Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
Sartoria
410Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised Italian, no reservations headache.

About Sartoria
Sartoria is a Michelin Plate-recognised Italian restaurant in Roma Norte with a 4.2 Google rating across 1,700+ reviews, operating at the $$ price point. It's among the more accessible and consistent Italian options in Mexico City — easy to book, open across breakfast, lunch, and dinner most days, and a credible alternative to Rosetta at the same price tier.
A Michelin-recognised Italian in Roma Norte for around $$ per head — and one of the easier bookings in Mexico City's competitive dining scene
With a 4.2 rating across 1,730 Google reviews and two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025), Sartoria is one of the more credible Italian options in Mexico City's Roma Norte neighbourhood. At the $$ price point, it sits in a category where the competition is real — Rosetta operates at the same tier with a creative Italian-Mexican approach, but Sartoria holds its own through consistent execution and a format that works across breakfast, lunch, and dinner. If you're a first-timer in Roma Norte looking for Italian food that doesn't require a three-week advance booking or a four-figure bill, this is where you should go.
What to Expect
Sartoria is a small room, the Michelin notes describe it as easy to walk past on the corner between Roma and Condesa, and that assessment is accurate enough to take seriously. The compact size means the kitchen can focus, and the Google review volume (over 1,700 reviews at 4.2) suggests a place that sees consistent, repeat traffic rather than one-off visits driven by hype. For a first-timer, the key thing to know is that this is not a production-scale dining room. Arrive expecting a personal, neighbourhood-restaurant feel rather than the polished formality of a high-end tasting-menu destination.
The cuisine is Italian, and the editorial angle here matters: Italian cooking in Mexico City is not a low-stakes proposition. The sourcing of imported Italian ingredients, pasta, olive oil, aged cheeses, cured meats, alongside quality Mexican produce is what separates the Italian restaurants in this city that are worth your time from the ones that aren't. Sartoria's Michelin Plate recognition implies that the kitchen is meeting a sourcing and execution standard the guide considers worth flagging. That's not a three-star guarantee, but it is a meaningful signal at the $$ price point, where ingredient quality is often the first thing that gets cut.
Ideal time to visit
Sartoria runs three service windows most days: breakfast (7:30–10:30 am), lunch (12–3 pm), and dinner (5:30–11:30 pm on most nights, 5 pm on Wednesdays). Saturday drops breakfast service entirely, and the restaurant is closed on Sundays. For a first visit, weekday lunch is the optimal window. The Roma Norte neighbourhood is at its most navigable midweek, the $$ price point makes a weekday lunch genuinely accessible, and the 12–3 pm window gives you enough time to settle in without the dinner-service pace. If dinner is the only option, Wednesday is worth noting, service starts at 5 pm rather than 5:30 pm, which gives you a head start before the evening fills.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is a meaningful advantage in a city where Pujol and Quintonil require significant advance planning. You don't need weeks of lead time here, though a reservation is still the sensible approach given the small room size. Walk-ins may work on quieter weekday lunch slots, but don't rely on it.
Who Should Book
Sartoria works well for diners who want a reliable, Michelin-recognised Italian meal in Roma Norte without committing to a high-end tasting menu or a complex booking process. It's a good fit for solo diners, the neighbourhood restaurant format tends to accommodate single covers more easily than large event-style restaurants, and for pairs looking for a low-pressure dinner or lunch. Groups planning a longer Mexico City stay will find it useful as a quality weekday option that doesn't dominate the itinerary. For deeper context on where Sartoria fits within the city's full dining picture, see our full Mexico City restaurants guide.
If you're visiting Mexico City primarily for its modern Mexican dining, the category that drives most international interest, Sartoria is not the headliner. Pujol and Quintonil are the priority bookings for that experience. But if Italian is what you're after, or you want a break from the modern Mexican tasting-menu format, Sartoria at $$ with a Michelin Plate is a well-supported choice. Elsewhere in Mexico, diners interested in ambitious cooking at various price points should also consider Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe, Le Chique in Puerto Morelos, and Levadura de Olla in Oaxaca for regional contrast.
Ratings & Recognition
- Michelin Plate: 2024, 2025
- Google: 4.2 / 5 (1,730 reviews)
- Price tier: $$
- Cuisine: Italian
- Neighbourhood: Roma Norte, Mexico City
Practical Details
Sartoria is at Calle Orizaba 42, Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City. Hours run Monday through Friday with three service windows (breakfast, lunch, dinner); Saturday is lunch and dinner only; closed Sunday. The dinner window on Wednesday opens at 5 pm rather than the usual 5:30 pm. Booking is Easy by Pearl's classification, reserve through Google or wherever walk-in visibility shows current availability. No dress code information is on record; Roma Norte restaurants at the $$ tier are generally casual-smart. For broader planning, see our Mexico City hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide.
For those tracking Italian cooking internationally, the contrast with 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto illustrates how Italian cuisine travels differently at different price points and cities. Sartoria's $$ positioning in Mexico City is closer to a neighbourhood trattoria model than a destination fine-dining exercise, which is exactly what makes it useful.
