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A Michelin Plate-recognised Mexican restaurant on Wigmore Street, Cavita runs a menu of shareable platters, raw preparations, and street food-style tacos across lunch and dinner, with a basement bar that sets the mood before the main event. The open kitchen and group-friendly format make it one of the more considered Mexican addresses in central London at the £££ price point.

Wigmore Street Before the First Bite
The stretch of Wigmore Street running west from Cavendish Square sits in a curious middle zone of central London: close enough to Mayfair's restaurant density to attract serious diners, far enough removed to avoid the full theatre of that neighbourhood's pricing and pageantry. The building Cavita occupies at 56–60 Wigmore Street sets its tone from the moment you descend to the basement bar before being called upstairs. That sequence, bar first then dining room, is not incidental. It shapes the evening's rhythm in a way that distinguishes this restaurant from the more transactional Mexican dining that London's mid-market has historically offered.
The ground floor dining room runs a view of an open kitchen, the kind of format that has become standard in modern London restaurants as a trust signal about technique rather than a gimmick. Natural light makes it a different room at lunch than at dinner, and that difference matters more at Cavita than at many of its neighbours.
How Daytime and Evening Service Split
Lunch and dinner divide at restaurants operating the £££ bracket in central London tends to fall into two patterns: a condensed midday menu designed for efficiency, or a full format run at reduced tempo. Cavita leans toward the latter category at dinner, where the menu's architecture is built around the logic of sharing. The main course platters are designed for groups rather than solo diners, and the Michelin inspectors who awarded consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 were assessing a format that rewards the table-wide order rather than the cautious individual selection.
Brunch is where the daytime proposition becomes most distinct. The brunch offering runs with mezcal and margaritas as central components rather than afterthoughts, which repositions the meal as a social occasion rather than a functional one. For London's Mexican restaurant category, that is a meaningful differentiation. Most venues in the bracket treat brunch as a secondary service; here it functions as a proper format with its own internal logic.
For groups debating whether to visit at lunch or dinner, the calculus is reasonably clear: brunch and lunch suit smaller parties and lighter budgets within the £££ range; dinner, with its platter-based main courses, returns more value at four or more covers.
The Menu's Logic: Raw, Street, Share
London's Mexican restaurant category has expanded considerably over the past decade, with venues like Fonda and Santo Remedio staking out different positions on the formality and authenticity spectrum. Cavita's menu operates along three recognisable axes: raw preparations, street food formats, and larger sharing plates.
The raw section includes hamachi tostadas, which place the restaurant in conversation with the broader raw-fish-on-crisp format that has become a reliable opener at mid-to-upper Mexican tables globally. Reference points for that style extend to Pujol in Mexico City at the upper end of the spectrum, and venues like Alma Fonda Fina in Denver in the North American mid-market. Cavita sits in a comparable position within London's Mexican tier: technically considered, accessible in format, priced for the Marylebone demographic rather than for destination-dining tourists.
The taco section is described as concise, which is a deliberate editorial choice on the kitchen's part. A long taco list signals breadth; a short one signals confidence in the selections made. For a restaurant earning Michelin recognition in consecutive years, the restraint is consistent with the broader positioning.
Platter format for main courses is the most group-dependent element of the menu. It creates an incentive structure toward communal dining that distinguishes the evening experience from the more individually plated service typical at comparable price points in the Marylebone area.
Cavita in Context: Mexican Dining in Central London
Mexican cuisine has historically occupied a difficult position in London's restaurant hierarchy. For years it defaulted either to fast-casual formats or to high-concept interpretations that moved so far from source material as to lose coherence. The last half-decade has produced a more considered middle tier, where Michelin recognition has begun to track venues that treat Mexican technique seriously without requiring fine-dining ceremony.
Cavita's consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) place it in that emerging tier. The Michelin Plate designation signals that inspectors regard the cooking as competent and consistent, a threshold that fewer Mexican restaurants in London have cleared than the category's growth might suggest. It positions Cavita well above the casual Mexican category without pushing it into the ££££ bracket occupied by Wigmore Street's broader Marylebone neighbours.
For broader orientation across London's dining scene, our full London restaurants guide maps the city's categories with more granularity. The three-star Michelin tier in London, represented by venues such as CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, and Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, represents a different category of commitment and pricing entirely. Cavita's appeal is that it delivers Michelin-recognised cooking at a fraction of that cost, with a format that actively encourages informal group dining.
Outside London, the UK's Michelin-starred restaurant scene is anchored by destinations including The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood.
Planning Your Visit
Cavita holds a Google rating of 4.3 across 760 reviews, which at that volume represents a stable signal rather than a small-sample spike. The address at 56–60 Wigmore Street is walking distance from Bond Street and Oxford Circus stations. The basement bar functions as a pre-dinner holding space and is worth arriving early to use properly rather than skipping to go straight to the table.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Michelin | Group Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cavita | Mexican | £££ | Plate (2024, 2025) | Sharing platters, brunch |
| Fonda | Mexican | £££ | — | À la carte |
| Santo Remedio | Mexican | ££ | — | Casual sharing |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | ££££ | 3 Stars | Tasting menu |
For further reading on where to stay and drink in the area, see our full London hotels guide, our full London bars guide, our full London wineries guide, and our full London experiences guide.
What People Recommend at Cavita
Across the venue's 760 Google reviews and its Michelin write-up, a few consistent signals emerge. The hamachi tostadas are the most cited raw dish and represent the clearest entry point for first-time visitors. The taco selection, though concise, draws consistent positive attention, suggesting the kitchen's restraint in that section is working. The main course sharing platters are leading approached with a group of four or more, both for variety and for value within the £££ range. Brunch with mezcal or a margarita is the format that generates the highest satisfaction signals among daytime visitors, particularly for groups using it as a social anchor rather than a quick meal. The basement bar earns specific mention as a pre-dinner destination in its own right; arriving thirty minutes before your table improves the overall experience substantially compared to going straight to the dining room.
Cuisine and Awards Snapshot
Comparable options at a glance, pulled from our tracked venues.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cavita | Mexican | Head to the basement bar for a cocktail before taking a seat in this bright, friendly ground floor restaurant with a view of the chefs at work in the open kitchen. The menu brims with punchy, vibrant Mexican choices, including raw dishes such as hamachi tostadas and street food options like a concise range of tacos. Make sure you bring some friends to make the most of the main course platters to share. There's an enticing brunch offering too, where the mezcal and margaritas are bound to be flowing.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | This venue |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Modern French, ££££ |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Modern British, ££££ |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Contemporary European, French, ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Modern British, Traditional British, ££££ |
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