Cancún pours more tequila per capita than almost anywhere else in Mexico — most of it cheap, sweet, and designed to be mixed with fruit juice in frozen machines. Finding genuinely good agave spirits requires knowing where to look and what to avoid.
Tequila vs mezcal — the basic distinction
Tequila is made specifically from blue Weber agave, primarily in Jalisco. Mezcal can be made from dozens of agave varieties across several Mexican states — Oaxaca dominates. Tequila is the larger industry; mezcal has the wider range of flavors and artisanal production. Most mezcal has a slight smoky character from roasting the agave hearts (piñas) before fermentation.
What to avoid in the Hotel Zone
The margarita machines. The "premium tequila" upsells at nightclubs. Any bottle that looks like it contains something glowing. The Jose Cuervo Gold open bars. These are fine if you want something cold and sweet, but they have nothing to do with the actual culture of agave spirits.
Where to drink well
La Destilería (km 12.65): The Hotel Zone's most serious agave spirits program. Over 150 labels, flights available, knowledgeable staff. Order a flight of three expressions — reposado, añejo, and extra añejo — from the same producer to understand how barrel aging changes the spirit.
Mercado 28, El Centro: Several vendors sell artisanal mezcal by the shot. Not a sit-down bar experience, but genuine small-producer mezcal at $40–80 MXN per shot.
Roots Bar (SM 22, El Centro): A local bar with a solid mezcal selection and no tourist markup. Ask for espadín for a classic smoky introduction.
What to order if you're new to mezcal
Start with an espadín (the most common agave variety in mezcal). It's the most approachable — smoky but not overwhelmingly so. If you want something more interesting, ask for tobalá or tepeztate — rarer, more complex, and significantly more expensive. Don't mix quality mezcal with anything. Drink it neat, at room temperature, slowly.
Bringing spirits home
Mexico allows you to carry 3 liters of spirits through customs tax-free. Airport duty-free stores in Cancún carry decent selections, but they're 20–40% more expensive than buying directly from specialty stores in El Centro. Shop on your last full day and keep receipts.