Where I Stayed in Guadalajara (And Where I’d Recommend)
Still trying to figure out where to stay in Guadalajara and which areas are safe? This guide breaks down the best areas and accommodations for every budget and travel style.
Honestly, I didn’t expect to love Guadalajara. It was just meant to be a stopover on our Dia de Muertos trip to Michoacán. But in the few days we spent there, somewhere between the smell of birria drifting from a street corner and the sound of a mariachi band echoing across a sunlit plaza, we fell in love with the city.
And it is not hard to see why. This is the city where so much of what the world recognizes as Mexico was born. Tequila, mariachi, and the charrería rodeo all trace their roots back to Jalisco, and you feel that cultural weight the moment you step outside.
What surprised our family most was how livable it all feels. Less overwhelming than Mexico City, more culturally rich than the beach towns, and genuinely welcoming in a way that makes you want to slow down and stay longer than you planned. But none of that matters if you end up in the wrong neighborhood.

Table of Contents
- Best Areas to Stay in Guadalajara
- Guadalajara Map: Best Areas and Places to Stay
- Centro Historico: for First-Time Visitors
- Colonia Americana: for Food and Nightlife Lovers
- Providencia: for Upscale Travelers
- Chapalita: for Families
- Zona Minerva: for Digital Nomads
- Plaza Andares: for Shopping
- Where NOT to Stay in Guadalajara
- Prices of Guadalajara Hotels
- Have You Decided Where to Stay in Guadalajara?
Best Areas to Stay in Guadalajara
Knowing which neighborhood in Guadalajara to base yourself in makes all the difference, because every area tells a completely different story. If it is your first visit, Centro Histórico puts you right inside the cultural heart of the city, walking distance from the cathedral, the murals, and markets. Colonia Americana is where the food and nightlife scene truly shines, and Providencia offers a quieter, more residential pace that suits some travelers perfectly. Get it wrong and you will spend your days in taxis rather than on foot, missing the city that happens between the landmarks.
But I have also covered a handful of other neighborhoods below, each one suited to a different kind of traveler. To get the most out of whichever area you choose, my guide on the best things to do in Guadalajara will help you map out your days around the neighborhoods you are already in.
Whether you are arriving for the first time or looking to put down roots for a few months as a digital nomad, this guide will make sure you know exactly where to stay in Guadalajara before you book a single night.
- Centro Histórico — Best for first-time visitors and sightseeing
- Colonia Americana — Best for food, cafés, and nightlife
- Providencia — Best for upscale travelers
- Chapalita — Best for families and relaxed stays
- Zona Minerva — Best for digital nomads
- Plaza Andares — Best for shopping

Guadalajara Map: Best Areas and Places to Stay
I have pinned every area and every hotel mentioned in this guide onto one interactive map, so you can see exactly how close Centro is to Americana, or how far you would really be tucked away in Providencia. It makes choosing so much easier.
How to use this map: Click on the top left of the map to display the list of locations, then click on the locations to display further information. To open a larger version in a new tab, click on the top right corner of the map.
Centro Historico: for First-Time Visitors
If you are visiting Guadalajara for the first time, Centro Histórico is where you need to be. This is where the city was born, and five centuries of history are woven into every street and every corner you turn. The Instituto Cultural Cabañas, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is practically at your doorstep, and the Mercado Libertad, one of the largest covered markets in Latin America, is a ten-minute walk away. You do not need a car, a plan, or even a map. Just step outside and let the city take over.
My favorite place to stay here is Hotel Morales Historical & Colonial Downtown Core, a beautifully restored property with over a century of history behind it that still feels genuinely special every time. The location is hard to beat, the atmosphere is the real thing, and every major landmark is within easy reach. I have also handpicked three more options below so whatever your situation, there is something here for you.
Best Hotels in Centro Histórico
Budget — Hotel Real Maestranza
For travelers watching their budget without skimping on comfort, Hotel Real Maestranza is a reliable find. Family rooms with air-conditioning, free private parking, a fitness center, and a restaurant serving Mexican and local cuisine make it an easy choice, with Plaza de Armas just a short walk away. Check the rates here.

Midrange — Hotel Plaza Génova Centro
A smart midrange pick that keeps you close to the action, Hotel Plaza Génova Centro puts Mariachi Square and the Guadalajara Wax Museum just five minutes from your door. Comfortable rooms, free WiFi, free parking, and a 24-hour front desk mean everything runs smoothly from the moment you arrive. Check the rates here.

