Grocery Essentials

Where do I buy groceries in Playa del Carmen?

⚠ Verification in progressLast reviewed May 16, 20263 min readPlaya del Carmen
Chris, PlayaStays founder, photographed in Playa del Carmen
Written by
& the PlayaStays local team
Founder, PlayaStaysOperating in Playa del Carmen since 2018EN / ES
Topic
Grocery Essentials
For
Traveler · Family
Where
Playa del Carmen
Cheap staples
Walmart / Soriana
Imports + organic
Chedraui Selecto
Local produce
Mercado 28

Quick answer

Four main supermarket chains, each with a niche: Chedraui Selecto (best for imports + organic), La Comer (best balanced selection), Walmart (cheapest for staples), Soriana (mid-range). For fresh local produce, use Mercado 28 or the Mercado de Sabores. Rappi delivers from any of them in 30–60 min.

The full picture

Grocery options in Playa cover everything from US-import warehouse stores to local mercados where fish came off the boat that morning. The "best" supermarket depends on what you're buying.

**The big four chains:**

- **Chedraui Selecto** (different from regular Chedraui — Selecto is the upmarket version) — best for international/imported goods. If you're a US/Canadian expat and want familiar brands (peanut butter that tastes like peanut butter, real bagels, decent maple syrup), this is where you'll find them. Two locations including one at Centro Maya. Pricier overall but worth it for specific items.

- **La Comer** — best balanced selection. Strong fresh produce, decent meat counter, good wine selection, reasonable prices. Mid-tier expat default. Location near Calica.

- **Walmart Playa del Carmen** — cheapest for staples (rice, pasta, water, cleaning supplies, baby formula). Lower-quality produce than Chedraui/La Comer. Largest selection if you need cooking equipment, electronics, etc. Location on Av. 30 × CTM.

- **Soriana** — mid-tier between Walmart and Chedraui. Smaller, easier to navigate. Multiple locations.

**Local mercados (for fresh produce + meat + tortillas):**

- **Mercado 28** — local market with butcher counters, produce stalls, tortillería (fresh tortillas), small food court. Locals shop here. Saves significant money on fresh items. - **Mercado de Sabores** — newer, cleaner, more tourist-friendly version of a traditional mercado.

**Specialty:**

- **City Market** (Costco-style membership warehouse) — bulk imports. Good for long-stay families. - **Costco Cancún** — the actual Costco is a ~50-min drive but locals trip up monthly. Membership transfers internationally. - **Sam's Club** at Centro Maya — similar to Costco, bulk + imports.

**For specific things:**

- **Best produce** — Mercado 28 in the morning, La Comer for convenience - **Best meat** — Chedraui Selecto carniceria (butcher counter), or Mercado 28 for whole cuts - **Best wine selection** — La Comer (surprisingly), Chedraui Selecto - **Best fish** — Mercado 28 morning, or directly from fishermen at Playa's pier 7am - **Fresh tortillas** — any tortillería (small storefronts everywhere; ~10 pesos for a dozen) - **Organic / specialty** — Loop Sustainable Market on 5th Ave

**Delivery:**

**Rappi** is the dominant delivery app — Spanish/English UI, delivers from any of the four major chains in 30–60 min for a $40–80 MXN delivery fee plus tip. **Uber Eats** also offers grocery delivery from Walmart and Chedraui.

**Tipping in supermarkets:**

The bagger at checkout is usually a teenager working for tips only. Standard tip is 10–20 pesos depending on bag count. Cash, not card.

**Long-stay tip:**

Buy water filtered jugs ("garrafones") refilled at a Ciel or Crystal station for ~25 MXN per 20L instead of carrying cases. Most condo buildings have a delivery service that brings garrafones weekly.

Local context

Playa's grocery scene mirrors the city itself — three tiers serving very different audiences. Chedraui Selecto and La Comer are the upmarket chains (clean, broad imported selection, butcher counter, deli); they cost 20–30% more than Walmart but the quality difference is real. Walmart and Mega Soriana are the value plays — staples are cheap, produce is mediocre. Mercado 28 (and other neighborhood mercados) is where locals shop for produce, butcher cuts, tortillas, and Mexican pantry staples; prices are 40–60% below the supermarkets but you need cash and a willingness to point and gesture. Rappi is dominant for delivery — most stores are on it.

What to do

Here's the move

  1. First trip in town: hit Chedraui Selecto or La Comer for a one-stop stocking run (you'll find familiar brands plus everything for Mexican home-cooking).
  2. Once you know the area, build the local pattern: Mercado 28 mornings for fresh produce + tortillas + meat, Chedraui for the in-between, Walmart for bulk household stuff.
  3. Rappi for the laziness backup — most stores deliver in 30–60 minutes with a 35–60 peso fee.
Common mistake

Doing all your shopping at Walmart because the prices are lowest. The produce isn't as fresh, the meat isn't as good, and you'll come back disappointed. Split: staples at Walmart, fresh at Mercado 28 or La Comer.

References
Chris, PlayaStays founder

Hi, I'm Chris — founder of PlayaStays.

I built PlayaStays after years of seeing the same problem repeat across the Riviera Maya — owners trusting their properties to managers who under-communicate and under-deliver. We're a founder-led operating company based in Quintana Roo with local teams running every one of the eight markets we cover — built to handle a single unit or a portfolio with the same standards. If you own a property here, I'd like to help you think it through.

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