Bar in Mexico City, Mexico
Ladina Bar
100ptsRoma Norte Street-Level Cocktails

About Ladina Bar
Ladina Bar occupies a corner address on Colima 333 in Roma Norte, one of Mexico City's most competitive blocks for serious drinking. The bar sits within a neighbourhood that has become a reference point for the city's cocktail evolution, where low-key exteriors give way to considered programs. Its presence on a street lined with strong competition makes it a useful read on where Roma Norte's bar scene currently stands.
Roma Norte and the Street-Level Bar Scene
Colima Street in Roma Norte has become one of the more instructive stretches for understanding how Mexico City's cocktail culture has matured. The neighbourhood built its reputation on cafe terraces and mezcal-forward cantinas, but over the last decade a second tier has emerged: bars that treat the drink program with the same seriousness as the room design, where the physical space and the glass in front of you are understood as a single editorial statement. Ladina Bar, at Colima 333, sits within that context.
Roma Norte's competitive density matters here. Within a few blocks you can benchmark against Baltra Bar, which occupies the more minimalist, technique-driven end of the spectrum, and Bar Mauro, which leans into a warmer, Italian-influenced register. Bijou Drinkery Room and Brujas extend the range further. That peer density is what gives an address on Colima genuine signal value: bars that survive here do so because the room and the program earn repeat visits, not because the competition is thin.
What the Space Communicates
The atmosphere-first editorial case for Ladina Bar starts with its address. Colima 333 places it in the heart of Roma Norte's bar corridor, where the physical experience of arriving matters as much as what follows. In this part of the city, bars tend to signal their register through small but deliberate choices: the width of the doorway, whether the interior opens toward the street or pulls you inward, how the lighting lands at table level rather than at ceiling height.
Mexico City's more considered bars have largely moved away from the theatrical darkness of early speakeasy formats toward spaces that use warm, directional light to create intimacy without obscuring the drink itself. The logic is that if the glassware and garnish are part of the communication, the room needs to let them read clearly. This shift is visible across the better Roma Norte addresses, and it reflects a broader confidence in the program: the bar no longer needs the room to do theatrical work that the cocktail cannot.
Music policy at this tier of Mexico City bar tends toward considered restraint at earlier hours, with volume rising incrementally as the evening moves past 10pm. The effect is a bar that functions as both a pre-dinner destination and a late-night anchor, without the abrupt gear change that characterises louder, more event-oriented venues. Seating arrangements in Roma Norte's tighter spaces typically prioritise counter seating and small tables over large group configurations, which shapes the social dynamic: conversations stay contained, the bar itself remains a focal point, and the interaction with whoever is building your drink stays legible.
Mexico City's Cocktail Moment and Where Ladina Sits
Mexico City's bar scene has gone through a structural shift that mirrors what happened in London and New York roughly a decade earlier. The first wave was access: mezcal and tequila became credible bases for serious cocktails, and a cohort of bartenders trained on international programs brought fermentation, clarification, and fat-washing into local vernacular. The second wave, which is where the city largely sits now, is about consolidation and identity: which bars have a point of view that extends beyond the menu to the room, the service rhythm, and the kind of evening they are actually designed to produce.
Bars like Brujas have staked out a particular cultural position within that consolidation. Ladina's position on Colima 333 suggests it is playing in the same general tier, competing on atmosphere and program coherence rather than volume or spectacle. For comparison, venues at the more theatrical end of the Mexican market, such as Coco Bongo in Cancun, operate on an entirely different axis; the gap between those formats and what Roma Norte expects from its bars is now wide enough that the two barely share a category.
Across Mexico more broadly, the bar conversation has become genuinely regional. El Gallo Altanero in Guadalajara has built a strong case for agave-forward programs rooted in Jalisco identity. La Capilla in Tequila represents the deep-history end of that conversation. Further south, Arca in Tulum has positioned itself as the design-led, wellness-adjacent option for a different traveller entirely. What Roma Norte offers, and what Ladina Bar participates in, is the urban, program-serious middle of that national picture.
Internationally, the comparison set worth holding in mind includes bars like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, where a similar commitment to craft within a neighbourhood context has produced a bar that punches considerably above its address. Bekeb in San Miguel de Allende and Aruba Day Drink in Tijuana extend the Mexico reference set to smaller cities, each with a distinct local identity that the CDMX conversation both informs and learns from.
Planning a Visit
Colima 333 is a walkable address from the Roma Norte metro area and sits within easy reach of the neighbourhood's main restaurant corridor, which makes it a natural anchor for a longer evening that moves between dinner and drinks. Roma Norte bars at this tier do not typically take reservations in the conventional sense; arrival before 9pm on weekdays generally secures seating, while weekends reward earlier timing. The neighbourhood's bar density means that a circuit through Colima and its adjacent streets gives a reasonable cross-section of where the city's cocktail conversation currently sits. For a fuller orientation to the city's food and drink scene, the EP Club Mexico City guide maps the neighbourhood clusters and price tiers in more detail.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the atmosphere like at Ladina Bar?
- Ladina Bar occupies a position within Roma Norte's most competitive bar corridor, where the prevailing atmosphere across the better addresses tends toward considered intimacy rather than high-volume spectacle. The neighbourhood context, which includes reference points like Baltra Bar and Bijou Drinkery Room, sets a high baseline for room design and program coherence. Bars at this address on Colima typically use directional lighting, counter-forward seating, and a music policy that shifts register as the evening progresses.
- What drink is Ladina Bar famous for?
- Specific menu or signature drink details are not confirmed in our current data for Ladina Bar. What the Roma Norte tier of Mexico City bars consistently demonstrates, however, is a program built around Mexican spirits, particularly mezcal and tequila, treated as serious cocktail bases rather than novelty elements. For the most current menu information, visiting directly or checking the bar's current social presence is the most reliable approach.
- Is Ladina Bar a good option for a late-night drink in Roma Norte?
- Roma Norte's bar corridor, where Ladina sits at Colima 333, is one of Mexico City's more reliable late-evening destinations precisely because its bars are designed for the full arc of a night rather than a single occasion. The neighbourhood draws a mix of residents and visitors who treat the area as a circuit rather than a single stop, which keeps energy levels steady well into the evening. Bars at this address tend to hold their program quality late, making them a stronger late-night option than venues that peak earlier and thin out by 11pm. For broader context on the city's drinking options by neighbourhood, the EP Club Mexico City guide covers the key clusters in detail.
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Ladina Bar on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