Luxury — Hotel Morales Historical & Colonial Downtown Core
For a stay that feels like a genuine event, Hotel Morales is in a class of its own in the centro. A beautifully restored colonial property with an outdoor pool, spa, and a lounge where live music drifts through the evening. Everything the historic center has to offer is right outside the door. Check the rates here.

Families — Hotel Portobelo
For families, Hotel Portobelo makes life considerably easier. Comfortable air-conditioned rooms, free parking, an on-site restaurant, and a 24-hour front desk mean every base is covered, all just minutes from Revolution Park. Check the rates here.

Colonia Americana: for Food and Nightlife Lovers
If your ideal trip revolves around long lunches that drift into dinner and cocktail bars that do not fill up until ten, Colonia Americana deserves your full attention. This is where locals actually eat and drink, the energy is younger and more relaxed than Centro, and the streets fanning out from the neo-Gothic Templo Expiatorio are where you will do your best wandering.
My favorite base here is Casa Habita, a Design Hotels member and one of the most thoughtfully designed properties in the city, with a rooftop pool that makes the end of every day feel like a reward. I have also picked out a few alternatives below depending on your budget and travel style.
Best Hotels in Colonia Americana
Budget — Casa Sabina
For a budget stay that still feels personal, Casa Sabina is a lovely little find. Family rooms with private entrances and a kitchenette give you real breathing room, the garden and sun terrace are perfect for a slow morning, and the on-site restaurant serves local cuisine worth lingering over. Check the rates here.

Midrange — Demetria Bungalows
Demetria Bungalows hits that sweet spot between comfort and character. Certain rooms open onto a private patio, there is a terrace for unwinding, and the staff have a well-earned reputation for being genuinely wonderful. Free parking, a 24-hour front desk, and some of Colonia Americana’s best restaurants just steps away make this one easy to recommend. Check the rates here.

Luxury — Casa Habita
For the ultimate Colonia Americana experience, Casa Habita is in a league of its own. A rooftop pool, spa, steam room, fitness center, and an on-site restaurant serving continental breakfast make every moment here feel considered and unhurried. This is the kind of place that turns a good trip into an exceptional one. Check the rates here.

Providencia: for Upscale Travelers
Providencia is where Guadalajara’s own well-heeled residents actually live, and that tells you everything you need to know. Tree-lined avenues, upscale restaurants, boutique shops, and a calm residential atmosphere give the whole area a quiet confidence that feels completely effortless. It sits far enough from Centro to feel genuinely restful, but close enough that getting in for dinner or a museum visit is never a hassle.
My top pick here is the NH Collection Guadalajara Providencia, a polished five-star property that delivers on every front without tipping into the kind of corporate blandness that can undermine otherwise excellent hotels. And I have added a few more options below to suit every budget.
Best Hotels in Providencia
Midrange — FULTON Business Luxury HOTEL
A polished four-star option that punches well above its price point, FULTON Business Luxury Hotel offers city views, a terrace, balcony, and free private parking in the heart of Providencia. Parque Silvano Barba La Mirilla is just a twelve-minute walk away. Check the rates here.

Luxury — NH Collection Guadalajara Providencia
Elegant and effortlessly connected, NH Collection Guadalajara Providencia delivers world-class service in one of the city’s most coveted addresses. A gym, stylish restaurant, and a position right next to the Country Club Golf Course set the tone, with the historic center just a ten-minute drive away. Check the rates here.

Ultra Luxury — Grand Fiesta Americana Guadalajara Country Club
For those who want the full treatment, Grand Fiesta Americana Guadalajara Country Club delivers on every front. The outdoor pool sets the tone, evenings at the Bargüero bar with a fine glass of wine are hard to beat, and the restaurant covers everything from a leisurely breakfast to a long, unhurried dinner. This is Guadalajara luxury done properly. Check the rates here.

