Tucson, AZ

The taco guide
that actually
knows Tucson.

No algorithms. No sponsored results. Just the spots worth knowing.

The problem

You've been there. You search for tacos, you get a list of the same five places with 4.2 stars and 800 reviews. Half of them are chains. The other half are fine. None of them are what you were looking for.

The problem isn't that there's not enough information. It's that the wisdom of the masses isn't actually wise — it's just loud.

4.2 (847 reviews)

The idea

CartoTaco is built on a different idea: that one person who really knows a place is worth more than a thousand people who kinda liked it.

Every restaurant in here was chosen deliberately. You won't find everything — you'll find the right things. Spots that have been operating the same way for decades. Family places that don't have a website. Trucks that move. The taco that someone's abuela has been making since before you were born.

This is a small
list, on purpose.

The app

How it works

App screenshot 1

Small data, powerful viz

App screenshot 2

Filters and search to find what you want

App screenshot 3

Build custom taco-trails to maximize deliciousness

The list

A taste of what's inside

El Antojo Poblano

Westside

A family-run kitchen bringing real southern Mexican flavors to the Westside. The mole sauce comes straight from Puebla — made by their mother and shipped to Tucson. Get the huaraches.

El Chivo de Oro

South Side

A south-side food truck institution since 2008. Maria Elena Domínguez's goat birria has earned a devoted following — quesabirria, Sonoran hot dogs, and homemade tortillas on W. Irvington.

Tacos Apson

South 12th Avenue

No frills, no menu on the wall, just carne asada and costilla tacos done exactly right. The kind of place you drive past three times before you find it. Worth every wrong turn.

The person

Why I made this

I've lived in Tucson long enough to know that the best food here doesn't show up on the first page of a search engine. It's in the places that don't have a marketing budget, that have never asked anyone for a review, that have been serving the same recipes for generations.

I built CartoTaco because I'm a data nerd and wanted a guide I could hand to a friend — one that skips the noise and goes straight to the places that matter. No stars, no rankings, no algorithm deciding what you should eat. Just a short list of spots I'd stake my reputation on.

This is a one-person project, and that's the point. Curation means someone is making choices. I'd rather give you ten great recommendations than a thousand mediocre ones.

Open CartoTaco