Both are agave spirits. Both are Mexican. But mezcal and tequila are made from different agaves, in different states, using different processes, and they taste nothing alike. This 2026 guide is for travelers planning to drink, tour, or buy in Mexico — what they are, where to taste them, and how to look like you know what you're doing.
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Map a mezcal-and-tequila trip across Oaxaca and Jalisco.
Calculate now →The Core Difference
Tequila is a protected subcategory of mezcal. Both are distilled from agave, but tequila has strict rules: only blue Weber agave, only from one of five states, only steam-cooked. Mezcal can use any of 30+ agave varieties, can come from nine states, and is traditionally pit-roasted underground — the source of its signature smoke.
| Tequila | Mezcal |
|---|
| Agave | Blue Weber only | 30+ varieties (espadín, tobalá, tepeztate...) |
| Cooking | Steam ovens or autoclaves | Wood-fired earthen pits |
| Flavor | Clean, vegetal, peppery | Smoky, mineral, earthy |
| Region | Jalisco + 4 states | Oaxaca + 8 states |
| Production | Mostly industrial | Mostly artisanal (palenques) |
| Price (750 ml, MX) | $15–$60 USD | $20–$90 USD |
Where Each Is Made
- Tequila: Jalisco (the town of Tequila itself, plus Los Altos), Nayarit, Michoacán, Guanajuato, and Tamaulipas. The Tequila Trail tour runs from Guadalajara — a 45-min train ride to Tequila town with distillery stops.
- Mezcal: Oaxaca produces ~90% of all mezcal. Other DO-protected states include Guerrero, Durango, San Luis Potosí, Zacatecas, Tamaulipas, Michoacán, Puebla and Guanajuato.
- Raicilla: A mezcal-style spirit from Jalisco's coast (Puerto Vallarta region) — worth seeking out.
- Bacanora: A Sonora-only agave spirit, similar to mezcal, gaining international attention.
Agave Varieties Worth Knowing
- Espadín: The workhorse — 90% of mezcal. Sweet, balanced, approachable. Great starting point.
- Tobalá: Wild, mountain-grown, takes 12+ years to mature. Floral, complex. $60–$90/bottle.
- Tepeztate: Wild, 25-year maturation. Herbaceous and intense. Rare and pricey.
- Madrecuixe: Wild, 12 years. Earthy and savory.
- Cuishe: Mineral, almost briny. A favorite of bartenders.
- Blue Weber: Tequila only — sweet, peppery, vegetal.
How to Drink Each
Mezcal is sipped at room temperature from a clay copita or shallow glass, with orange slices and sal de gusano on the side. Take small sips — kiss it, don't shoot it. A traditional Oaxacan saying: "para todo mal, mezcal; para todo bien, también" (for everything bad, mezcal; for everything good, the same).
Tequila is more flexible. Quality blanco/reposado is sipped neat or over a single ice cube. Cheap mixto is for margaritas and shots. Add lime and salt only with the cheaper stuff — it masks the flavor.
Brands Worth Seeking
- Mezcal: Del Maguey Vida (entry-level, $40), Real Minero, Mezcal Vago, Rezpiral, El Jolgorio, La Niña del Mezcal.
- Tequila: Fortaleza, Tequila Ocho, Don Fulano, El Tesoro, G4, Tapatío, ArteNOM.
- Avoid: Brands sold mainly through celebrity marketing — they're typically NOM 1173 or 1414 mass producers with inflated prices.
Palenque & Distillery Tour Pricing (2026)
| Tour | Price (USD) | Includes |
|---|
| Oaxaca group palenque tour (8 hr) | $65–$95 | 3–4 palenques, lunch, 10+ tastings |
| Oaxaca private palenque tour | $180–$280 | 1–4 people, custom palenques, lunch |
| Tequila town day trip from Guadalajara | $70–$110 | Train, 2 distilleries, lunch |
| Jose Cuervo Express train | $90–$160 | Train, distillery, lunch (touristy) |
| Casa Sauza or Patrón VIP distillery tour | $45–$80 | Distillery only, walk-up |
Food Pairings
- Mezcal espadín + mole negro: the smoke matches the chocolate-chile depth.
- Mezcal tobalá + tlayudas: floral mezcal cuts the cheese and chorizo.
- Tequila blanco + ceviche: citrus and pepper amplify the lime.
- Tequila reposado + carne asada: oak and char pair perfectly with grilled beef.
- Tequila añejo + dark chocolate: finish a meal like a brandy.
Hangover note — sticking to 100% agave (look for it on the label) dramatically reduces the next-day damage. Mixto tequila (cheap, 51% agave) is the main culprit behind tequila's rough reputation.
