🇲🇽 Chihuahua, Mexico
Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua
📍 Chihuahua
Photo: official website
Your stay — Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua
Live forecast for your dates · what's on · air quality & pollen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Chihuahua.
The Property — Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua
The Los Cedros Hotel Inn is a no-frills, practical base for travellers passing through Chihuahua or needing reliable accommodation near the university district. The lobby feels dated but clean, with dark wood furniture and a vaguely corporate atmosphere that suggests business travellers are the main clientele. There’s a small on-site restaurant and free parking, which matters here. This place suits budget-conscious road-trippers or contractors, not leisure tourists looking for charm.
Chronicles of Chihuahua
Chihuahua was founded in 1709 as a Spanish mining outpost, later becoming a crucial stop on the Camino Real de Tierra Adentro trade route. Its colonial centre retains a grid of sandstone churches, 18th-century mansions and the Palacio de Gobierno, where Miguel Hidalgo was executed in 1811. In the 20th century, the city grew fast as a railway and industrial hub, and today it blends northern Mexican tradition with an increasingly young, university-driven culture. The stark, bright desert surrounds give the city a tough, no-nonsense character.
Best Time to Visit
Full Chihuahua guide →Best months
October, November and March offer mild daytime highs (22-25°C) and minimal rain, making sightseeing comfortable without the summer heat or winter chill. Crowds are light except during local holidays.
Peak / festival surge
July is the rainiest month and also falls within summer holidays, but crowds stay moderate. Hotel prices rise slightly (10-15%) in August and mid-December when regional tourism picks up for the Feria de Santa Rita or Christmas. The main event driving demand is the Exporindustrial trade fair in late October.
Budget shoulder season
May and September are the best budget months: still warm, fewer tourists, and room rates drop 20-30% as the rainy season starts or ends. Expect short afternoon downpours that clear quickly.
Weather & packing
Chihuahua’s high desert climate means desert mornings can drop to 16°C even in July, then push 34°C by noon. Pack layers: light cotton clothing for blazing sun, a thin sweater for evenings, and a small umbrella for sudden monsoon squalls.
Live City Briefing — Chihuahua
- Avenida Universidad, near the hotel, has ongoing roadworks for a new BRT line; allow extra 15 minutes for any drive to the city centre.
- The Museo Casa Chihuahua recently reopened after a six-month renovation, with a new exhibition on the city’s mining history.
- Chihuahua’s annual summer rain pattern is stronger than normal this year; visitors should expect evening thunderstorms and possible flash flooding on low streets.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor, away from the main street side. These upper floors reduce street-level noise and offer better airflow from the courtyard.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the reception and any rooms on the side facing the main road (likely Avenida Juárez or similar) due to traffic noise. Lower floors (1st and 2nd) may also pick up noise from the lobby and street.
Best views
A room on the 4th floor facing the inner courtyard or side street offers a modest view of the city skyline with less traffic noise. No significant mountain or landmark view at this address.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 are generally quietest, as they are above street-level bustle and away from common areas.
🔊 Noise notes
Chihuahua city centre has moderate traffic noise, especially during weekday mornings and evenings. The hotel is on a main thoroughfare, so rooms facing the street will hear cars, buses, and occasional honking.
Insider tips
1. Park in the hotel's secure lot if available (confirm at check-in) — street parking is limited and patrolled. 2. Request a room with a window that opens for natural ventilation, as air conditioning can be erratic at this star level. 3. Check if the hotel offers a free breakfast; if not, grab coffee and pan dulce from a nearby bakery like El Globo.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua
Free for all guests; password on keycard envelope; typical speed 15 Mbps down, adequate for streaming.
One lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections.
No formal newspaper service; no digital newsstand. Lobby has a small book-exchange shelf.
Check-in from 15:00; early bag drop allowed from 12:00 (no fee); late check-out until 13:00 costs 200 MXN, subject to availability.
Free at front desk after check-out; secure, receipt-issued.
No step-free access at main entrance (one step); no ramp. No wheelchair-accessible rooms. Lift is narrow (fits manual chair, not electric scooter).
Free on-site parking for 20 cars (first-come, first-served; no reservation). No valet. Nearest public car park: 'Estacionamiento Mirador' on Calle 4a, 50 MXN/night. No EV charging.
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: None (no municipal tourist tax in Chihuahua)
Deposit & card hold: First night charged at booking; incidental hold of 500 MXN at check-in.
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Nuestra Señora de los Angeles (1.0 km · ~13 min walk)
- Church: Palabra Viva (2.0 km · ~25 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Plaza Pedregales — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Cumbres I Etapa — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Oxxo — 965 m · ~12 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Mexican Peso, MXN
Use bank ATMs (Bancomer, Banamex) for the best rate; avoid airport or hotel exchange counters that charge high fees.
Visa/Mastercard accepted in most restaurants and shops; contactless common; many smaller stalls and taxis are cash-only.
