A neighborhood-by-neighborhood guide to Mérida — curated by the Casa Querida team. Architecture, Maya heritage, gastronomy, art, cenotes, birds and the people who keep the city alive.
Casa Querida is a boutique hotel in the heart of Mérida, built for travelers who come to Yucatán for what makes it different: the depth of Maya civilization, the cenotes and pink lagoons that exist nowhere else on earth, the colonial and belle-époque architecture of the old henequen families, the contemporary art and design scene that has grown around it, and the birds — flamingos in the lagoons, motmots in the gardens, ocellated turkeys in the jungle.
This guide is organized to match those interests: every neighborhood is broken down by Architecture & Heritage, Art & Design, Maya Heritage where it exists, Gastronomy, Nature & Public Spaces, and Music & Nightlife. Outside the city, we've organized everything by what you came to see — pyramids, cenotes, birds, haciendas, beaches, pueblos mágicos.
Don't miss · 2026–2027
The Bienal de Yucatán opens in Mérida on 26 November 2026 and runs through 28 February 2027 — the first international art biennial of its scale in Mexico, conceived to position Mérida as a center for contemporary creative thinking. Three months of programming across multiple venues in the city, with local and international artists in dialogue. For travelers whose calendar is flexible, this is the most consequential arts event in the peninsula in our lifetimes — and the most compelling reason to plan a stay in this window. Casa Querida sits a short walk from several of the venues. bienaldeyucatan.com
Mérida's historic center is a flat, walkable grid of barrios (neighborhoods) radiating from the Plaza Grande. Each one has its own square, its own church, and its own personality — built on top of T'Hó, the Maya city that stood here before 1542. Most of what travelers come for happens inside this ring: Santiago, Santa Lucía, Santa Ana, Mejorada, San Sebastián, La Ermita, San Juan and San Cristóbal.
Just outside the strict center you'll find García Ginerés (leafy, residential), Itzimná (quieter, green) and the grand mansions of Paseo de Montejo. The guide goes barrio by barrio, starting with our own.
Contents
Jump straight to the barrio, theme, or excursion you want. The guide reads linearly — but it isn't meant to be read in one sitting.
In Mérida
Beyond Mérida
Beyond Mérida
Mérida sits at the center of one of the most layered regions in Mexico. Within a half-day drive of Casa Querida — and entirely inside the state of Yucatán — you can stand inside a Maya pyramid, swim in a cenote that has been sacred for two thousand years, watch flamingos turn a lagoon pink, eat in a Maya kitchen that has never compromised, or step into a contemporary art foundation that rewrote the rules. Every entry below has been visited by the Casa Querida team, and several are made meaningfully better by booking through us.

Maya Heritage
The Yucatán peninsula was the heartland of the Maya world. Within a half-day drive of the hotel you can visit half a dozen sites — most of them yours to walk through almost alone if you go early.
Art & Design
For travelers who come to Yucatán for the art and design scene, these are the addresses that elevate a trip from interesting to essential. None of them are walk-ins; we make the introduction.

Nature
When the asteroid that ended the dinosaurs struck off the Yucatán coast 66 million years ago, it left behind a peninsula riddled with more than 6,000 freshwater sinkholes — cenotes, sacred wells the Maya understood as portals to Xibalba, the underworld.

Birds & Wildlife
Yucatán is one of the most rewarding birding regions in Mexico — over 540 recorded species, including several endemics found nowhere else (Yucatán Wren, Yucatán Jay, Mexican Sheartail).

Heritage
The henequen boom between the 1880s and the 1920s turned modest manors into the extravagant pink-and-ochre haciendas you see today. Many are now restored as hotels, restaurants and museums.

Towns
Yucatán has three towns formally designated pueblos mágicos and several more that deserve the title. Each below is a half-day or an easy overnight.

Kitchens
Each entry below is a meal — or a meal-making — that we would put forward in any guide of record, and several of them are worth the trip to Yucatán on their own.
Coast
Yucatán's Gulf coast is one long strip of sand interrupted by small fishing villages — each with its own specialty seafood.
Expedition
Outside Yucatán State
The Yucatán Peninsula is divided into three Mexican states. The guide above is restricted to Yucatán State, our home; the entries that follow sit in the neighboring states of Quintana Roo and Campeche, close enough to fold into a longer trip if your interest in the region runs deep. We make the arrangements only when a guest specifically asks.
Logistics
We update this guide as places open, close, change hands, or surprise us. If you find a new one we should know about, tell the front desk.
— The Casa Querida team