While Playa del Carmen is a fishing village with beautiful beaches which has morphed into a party town with zero culture, it didn’t even have a single book store when I was there, Mexico City is a splendid capital city, replete with history, art and beautiful architecture. I was particularly impressed with the Roma and Condesa neighbourhoods.
I loved the leafy avenues, the parks and the slightly dilapidated European style apartment buildings, legacy of Porfrio Diaz, the Francophile autocrat who ruled the country for more than 30 years.
There were lots of interesting bookstores, restaurants, bars and galleries. It seemed like a great place to live.
I was bored with my job in Germany, the department I was working for was slated for outsourcing and I wanted to learn Spanish well.
The next time I was coming to Mexico City, I would come to stay for a while. I did so at the end 2010 and met my future Mexican wife outside of a cantina on Avenida Vicente Suárez in Condesa a few months later.
Fast forward to 2022: My wife and I had been living in Germany for almost 10 years and it seemed as if nobody was afraid of Mexico City any longer.
We had just gone through another pandemic, Mexico never closed its borders and the city had become popular with digital nomads and expats of all kinds.
Roma and Condesa in particular had become very fashionable for both foreign and Mexican hipsters.
When I was there for the first time in 2009, it was still rare to hear English spoken on the street. Now you heard it all the time and the backlash against gentrification was starting.
GQ magazine called the neighbourhoods “Mexico City’s reigning axis of cool”.
Scouting the Market
My mother had died a few years earlier. I had inherited property, interest rates in Germany
were negative and property prices had climbed to all time highs.
Our idea had always been to return to Mexico at some point. It was the right time to lay the foundation for that move.
Real estate prices in Mexico had taken a dip after the pandemic, it seemed likely they would only be increasing over the next few years.
We decided to sell the German property and embark on the adventure of buying in apartment in Mexico.
My wife was busy with setting up her catering business in Germany, so I went to Mexico by myself in the summer of 2022 to scout the market.
I was a little wary of investing in Mexico, but my Spanish was good at this point, I had family and friends in the country and it seemed like a good time to act.
I started with a simple Google search and contacted several of the real estate agencies that showed up on the first page.
The first real estate agent I met with was Manuel, a dishevelled guy in his 50s who had changed careers and just started working in real estate.
He seemed a little desperate and quickly started telling me about how difficult it was to get people to commit and actually go through with a purchase.
He didn’t receive a salary, commissions were the only income he had. Manuel showed a number of apartments in “preventa”, i.e. unfinished apartments being built by his employer, a company called “Llave MX”.
The apartments were fairly large by European standards, but prices were high: an apartment
on a Avenida Revolucion, a main road with constant heavy traffic, was priced at 6,260,000
Mexican pesos, 335,000 Euros (December 2023 exchange rate) for 93m 2 .
The apartment was going to have all the amenities typical for this kind of development in Mexico City: a roof top terrace, a gym and 24 hours security.
Compared to a similar place in Berlin, it was still affordable: you would have to pay at least
700,000 Euros for an apartment of this size there.