The Top 28 Places to Eat Near Mercado 20 de Noviembre
-
-
Rank 2. Levadura de Olla
Oaxacan Mexican
A Michelin-starred courtyard restaurant where the cooking feels like someone's grandmother is in the kitchen, except she has a star and a very serious mole game. The chef draws on her small-town Oaxacan roots to turn local produce into something quietly stunning. The crowd leans toward couples and curious travelers who dress like they read design magazines. Order the tamales and let the ancestral drinks do their thing.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- MexBest 2025 · Best of the Best: Nominados · Premios MexBest
- MexBest 2023 · Casual Dining: Nominados · Premios MexBest
-
Rank 3. Casa Oaxaca El Restaurante
Oaxacan Mexican
Casa Oaxaca El Restaurante has been around forever, yet it somehow still feels like the hottest table in town. It's a proper sit-down restaurant near the Templo de Santo Domingo, with a rooftop patio where stylish locals and well-traveled visitors watch the sun drop behind the church while cocktail shakers rattle in the background. The kitchen takes Oaxacan ingredients seriously and plates everything beautifully, and the servers make salsa right at your table.
- MexBest 2025 · Mejor Trayectoria Empresarial: Ganador · Premios MexBest · Alex Ruiz
- MB100 2024 · The 35 Classic Restauraunts
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
-
-
Rank 5. Los Danzantes Oaxaca
Mexican
A Michelin-starred courtyard restaurant in the heart of Oaxaca that actually earns the fuss. The open-air space is gorgeous, the crowd is a happy mix of locals and travelers, and the kitchen leans into regional Mexican cooking with real confidence. The mole sampler alone is worth the trip, and they make their own mezcal, which finds its way into cocktails that don't feel like an afterthought. Dress up a little.
-
- MexBest 2024 · Mejor Panadería: Ganador · Premios MexBest
- MexBest 2025 · Mejor Panadería: Nominados · Premios MexBest
-
Rank 7. Las Quince Letras
Oaxacan Mexican
Oaxaca's mole temples don't get much more legit than this casual, family-run restaurant in the centro. The chef has been cooking traditional Oaxacan food for decades and carries real global recognition for it, which you can taste in every bowl. She makes several moles, but the mole negro is the one worth building your lunch around. The crispy garnachas istmenas, topped with shredded beef and pickled cabbage, are a close second. Locals and tourists alike, all equally happy.
-
Rank 8. La Cocina de Humo
Oaxacan Mexican
- MexBest 2025 · Experiencia de maíz: Ganador · Premios MexBest
- MexBest 2024 · Experiencia de maíz: Nominados · Premios MexBest
-
Rank 9. Crudo
Fusion Japanese
An omakase counter in Oaxaca where the chef splices Japanese technique with local ingredients in ways that feel genuinely inventive rather than gimmicky. Think raw fish meeting nixtamalized produce, or eel handrolls finished with agave pulp, and it all tracks. The room is small and intimate, and the crowd is almost entirely tourists, so you won't feel out of place being one.
-
Rank 10. Criollo
Oaxacan Mexican
Dinner in a candlelit open-air courtyard inside a UNESCO heritage guesthouse, with incense burning and birds doing their thing overhead. That's Criollo, a tasting-menu restaurant where the kitchen works through traditional Oaxacan recipes with serious intention. The crowd tends toward the romantic-occasion end of things, people dressed nicely and in no particular rush. Enrique Olvera's name on the door tells you the cooking is worth the commitment.
-
- The Pinnacle Guide 2 Pins
- MexBest 2025 · Mejor Bartender: Nominados · Premios MexBest · Martina Marré
-
Rank 12. Brío
Oaxacan Mexican
A terrace overlooking a church in the middle of Oaxaca, a wood-fired grill sending smoke into the air, and a menu that treats local ingredients like they deserve the spotlight. Brío is a proper sit-down restaurant where the cooking leans into regional Oaxacan flavors with just enough Mediterranean thinking to feel fresh without being fussy. The crowd tends toward couples and travelers who did their homework.
-
Rank 13. Labo Fermento
Asian
Oaxaca is not where you'd expect to find a fermentation-obsessed Asian kitchen, and yet here we are. This Bib Gourmand-winning spot does wontons, pork buns, and dashi built on house-made kimchi, miso, and shoyu. The fried chicken is the order. Open-roof, breezy, loud playlist, a crowd that's happy to share plates. Grab a bottle of their sauces on the way out.
-
Rank 14. La Olla
Oaxacan Mexican
La Olla is a casual Oaxacan restaurant that looks like nothing from the street, which is exactly how the locals like it. The chef is a genuine authority on regional cooking, and her mole negro is the reason you came, even if you didn't know it yet. The crowd skews curious travelers and neighborhood regulars who don't need to see a menu. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand, so the food punches well above the price.
-
Rank 15. Tierra del Sol
Mexican
A Bib Gourmand-winning spot tucked near Centro Histórico's famous church, Tierra del Sol is a casual rooftop restaurant where the chef champions the farmers behind the food and lets their ingredients do the talking. Walk through the bakery, past the hot chocolate counter, past comals loaded with tlayudas, and up to an open-air terrace with mountain views. The moles are serious, the salsa gets made at your table, and the whole thing feels genuinely personal.