Restaurants: 10–15% for good service; taxis: round-up or small tip (10–20 MXN); hotel staff: 20–50 MXN per bag or per night for housekeeping.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee or café de olla from a street stall or small café: around 20–30 MXN.
Tortas, tacos or a comida corrida (set menu) at a market or casual eatery: 60–100 MXN.
A main course at a sit-down restaurant (platillo fuerte): 100–150 MXN.
Street stalls and small taquerías in the city centre, especially around Plaza de Armas and market areas, sell tacos, gorditas and quesadillas for 15–30 MXN each.
Supermercado Soriana, Bodega Aurrerá and Alsuper are common budget chains in Chihuahua.
Coppel (department store) or market stalls in the city centre for basic clothing at low prices.
City bus (Ruta) costs 10 MXN per ride; from the airport take a colectivo (shared van) for about 30–50 MXN per person, or a taxi/uber for around 150–200 MXN.
Eat at market stalls or taquerías for filling, cheap meals. Use public buses rather than taxis. Buy bottled water and snacks at a supermarket, not at tourist spots.
Good to know — Chihuahua
Type A/B · 127V
not safe — drink bottled
$1 ≈ MX$17.58 · MXN
Emergency Contacts
ChihuahuaFor tourists, the state tourist police can be reached at 01 800 508 0948. For non-urgent tourist help, call 01 614 429 3300.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Chihuahua, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Aeropuerto bus stop (outside terminal) → Calle Libertad, two blocks from Mansion Tarahumara
💡 Buses are worn but safe. Sit near the driver. You'll need a prepaid card from a corner shop (Oxxo sells them). Cash is rarely taken on board.
General Roberto Fierro Villalobos International Airport (CUU) → Mansion Tarahumara, Zona Centro
💡 Agree the fare before getting in and pay in pesos. Official airport taxis charge a flat rate—ignore anyone offering a deal inside the terminal.
Plaza de Armas, 5-minute walk from Mansion Tarahumara → Loop through Centro Histórico
💡 Not an airport option—this is for sightseeing. Buy tickets outside the Cathedral. The tram gives a decent overview of the city’s colonial architecture, but skip it if you're short on time.
Anywhere in Chihuahua city → Mansion Tarahumara, Calle Juárez 601
💡 Uber and DiDi are often cheaper than street taxis for short hops. Set the pickup pin exactly at the hotel entrance—drivers get confused by narrow one-way streets around the Zócalo.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor, away from the main street side. These upper floors reduce street-level noise and offer better airflow from the courtyard.
Which rooms should I avoid at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the reception and any rooms on the side facing the main road (likely Avenida Juárez or similar) due to traffic noise. Lower floors (1st and 2nd) may also pick up noise from the lobby and street.
Is Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua noisy?
Chihuahua city centre has moderate traffic noise, especially during weekday mornings and evenings. The hotel is on a main thoroughfare, so rooms facing the street will hear cars, buses, and occasional honking.
Which rooms have the best views at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
A room on the 4th floor facing the inner courtyard or side street offers a modest view of the city skyline with less traffic noise. No significant mountain or landmark view at this address.
What are insider tips for staying at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
1. Park in the hotel's secure lot if available (confirm at check-in) — street parking is limited and patrolled. 2. Request a room with a window that opens for natural ventilation, as air conditioning can be erratic at this star level. 3. Check if the hotel offers a free breakfast; if not, grab coffee and pan dulce from a nearby bakery like El Globo.
What time is check-in at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
Check-in at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua have Wi-Fi?
Free for all guests; password on keycard envelope; typical speed 15 Mbps down, adequate for streaming.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
None (no municipal tourist tax in Chihuahua)
Where can I eat cheaply near Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
Tortas, tacos or a comida corrida (set menu) at a market or casual eatery: 60–100 MXN.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Los Cedros Hotel Inn Chihuahua?
City bus (Ruta) costs 10 MXN per ride; from the airport take a colectivo (shared van) for about 30–50 MXN per person, or a taxi/uber for around 150–200 MXN.
When is the best time to visit Chihuahua?
October, November and March offer mild daytime highs (22-25°C) and minimal rain, making sightseeing comfortable without the summer heat or winter chill. Crowds are light except during local holidays.
Top Attractions in Chihuahua
💡 Go in the late afternoon when locals gather—there's often live music or dance classes near the main gazebo. The paddle boats cost around 20 pesos for 20 minutes.
💡 The cathedral is free to enter, but dress modestly. On weekend evenings, the plaza fills with families and street food stalls selling elotes and churros.
💡 Admission is cheap (roughly 30 pesos), but Tuesday afternoons are sometimes free—check their Facebook page before going.
💡 Entry is about 50 pesos. Bring small bills—they often don't have change for large notes. The guided tour (in Spanish) is included and adds context to Villa's eccentricities.
💡 Entry is around 60 pesos, and the guided tour takes about an hour. Wear sturdy shoes; it's damp and uneven. Go early to avoid crowds—it's popular with school groups on weekday mornings.