Summary of cost of living in Mexico City, Mexico:
Restaurants | Edit | Range |
---|---|---|
Meal, Inexpensive Restaurant | 15.15 A$ | |
Meal for 2 People, Mid-range Restaurant, Three-course | 79.51 A$ | |
McMeal at McDonalds (or Equivalent Combo Meal) | 12.12 A$ | |
Domestic Beer (1 pint draught) | 4.17 A$ | |
Imported Beer (12 oz small bottle) | 6.82 A$ | |
Cappuccino (regular) | 4.68 A$ | |
Coke/Pepsi (12 oz small bottle) | 1.74 A$ | |
Water (12 oz small bottle) | 1.23 A$ | |
Markets | Edit | |
Milk (regular), (1 gallon) | 8.47 A$ | |
Loaf of Fresh White Bread (1 lb) | 3.38 A$ | |
Rice (white), (1 lb) | 1.22 A$ | |
Eggs (regular) (12) | 3.32 A$ | |
Local Cheese (1 lb) | 6.71 A$ | |
Chicken Fillets (1 lb) | 5.38 A$ | |
Beef Round (1 lb) (or Equivalent Back Leg Red Meat) | 7.48 A$ | |
Apples (1 lb) | 1.88 A$ | |
Banana (1 lb) | 1.03 A$ | |
Oranges (1 lb) | 1.20 A$ | |
Tomato (1 lb) | 1.29 A$ | |
Potato (1 lb) | 1.28 A$ | |
Onion (1 lb) | 1.28 A$ | |
Lettuce (1 head) | 1.93 A$ | |
Water (1.5 liter bottle) | 1.38 A$ | |
Bottle of Wine (Mid-Range) | 18.93 A$ | |
Domestic Beer (0.5 liter bottle) | 2.34 A$ | |
Imported Beer (12 oz small bottle) | 4.51 A$ | |
Cigarettes 20 Pack (Marlboro) | 6.06 A$ | |
Transportation | Edit | |
One-way Ticket (Local Transport) | 0.45 A$ | |
Monthly Pass (Regular Price) | 27.26 A$ | |
Taxi Start (Normal Tariff) | 1.67 A$ | |
Taxi 1 mile (Normal Tariff) | 0.73 A$ | |
Taxi 1hour Waiting (Normal Tariff) | 7.65 A$ | |
Gasoline (1 gallon) | 7.08 A$ | |
Volkswagen Golf 1.4 90 KW Trendline (Or Equivalent New Car) | 28,208.57 A$ | |
Toyota Corolla Sedan 1.6l 97kW Comfort (Or Equivalent New Car) | 32,965.54 A$ | |
Utilities (Monthly) | Edit | |
Basic (Electricity, Heating, Cooling, Water, Garbage) for 915 sq ft Apartment | 59.63 A$ | |
Mobile Phone Monthly Plan with Calls and 10GB+ Data | 37.41 A$ | |
Internet (60 Mbps or More, Unlimited Data, Cable/ADSL) | 38.09 A$ | |
Sports And Leisure | Edit | |
Fitness Club, Monthly Fee for 1 Adult | 82.65 A$ | |
Tennis Court Rent (1 Hour on Weekend) | 35.80 A$ | |
Cinema, International Release, 1 Seat | 7.57 A$ | |
Childcare | Edit | |
Preschool (or Kindergarten), Full Day, Private, Monthly for 1 Child | 580.58 A$ | |
International Primary School, Yearly for 1 Child | 13,045.82 A$ | |
Clothing And Shoes | Edit | |
1 Pair of Jeans (Levis 501 Or Similar) | 87.13 A$ | |
1 Summer Dress in a Chain Store (Zara, H&M, ...) | 63.30 A$ | |
1 Pair of Nike Running Shoes (Mid-Range) | 142.43 A$ | |
1 Pair of Men Leather Business Shoes | 141.63 A$ | |
Rent Per Month | Edit | |
Apartment (1 bedroom) in City Centre | 1,379.47 A$ | |
Apartment (1 bedroom) Outside of Centre | 857.83 A$ | |
Apartment (3 bedrooms) in City Centre | 2,935.36 A$ | |
Apartment (3 bedrooms) Outside of Centre | 1,758.68 A$ | |
Buy Apartment Price | Edit | |
Price per Square Feet to Buy Apartment in City Centre | 413.41 A$ | |
Price per Square Feet to Buy Apartment Outside of Centre | 313.02 A$ | |
Salaries And Financing | Edit | |
Average Monthly Net Salary (After Tax) | 1,161.07 A$ | |
Mortgage Interest Rate in Percentages (%), Yearly, for 20 Years Fixed-Rate | 11.39 |
Cost of Living in Naucalpan de Juárez | 9.71 miles |
Cost of Living in Ecatepec | 17.33 miles |
Cost of Living in Chicoloapan de Juarez | 19.75 miles |
Cost of Living in Pachuca | 60.64 miles |
Cost of Living in Cuautla | 68.55 miles |
