue-facing rooms can pick up traffic noise
- High rates plus several add-on charges
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No. 6 #6 boutique hotel · Neocolonial mansion opposite Parque Lincoln ★9.4 Casa Polanco Hotel Boutique
📍 Directly opposite Parque Lincoln in Polanco — about a 5 to 8 minute walk to the luxury shopping street Avenida Presidente Masaryk, and roughly 12 to 15 minutes on foot to Polanco metro station (Line 7).
Picture a quiet 1940s Neocolonial mansion on a leafy street facing a park in Polanco, the smartest neighborhood in Mexico City, painstakingly turned into a 19-room boutique hotel. That is Casa Polanco Hotel Boutique, opened in 2022. The trick is that it doesn't read like a hotel at all — it feels like staying in the gorgeous home of a friend with very good taste. Every room is decorated differently, blending designer furniture and art with the original house's classic woodwork and detailing. It sits directly opposite Parque Lincoln, a few minutes' walk from the luxury shopping strip Avenida Presidente Masaryk and the area's renowned restaurants. Travelers love that the rate folds in breakfast, the in-room minibar and free parking, and there's a small spa plus a rooftop terrace. Real guest reviews run very high and praise the warm, personal service. The combined score is 9.4/10 — best for couples and luxury travelers who want privacy and boutique charm over a big chain.
- Neocolonial mansion with just 19 rooms — villa-level privacy
- Right across from Parque Lincoln in central Polanco
- Breakfast, minibar and parking included, plus praised service
- Small boutique — no pool or large gym like a chain
- 12 to 15 minute walk from the metro
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No. 7 #7 Polanco location · lobby and restaurant fully renovated ★9 JW Marriott Hotel Mexico City Polanco
📍 In the heart of Polanco on Andrés Bello street — about a 5-minute walk to Paseo de la Reforma and the Auditorio Nacional, close to the luxury shopping strip Avenida Presidente Masaryk, with Auditorio metro station (Line 7) roughly 8-10 minutes on foot.
Picture staying in the smartest district in Mexico City, where a few steps out of the lobby drop you among renowned designer boutiques on Avenida Presidente Masaryk with good restaurants lining every block — that's the pull of the JW Marriott Hotel Mexico City Polanco, a 314-room property that recently came through a major renovation. The lobby, restaurant, bar and Mezcal room were all redone to feel fresh, modern and quietly contemporary-Mexican, and the rooms are spacious in the JW Marriott manner with warm tones throughout. There's an outdoor pool — not a given for a downtown hotel — plus a full spa and fitness center. The location is the trump card: roughly 5 minutes on foot to Paseo de la Reforma and the Auditorio Nacional, and not far from Bosque de Chapultepec and the National Anthropology Museum. Guest reviews line up on the location, the clean refreshed rooms and the warm staff. It scores 9.0/10.
- Heart of Polanco, 5 minutes on foot to Reforma and the designer shopping street
- Lobby, restaurant, bar and rooms freshly renovated and modern
- Outdoor pool plus spa and the warm JW Marriott service
- Prices, extras and valet parking run high for the smart district
- It's a downtown high-rise, so some rooms face neighboring buildings
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No. 8 #8 icon · 42-story tower beside Chapultepec park ★8.7 Presidente InterContinental Mexico City
📍 On Campos Elíseos street at the edge of Polanco, right beside Bosque de Chapultepec park — a few minutes' walk to Auditorio Nacional and the luxury shopping street Avenida Presidente Masaryk; Auditorio metro station (Line 7) is about a 5-8 minute walk.
