Hilton Mexico City Reforma — 3-Minute Metro Walk to Reach Estadio Azteca in ~35 Minutes
How do you get to Estadio Azteca on World Cup match day without sitting in gridlock Uber traffic for an hour? That is the real question when picking a hotel in Mexico City — and Hilton Reforma answers it better than almost anything else in this list. Score 8.4/10 from over 3,400 verified Booking.com reviews, the largest pool of reviews in this roundup. Metro Hidalgo (Lines L2 and L3) is a 3-minute walk from the front door. Line L2 runs direct south to Tasqueña, where the Tren Ligero continues straight to Estadio Azteca — total journey around 35 minutes, ticket price MXN 10. For a tournament where traffic unpredictability is a real concern, this connectivity matters.
Open the curtains in the morning and Torre Latinoamericana is right there — the landmark art-deco tower that has defined Mexico City's skyline for generations. This is the view guests in the higher city-facing rooms describe as the moment they knew the hotel choice was right. The Hilton Mexico City Reforma sits at Avenida Juárez 70, on the edge where Centro Histórico meets Paseo de la Reforma, and it has accumulated over 3,400 reviews on Booking.com with a score of 8.4/10 — the largest verified review pool in this entire roundup. That number does not automatically mean the best hotel, but it does mean thousands of people chose to stay here and enough of them felt good about it to write it down.
"Woke up every morning to Torre Latinoamericana framed in the window. Metro Hidalgo 3 minutes away. Fast WiFi. Every staff member speaks English. Nothing to stress about for five nights straight."
The rooms follow the reliable Hilton formula — not flashy, not bland. Wide beds with multiple pillows, strong air-conditioning (important in a city that gets warm and occasionally polluted), large TV, fast WiFi that every review credits as genuinely good. Standard King from $140–190 per night. Deluxe City View $175–230 — the uplift is worth it for anyone who wants the skyline; several guests described the night view as an unexpected highlight. Executive Room $200–280 includes Executive Lounge access with complimentary breakfast and evening snacks. One practical note: if your stay includes multiple nights and breakfast matters, the Executive tier often works out cheaper than adding breakfast separately.
The hotel's most talked-about feature — which guests genuinely seem not to expect from a mid-range Hilton — is the Rooftop Pool. A swimming pool at altitude with an open vista toward Torre Latinoamericana and the broader Centro skyline. The pool-side bar serves drinks. At sunset, the light on the tower turns the sky orange in a way that feels distinctly Mexico City. Separate from the pool, the hotel has a fitness center and in-house dining. Across every review platform, one thing comes up consistently: the staff speak excellent English and are genuinely helpful — a meaningful detail for international visitors navigating an unfamiliar city.
The location argument is straightforward. Metro Hidalgo station (Lines L2 and L3) is a 3-minute walk from the hotel. Line L2 heads south through the city all the way to Tasqueña at the terminus. At Tasqueña, transfer to the Tren Ligero — a light rail line that runs south through Xochimilco territory directly to Estadio Azteca. Door to stadium: approximately 35 minutes. Ticket cost: around MXN 10. On match days, this is the obvious way to travel — the roads around the stadium get seriously congested, and surge pricing on Uber during mass post-match exits can be severe. Beyond the stadium route, the hotel is walkable to Palacio de Bellas Artes (5 minutes), Alameda Central park (3 minutes), and Zócalo, the historic main square (10–15 minutes on foot).
Two things to know before booking: Centro Histórico's immediate surroundings are uneven — the neighborhood is genuinely historic and interesting but also crowded, noisy, and inconsistently maintained on the streets directly outside the hotel. This is documented across reviews and is the reality of staying in this part of the city rather than Polanco or Condesa. More specifically to this property: some rooms have a tobacco smell from previous guests. Multiple reviews mention this. The fix is simple — request a non-smoking floor explicitly at booking and again at check-in — but it is worth knowing in advance so you do not discover it tired after a long flight.
To put it plainly: Hilton Mexico City Reforma is the most reliable World Cup base in this roundup for travelers who prioritize transit access. The 3,400-review track record is genuine. The Metro-to-Azteca route is the most direct and cheapest in the list. The rooftop pool is better than expected for the category. It suits World Cup visitors planning multiple matches, travelers who want a solid Centro Histórico location for sightseeing, and anyone who wants the Hilton brand consistency at a competitive mid-range price. If you need a quieter upscale neighborhood or a smoke-free guarantee without having to ask — other properties in Mexico City will serve you better.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Metro Hidalgo L2/L3 just 3-min walk — fastest public-transit route to Estadio Azteca in this list
- ✓ 3,400+ reviews at 8.4/10 — largest verified pool in this roundup
- ✓ Rooftop pool with Torre Latinoamericana and city skyline views
- ✓ Staff speak English across the board — confirmed repeatedly in reviews
- ! Centro Histórico surroundings are busy and inconsistently maintained — not a quiet neighborhood
- ! Some rooms have lingering tobacco smell — request a Smoke-free floor explicitly at booking
- ✓ Reforma-Centro boundary location — walkable to Bellas Artes, Alameda Central, Zócalo
- ✓ Fast WiFi confirmed consistently across guest reviews
- ✓ Competitive mid-range pricing for a full-service Hilton in a prime zone
- ! Tobacco odor reported in some rooms — confirm non-smoking preference at check-in
- ! In-hotel dining prices higher than street-level Centro restaurants nearby
- 💡If you want a quiet, upscale neighborhood like Polanco or Condesa · Centro Histórico is vibrant and historic but also loud and crowded · Consider Camino Real Polanco or Condesa DF instead
- 💡If your room smells of tobacco on arrival · Tell front desk immediately and ask for a Smoke-free floor transfer — reviews confirm the hotel accommodates this
- 💡If your budget is under $140/night · See Hampton Inn Suites Centro Histórico or Mundo Joven Catedral in this list
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.