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Where to stay in Roma Norte, Mexico City

Deciding where to stay in Roma Norte is the easiest good decision you’ll make planning a Mexico City trip. The hard part is picking the hotel.

 

Below you’ll find hotels sorted by budget, a comparison table, a micro-area breakdown so you book the right street, plus the safety and logistics answers that actually decide a booking.

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Written By: Danilo S. Last Updated:

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Quick picks: best places to stay in Roma Norte at a glance

Short on time? These are the standout places to stay in Mexico City’s Roma Norte, one pick per traveler type:

CategoryHotelHighlights
Best overallIgnacia Guest HouseA restored 1913 mansion with just a handful of rooms, and the Roma Norte stay people rave about.
Best luxuryLa ValiseEight suites, one with a bed that rolls onto a private balcony. Worth the splurge.
Best mid-rangeNaNa VidaDesign-forward, central, and a genuine value.
Best budgetTanat Art BoutiqueStyle well above its price, walkable to everything.
Best for longer staysULIV Cibeles aparthotelKitchen, workspace, and fast wifi for nomads.

Hotel comparison table

Here’s the whole shortlist in one view so you can compare at a glance.

HotelPrice rangeBest forVibe
La Valise$$$$Special occasionsIntimate, romantic
Ignacia Guest House$$$Best overallBoutique, design
Brick Hotel$$$Classic luxuryGrand, polished
Nima Local House$$$$CouplesTiny, personal
Colima 71$$$Style & sceneTrendy, central
NaNa Vida$$Mid-range valueModern, calm
Santa Casa by Tasman$$Boutique styleDesign-led, central
Hotel Marbella$$Solo & businessPractical, modern
Tanat Art Boutique$Budget designArty, social
U-Co Coliving$Solo / socialHostel-coliving
ULIV Cibeles$$ (monthly)Long staysAparthotel
Jardín Roma$$ (whole apt)Groups & long staysApartment

Best luxury hotels in Roma Norte

If you want Roma Norte at its most polished, these are the addresses worth the spend. All three put you within a short walk of Álvaro Obregón’s dining and the neighborhood’s best cafés.

La Valise Mexico City

★★★★ • 8 Luxury Suites • Private Balconies • Rated 4.9/5 on Tripadvisor

Eight suites inside a 1920s townhouse, run like a private home. The signature Terraza suite has a four-poster bed on wheels that staff roll out onto your private balcony so you can sleep under the open sky. It’s the most romantic room in the neighborhood and priced accordingly. Book it for an anniversary, not a backpacking week. You’re a two-minute walk from coffee at Cardinal and ten minutes from Mercado Roma.

Ignacia Guest House

★★★ • Luxury Bed & Breakfast • Beautiful restored mansion • Rated 4.5/5 on Tripadvisor

My single best pick for where to stay in Roma Norte. Ignacia is a restored 1913 mansion built around a courtyard, with a handful of rooms named after the seasons and a daily breakfast that’s worth waking up for. It gets the thing Roma Norte does best: it feels residential and design-led at the same time. It isn’t cheap, but it’s the stay guests remember. Reserve early, because the room count is small and it books out.

Brick Hotel

★★★★ • Rooftop terrace & bar • 17-room boutique hotel • Rated 4.4/5 on Tripadvisor

The grandest of the three. Brick is a full-service luxury hotel inside a restored early-1900s building, with a rooftop pool, a proper restaurant, and a more traditional hotel feel than the guesthouses. Choose it if you want concierge service, room service, and a pool. It sits a little further east, closer to the calmer edge of the neighborhood, which is a plus if you’re a light sleeper.

Nima Local House

★★★ • Boutique • Four exclusive rooms • Rated 9.8/10 on Booking.com

Nima is tiny, just a few rooms, and intensely personal. It feels like staying with a very stylish friend, with attentive service and a peaceful courtyard. Ideal for couples who want intimacy over amenities.

Colima 71

★★★★★ • Coffee & cocktail bar • 16-room boutique hotel • Rated 9.4/10 on Booking.com

Right in the thick of it on Calle Colima, this is the trend-forward pick for travelers who want to step out the door into Roma Norte’s café and boutique scene. Expect sharp design, a sociable feel. The trade-off for the central location is street noise, so ask for an interior room.

Best mid-range & boutique hotels in Roma Norte

This is the sweet spot for most travelers.

NaNa Vida

★★★★ • Boutique • Rooftop terrace • Rated 9.6/10 on Booking.com

A modern, light-filled boutique hotel that’s become a reliable mid-range favorite. The design is clean Scandinavian-meets-Mexican, the interior is quiet, and the location is central to the best of the neighborhood. It’s one of the better values for the best mid-range place to stay in Roma Norte, Mexico City. Good for couples and solo travelers who want style without the boutique-suite price.

