
Americans targeted in Mexico City as locals protest against tourism and soaring rents
Residents in Mexico City protested against mass tourism over the weekend, with hundreds of people taking to the streets over the weekend, The Associated Press (AP) reported.
Protesters marched in neighborhoods that are popular with tourists, as well as near the U.S. Embassy and inside metro stations in a stand against gentrification of the popular destination.
What began as a peaceful march then took a turn when a small group of people in masks began smashing storefronts, looting and harassing foreigners, AP reported.
Popular areas such as Condesa and Roma were affected.
Graffiti written on shattered glass from rocks read, "Get out of Mexico," AP reported.
Other signs held by protesters read, among other messages, "Gringos, stop stealing our home," and Pay taxes, learn Spanish, respect my culture."
Protesters are demanding stricter housing laws and legislation to regulate tourism levels.
Many Americans took advantage of cheaper rent prices in Mexico during the coronavirus, escaping lockdowns in 2020 as "digital nomads."
The number of Americans living in Mexico jumped 70% from 2019 to 2022.
"There are a lot of foreigners, namely Americans, coming to live here."
It has continued to grow to a total of 1.6 million, according to the U.S. State Department.
Local college student Michelle Castro told AP she has watched the transformation of her "working-class" community.
"There are a lot of foreigners, namely Americans, coming to live here. Many say it's xenophobia, but it's not," said Castro.
She added, "It's just that so many foreigners come here [and] rents are skyrocketing because of Airbnb. Rents are so high that some people can't even pay anymore."
Last month, people in Barcelona and on the Spanish island of Mallorca sprayed tourists with water guns in an attempt to "cool down" tourism, Fox News Digital previously reported.
Other cities have held their own tourism protests, with locals gathering in Venice, Italy, and Lisbon, Portugal.
Other international vacation destinations have implemented taxes in an effort to curb tourism, Fox News Digital previously reported.
Greek officials, for example, are planning to impose a $22 tax on visitors cruising to Santorini or Mykonos.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Condé Nast Traveler
an hour ago
- Condé Nast Traveler
The Best Places to Go in 2025: 16 Editor-Approved Hotels Worth the Trip
Let's be honest: we're living in the golden age of trip planning. Flight alerts ping during meetings, group chats spiral into dream itineraries, and somehow your saved folder is now 80% hotel pools. Every year, our team of editors and writers comb through the world's cities, islands, valleys, and coasts to pull together a list of places we can't stop thinking about—and believe you shouldn't either. This year's Best Places to Go list reflects what's exciting now: bold new openings, cultural shifts, once-in-a-decade events, and destination-defining activities. In addition to the locations, we've tacked on accommodations that aren't just photogenic, but also have a story to tell—and an exciting buzz you can feel when you get there; the kind of hotels that stay with you long after you unpack. Whether you're chasing a solar eclipse over Mexico, sleeping in a rewilded lodge in Uganda, or rediscovering a city that's quietly reinventing itself—2025 is all about travel that moves you. Below, 16 editor-approved hotels we think you should book in 2025.

Condé Nast Traveler
3 hours ago
- Condé Nast Traveler
How Gentrification Continues to Change Mexico City—and What Comes Next
Mexico City has always been a complex destination. As the son of Mexican immigrants from Veracruz, I don't remember my first trip to the Mexican capital—a place where some of my closest friends and family members have been born, raised, and in some cases, buried. But as a child, I remember it being a non-destination with a gritty exterior; a smoggy behemoth of urban sprawl that other Mexicans would joke about never wanting to visit. Still, the oldest and largest metropolis in North America—and a primary gateway into Latin America for travelers worldwide—has always emitted a type of magic, with live folk bands roaming Plaza Garibaldi; the world largest collection of Mesoamerican relics in the heart of Parque Chapultepec; and lard-rubbed Gaonera tacos slung from crammed streetside stalls. There's an unvarnished vibrancy of Mexican life, beside a swirling mix of global influences and ideas that have historically been embraced. Everything from the food to art of this metropolis has the fingerprint of immigrant communities who have arrived from overseas and within the country. But in recent years, the influx of Americans and Europeans specifically has reached a crescendo. Now, it seems the city has become too beloved for its own good. In early July, hundreds of Mexican nationals took to Mexico City's streets to protest the current realities of a city that now seems to embrace foreigners at the cost of locals' needs. The protests were concentrated in the upscale neighborhoods of Roma and Condesa, where the biggest cluster of international visitors and residents have flocked in record numbers since the pandemic, drawn by internationally acclaimed restaurants and bars, designer boutiques, and Instagram-friendly façades—and where the cost of living has risen exorbitantly in response. A number of interconnected factors can be blamed (Airbnb, digital nomads themselves, government policy), but demonstrators are clear that their way of living has been altered by this massive influx of people, and something has got to give. In the past five years alone, the average rent costs around Cuauhtémoc, a desirable municipality that encompasses the trendiest zip codes, have swelled by 30%. During that same window, the amount of US citizens who initiated or renewed their residency visas in Mexico City increased by nearly 70%. Yet, as rent and property values have skyrocketed, wages have remained relatively stagnant and in some cases decreased for the Mexican workforce. Some estimates on the average American salary place it at between double and triple the average Mexico City salary. In neighborhoods like Condesa, rents in many apartment buildings are now reflective of what foreigners with higher salaries can afford, rather than what locals are able to pay in pesos. The effects on everyday Chilangos are devastating as the market adjusts to US dollars and euros, and businesses overly cater to the tourists who earn in those currencies. Many blame the government primarily for overreaching in its attempt to transform the city into a global hub. In 2016, El Distrito Federal de México (DF), as it was formerly known, was legislatively renamed as Ciudad de México (CDMX) to more closely resemble its English-sounding name, Mexico City. It signaled the early stages of a judicial overhaul to clean up the city's image. The corporate-coded rebranding came packaged with a glossy paint job, in which the city's taxis and public letterings were cast in bright pink as an effort to soften the city's appearance for incoming visitors. (The color was selected based on study groups and the perception of safety). The Condesa neighborhood in Mexico City has been one of those most impacted by gentrification in recent years, with the cost of living surpassing what some longtime residents can pay. erlucho/Getty As locals are pushed from central neighborhoods to the outskirts of the city, "the social fabric of the place starts to deteriorate over time' says resident Paul Lara. Linka A Odom/Getty In a capital known for its gastronomic wonders, restaurants have been a focal point. The city's hardest-to-get tables are often dominated by foreigners, some of whom make restaurant reservations at destination-worthy spots before even booking their flights there. It raises an even bigger question: Who are these restaurants for? At times, the city's beloved restaurants have served as harbingers of oncoming gentrification. In others, they've remained as symbols of an enduring past.

Epoch Times
6 hours ago
- Epoch Times
US Embassy Issues Travel Alert to Americans as Clashes Between Thai and Cambodian Forces Continue
The U.S. Embassy in Thailand issued an alert on Friday warning U.S. nationals to stay away from a contested border area between Thailand and Cambodia after military clashes erupted between the two nations. Americans are being 'advised to avoid all travel to the area within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of the Thailand-Cambodia border due to ongoing military conflict in the region,' the embassy statement said, noting that the Thai government has shut down border crossings 'in both Chanthaburi and Trat provinces, including both land and maritime routes.'