Teotihuacan is the largest pre-Hispanic city in the Americas — at its peak around 500 AD, somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 people lived here, making it one of the six largest cities in the world at the time. The two giant pyramids you see today are roughly 1,800 years old. This guide covers exactly how to visit in 2026: the cheapest way out from CDMX, what's climbable (almost nothing), the hot-air balloon scene, and the tactical mistakes that ruin most visits.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Add Teotihuacan to your CDMX trip and see how it changes your overall budget.
Calculate now →History and Significance
Teotihuacan ("place where the gods were created" in Nahuatl) was already in ruins when the Aztecs found it around 1200 AD — they renamed it and made pilgrimages here. The Maya, the Zapotec and most other Mesoamerican civilizations were influenced by Teotihuacan culture. Who actually built it remains debated: not Aztec, not Maya, possibly a multiethnic city with origins around 100 BC. The civilization collapsed mysteriously around 550 AD and the city was abandoned.
The site is laid out along the 1.5-mile-long Avenue of the Dead, with the Pyramid of the Moon at the north end, the Pyramid of the Sun roughly midway, and the Citadel + Temple of Quetzalcoatl at the south end. UNESCO World Heritage since 1987.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Daily |
| Hours | 9:00am–5:00pm (last entry 4:00pm) |
| Adult ticket | ~$5 USD |
| Mexican residents | ~$3 USD (free Sundays) |
| Parking | $4 |
| Audio guide app | Free, download INAH app |
| Site museum | Included |
Getting There from Mexico City
- ADO bus (cheapest): From Autobuses del Norte terminal (Metro Línea 5). "Pirámides" departures every 15–30 minutes. $5 each way. 1 hour. Drops at Gate 1 (south entrance).
- Group tour: $35–$70 with hotel pickup, English-speaking guide, lunch and (usually) a tequila/obsidian workshop stop. Most efficient for first-timers.
- Private driver: $90–$140 for 6–8 hours, flexible timing. Best for groups of 3–4.
- Uber: $35–$50 one-way from CDMX. Return Uber availability is unreliable — pre-arrange or use the bus back.
- Hot-air balloon package: $140–$210 includes balloon, breakfast and round-trip transfer.
Pyramid of the Sun and Pyramid of the Moon
The Pyramid of the Sun is the third-largest pyramid in the world by volume — 216 ft tall, 738 ft on each base side. Climbing was permanently closed in 2020. You can walk all the way around it, climb to the lowest platform, and shoot the classic photo from the Avenue of the Dead. The Pyramid of the Moon is smaller (140 ft) but framed by the Cerro Gordo mountain behind, which photographers prefer.
The Avenue of the Dead between them is the visual centerpiece. Walking the full avenue from one end to the other and back is roughly 3 miles. The Citadel + Temple of Quetzalcoatl at the south end is often skipped but contains the best-preserved sculptural detail on the site — feathered serpent heads carved out of stone.
Hot Air Balloons
Sunrise balloon flights have become the marquee experience at Teotihuacan over the last 5 years. Liftoff is around 6:30am from a launch field 1 mile from the south entrance. You float for 45–60 minutes at altitudes of 500–1,500 ft over the pyramids, then land in a nearby field. Champagne breakfast at a hacienda-style restaurant is included with most packages.
- Cost: $140–$210 per person, hotel pickup included.
- Departure from CDMX: 4:00–4:30am. Brutal early.
- Best months: November–April (clearer skies, less wind).
- Cancellation: Weather-dependent; reschedule or refund standard.
- Recommended operators: Volar en Globo, Sky Balloons, Globo Aerostático México — all bookable via GetYourGuide.
Best Time to Visit
For the site itself: arrive at the 9am opening or after 2pm. Midday is hot, exposed and crowded with tour buses. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday are noticeably calmer than Saturday and Sunday. Avoid the spring equinox (March 20–21) when 30,000+ Mexicans flood the site dressed in white. Avoid Sunday for solitude (free for Mexicans = packed).
What to Bring
- Sun hat and sunscreen — almost no shade on the avenue.
- 1.5 liters of water per person; vendors inside charge double.
- Comfortable shoes — uneven volcanic stone on the avenue.
- Light jacket if visiting at sunrise (balloon trips, mornings can be 45°F in winter).
- Cash for the entry fee, snacks and the optional museum.
- Phone with offline map; cell signal is spotty inside the zone.
Common Mistakes
- Visiting at midday on a Saturday. The single worst time slot.
- Driving without a plan to leave. No Uber pickups means you wait at the gate.
- Skipping water. 7,200 ft elevation + sun = guaranteed dehydration.
- Trying to climb. Pyramid climbing is closed. Don't embarrass yourself.
- Booking the cheapest tour bus. Many include a 90-minute "obsidian workshop" sales pitch you can't escape — read reviews.
The most cost-efficient day-trip is: 8am ADO bus, 9am arrival, 9–11am Pyramid of the Moon and Avenue, 11am–12:30pm Pyramid of the Sun and Citadel, 1pm lunch at La Gruta cave restaurant ($25), 3pm bus back to CDMX.
