The Frida Kahlo Museum — Casa Azul, the Blue House, in Coyoacán — is the most-visited single-artist museum in Latin America. It's the house where Frida was born in 1907, lived most of her adult life with Diego Rivera, and died in 1954. The cobalt-blue walls have become one of the most photographed exteriors in Mexico City. This guide covers everything you need to actually visit it in 2026: timed tickets, the right entry time, what's worth seeing inside and the mistakes most travelers make.
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The Casa Azul was built by Frida's father Guillermo Kahlo in 1904, three years before her birth. Frida and Diego Rivera moved in together after their 1929 marriage, repainted the courtyard cobalt blue (a color believed to ward off evil spirits), and turned the house into a salon for artists, exiled politicians (Trotsky lived here for two years) and the Mexican intellectual elite. After Frida's death in 1954, Diego donated the house and contents to the Mexican state to be opened as a museum, which it has been since 1958.
What makes Casa Azul different from a conventional art museum: the house is preserved largely as Frida and Diego left it. Her wheelchair sits at her studio easel. Her dresses and orthopedic corsets hang in custom display cases (revealed only in 2004 when a sealed bathroom was finally opened). The kitchen still has the names "Frida" and "Diego" spelled out in clay cups on the wall. The garden contains pre-Hispanic stone idols Diego collected obsessively.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Tuesday–Sunday |
| Hours | 10:00am–5:30pm (Wed opens 11:00am) |
| Adult ticket weekday | ~$12 USD |
| Adult ticket weekend | ~$14 USD |
| Photo permit | $1.50 |
| Audio guide (English/Spanish) | $4 |
| Mexican students/seniors | ~$5 |
| Combined ticket (+ Anahuacalli) | ~$16 |
Tickets are sold for specific 30-minute entry windows. Once you're inside, you can stay as long as you like.
Getting There
Casa Azul is at Londres 247, Del Carmen, Coyoacán — about 8 miles south of the Zócalo. Options:
- Uber from Roma/Condesa: $7–$11, 25–40 minutes depending on traffic. The most painless option for first-timers.
- Metro: Line 3 to Coyoacán station, then 15-minute walk or $2 cab. About $0.30 each way.
- Metrobús + walk: Line 1 (Insurgentes) south to Dr. Gálvez stop, then 12-minute walk.
- Guided tour pickup: Most tours include hotel pickup from Roma, Condesa, Polanco or Centro.
What to See Inside
The visit follows a one-way route through the courtyard, the day rooms, the kitchen, the dining room, Frida's studio, her bedroom (where she died), the dress collection, and finally the garden. The standout rooms:
- The studio: Wheelchair at the easel, paint-stained palette, unfinished portrait of Stalin on the easel.
- Frida's day bed: A four-poster bed with mirror in the canopy — installed by her mother during her recovery from the bus accident, the mirror is what allowed her to begin painting self-portraits.
- The kitchen: Yellow walls, traditional clay cookware, the "Frida & Diego" cup mosaic.
- The dress room: Tehuana dresses, embroidered huipiles, orthopedic corsets — opened to the public in 2012.
- The garden: Stone idols, a pre-Hispanic pyramid Diego built, fruit trees and Frida's ashes (in a pre-Hispanic urn in her bedroom, technically).
Best Time to Visit
Tuesday and Wednesday at the 10:00am or 4:30pm slot are the calmest. The midday windows (11am–2pm) are the busiest, especially Saturdays and Sundays. Avoid school-vacation periods (mid-July through mid-August, late December) when school groups arrive in waves. Weather is irrelevant — most of the visit is indoors and the garden is partly covered.
Photographer Tips
- The cobalt exterior shoots best in late-afternoon side light (3:30–5:00pm). Mornings the entrance facade is in shade.
- For the iconic blue-wall portrait, walk one block north to Calle Allende — fewer tourists, same color.
- Inside, the kitchen and the courtyard photograph best. Bring a fast 35mm prime; light levels are low.
- No flash, no tripods anywhere. Phone shots only in the dress room.
- The Tehuana dresses are behind glass — shoot at a slight angle to avoid reflections.
Nearby Food
Coyoacán is a great lunch stop. Within 10 minutes' walk:
- Mercado de Coyoacán: Tostadas de Coyoacán (counter inside the market) — $4 each, the city's best.
- Los Danzantes: Mezcal and modern Mexican on Plaza Hidalgo. Mains $14–$22.
- Café El Jarocho: Best coffee in the neighborhood, $1.50 a cup.
- Corazón de Maguey: Mezcal-flight bar with strong food. Plates $9–$16.
- Casa de los Tacos: Solid taqueria, 5 minutes from the museum.
Common Mistakes
- Showing up without a ticket. Walk-up tickets are rare. Book online a week ahead.
- Arriving in midday Saturday. The slowest, most crowded slot.
- Skipping the audio guide. Wall labels are minimal — the audio guide adds context that makes the visit much richer for $4.
- Paying cash at the door. Online prices are the same and you skip the entry queue.
- Visiting only Casa Azul in Coyoacán. Plaza Hidalgo, the market, and Diego Rivera's studio in San Ángel are all worthwhile combos.
A guided combo tour adding the Diego Rivera Studio Museum in San Ángel runs $55–$80 via GetYourGuide and is the most efficient way to see both Frida and Diego sites in one day.
