Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
Arturo's
100ptsPolanco Corridor Precision

About Arturo's
Arturo's in Polanco offers a relaxed alternative to the area's more formal destination restaurants, with easy booking and a low-pressure atmosphere that suits dates, casual business meals, and celebrations where conversation takes priority over ceremony. If you want quality without the advance planning that Pujol or Quintonil require, it's a practical choice in one of Mexico City's most polished neighborhoods.
Arturo's, Polanco: The Verdict
If you're expecting Polanco to mean formal, high-ceremony dining, Arturo's will correct that assumption fast. This is a neighborhood-anchored address on Avenida Emilio Castelar that delivers a genuinely relaxed meal without the stiffness that often comes with the postcode. The question isn't whether it's worth visiting — it's whether it matches your occasion. For a low-pressure dinner in one of Mexico City's most polished districts, it earns its place on the shortlist.
What to Expect
Arturo's sits in Polanco III, a few blocks from the concentration of destination restaurants that draw international visitors to this part of the city. The setting doesn't perform ambition the way its neighbors sometimes do. That's the point. Booking is easy — no weeks-long wait, no app required , which makes it a practical option when you want a solid meal without the advance planning that Pujol or Quintonil demand.
Because the venue database carries limited specifics on price, cuisine type, and hours, some details here reflect the broader context of this dining tier in Polanco rather than confirmed venue data. Treat pricing and menu guidance as directional until you verify directly with the restaurant.
For Special Occasions
Arturo's works for the kind of occasion where the conversation matters more than the theatre. A birthday dinner for someone who finds tasting-menu pacing exhausting, a business lunch where you want a quiet room rather than a spectacle, or a date where the meal should feel considered but not contrived. It is not the venue for a milestone where you want white-glove service choreography , for that, look toward Em at the $$$ tier or push to Pujol if budget allows.
Mexico City's dining scene rewards knowing which register to book at. Polanco has enough options across price tiers that defaulting to the most famous name on the block is rarely the right call. Arturo's fits the gap between neighborhood local and destination dining , useful when you want quality without the friction.
Booking Window
Based on the easy booking difficulty assigned to this venue, you can likely secure a table with a few days' notice rather than weeks out. That gives it a distinct logistical edge over the area's harder-to-book addresses. If you're planning around a fixed travel date, still book at least 3 to 5 days ahead to have your preferred time confirmed. Walk-in availability is plausible, but not guaranteed on weekends in Polanco.
Mexico City Context
Polanco is the right neighborhood if you're staying in the district or combining dinner with a visit to Chapultepec. For other parts of the city, Rosetta in Roma Norte is an equally accessible option at a comparable price tier. If you're building a broader Mexico City itinerary, Pearl's full Mexico City restaurants guide covers the range from casual to destination, and the hotels guide and bars guide round out the planning. For dining elsewhere in Mexico, Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe, Le Chique in Puerto Morelos, and Levadura de Olla in Oaxaca are worth knowing about.
Practical Details
| Detail | Arturo's | Rosetta | Em |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neighbourhood | Polanco | Roma Norte | Polanco area |
| Price tier | Not confirmed | $$ | $$$ |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Moderate |
| Occasion fit | Casual / date | Date / group | Special occasion |
| Booking window | 3–5 days | 1–2 weeks | 1–2 weeks |
Compare Arturo's
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arturo's | Easy | ||
| Pujol | Mexican | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Quintonil | Modern Mexican, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Rosetta | Italian, Creative | $$ | Unknown |
| Em | Mexican | $$$ | Unknown |
| Comedor Jacinta | Mexico, Mexican | $$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Mexico City for this tier.
More restaurants in Mexico City
- QuintonilQuintonil is Mexico City's strongest argument for a special occasion table, with two Michelin stars, a #7 World's 50 Best ranking in 2024, and the 2025 Best Restaurant in North America title. Book lunch for value and calm; book dinner for the full celebration arc. Reservations are Near Impossible — start early or you will miss it.
- PujolPujol is Mexico City's most credentialed restaurant: two Michelin stars, a sustained World's 50 Best ranking since 2011, and a tasting menu format built around indigenous Mexican ingredients and serious technique. Book it for a special occasion in Polanco, but plan well ahead — this is one of the hardest reservations in Latin America.
- RosettaA Michelin-starred, World's 50 Best Top 35 restaurant at $$ pricing — Rosetta is the most compelling value proposition among Mexico City's serious restaurants. Chef Elena Reygadas' plant-forward reinterpretations of Mexican classics in a Roma Norte mansion justify the near-impossible booking difficulty. Plan four to six weeks ahead for dinner, closed Sundays.
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