Chapalita: for Families
Chapalita is the neighborhood that Guadalajara families choose for themselves, and that is the strongest recommendation I can give. Tree-lined streets, mid-century homes sitting comfortably alongside modern buildings, excellent international restaurants, and a main promenade where you will find families out walking and live music filling the air at practically any hour. It has an unhurried quality that is increasingly rare in a city this size.
The Glorieta Chapalita is a lovely focal point for the neighborhood, and the area connects easily to Arcos Vallarta, another restaurant-heavy stretch that makes eating out with kids genuinely enjoyable rather than stressful. The only trade-off is that you will Uber into Centro rather than walk. It is a small price for the quality of life this neighborhood offers.
My top pick here is Becquer Hotel Guadalajara, a polished four-star property with a hot tub, spa, fitness center, and a rooftop terrace that makes winding down at the end of the day genuinely easy. It has all the comforts you need without ever feeling like a hotel chain.
Best Hotels in Chapalita
Budget — Casa Ixaya by Barrio México
A wonderful budget find in the heart of Chapalita, Casa Ixaya by Barrio México feels more like a home than a hotel. A garden, sun terrace, picnic area, and balconies with garden or city views give the whole place a relaxed, unhurried charm. Free parking included, and Glorieta de la Estampida is just an 8-minute walk away. Check the rates here.

Midrange — Becquer Hotel Guadalajara
Becquer Hotel Guadalajara is the kind of four-star property that makes you want to stay an extra night. The terrace, bar, fitness center, and a hot tub that genuinely earns its keep all add up to something special. Book the suite with the hot tub if you can. Glorieta de la Estampida is just a six-minute walk away. Check the rates here.

Luxury — Hotel Victoria Ejecutivo
A solid family choice in Chapalita, Hotel Victoria Ejecutivo brings together a hot tub, pool, and fitness center at a price that makes it excellent value. The neighborhood outside is calm and walkable, and the hotel itself gives both parents and kids plenty of ways to unwind. Check the rates here.

Zona Minerva: for Digital Nomads
Digital nomads have been quietly claiming Zona Minerva for years, and it is not hard to understand why. This is where creative energy meets genuine polish, with specialty coffee shops, coworking spaces, fast WiFi, and well-designed restaurants that make working remotely feel less like a compromise and more like an upgrade.
The Porfiriato-era mansions along Avenida Vallarta make even the walk to your café of choice worth documenting, and palReal in nearby Arcos Vallarta is exactly the kind of specialty coffee spot you will find yourself returning to every morning.
Mesón Ejecutivo Guadalajara is my first recommendation here every time, an intimate and beautifully kept property with free WiFi, a fitness center, and a reputation for thoughtful service that consistently exceeds expectations. It is the kind of place that makes settling in for a few weeks feel like the obvious decision.
Best Hotels in Zona Minerva
Midrange — Mesón Ejecutivo Guadalajara
For a midrange base that genuinely supports the nomad lifestyle, Mesón Ejecutivo Guadalajara is an easy choice. City view rooms, fast free WiFi, a terrace to decompress on after a long work session, and a bar and restaurant that mean you rarely need to go far. This is the kind of property that makes staying a few extra weeks feel like the obvious decision. Check the rates here.

Luxury — Fiesta Americana Guadalajara
Fiesta Americana Guadalajara puts you right across from the iconic Glorieta de La Minerva, one of those locations that reminds you why you chose this neighborhood in the first place. Landmark views, room service, and free private parking make everyday life effortless, and Plazuela Vallarta is just a five-minute walk away when you are ready to swap the laptop for a long lunch or an evening drink. Check the rates here.

Ultra Luxury — Quinta Real Guadalajara
Quinta Real Guadalajara feels less like a hotel and more like a private estate. Stunning gardens, an outdoor pool, a hot tub, marble bathrooms, and a pillow menu that leaves nothing to chance. Two restaurants, free parking, and a quietly European atmosphere that makes settling in for a few weeks feel like an absolute pleasure. Check the rates here.

Plaza Andares: for Shopping
Plaza Andares is not trying to be the rest of Guadalajara, and that is exactly the point. This is the city’s most polished shopping destination, an open-air mall in Zapopan where international brands sit alongside Mexican designers and the restaurants are good enough to book in advance.
It sits northwest of Centro, so the cathedral and the murals are not on your doorstep. But if this trip is more about retail and long dinners than sightseeing, that distance barely matters. Ubers are cheap, and Centro is always close enough when you want it.
Nothing in this area comes close to the Hyatt Regency Andares Guadalajara, a five-star property that puts you right in the heart of the action without ever letting you forget how good a hotel can feel.
Best Hotels near Plaza Andares
Midrange — Lobby33 Andares Lujoso Departamento
Lobby33 is the kind of place that makes a hotel room feel like the wrong choice. The entire apartment is yours, two bedrooms, two bathrooms, a living room that actually invites you to sit down, a balcony, and a hot tub. There is a rooftop pool, free parking, and Plaza Andares right outside. For a trip built around shopping and long dinners, it is exactly what you need. Check the rates here.

