Mexico City Safe Solo Travelers: Is Mexico City Safe for Solo Travelers in 2026? My Honest Take
Linda Doran 07/11/2026travel ArticleI spent three weeks solo in Mexico City in early 2026. I walked alone at night, took the Metro during rush hour, and ate street tacos at 11 PM. I did not get robbed, scammed, or feel genuinely threatened once. That is my honest experience. But your mileage depends on where you stay, how you move, and what you expect. Here is the real data, not tourism board fluff.
What the Crime Numbers Actually Say
Mexico City has a homicide rate of roughly 8.5 per 100,000 residents as of 2026 INEGI data. That is lower than New Orleans (40 per 100k) or St. Louis (60 per 100k). For a city of 9 million, violent crime against tourists is rare. The real risk is petty theft — phone snatching, bag slashing, pickpocketing.
Here is a breakdown of common incidents reported in tourist zones:
| Neighborhood | Pickpocket Risk | Phone Snatch Risk | Violent Crime Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Condesa / Roma Norte | Low | Low | Very Low |
| Polanco | Low | Low | Very Low |
| Centro Histórico | Medium-High | Medium | Low |
| Juárez / Cuauhtémoc | Medium | Medium | Low |
| Iztapalapa / Tepito | High | High | Medium |
Bottom line: Stay in Condesa, Roma, or Polanco and you are statistically safer than in most US downtowns. The numbers back that up.
Three Real Risks You Need to Plan For

Most safety advice is generic. Here is what actually goes wrong for solo travelers in CDMX.
Phone theft on the Metro
The Metro is cheap ($0.25 USD per ride) and fast. But Line 1, Line 3, and Line B during peak hours are known for phone grabs. Do not hold your phone near the doors. Keep it in a zipped front pocket or a cross-body bag under your jacket. I used a cheap Moto G Power ($150) as my daily phone and left my iPhone locked at the Airbnb.
ATM scams
Skimmers exist. Use ATMs inside banks (Banamex, Santander, BBVA) during business hours. Avoid standalone ATMs on sidewalks. I withdrew 2,000 pesos ($100) every 4 days — enough to avoid multiple trips but not enough to worry about losing.
Fake taxi overcharges
Official taxi drivers at the airport charge 3x the Uber rate to Centro. Uber costs 120-180 pesos ($6-9) from the airport. Didi is cheaper (~90 pesos). I used Uber exclusively and never had a problem. The Uber safety feature — share trip with a friend — is worth using every ride.
Neighborhoods Worth Your Money (and One to Skip)
Your base determines 80% of your safety experience. Here is my honest breakdown:
- Condesa: Tree-lined streets, 24/7 cafes, walkable at 1 AM. Airbnb studios run $40-60/night. Best for first-time solo travelers.
- Roma Norte: Trendier, louder, more bars. Slightly more petty theft at night. I felt safe but kept my wits up after midnight.
- Polanco: Upscale, boring, expensive. Hotels like the Hyatt Regency ($180/night) feel like a bubble. Safe but you will Uber everywhere.
- Centro Histórico: Cheaper ($25-40/night hostels) but chaotic. I stayed at Hostel Suites DF for 3 nights. Great for day exploring, but I did not walk alone after 9 PM.
- Do not stay in Tepito unless you know someone. It is not unsafe per se — it is a working-class market neighborhood — but solo travelers stick out and petty theft is common.
Transport: Uber vs Metro vs Walking

I used all three. Here is what worked.
Uber: Reliable, tracked, driver info shared. Cost me 50-120 pesos ($2.50-6) per ride within the core 4 neighborhoods. Never had a driver cancel or ask for cash. The app shows the license plate — check it before getting in.
Metro: $0.25 per ride. Cleaner than NYC subway. Women-only cars exist on every train (front 2 cars) — use them during peak hours. I rode the Metro 12 times total. No incidents, but I kept my phone in my bag and my wallet in a front pocket.
Walking: Fine in Condesa/Roma/Polanco during daylight. At night, stick to main avenues (Avenida Álvaro Obregón, Avenida Amsterdam). I walked 20 minutes home from a bar in Roma at 11 PM once. No problem, but I would not do it in Centro.
Ecobici: The bike-share system costs 400 pesos ($20) for a week pass. Stations everywhere. Helmets are not provided. I used it 5 times in daylight only.
Common Mistakes Solo Travelers Make
I watched other tourists make these errors. Do not repeat them.
- Flashing expensive gear. A Sony A7IV camera with a 70-200mm lens screams “rob me.” I used a Fujifilm X-T30 ($900 used) with a pancake lens. Small, discreet, good photos.
- Walking alone in Chapultepec Park after dark. The park is massive. During the day it is full of families. At night it empties out and phone thefts happen near the entrances. Leave by 6 PM.
- Trusting strangers who approach you. The “friendship bracelet” scam is alive and well in Centro. Someone ties a bracelet on your wrist, then demands 200 pesos. Say “no, gracias” firmly and walk away. Do not engage.
- Carrying your passport. I left mine locked in my Airbnb safe. A photo on my phone was sufficient for police checks (which never happened). If you lose your passport in CDMX, the US embassy replacement takes 5-7 days.
The Honest Verdict: Yes, but With Rules

Mexico City is safe for solo travelers in 2026 — if you follow three rules:
- Stay in Condesa, Roma, or Polanco. These neighborhoods have street lighting, 24/7 foot traffic, and police presence. You pay more ($40-60/night vs $20-30) but you eliminate the biggest risk factor.
- Use Uber at night. $5-7 per ride is cheap insurance. The Metro is fine during the day. At night, pay for the car.
- Keep your phone in your bag on public transport. That single habit removes 90% of the theft risk. Buy a $150 burner phone for maps if you are nervous.
I recommend the Condesa area near Parque México as your base. Walk to Roma Norte for dinner, take Uber to Centro for museums, and use Ecobici for daytime exploring. You will have a safe, incredible trip.
This is not financial or safety advice. Your experience depends on your choices. But the data and my three weeks say: go.
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