Cost of Living in Tulancingo | 75.31 miles |
Cost of Living in Puebla | 80.54 miles |
Cost of Living in Iguala | 118.41 miles |
Cost of Living in Queretaro (Santiago de Querétaro) | 133.73 miles |
Cost of Living in San Miguel de Allende | 171.88 miles |
DeutschLebenshaltungskosten in Mexiko-Stadt |
PortuguêsCusto de Vida em Ciudad de México |
ItalianoCosto della Vita a Città del Messico |
FrançaisCoût de la Vie à Mexico |
EspañolCosto de Vida en Ciudad de México |
Public transportation outside the city center is precarious at best, and public healthcare is completely overrun and inefficient. In my opinion, you need around $60k-85k to live comfortably, with insurance, a car, utilities, and spare money for restaurants, weekend activities and traveling. This sort of salaries in Mexico City are normally reserved for high managerial positions in multinational corporations. The normal salary for a mid level job needing a higher education degree, is around 30-45k a year, before taxes.
The prices have doubled for nearly everything since 2020, CV.
Tons of Russian, Turks, Indians, Chinese, Africans, Arabs hanging around waiting to get to the border to cross over into US.
Prices of food and beer in Tijuana, are just 20% below that of San Diego, in some places it's even higher.
In general, people have become ruder, aggressive, and there are more scammers everywhere.
In CDMX, the metros and buses are jampacked worse than Tokyo all day and night.
Stay away from Hidalgo just outside the metro, as this is where the cannabis smokers aggregate, they are malicious, very different compared to most potheads around the world.
The pubs and restaurants overlooking the Cathedral square in the city centre Zocalo are complete tourist traps, the prices are outrageous.
Tons of Americans and Canadians have moved here, while they make money in dollars, jacking up rents and grocery prices for both locals and other tourists from not so rich countries.
The police in Tijuana stole $300 US dollars from me on the pretext of a false accusation made by a woman standing next to me at a cigarette vendor outside a bar. The next day, a hotel refused to give me 100 pesos deposit because I checked out 10 mins late.
Mexico isn't what it used to be, there is a negative energy in general and people are out to get you, especially if you are a foreigner.
Tons of missing women posters, absolutely brutal. This is a culture that just doesn't give a F about human life or basic emotions.
The classic Mexico of literature and movies, what we read and imagined about, is long dead and buried.
I am brown and I speak Spanish yet I felt unwelcome here.
Better go to El Salvador, it will overtake Mexico by 2030 in all aspects especially safety for women and less aggressive men. Costa Rica is better as well.
The prices have doubled for nearly everything since 2020, CV.
In general, people have become ruder, aggressive, and there are more scammers everywhere.
The police in Tijuana stole $300 dollars from me on the pretext of a false accusation. The next day, a hotel refused to give me 100 pesos deposit because I checked out 10 mins late.
Mexico isn't what it used to be, there is a negative energy in general and people are out to get you, especially if you are a foreigner.
I am brown and I speak Spanish yet I felt unwelcome here. Better go to El Salvador, it will overtake Mexico by 2030 in all aspects.