Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
El Hidalguense
150ptsFriday–Sunday only. No reservation needed.

About El Hidalguense
El Hidalguense in Roma Sur is one of the most consistently recognised cheap-eat destinations in North America, ranked #100 on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 list. It operates Friday through Sunday only, 7 am to 6 pm, with no reservations needed. The format is Hidalgo-style barbacoa — come early for the best selection and expect a fast-moving, no-frills room.
El Hidalguense, Roma Sur: The Verdict
Getting into El Hidalguense is not the challenge — booking difficulty here is low, and no reservation is required. The real constraint is its schedule: Friday through Sunday only, 7 am to 6 pm, and the kitchen runs on its own logic. If you have been once and are planning a return, know that showing up early gives you more options. By midday, whatever has sold out is gone, and it is not coming back. That narrowness is part of what makes this place work. It is not trying to be everything; it is doing one thing — barbacoa in the Hidalgo tradition , through a weekly cycle that resets every Friday.
Portrait
El Hidalguense sits on Campeche 155 in Roma Sur, a neighbourhood with enough serious eating options that casual recommendations tend to get lost. This one has not. Ranked #100 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2025 , up from #139 in 2024 and a prior Recommended slot in 2023 , the trajectory is consistent and the recognition is earned. OAD's cheap eats rankings are crowd-sourced from serious eaters, which makes consecutive appearances meaningful rather than ceremonial. With a Google rating of 4.4 across nearly 6,000 reviews, the consensus across both enthusiast and general audiences lines up in the same direction.
The atmosphere here is functional, not atmospheric in any designed sense. The energy is generated by volume , tables turning, orders being called, the particular noise of a room where people are focused on eating rather than performing. If you are coming for a quiet conversation, this is not the room. If you are coming because the weekend barbacoa cycle is the right format and you want to be inside it, the energy works in your favour. Come on a Friday or Saturday morning for the fullest selection; Sunday still delivers but the week's momentum has already peaked by then.
The seasonal angle at El Hidalguense is less about ingredient rotation and more about the weekly reset that barbacoa demands. This is a tradition-driven format: the meat is slow-cooked overnight, the consommé builds from that process, and what you get on a Friday morning is the freshest possible expression of that cycle. Return visitors who treat this as a weekly or bi-weekly habit tend to develop a feel for timing , early in the service window for maximum variety, later if you are content with what remains. If you have been once and ordered conservatively, a return visit rewards more confident ordering across the full range of cuts available.
For context on where El Hidalguense sits relative to other taqueria options in the city: El Farolito and Tacos El Huequito are legitimate alternatives for weekday taco eating, but neither operates in the same format or tradition. Tacos Álvaro Obregón is another Roma-adjacent option worth knowing. For out-of-town visitors building a Mexico eating itinerary, the weekend-only schedule at El Hidalguense should be treated as a hard logistical anchor , plan around it rather than trying to fit it in.
El Hidalguense is also worth comparing to what is happening at a national level. Levadura de Olla Restaurante in Oaxaca and Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe both operate in the tradition-forward, regionally specific lane, but at very different price points and with full table-service formats. El Hidalguense is the no-frills, no-reservation end of that spectrum , and it earns its ranking precisely because the cooking does not need the frame. Visitors exploring Mexico more broadly might also bookmark Le Chique in Puerto Morelos, KOLI Cocina de Origen in Monterrey, Lunario in El Porvenir, and HA' in Playa del Carmen for the broader picture of where serious Mexican cooking is happening.
For those comparing taqueria culture across North America, Leo's Tacos Truck in Los Angeles and Taqueria Del Sol in Fayetteville are part of the OAD cheap eats conversation but operate in different regional traditions. El Hidalguense's consecutive OAD placements put it at the sharper end of that list.
The practical summary: walk in on a Friday morning, order broadly, expect noise and fast service, and treat the weekend-only window as a feature rather than a limitation. This is one of the more direct decisions in Roma Sur , the question is not whether it is worth going, but whether your schedule can accommodate the format. See our full Mexico City restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide to build the rest of your trip around it.
Quick reference: Roma Sur, Campeche 155 | Friday–Sunday 7 am–6 pm | No reservation required | OAD Cheap Eats North America #100 (2025) | Google 4.4 / 5,965 reviews.
Ratings & Recognition
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , #100 (2025)
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , #139 (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , Recommended (2023)
- Google rating: 4.4 (5,965 reviews)
Booking & Access
No reservation is needed. Walk-in only, and the process is self-managing , arrive, queue if necessary, order at the counter or table depending on setup. The main constraint is not access but timing: the kitchen operates Friday through Sunday from 7 am to 6 pm only, and the most popular cuts sell through as the morning progresses. Early arrival is the practical move for returning visitors who know what they want.
How It Compares
Compare El Hidalguense
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at El Hidalguense?
Lunch is your only option — El Hidalguense operates Friday through Sunday, 7am to 6pm, and does not serve dinner. Go earlier in the day if you want to avoid a queue and ensure full availability; by mid-afternoon, popular items can run out. Plan accordingly.
What should a first-timer know about El Hidalguense?
No reservation is needed — it's walk-in only, which keeps the barrier to entry low. The real constraint is timing: the venue is closed Monday through Thursday, so your window is the weekend plus Friday. It has ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list three consecutive years (2023, 2024, 2025), which tells you this is a serious taqueria, not a tourist shortcut.
Does El Hidalguense handle dietary restrictions?
Taqueria menus at this format typically centre on meat-forward preparations, and El Hidalguense's cuisine type is listed as taqueria without documented vegetarian or allergy-specific options in available records. If dietary restrictions are a firm requirement, confirm directly before visiting — arriving at 7am on a Friday with limited flexibility is a risk without that clarity.
How far ahead should I book El Hidalguense?
No booking is required or possible — El Hidalguense is walk-in only. The planning consideration is scheduling, not reservations: it operates only Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Build your visit around those days, and arrive early to avoid a wait.
What are alternatives to El Hidalguense in Mexico City?
For a step up in format and price, Pujol and Quintonil are the benchmark fine-dining options in Mexico City, both requiring advance reservations and significantly higher spend. Rosetta and Em offer a mid-tier sit-down experience in Roma. El Hidalguense occupies a different tier entirely — it's an OAD-ranked cheap eats destination, so the comparison that matters most is other serious taquerías in CDMX, not tasting-menu restaurants.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- Closed
- Thursday
- Closed
- Friday
- 7 am–6 pm
- Saturday
- 7 am–6 pm
- Sunday
- 7 am–6 pm
Recognized By
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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