Home Travel Guide Zócalo Mexico City — Plaza de la Constitución Visitor Guide (2026)
Travel Guide Updated April 2026 ⏱ 4 min read

Zócalo Mexico City — Plaza de la Constitución Visitor Guide (2026)

A complete guide to the Zócalo and the historic core surrounding it: Metropolitan Cathedral, Templo Mayor, Palacio Nacional, hours, ticket prices and the right walking order in 2026.

InfoMexico.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

The Zócalo — officially Plaza de la Constitución — is the political, religious and ceremonial heart of Mexico. It's one of the largest city squares in the world, 920 ft on each side, and surrounds three of CDMX's most important buildings: the Metropolitan Cathedral, the Palacio Nacional with the Diego Rivera murals, and the Templo Mayor Aztec ruins. This 2026 guide covers exactly how to walk it, what to pay, and what to skip.

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History and Significance

The plaza sits on the literal center of Tenochtitlán — the Aztec capital that was here when the Spanish arrived in 1519. Hernán Cortés had the city demolished in 1521 and built the Spanish colonial capital directly on top, using stones from the destroyed Aztec ceremonial precinct to build the cathedral. In 1978 electrical workers digging a few blocks from the plaza accidentally uncovered the Templo Mayor, which had been buried under colonial buildings for 450 years. Today's Zócalo is therefore three cities at once: Mexica, Spanish colonial, and modern Mexican.

Walking Order Around the Plaza

The most efficient walking order, starting from the Metro Zócalo exit on the south side:

  • 1. Stand in the middle of the plaza — note the giant flag, the Cathedral to the north, Palacio Nacional to the east.
  • 2. Metropolitan Cathedral (free, 30–60 minutes).
  • 3. Templo Mayor and museum (~$5, 60–90 minutes) — directly behind the Cathedral.
  • 4. Lunch break — El Cardenal (5-min walk) or Café de Tacuba (8-min walk).
  • 5. Palacio Nacional (free with passport, 60 minutes for the Rivera murals).
  • 6. Optional: Walk down Calle Madero pedestrian street to Palacio de Bellas Artes (15 min walk).

Metropolitan Cathedral

The Catedral Metropolitana is the largest cathedral in the Americas — construction started in 1573 and ended in 1813, which means the building mixes Renaissance, Baroque, Churrigueresque and Neoclassical styles. Highlights inside: the Altar of the Kings, the choir, the sacristy paintings, and the literal tilt of the building (it's sinking unevenly into the lakebed; you can feel the slope when you walk).

  • Free entry to the main nave.
  • Bell-tower tour about $4 (when offered) — 60 stairs, great views.
  • No flash photography.
  • Mass schedules posted at the entrance — visit between services for quietest atmosphere.

Templo Mayor

Templo Mayor was the main pyramid of Tenochtitlán — twin temples to Tlaloc (rain) and Huitzilopochtli (war) on top of a stepped pyramid. The Spanish demolished it almost completely in 1521 and built directly on top. What you see today is the layered foundation excavated since 1978: seven construction phases, eagle warrior sculptures, the Coyolxauhqui stone (an 8-foot circular relief of a dismembered moon goddess found in 1978).

  • Entry roughly $5 USD (free Sundays for Mexican residents — busiest day).
  • Allow 60–90 minutes including the on-site museum.
  • Audio guide $4.
  • Don't skip the museum — it has the best pre-Hispanic artifacts outside the Anthropology Museum.

Palacio Nacional and the Diego Rivera Murals

The Palacio Nacional is the seat of the Mexican federal executive and houses the Diego Rivera murals — a massive painted history of Mexico from pre-Hispanic times through the Revolution, completed 1929–1951. The murals fill the main staircase and the second-floor corridor. They're some of the most important 20th-century artworks in the world. Free to visit, but you must enter on the Calle Moneda side with a passport or government ID.

  • Bring your passport — no ID, no entry.
  • Bag check at security; large bags refused.
  • Closed Mondays and during state events (check ahead).
  • The presidential balcony where the Grito de Independencia is shouted every September 15 is on the main facade above the door.

Best Time to Visit

Tuesday through Thursday mornings (9:30–11:30am) are the calmest. Saturdays are crowded but lively — concerts and exhibitions often fill the plaza. Avoid September 15–16 (Independence Day) unless you specifically want the Grito celebration crowds. Check El Universal or local news before visiting — political marches and concerts regularly close the plaza.

Nearby Food

  • El Cardenal (Palma 23): The classic Mexican-breakfast restaurant. Hot chocolate, conchas, lamb barbacoa. $14–$24.
  • Café de Tacuba (Tacuba 28): Open since 1912, vaulted ceiling, wandering musicians. $14–$22.
  • Limosneros (Allende 3): Modern Mexican upstairs, $20–$32 mains.
  • Mercado de San Juan (15-min walk): Counter-culture food market. Cheese, charcuterie, Mexican exotics. $8–$14 lunches.
  • Sanborns at Casa de los Azulejos: A coffee stop in a 16th-century tiled palace. $6–$10.

Common Mistakes

  • Visiting Palacio Nacional without ID. No exceptions.
  • Walking back to your hotel after dark on side streets. Take Uber.
  • Skipping the Templo Mayor museum. Better than the ruins themselves.
  • Going on a Monday. Templo Mayor and Palacio Nacional both close.
  • Booking a "Centro Histórico walking tour" for $80+. Self-guided is easy. A free walking tour (Estación México Free Tours) covers the highlights well; tip $10–$15.
Combine the Zócalo with a rooftop sunset cocktail at the Gran Hotel Ciudad de México (Tiffany glass ceiling lobby is also free to walk through) — it's one block from the cathedral and the rooftop has the best Cathedral view in the city.
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Preguntas Frecuentes

Is the Zócalo free?

Yes — the plaza itself is free and always open. Surrounding museums charge separately: Templo Mayor about $5, Cathedral free (donations welcomed), Palacio Nacional free (passport ID required).

How long do I need at the Zócalo?

Half a day — 4 to 5 hours covers the plaza, Cathedral, Templo Mayor, Palacio Nacional murals and a lunch stop.

Is the Zócalo safe at night?

The plaza itself is safe and well-lit until about 10pm. Side streets in Centro grow sketchier after 9pm — take Uber back to your hotel rather than walking 6+ blocks.

Can I climb the Cathedral towers?

Yes — the bell-tower tour is offered intermittently for about $4. Fantastic city views. Check at the Cathedral entrance for the day's schedule.

Do you need ID for Palacio Nacional?

Yes — you must present a passport or government ID to enter, and bags are checked. Free entry.

What is the best time of day to photograph the Zócalo?

Sunrise (6:30–7:30am) for the Cathedral facade in golden light, or early evening (7:00–8:30pm) when the plaza is lit and the giant Mexican flag still flies.

When does the Zócalo flag come down?

The huge flag is raised at 6:00am and lowered at 6:00pm with a military ceremony — a great spontaneous photo op.