Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City — Reforma · on Paseo de la Reforma
Honestly, if you want luxury without any guesswork — the Four Seasons on Paseo de la Reforma is the answer. A green courtyard garden so calm you forget you're in a megacity, with a top spa and restaurants, near Chapultepec park.
The Four Seasons sits on Paseo de la Reforma, Mexico City's grandest avenue, near Chapultepec park (Latin America's largest urban park), the Anthropology Museum and the Angel of Independence. The location connects easily to Roma/Condesa and Polanco. Note that CDMX sits at 2,240m, so it's cooler than many expect.
"A calm courtyard garden — an oasis in the heart of the megacity"
The heart of the hotel is its hacienda-style green courtyard garden — a calm, shaded space that makes you forget you're in the largest city in North America. Many guests say sipping morning coffee in the garden alone is worth it. Rooms are spacious, classically luxurious, with soft beds and marble bathrooms.
Service is what the Four Seasons is famous for — name-recognising, attentive staff who arrange everything from top restaurant reservations to Teotihuacan tours. The spa is highly praised, there's a pool, gym, the Zanaya restaurant (Pacific coastal seafood) and Fifty Mils bar, ranked among the world's best bars.
It suits couples, honeymooners, those who value world-class service and calm, or business travellers wanting a Reforma location. The interesting part is the price — from around MXN 9,500/night sounds high, but compared to a Four Seasons in Europe/North America it's far better value. In CDMX you get this level of luxury at a price Thai travellers can reach.
Worth knowing — it's the priciest hotel in our list. If your plan is to be out all day and just sleep, a good boutique in our list may make more sense. But if the point is to relax and enjoy the hotel, it's worth every peso.
Also, CDMX is at altitude, so you may tire more easily the first day or two — a hotel of this calibre makes adjusting easier. The Reforma location is safe day and into the evening.
A key note for Thai travellers heading to Mexico: Thai passport holders normally need a Mexican visa, but if you hold a valid US, Canadian, Japanese, UK or Schengen visa you can enter Mexico without a separate one — a popular shortcut, but always confirm the current rules with the Mexican embassy before you fly. From MEX airport, an Uber or DiDi to Reforma is the safe, simple choice, around 30-50 minutes depending on traffic. And do take the altitude seriously the first day; the Four Seasons' calm makes easing in painless.
Bottom line: the Four Seasons Mexico City sells world-class service and calm in the heart of a megacity. If the budget's there and you want a memorable luxury stay at better value than other continents, go for it — no regrets.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Calm central courtyard garden
- ✓ World-class Four Seasons service
- ✓ Safe Reforma location near Chapultepec
- ✓ Far better value than Four Seasons elsewhere
- ! Highest price in the list
- ! Altitude can tire you the first days
- ✓ World-class Four Seasons service
- ✓ Safe Reforma location near Chapultepec
- ✓ Far better value than Four Seasons elsewhere
- ✓ Calm central courtyard garden
- ! Altitude can tire you the first days
- ! Highest price in the list
- 💡If you sightsee all day and just sleep — this price may not pay off → see boutiques like Condesa DF/Habita in our list
- 💡If you worry about altitude — it's at 2,240m → hydrate, rest day one, ease in
- 💡If you go during Dia de Muertos — rates spike and fill fast → book months ahead
Heading to Mexico City for the World Cup?
Mexico City is a 2026 host city — see our full World Cup guide (matches, where to stay, tickets, visa) plus how to reach Estadio Azteca on match day.