Both are agave spirits. Both are Mexican. But mezcal and tequila are made from different agaves, in different states, using different processes, and they taste nothing alike. This 2026 guide is for travelers planning to drink, tour, or buy in Mexico — what they are, where to taste them, and how to look like you know what you're doing.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Map a mezcal-and-tequila trip across Oaxaca and Jalisco.
Calculate now →The Core Difference
Tequila is a protected subcategory of mezcal. Both are distilled from agave, but tequila has strict rules: only blue Weber agave, only from one of five states, only steam-cooked. Mezcal can use any of 30+ agave varieties, can come from nine states, and is traditionally pit-roasted underground — the source of its signature smoke.
| Tequila | Mezcal |
|---|
| Agave | Blue Weber only | 30+ varieties (espadín, tobalá, tepeztate...) |
| Cooking | Steam ovens or autoclaves | Wood-fired earthen pits |
| Flavor | Clean, vegetal, peppery | Smoky, mineral, earthy |
| Region | Jalisco + 4 states | Oaxaca + 8 states |
| Production | Mostly industrial | Mostly artisanal (palenques) |
| Price (750 ml, MX) | $15–$60 USD | $20–$90 USD |
Where Each Is Made
- Tequila: Jalisco (the town of Tequila itself, plus Los Altos), Nayarit, Michoacán, Guanajuato, and Tamaulipas. The Tequila Trail tour runs from Guadalajara — a 45-min train ride to Tequila town with distillery stops.
- Mezcal: Oaxaca produces ~90% of all mezcal. Other DO-protected states include Guerrero, Durango, San Luis Potosí, Zacatecas, Tamaulipas, Michoacán, Puebla and Guanajuato.
- Raicilla: A mezcal-style spirit from Jalisco's coast (Puerto Vallarta region) — worth seeking out.
- Bacanora: A Sonora-only agave spirit, similar to mezcal, gaining international attention.
Agave Varieties Worth Knowing
- Espadín: The workhorse — 90% of mezcal. Sweet, balanced, approachable. Great starting point.
- Tobalá: Wild, mountain-grown, takes 12+ years to mature. Floral, complex. $60–$90/bottle.
- Tepeztate: Wild, 25-year maturation. Herbaceous and intense. Rare and pricey.
- Madrecuixe: Wild, 12 years. Earthy and savory.
- Cuishe: Mineral, almost briny. A favorite of bartenders.
- Blue Weber: Tequila only — sweet, peppery, vegetal.
How to Drink Each
Mezcal is sipped at room temperature from a clay copita or shallow glass, with orange slices and sal de gusano on the side. Take small sips — kiss it, don't shoot it. A traditional Oaxacan saying: "para todo mal, mezcal; para todo bien, también" (for everything bad, mezcal; for everything good, the same).
Tequila is more flexible. Quality blanco/reposado is sipped neat or over a single ice cube. Cheap mixto is for margaritas and shots. Add lime and salt only with the cheaper stuff — it masks the flavor.
Brands Worth Seeking
- Mezcal: Del Maguey Vida (entry-level, $40), Real Minero, Mezcal Vago, Rezpiral, El Jolgorio, La Niña del Mezcal.
- Tequila: Fortaleza, Tequila Ocho, Don Fulano, El Tesoro, G4, Tapatío, ArteNOM.
- Avoid: Brands sold mainly through celebrity marketing — they're typically NOM 1173 or 1414 mass producers with inflated prices.
Palenque & Distillery Tour Pricing (2026)
| Tour | Price (USD) | Includes |
|---|
| Oaxaca group palenque tour (8 hr) | $65–$95 | 3–4 palenques, lunch, 10+ tastings |
| Oaxaca private palenque tour | $180–$280 | 1–4 people, custom palenques, lunch |
| Tequila town day trip from Guadalajara | $70–$110 | Train, 2 distilleries, lunch |
| Jose Cuervo Express train | $90–$160 | Train, distillery, lunch (touristy) |
| Casa Sauza or Patrón VIP distillery tour | $45–$80 | Distillery only, walk-up |
Food Pairings
- Mezcal espadín + mole negro: the smoke matches the chocolate-chile depth.
- Mezcal tobalá + tlayudas: floral mezcal cuts the cheese and chorizo.
- Tequila blanco + ceviche: citrus and pepper amplify the lime.
- Tequila reposado + carne asada: oak and char pair perfectly with grilled beef.
- Tequila añejo + dark chocolate: finish a meal like a brandy.
Hangover note — sticking to 100% agave (look for it on the label) dramatically reduces the next-day damage. Mixto tequila (cheap, 51% agave) is the main culprit behind tequila's rough reputation.