Picture a dark 42-story tower that has stood on the edge of Bosque de Chapultepec since before Mexico City had a single international hotel — that's the Presidente InterContinental Mexico City, a Polanco icon and the country's first renowned hotel. With around 700 rooms and suites, it's a big, self-contained place where you barely need to leave. The talked-about feature is food: 7 specialty restaurants under one roof, from contemporary Mexican and Japanese to a steakhouse, bakery and café, plus the largest wine cellar in Latin America that wine drinkers come for on purpose. To unwind there's Hela Spa and an indoor pool. The location sits right beside Chapultepec park, a few minutes' walk from Auditorio Nacional and the luxury shopping strip Avenida Presidente Masaryk. Real reviews consistently praise the easy-to-reach spot, the sheer range of restaurants, and the city-and-park views from the high floors. Overall 8.7/10 — good for couples, families and business travelers who want to plant themselves in a Polanco legend.
- 42-story icon beside Chapultepec park in the heart of Polanco
- 7 specialty restaurants plus the largest wine cellar in Latin America
- Few minutes' walk to Auditorio Nacional and luxury shopping
- Long-running older hotel; some rooms feel dated next to newer towers nearby
- Big-scale property, so the lobby and lifts get busy during conferences
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No. 9 #9 classic luxury · on Paseo de la Reforma ★9.1 Marquis Reforma Hotel & Spa
📍 On Paseo de la Reforma in the Cuauhtemoc district — about a 5-minute walk to the Angel of Independence, and roughly 8-10 minutes on foot to Insurgentes metro station (Line 1).
Picture a grand hotel standing on the prettiest avenue in Mexico City, a few minutes' walk from the golden Angel of Independence that the whole city uses as its symbol. That's the Marquis Reforma Hotel & Spa, and its real headline is being the single Leading Hotels of the World member in town. What people fall for is the warm, classic kind of luxury here: rooms and suites finished in dark mahogany and marble that feel genuinely premium, with some rooms giving you a balcony or big window over Reforma and the Angel itself. The most-reviewed feature is Spa Marquis, an in-house spa with more than 60 treatments, an indoor pool and a sauna. The location on Paseo de la Reforma puts Zona Rosa, Roma and Condesa within easy reach, and guest after guest praises the warm, personal service and the value against pricier 5-star rivals. It scores 9.1/10 and suits couples, luxury travelers and business guests who want a central address with a good spa at a price that doesn't sting.
- Prime spot on Reforma, about 5 minutes' walk to the Angel of Independence
- Leading Hotels of the World member plus Spa Marquis with 60+ treatments
- Warm, personal service and strong value for a 5-star
- Classic decor — some corners look older than newer design hotels
- Rooms facing Reforma can pick up traffic noise
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No. 10 #10 Architecture icon · 1968 Hotel Museum ★9 Camino Real Polanco Mexico
📍 Polanco district on Mariano Escobedo street — an 8 to 10-minute walk to Bosque de Chapultepec park and the National Anthropology Museum; Chapultepec and Auditorio metro stations are a short drive away.
Picture a hotel where the building itself is the artwork — tall walls in vivid yellow, hot pink and magenta, plus a legendary blood-red fountain wall that has become an Instagram pilgrimage. That is Camino Real Polanco Mexico, the masterpiece of legendary Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta, finished in 1968 to host visitors during the Mexico City Olympics. It earned the nickname Hotel Museum because the public spaces hold major works by Alexander Calder, Mathias Goeritz and Rufino Tamayo. The low-rise building sprawls around gardens, fountain courtyards and 3 swimming pools tucked among the trees, in the upscale Polanco district — an 8 to 10-minute walk from the huge Bosque de Chapultepec park and the National Anthropology Museum. Real reviews agree on the unique design, the leafy grounds, and prices that feel like a steal for an icon this storied. Overall 9.0/10.
