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Oaxaca, Mexico
Oaxaca

Oaxaca (Southern Mexico)

Oaxaca

A food-and-culture trip, not a beach one: connect through Mexico City, sleep between the Centro and Jalatlaco, climb Monte Alban and tour the mezcal valleys, and book Day of the Dead by spring.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

4 nights (3 minimum)

Airport

Oaxaca (OAX), ~8km south of the Centro

Airport to centre

Prepaid taxi ~25 min, Zone 1 ~390 pesos (~ยฃ17); colectivo ~100 pesos

Getting there

Via Mexico City (MEX) โ€” connecting hop ~1h10, no UK directs

Best base

Centro Historico for first trips; Jalatlaco for a quieter local feel

In short

Oaxaca at a glance

Oaxaca City is a food-and-culture trip, not a beach one: a compact colonial centre at 1,550m, the Zapotec ruins of Monte Alban on the ridge above it, and a valley of mezcal palenques, weaving villages and the petrified falls of Hierve el Agua within an hour's drive. There are no UK direct flights, so you connect through Mexico City on a cheap one-hour hop. Stay in or beside the Centro Historico, give it four nights, and pick your dates around the two events that change everything: Day of the Dead in late October and the Guelaguetza in July, both of which triple hotel prices and need booking months ahead.

The short version

  • No direct UK flights: fly to Mexico City, then connect onto the ~1h10 hop to Oaxaca (OAX) with Aeromexico, Volaris or VivaAerobus.
  • Stay in or just off the Centro Historico; Jalatlaco is the cobbled, artsy alternative a 10-minute walk away.
  • Give Monte Alban a half-day and go before 10am: 209 pesos (~ยฃ9) entry plus a 120-peso shuttle, 20 minutes from town, before the coaches and the ridge-top heat.
  • Give a full day to the Tlacolula valley loop: Mitla, Hierve el Agua, Teotitlan weavers and a mezcal palenque.
  • Day of the Dead (around 31 Oct-2 Nov) and the July Guelaguetza are spectacular but need booking by spring; rates run 2-3x normal.
  • This is gastronomy first: tlayudas, seven moles and mezcal tasting are the reason to come, not sights you can tick off.

Oaxaca is the trip people fly to Mexico for and then never make. Most UK visitors land on the Caribbean coast and stay there, but the countryโ€™s gastronomic and cultural heart is inland and south, a compact colonial city sitting at 1,550m with a valley of Zapotec ruins, weaving villages and mezcal palenques fanned out around it. The food alone โ€” tlayudas off a market grill, the famous seven moles, chapulines if youโ€™re brave, and small-batch mezcal poured by people who distilled it โ€” is reason enough. There are no direct flights from the UK, so you connect through Mexico City on a cheap one-hour-ten hop, which puts off the casual crowd and is part of why the city still feels like itself.

Four nights is the comfortable length: a day for the Centro Historico, its markets and mezcalerias on foot; a half-day for Monte Alban on the ridge above town; and a full day looping the Tlacolula valley for Mitla, the petrified falls at Hierve el Agua, a Teotitlan rug workshop and a palenque tasting. The one planning call that overrides everything is your dates. Day of the Dead in late October and the Guelaguetza in July turn Oaxaca into the best version of itself, but both fill the city completely and push rates to two or three times normal, so they need booking by spring. Below, the structured detail โ€” how to connect, where to base yourself, the day trips and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Oaxaca

Monte Albรกn

You don't need to book Monte Albรกn in advance โ€” there is no timed entry and no online ticket โ€” so the real decision is how you get up there. The official shuttle from the city is the cheap, flexible option; a guided tour costs more but gives you the Zapotec history that the bare ruins won't tell you. Go on the first or second departure to be on the ridge before the coaches and the midday heat, allow two to three hours, and bring a hat and water because there is almost no shade up top.

2โ€“3 hours ยฃ9

Centro Historico and the Zocalo

Oaxaca's Centro Historico is the heart of the trip and best done slowly on foot: the gold-leaf interior of Santo Domingo, the pedestrian Andador Macedonio Alcala, the leafy Zocalo, and the 20 de Noviembre and Benito Juarez markets for tlayudas and mole. Wandering is free; the Santo Domingo cultural museum is a separate ticket of around 95 pesos.

A full day
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Centro Historico

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The colonial core: walkable to Santo Domingo, the markets, the mezcalerias and the best restaurants, with rooms for every budget. The obvious first-trip base, though the streets near the Zocalo can be noisy at night during festivals.

Best for: First-timers, food-led trips, short stays

Jalatlaco

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Cobbled lanes, street art and a slower local rhythm a 10-minute walk east of the Centro. Independent cafes, family kitchens and live-music bars; the better pick if you want atmosphere over being on top of the sights.

Best for: Couples, repeat visitors, a quieter base

Browse hotels 10 min walk from Centro

Xochimilco (the Oaxaca barrio)

ยฃ value

The city's oldest quarter, uphill north of the Centro, with aqueduct arches and muralled walls. Quiet, characterful and better value than the core, but the climb home after dinner is real.

