The $1,000/month Mexico lifestyle is a myth (unless you eat street tacos daily and share a room). Here are realistic monthly budgets for Americans in CDMX, Mérida, and Oaxaca — with actual 2026 rent prices.
The honest answer: $1,500-3,500 per month for a single person, depending on city and lifestyle. Couples typically spend $2,200-4,500. This assumes a private apartment (not shared housing), eating a mix of home-cooked and restaurant meals, having health insurance, and living in a safe neighborhood. The "$500/month in Mexico" stories on YouTube are either outdated, exaggerated, or describing a lifestyle most Americans wouldn't want.
CDMX is Mexico's most expensive city, but still 50-65% cheaper than comparable US cities. A comfortable single-person budget in neighborhoods popular with Americans (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacán):
Rent for a furnished 1-bedroom: $800-1,400/month. Groceries and household: $250-350. Eating out (3-4x/week): $200-300. Transportation (Metro + Uber): $80-150. Health insurance (private): $100-200. Phone and internet: $40-60. Entertainment and social: $150-250. Gym: $30-60. Total: $1,650-2,770 — call it $2,000-3,200 depending on lifestyle.
Mérida has exploded in expat popularity, pushing rents up 30-40% since 2022. It's still cheaper than CDMX but no longer the bargain it was. Popular areas: Centro, Santiago, García Ginerés, and the northern suburbs.
Rent for a furnished 1-bedroom: $500-900. Groceries: $200-300. Eating out: $150-250. Transportation: $60-100. Health insurance: $100-200. Utilities (A/C is essential — budget for it): $80-150. Total: $1,200-2,000 — realistically $1,800-2,400 for a comfortable American lifestyle.
Oaxaca remains one of the most affordable cities popular with Americans. The food scene is world-class and the cultural richness is unmatched. Drawbacks: smaller city, fewer amenities, limited English-speaking services.
Rent for a furnished 1-bedroom: $400-700. Groceries: $180-280. Eating out: $120-200. Transportation: $40-80. Health insurance: $100-200. Total: $1,000-1,600 — realistically $1,500-2,000 with a comfortable buffer.
San Miguel is beautiful but expensive by Mexican standards — rents rival CDMX in popular centro locations. Puerto Vallarta varies wildly between the touristy Zona Romántica (expensive) and neighborhoods 15 minutes away (much cheaper). The guide includes budget breakdowns for both cities.
The peso-dollar exchange rate has significant impact. At 17 MXN/USD (mid-2024), Mexico is relatively expensive for dollar-earners. At 20+ MXN/USD, everything gets 15-20% cheaper in dollar terms. The guide covers how to think about exchange rate risk if you earn in USD but spend in pesos, and whether to convert large amounts at once or gradually.
A/C electricity bills in hot climates (Mérida, PV) can hit $100-200/month. Imported products (American brands, specialty items) cost 2-3x US prices. Flights back to the US 1-2x/year add $500-1,500. Cross-border tax preparation fees run $500-2,000/year. The guide includes a complete list of hidden costs and a downloadable monthly budget template.
Yes, but the gap has narrowed. Mexico is roughly 40-60% cheaper than the US overall, with the biggest savings in rent, healthcare, and dining. Groceries are 20-30% cheaper. Electronics and imported goods are often the same price or more expensive. The guide includes a side-by-side cost comparison table: CDMX vs. Austin, Mérida vs. Tucson, Oaxaca vs. Asheville. Read about tax implications →
Educational content only — not tax or legal advice. This guide is an orientation document. Tax law is complex and individual situations vary. Always consult a qualified US expat CPA and a licensed local attorney before making financial, visa, or property decisions. Figures are verified as of the date shown and subject to change. Full disclaimer →