Luxury — Hyatt Regency Andares Guadalajara
Essentially built into Plaza Andares and the kind of place you quickly realize was worth the splurge. The rooms feel genuinely designed rather than just furnished, with thoughtful details, muted tones, and technology that actually works. When you need a break from the mall, the spa, indoor pool, and fitness center give you every reason to stay put. Check the rates here.

Where NOT to Stay in Guadalajara
Guadalajara is a city where neighborhood choice matters, and a few areas can make a short visit far less convenient than it needs to be.
- Oblatos and Colonia Jalisco sit east of the center and are far removed from the neighborhoods most visitors come to experience. Expect longer Uber rides, fewer cafés and restaurants geared toward travelers, and little reason to base yourself there unless you already know the city well.
- Colonia del Fresno works fine for locals but sits too far from Guadalajara’s main dining, cultural, and nightlife areas to make sense as a base for first-time visitors.
- The districts immediately east of La Calzada Independencia also change character quickly after dark. They are generally fine to pass through during the day, but most first-time visitors will feel more comfortable staying in neighborhoods such as Americana, Providencia, Chapalita, or near Zona Minerva.
Stick to the areas in this guide and Guadalajara becomes an easy, rewarding city to navigate, filled with great food, café culture, and some of the best urban energy in Mexico.

Prices of Guadalajara Hotels
One of the things I genuinely love about Guadalajara is how far your money goes here compared to other major Mexican cities. Whether you are traveling on a tight budget or ready to splurge a little, the city delivers exceptional value across almost every price point.
- If you are watching your budget, you can still find clean, comfortable rooms from around $25 to $45 per night, especially around Centro Histórico or the more affordable pockets of Colonia Americana. These are not grim compromise stays either. Guadalajara has a real talent for charming budget hotels and guesthouses that feel full of personality rather than stripped of it.
- Midrange travelers can expect to spend somewhere between $60 and $130 per night, and honestly, this is where Guadalajara shines brightest. Boutique hotels in Colonia Americana, stylish stays near Zona Minerva, and family-friendly properties in Providencia and Chapalita often feel far more expensive than they actually are. It is one of the few major cities where paying a little more genuinely transforms your experience.
- Luxury prices typically start around $150 per night, with the city’s finest hotels in Providencia and Zona Minerva climbing beyond $300 during busier periods. If your trip overlaps with Fiestas de Octubre in October, expect prices across the city to rise sharply, sometimes by as much as thirty to fifty percent, while the best hotels can sell out surprisingly early.
Outside festival periods, Guadalajara rewards flexibility. Booking in advance will usually secure the best rates and room selection, but if your schedule allows for spontaneity, last-minute deals appear here more often than you might expect.
Search hotels in Guadalajara here.

Have You Decided Where to Stay in Guadalajara?
Thanks for reading this far. By now, you have a real sense of what each neighborhood offers and which one is the right fit for the trip you have in mind. Guadalajara is one of those cities that reveals itself gradually, and the more you slow down and settle into a neighborhood, the more it gives back.
Choosing your base thoughtfully is the single best thing you can do before you arrive. Get that right and everything else falls into place, from the Guadalajara tours and activities you book to the restaurants you stumble into on your first evening.
And once you know where you are staying, my guide to the best things to do in Guadalajara will help you build an itinerary around the neighborhoods you are already in.
If you have any questions about where to stay, drop them in the comments and I will get back to you.
Planning to explore more of Mexico while you are here? I have put together guides and resources to help you make the most of the wider region:
- Things to Do in Guadalajara
- Why Tequila is the Best Day Trip from Guadalajara
- 25 Unique Places to Stay in Mexico
- Best Things to Do in Monterrey
- Safest Cities in Mexico
- Natural Wonders of Mexico
- Oaxaca Day of the Dead
- My 10-Day Chiapas Itinerary
- Where to Stay in Mexico City
- Where to Stay in Cancun
- Where to Stay in San Miguel de Allende
- Where to Stay in Cozumel, Mexico
- Where to Stay in Tulum
- Where to Stay in Holbox
- Staying at Casa Viva Troncones
- Hotel Review: Our Habitas San Miguel de Allende
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links i.e. if you book a stay through one of my links, I get a small commission at NO EXTRA COST to you. Thank you for your support!
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