- Legorreta's 1968 architecture, unlike anywhere else in the city
- 3 swimming pools in wide, leafy gardens
- Polanco location near Chapultepec, great value
- Parts of the 1968 building and some rooms feel dated
- Grounds are huge — a long walk from lobby to room
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📊Comparativa · 10 hoteles
| # | Hotel | Estrellas | Puntuación | Desde / noche | Zona | Destacado |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City | 5 | 9.1 | ~$1,600 | Sevilla station (metro Line 1), about an 8 to 10-minute walk. | #1 legendary luxury · right on Paseo de la Reforma |
| 2 | The St. Regis Mexico City | 5 | 9.1 | ~$600 | Insurgentes metro station (pink Line 1) is about a 10-minute walk; the international airport is a short drive away. | #2 luxury · César Pelli glass tower on Reforma |
| 3 | The Ritz-Carlton, Mexico City | 5 | 9.2 | ~$571 | Chapultepec metro station (Line 1), about an 8-10 minute walk. | #3 best view · skyscraper above Chapultepec park |
| 4 | Las Alcobas, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Mexico City | 5 | 9.4 | ~$543 | Polanco metro station (Line 7) | #4 luxury boutique · heart of Polanco |
| 5 | Sofitel Mexico City Reforma | 5 | 8.9 | ~$371 | Insurgentes metro station (Pink Line L1) is about an 8-minute walk; the airport is a short drive away. | #5 luxury · across from El Ángel + the highest rooftop in the city |
| 6 | Casa Polanco Hotel Boutique | 5 | 9.4 | ~$486 | Polanco metro station (Line 7) is about a 12 to 15 minute walk away. | #6 boutique hotel · Neocolonial mansion opposite Parque Lincoln |
| 7 | JW Marriott Hotel Mexico City Polanco | 5 | 9.0 | ~$429 | Auditorio station (metro Line 7) | #7 Polanco location · lobby and restaurant fully renovated |
| 8 | Presidente InterContinental Mexico City | 5 | 8.7 | ~$257 | Auditorio metro station (Line 7) | #8 icon · 42-story tower beside Chapultepec park |
| 9 | Marquis Reforma Hotel & Spa | 5 | 9.1 | ~$243 | Insurgentes station (metro Line 1), about an 8-10 minute walk. | #9 classic luxury · on Paseo de la Reforma |
| 10 | Camino Real Polanco Mexico | 5 | 9.0 | ~$214 | Auditorio and Chapultepec stations (metro lines 7 and 1) — a short drive, or a longer walk. | #10 Architecture icon · 1968 Hotel Museum |
Cuál elegir — por estilo de viaje
#1 Four Seasons Mexico City is an in-city oasis that hides a shaded garden courtyard behind its walls, right on the prettiest avenue in town — it stands out for the calm, the legendary service and the 2026 room refresh more than for any high-rise city view.
#2 The St. Regis Mexico City is standing in a glass tower over Reforma with the whole city under your feet and a personal butler looking after you around the clock — strongest on the view, the central location and the unanimously praised butler service rather than on flashy contemporary design.
#3 The Ritz-Carlton, Mexico City is sleeping high above the city on floors 37 to 47 of a new skyscraper, with the full sweep of Chapultepec park and Reforma laid out in front of you in a way no other hotel here can deliver, with the panoramic view and contemporary rooms backed by trusted Ritz-Carlton service.
#4 Las Alcobas is a stay in a 35-room luxury boutique looked after as closely as a well-bred friend's home, in the heart of Mexico City's most upscale district — strong on Yabu Pushelberg's quietly polished design and service so warm the praise is near-unanimous.
#5 The Sofitel Mexico City Reforma is about waking up to El Ángel de la Independencia filling your window, then closing the night with a cocktail on the highest rooftop in town — strong on its distinctive French-Mexican design, the skyline from Cityzen on floor 38, and a spot opposite the landmark, more than on quiet rooms set on a major avenue.
#6 Casa Polanco is an old mansion turned into a 19-room boutique hotel facing a pretty park in the heart of Polanco — the draw is villa-like privacy, a restoration with real character and the warm service reviewers single out, more than big-hotel facilities.
Selección final
10 hoteles para todos los estilos y presupuestos — elige por barrio, características únicas y estilo de viaje.
Haz clic en cualquiera para leer la reseña completa y comparar precios en Agoda · Booking.com · Trip.com.