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The Best Budget Hostels in Puebla, Mexico

Los Sapos is a restaurant-packed neighborhood in Puebla, Mexico
Los Sapos is a restaurant-packed neighborhood in Puebla, Mexico | © Diego Grandi / Alamy Stock Photo

With baroque churches sitting in the shadow of Popocatépetl volcano and streets of colorfully painted houses leading to leafy plazas, it’s hard to see how Puebla is under the tourist radar. Most visitors come for a day trip from Mexico City – which is two hours away – but, to get the most from Puebla, you need to spend at least two days: to soak up the atmosphere, sample the traditional restaurants and wander the pretty colonial streets. Thankfully, there’s a good choice of places to stay – including for those on a budget. Book your stay now with Culture Trip.

Hostal Azul Puebla

Hostel

Hostal Azul Puebla
Courtesy of Hostal Azul Puebla / Expedia

With only a single four-bed mixed dorm and a selection of doubles, Azul is more a budget guesthouse than a hostel. But, it’s well situated – a few hundred meters from the 16th-century baroque convent of St Francis and among the buildings of the Spanish colonial center – and offers a skyline view from the sunny rooftop terrace.

The Dear

Hostel

The Dear
Courtesy of The Dear / Expedia

This well-located hostel-guesthouse has bright 1960s-retro rooms flooded with light from floor-to-ceiling glass and offers space for one or two couples (thanks to double and shared sofa beds). There are a sun-baked rooftop terrace and a shady park on the doorstep. The zócalo (the main square) and cathedral in the city center – and the restaurant-packed Los Sapos neighborhood – are a 15-minute walk away.

Gente de Más Hostel

Hostel, Hotel

Gente de Más Hostel
Courtesy of Gente de Más Hostel / Expedia
Rooms and six-bed dorms at Gente de Más are barely bigger than the bed, but they’re cheap, bright and painted with striking street art. And, they sit over an airy central atrium lounge – in a converted mid-19th-century townhouse. The location couldn’t be better – four blocks from downtown Puebla and the cathedral, a stroll from the historic Fonda de Santa Clara Mexican restaurant and a 10-minute walk from the bus stop to Cholula.

Hostal Santo Domingo

Hotel

Hostal Santo Domingo
Courtesy of Hostal Santo Domingo / Expedia
Simply decorated with colorful tapestries and cloth, Hostal Santo Domingo gives off a warm, orderly vibe in a stately colonial home near the Santo Domingo Church in downtown Puebla. It has 10 private rooms and dorms, many with large windows overlooking the city. The rooms are clustered around a central patio and its tables and chairs.

Hostal Casona Poblana

Hotel

Hostal Casona Poblana
Courtesy of Hostal Casona Poblana / Expedia
Hostal Casona Poblana has a small shared kitchen, a simple central patio with tables and chairs and common sitting areas. You’ll stay in either a private room with a vibrant feature wall or a warehouse-chic dorm with in-room sinks. It all sits in a great location, just steps from Biblioteca Palafoxiana, the oldest public library in the Americas and a must-see on your Puebla adventure.

Posada Vee Yuu

Inn, Hostel

Posada Vee Yuu
Courtesy of Posada Vee Yuu / Hostelworld
This cozy hostel resides inside a classic baroque home, with balconies and windows offering magical views of the city streets. Enjoy a free breakfast in the central courtyard or on the upper balconies. And, you’ll get 24-hour security, plus free towels, free internet and a late check-out option.

Leonora Hostal

Hotel

Built in the 17th century, Leonora Hostal retains the glory of its building’s era with intricate woodworking, original oil paintings and plenty of gilded furniture. And, that style flows through to the seven “suites” (really a mixture of private rooms and dorms). There are also a games room and a library, plus a boutique outlet selling textiles from indigenous Mexican communities.

Alex Robinson contributed additional reporting to this article.

About the author

Lydia Carey is a freelance writer and translator based out of Mexico City. She has worked as an editor and writer for various publications including Mexico's English–language newspaper The News, Afar, The New Worlder, International Living and The Latin Kitchen among others. Lydia has been blogging and writing in Mexico for over a decade and lives a double life as a local tour guide in her adoptive hometown. You can find her on the street eating tacos or at her blog www.mexicocitystreets.com.

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