Teotihuacan is the largest pre-Hispanic city in the Americas — at its peak around 500 AD, somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 people lived here, making it one of the six largest cities in the world at the time. The two giant pyramids you see today are roughly 1,800 years old. This guide covers exactly how to visit in 2026: the cheapest way out from CDMX, what's climbable (almost nothing), the hot-air balloon scene, and the tactical mistakes that ruin most visits.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Add Teotihuacan to your CDMX trip and see how it changes your overall budget.
Calculate now →History and Significance
Teotihuacan ("place where the gods were created" in Nahuatl) was already in ruins when the Aztecs found it around 1200 AD — they renamed it and made pilgrimages here. The Maya, the Zapotec and most other Mesoamerican civilizations were influenced by Teotihuacan culture. Who actually built it remains debated: not Aztec, not Maya, possibly a multiethnic city with origins around 100 BC. The civilization collapsed mysteriously around 550 AD and the city was abandoned.
The site is laid out along the 1.5-mile-long Avenue of the Dead, with the Pyramid of the Moon at the north end, the Pyramid of the Sun roughly midway, and the Citadel + Temple of Quetzalcoatl at the south end. UNESCO World Heritage since 1987.
Hours and Tickets
| Detail | 2026 Info |
|---|
| Open days | Daily |
| Hours | 9:00am–5:00pm (last entry 4:00pm) |
| Adult ticket | ~$5 USD |
| Mexican residents | ~$3 USD (free Sundays) |
| Parking | $4 |
| Audio guide app | Free, download INAH app |
| Site museum | Included |
Getting There from Mexico City
- ADO bus (cheapest): From Autobuses del Norte terminal (Metro Línea 5). "Pirámides" departures every 15–30 minutes. $5 each way. 1 hour. Drops at Gate 1 (south entrance).
- Group tour: $35–$70 with hotel pickup, English-speaking guide, lunch and (usually) a tequila/obsidian workshop stop. Most efficient for first-timers.
- Private driver: $90–$140 for 6–8 hours, flexible timing. Best for groups of 3–4.
- Uber: $35–$50 one-way from CDMX. Return Uber availability is unreliable — pre-arrange or use the bus back.
- Hot-air balloon package: $140–$210 includes balloon, breakfast and round-trip transfer.
Pyramid of the Sun and Pyramid of the Moon
The Pyramid of the Sun is the third-largest pyramid in the world by volume — 216 ft tall, 738 ft on each base side. Climbing was permanently closed in 2020. You can walk all the way around it, climb to the lowest platform, and shoot the classic photo from the Avenue of the Dead. The Pyramid of the Moon is smaller (140 ft) but framed by the Cerro Gordo mountain behind, which photographers prefer.
The Avenue of the Dead between them is the visual centerpiece. Walking the full avenue from one end to the other and back is roughly 3 miles. The Citadel + Temple of Quetzalcoatl at the south end is often skipped but contains the best-preserved sculptural detail on the site — feathered serpent heads carved out of stone.
Hot Air Balloons
Sunrise balloon flights have become the marquee experience at Teotihuacan over the last 5 years. Liftoff is around 6:30am from a launch field 1 mile from the south entrance. You float for 45–60 minutes at altitudes of 500–1,500 ft over the pyramids, then land in a nearby field. Champagne breakfast at a hacienda-style restaurant is included with most packages.
- Cost: $140–$210 per person, hotel pickup included.
- Departure from CDMX: 4:00–4:30am. Brutal early.
- Best months: November–April (clearer skies, less wind).
- Cancellation: Weather-dependent; reschedule or refund standard.
- Recommended operators: Volar en Globo, Sky Balloons, Globo Aerostático México — all bookable via GetYourGuide.
Best Time to Visit
For the site itself: arrive at the 9am opening or after 2pm. Midday is hot, exposed and crowded with tour buses. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday are noticeably calmer than Saturday and Sunday. Avoid the spring equinox (March 20–21) when 30,000+ Mexicans flood the site dressed in white. Avoid Sunday for solitude (free for Mexicans = packed).
What to Bring
- Sun hat and sunscreen — almost no shade on the avenue.
- 1.5 liters of water per person; vendors inside charge double.
- Comfortable shoes — uneven volcanic stone on the avenue.
- Light jacket if visiting at sunrise (balloon trips, mornings can be 45°F in winter).
- Cash for the entry fee, snacks and the optional museum.
- Phone with offline map; cell signal is spotty inside the zone.
Common Mistakes
- Visiting at midday on a Saturday. The single worst time slot.
- Driving without a plan to leave. No Uber pickups means you wait at the gate.
- Skipping water. 7,200 ft elevation + sun = guaranteed dehydration.
- Trying to climb. Pyramid climbing is closed. Don't embarrass yourself.
- Booking the cheapest tour bus. Many include a 90-minute "obsidian workshop" sales pitch you can't escape — read reviews.
The most cost-efficient day-trip is: 8am ADO bus, 9am arrival, 9–11am Pyramid of the Moon and Avenue, 11am–12:30pm Pyramid of the Sun and Citadel, 1pm lunch at La Gruta cave restaurant ($25), 3pm bus back to CDMX.