Santa Casa by Tasman

★★★★ • Boutique • Garden & sun terrace • Rated 7.8/10 on Booking.com

A design-led boutique hotel in a 1930s colonial building, right in the heart of Roma Norte. The look mixes contemporary design with the old bones of the building, including a custom mural by artist Pie Chueca. Rooms come with garden or city views, AC, a coffee machine, and a mini fridge. There’s a lush garden and a sun terrace to slow down in. The best restaurants and bars are steps from the door, and Plaza Río de Janeiro is a short walk. Solo travelers rate it especially well. A strong style pick that puts you in the middle of everything.

Hotel Marbella

★★★ • Business hotel • On-site restaurant & bar • Rated 8.6/10 on Booking.com

A modern, practical hotel that leans business over boutique. Rooms are air-conditioned with a flat-screen, a wardrobe, and a proper work desk (the king room adds a seating area). There’s a business center, meeting rooms, room service, and fast wifi throughout. Solo travelers rate it highest, and you can see why. It’s an easy, no-fuss base with a desk and good connections.

One honest note on location. This sits at the southern edge near the Centro Medico hospital, not in the café-and-boutique heart of Roma Norte.

Best budget hotels & hostels in Roma Norte

You don’t have to spend big to stay well here. These options cover the budget end of where to stay in Roma Norte without sending you to a different neighborhood.

Tanat Art Boutique

★★★ • Aparthotel • Art-filled rooms with balconies • Rated 9.2/10 on Booking.com

Proof that budget doesn’t mean bland. Tanat leans into local art and color, with private rooms that look far more expensive than the price. It’s social without being a party hostel, and it’s walkable to the main café strip. The best budget design pick in the neighborhood.

U-Co Coliving

Hostel-coliving • Capsules & private rooms • Best for solo / social • Rated 8.2/10 on Booking.com

Part hostel, part coliving space, U-Co is built for solo travelers and remote workers who want company and a desk. You get dorms and private rooms, a communal kitchen, fast wifi, and a built-in social scene. Great if you’re traveling alone and want to meet people.

Apartments & Airbnbs for longer stays

Staying a week or more, or working remotely? Roma Norte is one of the best neighborhoods in Mexico City for it. For where to stay in Mexico City’s Roma Norte for a month or longer, an apartment or aparthotel usually beats a hotel on both price and practicality.

  • Aparthotels: ULIV Cibeles and Jardín Roma offer hotel-style buildings with full apartments (kitchen, laundry, workspace, and reliable wifi) at monthly rates that undercut nightly hotel stays.
  • Airbnb pockets: The quieter blocks around Plaza Río de Janeiro and the eastern edge of the neighborhood have the best apartment value. The Álvaro Obregón corridor is livelier but noisier.
  • What to expect: Wifi is generally fast and coworking spots are everywhere. Confirm the specific upload speed if you take video calls, and check whether the building has backup water and power.

Which part of Roma Norte should you stay in?

Roma Norte is small, but where you book inside it changes your trip. Here’s how the micro-areas differ.

  • Around Plaza Río de Janeiro: Leafy, quiet, and central, anchored by the famous David replica statue. The best base for most travelers. Calm at night and walkable to everything.
  • The Álvaro Obregón corridor: Roma Norte’s main spine, lined with restaurants, bars, and the Sunday market. Stay here for energy and dining on your doorstep, but expect street noise on weekend nights.
  • The Condesa-adjacent western edge: Quieter and greener, blending into Condesa’s parks. Good if you want both neighborhoods within a walk.
  • Near Insurgentes (eastern transit edge): Closest to the Metro and Metrobús. Slightly less charming, but the easiest base for getting around the wider city.

Roma Norte vs Condesa vs Juárez: where should you base yourself?

This is the single biggest question travelers ask before booking. All three are great, so here’s the honest trade-off.

NeighborhoodBest forVibePrice
Roma NorteFirst-timers, foodies, walkersLively, design-led, café culture$$–$$$
CondesaGreen space, calmer eveningsLeafy, residential, parks$$–$$$
JuárezCentral location, valueUp-and-coming, mixed$–$$

Roma Norte wins for most visitors: the best concentration of restaurants, cafés, and boutiques, and the most “stay and explore on foot” energy. Choose Condesa if you prioritize parks and a quieter evening (it’s a five-minute walk away anyway). Choose Juárez if you want to be closer to the historic center and Reforma for a little less money. For a first Mexico City trip, where to stay in Roma Norte, Mexico City is the safe, high-reward answer.

