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Classic Mexican Taqueria
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Mexico City, Mexico

Tacos Los Cocuyos

CuisineMexican
Executive ChefRigoberto Juarez
Price≈$5
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseLively
CapacityLarge
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

Open around the clock in Centro Histórico, Tacos Los Cocuyos has earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, alongside back-to-back top-five rankings from Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats North America list. Chef Rigoberto Juarez runs a counter that draws night-shift workers and serious eaters alike to Simón Bolívar 59, where the queue is the reservation system and the daylight hours are beside the point.

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Address
Simón Bolívar 59, Centro Histórico de la Cdad. de México, Centro, Cuauhtémoc, 06000 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico
Phone
+52 55 5518 4231
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Tacos Los Cocuyos restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
About

The Corner That Never Closes

At certain hours, Centro Histórico belongs to a different city. The formal restaurants have shuttered, the tourists have retreated to their hotels, and the sidewalks along Simón Bolívar narrow to the kind of crowd that fills this stretch after dark. Tacos Los Cocuyos occupies that version of Mexico City with particular authority: a 24-hour street-level counter where the lighting is functional, the smoke is real, and the queue rarely drops below a dozen people regardless of what the clock says.

That continuous operation is not a novelty act. In a city where late-night eating is less a subculture than a basic expectation, the taqueria that is still serving at 3am is making a clear commitment. Los Cocuyos has held that standard long enough to accumulate credentials that more formal venues would envy: a Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, and consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America rankings of #4 (2023), #6 (2024), and #5 (2025). Those two recognition systems rarely converge on the same counter.

Where This Counter Sits in Mexico City's Dining Map

Mexico City's restaurant conversation tends to organize itself around two poles: the tasting-menu tier, represented by operations like Pujol and Em, where the format is set and the price point reflects that; and the street-level tradition that predates the city's current international profile by several generations. Los Cocuyos sits firmly in the second category but operates at a level of recognition that places it in an unusual comparable set, compared less to the taco stand on the next block than to Expendio de Maíz or the kind of regional Mexican cooking that Esquina Común brings to a more structured room.

The distinction matters because it reframes what the Bib Gourmand means in this context. Michelin's accessible-price category was designed for exactly this scenario: technically accomplished cooking that doesn't require a booking window or a dress code. In Mexico City's specific geography, that recognition lands differently than it does in Paris or Tokyo. The city's street food infrastructure is deep enough that a Bib Gourmand doesn't automatically separate a venue from its neighbours, it has to represent something more specifically earned. For Los Cocuyos, the OAD rankings provide that additional signal, placing it consistently against a continental field rather than just a local one.

The Sweet Register of Mexican Street Food

The editorial angle that most Mexico City visitors miss when thinking about taquerias is how dessert and sweetness function in the street-food ecosystem. The taco counter in Mexico is rarely a savoury-only proposition. The tradition of pan dulce, available from predawn bakeries across the Centro, the post-meal drizzle of salsa dulce, and the proximity of churro vendors to the city's highest-traffic food corners are all part of the same continuous eating culture that a 24-hour operation like Los Cocuyos inhabits. The sweetness arrives in context: the charred-fat richness of carnitas or suadero against a fresh tortilla creates its own contrast without requiring a formal dessert course.

This is the culinary logic that distinguishes Mexican street food from its European street-food equivalents, where the sweet and savoury registers tend to be more formally separated. In Centro Histórico specifically, the proximity of churro stands, juice counters, and pan dulce sellers to the major taqueria corners means the meal doesn't end with a formal dessert so much as it disperses into the street. The counter at Los Cocuyos operates within that logic: the experience is complete at the counter, but the neighbourhood extends it in every direction.

That context also explains why Rigoberto Juarez's operation earns the recognition it does among critics who cover cheap eats with genuine seriousness. The Opinionated About Dining methodology prioritizes peer-review sourcing from industry professionals, which means those top-five rankings reflect how the cooking is regarded by people who eat at this level regularly, not just how it photographs.

Comparing Ambitions Across Mexico

Los Cocuyos is the Centro Histórico data point in a broader Mexican dining argument. The country's food recognition has expanded considerably in recent years, with operations from Valle de Guadalupe (Animalón), Monterrey (KOLI Cocina de Origen), Puerto Morelos (Le Chique), and Oaxaca (Levadura de Olla) drawing attention to how regionally diverse serious Mexican cooking has become. Within that context, a 24-hour Centro taqueria holding top-five status on the same ranking lists as tasting-menu destinations is a pointed reminder that technical seriousness doesn't require a tasting menu format.

The same argument plays out in the United States, where Mexican cooking continues to earn formal recognition at venues like Alma Fonda Fina in Denver and Cariño in Chicago. The elevation of that conversation abroad makes the source material, places like Los Cocuyos, more legible to international visitors who now arrive with a more sophisticated frame for what they're eating. The counter at Simón Bolívar 59 has not changed to meet that audience; the audience has caught up to the counter.

Further afield in Baja, Olivea in Ensenada and Lunario in El Porvenir represent the northern wine-country dining tradition. And for those considering Máximo as a companion stop in the capital, it occupies a different tier entirely, tasting-menu format, Roma Norte address, but shares the commitment to sourcing that makes the broader Mexico City food conversation coherent.

Know Before You Go

AddressSimón Bolívar 59, Centro Histórico, Cuauhtémoc, 06000 Mexico City
HoursOpen 24 hours, Monday through Sunday
ChefRigoberto Juarez
AwardsMichelin Bib Gourmand 2024 & 2025; Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America #4 (2023), #6 (2024), #5 (2025)
BookingNo reservation. Queue in person.
Google Rating4.1 from 13,305 reviews
NeighbourhoodCentro Histórico, walkable from the Zócalo and the Alameda Central
Signature Dishes
suaderoal pastorcampechanolengualonganiza
Frequently asked questions

City Peers

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Rustic
  • Hidden Gem
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Late Night
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityLarge
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingQuick Bite

Busy, no-frills atmosphere with an expansive dining room that fills quickly, featuring open cooking over bubbling cauldrons and fast-paced taco assembly.

Signature Dishes
suaderoal pastorcampechanolengualonganiza