For more Italian dining internationally, see also Bella Aurora and Galea in Mexico City, or explore HA' in Playa del Carmen, KOLI Cocina de Origen in Monterrey, and Lunario in El Porvenir for regional Mexican dining across price tiers. Full city-level planning starts at our Mexico City wineries guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sartoria good for a special occasion?
Yes, within reason. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) give it the credibility to anchor a birthday dinner or a low-key anniversary, and the $$ price range means you are not paying tasting-menu prices for the occasion. That said, if the event calls for a formal multi-course format or a private room, Pujol or Quintonil are better fits. Sartoria works for occasions where the setting is secondary to a reliable, well-regarded meal.
How far ahead should I book Sartoria?
Sartoria is one of the easier reservations in Roma Norte — a few days to a week out is typically sufficient, unlike the multi-week lead times required at Rosetta or Quintonil. That said, Friday and Saturday dinner slots move faster, so book those at least a week ahead. Breakfast and weekday lunch are the lowest-friction windows if you are flexible.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Sartoria?
The venue database does not confirm a tasting menu format at Sartoria, and the Michelin notes describe it as a small, neighbourhood-scale Italian. At the $$ price point, the value case is built around à la carte rather than a structured tasting format — if a full omakase-style progression is what you are after, this is likely not the right venue.
Is Sartoria good for solo dining?
Yes. Small-room Italian restaurants in this format typically work well for solo diners, and Sartoria's three daily service windows — including breakfast from 7:30 am — give you flexible entry points. The $$ price range removes the financial weight of solo dining at a Michelin-listed address. Lunch on a weekday is the lowest-pressure slot.
What should I order at Sartoria?
Specific dishes are not documented in the available venue data, so naming items here would be speculation. What the Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) does confirm is that the kitchen is executing at a consistent standard for an Italian in this price bracket. Check the current menu directly with the venue at Calle Orizaba 42 before visiting.
Is lunch or dinner better at Sartoria?
Lunch runs 12–3 pm daily (except Sunday when the venue is closed) and is likely the quieter, more casual window. Dinner runs until 11:30 pm most nights, which fits the Roma Norte rhythm of eating late. If the neighbourhood atmosphere matters to you, dinner slots from 8 pm onward will feel more alive. For a focused meal without the noise, the midday window is the practical choice.
Is Sartoria worth the price?
At $$, Sartoria is one of the stronger value cases among Michelin-recognised restaurants in Mexico City. Two consecutive Michelin Plates signal consistent kitchen quality, and the price point sits well below Pujol or Quintonil. For Italian food in Roma Norte at this standard, the answer is yes — particularly at lunch, where you get the same kitchen for less than a weekend dinner tab.
Location
C. Orizaba 42, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico
Mexico City, Mexico
Compare Sartoria
Also Consider
- Pujol, Mexican, $$$$
- Quintonil, Modern Mexican, Contemporary, $$$$
- Rosetta, Italian, Creative, $$
- Em, Mexican, $$$
- Comedor Jacinta, Mexico, Mexican, $$
At the $$ tier, Sartoria's closest direct competitor is Rosetta, which operates at the same price point with an Italian-influenced, creative approach and strong editorial recognition. Both carry similar accessibility and price positioning in Roma Norte. If you want a more experimental take on Italian with Mexican ingredients woven through, Rosetta is the call. If you want a more traditionally Italian neighbourhood feel with Michelin Plate-level consistency, Sartoria holds the advantage. For most first-timers choosing between the two, the decision comes down to that distinction rather than price or booking difficulty, which are comparable.
Pujol and Quintonil operate at $$$$ and are the priority bookings if modern Mexican is your main objective in the city. They require more advance planning and significantly larger budgets. Sartoria is not competing for that same occasion, it's the right choice when you want a quality meal in Roma Norte without the tasting-menu commitment or booking lead time those restaurants demand. Em at $$$ sits between these tiers with a Mexican focus, making it a logical step up from Sartoria if you want to spend more on a single dinner without reaching the Pujol/Quintonil level.
Comedor Jacinta at $$ covers the Mexican end of the same accessible price tier. If your priority is Mexican cooking at a reasonable price, Comedor Jacinta is the better fit. If Italian is the goal, Sartoria is the more appropriate choice in this tier. For a first-time visitor structuring a multi-day Mexico City itinerary, the practical recommendation is: use Sartoria for a weekday Italian lunch, reserve Pujol or Quintonil for the headline dinner, and treat Comedor Jacinta as the accessible Mexican option for a casual meal.
Hours
- Monday
- 7:30–10:30 am, 12–3 pm, 5:30–11:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 7:30–10:30 am, 12–3 pm, 5:30–11:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 7:30–10:30 am, 12–3 pm, 5–11:30 pm
- Thursday
- 7:30–10:30 am, 12–3 pm, 5:30–11:30 pm
- Friday
- 7:30–10:30 am, 12–3 pm, 5:30–11:30 pm
- Saturday
- 12–3 pm, 5:30–11:30 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Mexico City
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