-
Rank 16. Xaok
Oaxacan Mexican
From the street it looks like a boutique hotel, but inside it's a genuinely good sit-down restaurant earning a Michelin Bib Gourmand for Oaxacan cooking with a global twist. The team is warm without being performative, the patio is lovely, and the kitchen handles local ingredients with real care. Don't come expecting cocktails or wine, the drinks list runs to juices and coffee, which somehow fits the vibe perfectly.
-
Eating under a thatched roof in a tree-shaded courtyard in Barrio de Xochimilco, you'd be forgiven for forgetting the rest of Oaxaca exists. This open-air spot does traditional Mexican cooking rooted in family memory, which means the food feels earned rather than performed. The crowd tends toward travelers who did their research and locals who like that. Go for breakfast and watch the comal work happen right by the door.
-
Rank 18. Nois
Mexican
Nois is a two-floor adventure in downtown Oaxaca: a sleek cocktail lounge on the ground floor, and a serious seafood tasting menu upstairs where the kitchen likes to keep you guessing. Familiar Oaxacan ingredients show up in combinations you didn't see coming, and the team clearly enjoys the element of surprise. The crowd tends toward curious, well-dressed locals and travelers who came to eat, not just to look at food.
-
Rank 19. Zandunga
Oaxacan Mexican
Zandunga is a sit-down Oaxacan restaurant built around an open-air courtyard where sunlight drops straight through the roof onto wooden tables covered in clay pots and local art. It feels like the city distilled into a single room. The crowd tends toward curious travelers and locals who still eat here on weekdays, which is always a good sign. The menu leans into regional tradition, and the sampler platter is the honest move if you want to cover ground fast.
-
Rank 20. Teocintle-Tika'aya
Oaxacan Mexican
Tucked just south of the Mercado de La Merced, this tiny no-menu tasting spot is the kind of place you'd never stumble onto by accident, which is exactly why you need to know about it. A handful of tables, Mixteca regional inspiration, and cooking that punches well above its surroundings. Book through Facebook in advance and bring cash, because neither walk-ins nor cards are welcome here.
-
Rank 21. Adamá
Middle Eastern
Middle Eastern cooking in the heart of Oaxaca sounds like a fever dream, but Adama makes it work beautifully. Tucked down a quiet callejón, it draws the city's expat crowd and curious locals who settle in for shared plates built from local farm ingredients. The menu is short and focused, the vibe is relaxed, and the baklava with Turkish coffee at the end feels like a genuinely good idea wherever you happen to be.
-
Rank 22. Asador Bacanora Oaxaca
Mexican Steakhouse
The smell of the grill hits you before you even find the door on this little side street in Jalatlaco. It's a Mexican steakhouse with real range, running from plantain dumplings in mole negro to proper cuts cooked exactly right, with a few European ideas slipped in without making a big deal of it. The crowd tends to be locals who know what they're doing and visitors who got good advice.
-
-
Rank 24. Itanoni Flor del Maiz
Oaxacan Mexican
Itanoni is a casual tortilleria and lunch spot where the whole point is watching fresh masa get pressed, shaped, and cooked right in front of you on a hot comal. The menu is built around heirloom corn varieties, so everything, from the quesadillas to the tetelas, tastes like it's actually made of something. Order a glass of tascalate while you wait. The crowd is locals who know, plus anyone smart enough to follow them.
-
-
Rank 26. Alfonsina
Oaxacan Mexican
Getting here involves dirt roads and second-guessing yourself, but that's half the point. Alfonsina is a reservation-only backyard restaurant run by a son-and-mother team about a half hour south of Oaxaca city, and it genuinely feels like you've talked your way into someone's home for lunch. The tasting menu is relaxed and rooted in Oaxacan tradition, the kind of cooking that makes you slow down. It earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand, and the drive is worth it.
- MexBest 2024 · Mejor Experiencia Maíz: Ganador · Premios MexBest
- MexBest 2023 · Casual Dining: Nominados · Premios MexBest
- MB100 2024 · Mexico's Best 100 Restaurants
-
Rank 27. Restaurante Obispo Cocina Rural Oaxaca
Oaxacan Mexican
Oaxacan comfort food done the old way, built around barbacoa slow-cooked underground in a stone-lined pit. It's a casual, come-hungry kind of spot where the menu leans into regional classics like birria and jabalí, all wrapped into tlayudas, quesadillas, or tetelas. The crowd looks like regulars who already know what they're ordering. Weekly sharing specials are worth asking about, and finish with a cafe de olla before you roll out the door.
-
Rank 28. Almú Tilcajete
Oaxacan Mexican
An open-air countryside kitchen south of Oaxaca City that rewards the drive and the mild navigational panic of getting there. You'll find a rambling shed surrounded by plants, pottery, and sweet wood smoke from a log-burning kitchen where the cooks are basically handling fire with their bare hands. The food is deeply traditional, and the tableside salsas alone are worth the trip. Bring bug spray and an open mind about dining with the elements.