For a full breakdown of the best neighborhoods in Mexico City check out our Mexico City neighborhoods guide.

Getting around Roma Norte

Roma Norte is one of the easiest CDMX neighborhoods to get in and out of:

  • Metro: Insurgentes and Cuauhtémoc stations (Line 1) sit on the neighborhood’s edges.
  • Metrobús: Line 1 runs along Avenida Insurgentes. Fast and cheap up and down the city.
  • EcoBici: The bike-share has stations throughout; it’s a flat, bike-friendly area.
  • Uber / Didi: Cheap, plentiful, and the easiest way to move at night. Both work better than street taxis.
  • Walking: This is the whole point of staying here. Most of Roma Norte and much of Condesa is comfortably walkable.
  • Airport (AICM): Roughly 30–45 minutes by Uber depending on traffic; budget more during rush hour.

Is Roma Norte safe? What to know before you book

Roma Norte is one of the safer neighborhoods in Mexico City and very popular with international visitors, but a few specifics are worth knowing before deciding where to stay in Roma Norte.

  • Day: Comfortable and busy. Walking, cafés, and solo exploring are all fine.
  • Night: The main streets stay lively and well-trafficked; stick to them after dark rather than cutting through quiet residential blocks alone.
  • Common sense: Use Uber or Didi late at night, keep your phone in your pocket on busy streets, and don’t flash valuables. Standard big-city habits.
  • Solo travelers: It’s a popular and reassuring base for solo and female travelers; the eastern and Plaza Río blocks are calmest.

For a full breakdown of the safest neighborhoods in Mexico City, read our guide, Is Mexico City Safe?

What’s nearby: food, cafés & things to do

You’re staying in one of the best-eating neighborhoods in the Americas. A few essentials within a short walk:

  • Restaurants: Rosetta (Italian-Mexican in a townhouse) and Contramar (the legendary tuna tostadas, so book ahead).
  • Cafés: Cardinal and Panadería Rosetta for coffee and pastries.
  • Markets & green space: Mercado Roma for food stalls; Plaza Río de Janeiro to sit under the trees.

That’s just the surface. See our full things to do in Roma Norte guide to plan your days.

Plan your Mexico City trip

You’ve sorted Roma Norte. Now the rest of the city. Here’s where to go next.

Where to stay in Mexico City

Compare Roma, Condesa, Polanco, and other top neighborhoods, with picks for every budget.

Things to do in Mexico City

Museums, ancient ruins, street food tours, and more. Discover the best of what the whole city has to offer.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Roma Norte a good area to stay in Mexico City?

Yes. Roma Norte is one of the best areas to stay in Mexico City, especially for first-time visitors. It’s walkable, safe by CDMX standards, packed with great restaurants and cafés, and central to the rest of the city. It’s the neighborhood most travelers wish they’d booked.

Is Roma Norte or Condesa better for tourists?

Both are excellent and sit right next to each other. Roma Norte has more restaurants, cafés, and nightlife within a short walk, while Condesa is leafier and quieter with bigger parks. First-timers and foodies usually prefer Roma Norte; those wanting calm evenings lean Condesa.

When is the best time to book a hotel in Roma Norte?

Rates are highest from October through April, the dry season, and they spike around Día de Muertos (late October to early November) and the December holidays, when you should book one to two months ahead. The rainy summer months (June to September) are quieter and cheaper, with afternoon showers but plenty of dry mornings. Whatever the season, the best small boutique hotels have few rooms and sell out early, so reserve as soon as your dates are set.

Is Roma Norte safe for tourists and solo travelers?

Generally yes. Roma Norte is one of the safer, most visitor-friendly neighborhoods in Mexico City. Stick to main, well-lit streets at night, use Uber or Didi after dark, and take normal big-city precautions. It’s a popular and comfortable base for solo travelers.

Where should first-time visitors stay in Roma Norte?

For a first trip, base yourself around Plaza Río de Janeiro or the central blocks, which are quiet at night but walkable to everything. For where to stay in Roma Norte, Mexico City on a first visit, Ignacia Guest House (boutique) or NaNa Vida (mid-range) are reliable picks.

About me:
danilo-at-mekst-tourism-conference-in-novi-sad-serbia

Danilo - Travel writer with a degree in Tourism

My name is Danilo Stanin. I am a travel writer and a graduate in the Tourism program at the Faculty of Sciences, University of Novi Sad in Serbia. Mexico City has fascinated me for years, and this site is where I share travel tips and tricks backed by real knowledge of the topic. Every guide is built on hours of research and what I've learned through my studies in tourism.

"Mexico City has fascinated me for years, and this site is where I share travel tips and tricks backed by real knowledge of the topic."

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