Best for: Value, character, slower mornings

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk uphill

Colonia Reforma

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A modern, residential, un-touristy district north of the centre with supermarkets, gyms and international food. Choose it for a longer or work-from-here stay; it is a taxi or 20-minute walk from the sights, not a sightseeing base.

Best for: Longer stays, living-like-a-local trips

Browse hotels ~20 min walk / short taxi

Airport to city centre

Oaxaca airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Prepaid airport taxi (Zone 1, the Centro) ~25 min about 390 pesos (~ยฃ17) Buy the ticket at the kiosk inside arrivals
Prepaid taxi (Zone 2, Reforma) ~25-30 min about 520 pesos (~ยฃ22) Same kiosk; Reforma is the dearer zone
Colectivo shared van ~45 min about 100 pesos (~ยฃ4.30) Cheapest, but slower with multiple drops
App ride / private transfer ~20-25 min usually ยฃ8-ยฃ15 Good for late arrivals or groups
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: The dry season runs October to April, and late January to early March is the sweet spot: warm sunny days, cool evenings at altitude and the lowest humidity. October to December is lovely too but books out around Day of the Dead. The rains (May-September) bring heavy late-afternoon showers rather than all-day washouts and leave the valleys green; June is the wettest month.

Two dates dominate the calendar and both need booking months ahead. Day of the Dead, roughly 31 October to 2 November, is the headline event โ€” comparsas, market altars and cemetery vigils โ€” with hotels filling completely and rates 2-3x normal; book by spring. The Guelaguetza, the indigenous dance-and-culture festival across mid-to-late July, fills the city again and pushes rainy-season prices up. Outside those windows Oaxaca is uncrowded and good value, and at 1,550m it never gets Cancun-hot.

What it costs

There are no direct UK flights to Oaxaca. You fly London to Mexico City (~11h40 nonstop, roughly ยฃ475-ยฃ800 return), then connect onto a domestic hop with Aeromexico, Volaris or VivaAerobus โ€” about 1h10 and often ยฃ30-ยฃ90 each way if booked ahead. Build in a comfortable connection at Mexico City, ideally with the international and domestic legs on one ticket so a delay is the airline's problem, not yours.

Daily budget per person

Tlayuda from a market stall ~ยฃ3-5
Mezcal tasting flight ~ยฃ6-12
Monte Alban entry ~ยฃ9 (209 pesos)
Full-day Tlacolula valley tour ~ยฃ55-70 + cash site fees
Sit-down dinner with mezcal ~ยฃ12-20
Sample trip: A realistic 4-night mid-range Oaxaca stay for one person is roughly ยฃ900-ยฃ1,200 before shopping: ~ยฃ550-ยฃ750 of the UK-Mexico City flight, ~ยฃ90-ยฃ140 for the Oaxaca connecting hop, ~ยฃ160-ยฃ280 accommodation, ~ยฃ90-ยฃ150 food and mezcal, ~ยฃ60-ยฃ100 for Monte Alban plus a full valley day trip, and the rest on taxis and tastings. Oaxaca itself is markedly cheaper than the Cancun-Tulum coast โ€” the flights are the expensive part.

All peso figures use ยฃ1 โ‰ˆ 23.3 MXN (June 2026). Carry cash: the markets, tlayuda stalls, colectivos and many palenques are cash-only, and the city runs on small notes. Hotel prices double or triple for Day of the Dead and the July Guelaguetza, so the dates you pick matter more than the hotel you pick.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Mexico

See the full Mexico guide

Oaxaca FAQs

How do you get to Oaxaca from the UK?
There are no direct flights. You fly London to Mexico City (about 11h40 nonstop), then take a domestic connection to Oaxaca (OAX) of around 1h10 with Aeromexico, Volaris or VivaAerobus. Booking both legs on a single ticket protects you if the long-haul leg runs late. From Oaxaca airport the Centro is a ~25-minute prepaid taxi, around 390 pesos (~ยฃ17) for Zone 1.
How many days do you need in Oaxaca?
Four nights is the comfortable sweet spot and three the minimum: a day for the Centro, markets and mezcalerias, a half-day for Monte Alban, and a full day for the Tlacolula valley loop (Mitla, Hierve el Agua, a weaving village and a palenque). Add nights if you want to slow down or pair it with a stretch on the Oaxacan coast.
Is Oaxaca worth visiting for Day of the Dead?
Yes โ€” Oaxaca is widely seen as the best place in Mexico for it, with comparsas, market altars and cemetery vigils around 31 October to 2 November. The catch is logistics: the city fills completely, rates run two to three times normal, and you need to book accommodation by spring at the latest. Outside those dates the city is far quieter and cheaper.
Do you need a car in Oaxaca?
No. The Centro is small and walkable, and the main day trips โ€” Monte Alban and the Tlacolula valley โ€” are easiest as a cheap shuttle or an organised tour. A hire car only makes sense if you want to explore the valleys independently, and it is a nuisance in the city itself, where you should walk and use prepaid or app-based taxis.

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