The Frida Kahlo Museum — Casa Azul, the Blue House, in Coyoacán — is the most-visited single-artist museum in Latin America. It's the house where Frida was born in 1907, lived most of her adult life with Diego Rivera, and died in 1954. The cobalt-blue walls have become one of the most photographed exteriors in Mexico City. This guide covers everything you need to actually visit it in 2026: timed tickets, the right entry time, what's worth seeing inside and the mistakes most travelers make.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Building a CDMX itinerary? Drop in your dates and we'll budget Casa Azul plus the rest.
Calculate now →History and Significance
The Casa Azul was built by Frida's father Guillermo Kahlo in 1904, three years before her birth. Frida and Diego Rivera moved in together after their 1929 marriage, repainted the courtyard cobalt blue (a color believed to ward off evil spirits), and turned the house into a salon for artists, exiled politicians (Trotsky lived here for two years) and the Mexican intellectual elite. After Frida's death in 1954, Diego donated the house and contents to the Mexican state to be opened as a museum, which it has been since 1958.
What makes Casa Azul different from a conventional art museum: the house is preserved largely as Frida and Diego left it. Her wheelchair sits at her studio easel. Her dresses and orthopedic corsets hang in custom display cases (revealed only in 2004 when a sealed bathroom was finally opened). The kitchen still has the names "Frida" and "Diego" spelled out in clay cups on the wall. The garden contains pre-Hispanic stone idols Diego collected obsessively.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Tuesday–Sunday |
| Hours | 10:00am–5:30pm (Wed opens 11:00am) |
| Adult ticket weekday | ~$12 USD |
| Adult ticket weekend | ~$14 USD |
| Photo permit | $1.50 |
| Audio guide (English/Spanish) | $4 |
| Mexican students/seniors | ~$5 |
| Combined ticket (+ Anahuacalli) | ~$16 |
Tickets are sold for specific 30-minute entry windows. Once you're inside, you can stay as long as you like.
Getting There
Casa Azul is at Londres 247, Del Carmen, Coyoacán — about 8 miles south of the Zócalo. Options:
- Uber from Roma/Condesa: $7–$11, 25–40 minutes depending on traffic. The most painless option for first-timers.
- Metro: Line 3 to Coyoacán station, then 15-minute walk or $2 cab. About $0.30 each way.
- Metrobús + walk: Line 1 (Insurgentes) south to Dr. Gálvez stop, then 12-minute walk.
- Guided tour pickup: Most tours include hotel pickup from Roma, Condesa, Polanco or Centro.
What to See Inside
The visit follows a one-way route through the courtyard, the day rooms, the kitchen, the dining room, Frida's studio, her bedroom (where she died), the dress collection, and finally the garden. The standout rooms:
- The studio: Wheelchair at the easel, paint-stained palette, unfinished portrait of Stalin on the easel.
- Frida's day bed: A four-poster bed with mirror in the canopy — installed by her mother during her recovery from the bus accident, the mirror is what allowed her to begin painting self-portraits.
- The kitchen: Yellow walls, traditional clay cookware, the "Frida & Diego" cup mosaic.
- The dress room: Tehuana dresses, embroidered huipiles, orthopedic corsets — opened to the public in 2012.
- The garden: Stone idols, a pre-Hispanic pyramid Diego built, fruit trees and Frida's ashes (in a pre-Hispanic urn in her bedroom, technically).
Best Time to Visit
Tuesday and Wednesday at the 10:00am or 4:30pm slot are the calmest. The midday windows (11am–2pm) are the busiest, especially Saturdays and Sundays. Avoid school-vacation periods (mid-July through mid-August, late December) when school groups arrive in waves. Weather is irrelevant — most of the visit is indoors and the garden is partly covered.
Photographer Tips
- The cobalt exterior shoots best in late-afternoon side light (3:30–5:00pm). Mornings the entrance facade is in shade.
- For the iconic blue-wall portrait, walk one block north to Calle Allende — fewer tourists, same color.
- Inside, the kitchen and the courtyard photograph best. Bring a fast 35mm prime; light levels are low.
- No flash, no tripods anywhere. Phone shots only in the dress room.
- The Tehuana dresses are behind glass — shoot at a slight angle to avoid reflections.
Nearby Food
Coyoacán is a great lunch stop. Within 10 minutes' walk:
- Mercado de Coyoacán: Tostadas de Coyoacán (counter inside the market) — $4 each, the city's best.
- Los Danzantes: Mezcal and modern Mexican on Plaza Hidalgo. Mains $14–$22.
- Café El Jarocho: Best coffee in the neighborhood, $1.50 a cup.
- Corazón de Maguey: Mezcal-flight bar with strong food. Plates $9–$16.
- Casa de los Tacos: Solid taqueria, 5 minutes from the museum.
Common Mistakes
- Showing up without a ticket. Walk-up tickets are rare. Book online a week ahead.
- Arriving in midday Saturday. The slowest, most crowded slot.
- Skipping the audio guide. Wall labels are minimal — the audio guide adds context that makes the visit much richer for $4.
- Paying cash at the door. Online prices are the same and you skip the entry queue.
- Visiting only Casa Azul in Coyoacán. Plaza Hidalgo, the market, and Diego Rivera's studio in San Ángel are all worthwhile combos.
A guided combo tour adding the Diego Rivera Studio Museum in San Ángel runs $55–$80 via GetYourGuide and is the most efficient way to see both Frida and Diego sites in one day.