Hire in Mexico

Perspectives mondiales

Hire in Mexico

Mexico hiring generally depends on Federal Labour Law compliance, IMSS registration, payroll-tax withholding, and documented separation controls. Employers should align payroll records, leave handling, and exit procedure before local hiring.

19 octobre 2023
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Operational snapshot

Hire in Mexico

Mexico hiring generally depends on Federal Labour Law compliance, IMSS registration, payroll-tax withholding, and documented separation controls. Employers should align payroll records, leave handling, and exit procedure before local hiring.

Capitale

Mexico City

Payroll cycle

Bi-weekly

Employer contribution

46%

Languages

Spanish

Devise

Mexican Peso (MXN)

Last reviewed

23 mars 2026

Employment and compliance summary

Employer cost and contributions

Employer budgeting should include IMSS costs, payroll-tax administration, and the wider cost of compliant employment operations instead of modeling only base pay. Cost planning should also...

  • Employer budgeting should include IMSS costs, payroll-tax administration, and the wider cost of compliant employment operations instead of modeling only base pay.
  • Cost planning should also account for vacation exposure, worker records, and termination-related settlements.

Payroll and tax operations

Payroll should be configured for tax withholding, IMSS administration, and employer recordkeeping from the first cycle. Employers should confirm pay controls, payroll receipt workflow, and...

  • Payroll should be configured for tax withholding, IMSS administration, and employer recordkeeping from the first cycle.
  • Employers should confirm pay controls, payroll receipt workflow, and authority filings before onboarding or compensation changes.

Leave and holiday rules

Vacation entitlement and leave administration should stay aligned with Mexico labour rules and internal payroll records. Holiday treatment and unused leave balances should be reviewed before...

  • Vacation entitlement and leave administration should stay aligned with Mexico labour rules and internal payroll records.
  • Holiday treatment and unused leave balances should be reviewed before separation or major employment-status changes.

Termination and notice

Termination handling should be checked against dismissal documentation, statutory entitlements, and defensible employment records before execution. Final payroll, accrued benefits, and...

  • Termination handling should be checked against dismissal documentation, statutory entitlements, and defensible employment records before execution.
  • Final payroll, accrued benefits, and social-security closeout should be reviewed together before ending the relationship.

Minimum Wage

Mexico’s minimum wage is determined annually by the National Commission on Minimum Wages (CONASAMI). As of 2024, there are two minimum wage zones in Mexico:

  1. General Minimum Wage Zone: Applies to most of the country
  2. Free Economic Zone of the Northern Border: Covers certain municipalities in the northern states bordering the United States
ZoneDaily Minimum Wage (MXN)Monthly Minimum Wage (MXN)
General207.446,310.37
Northern Border312.419,498.46
Minimum Wage Rates in Mexico (2024)

It’s important to note that these rates are subject to change annually, and employers must stay informed about the latest updates to ensure compliance.

Income Tax

Mexico employs a progressive tax system, where higher incomes are taxed at higher rates. The income tax rates for 2024 are as follows:

Annual Taxable Income (MXN)Tax Rate
0 – 8,952.491.92%
8,952.50 – 75,984.996.40%
75,985.00 – 133,536.9910.88%
133,537.00 – 155,229.9916.00%
155,230.00 – 185,851.9917.92%
185,852.00 – 374,837.9921.36%
374,838.00 – 590,795.9923.52%
590,796.00 – 1,127,926.9930.00%
1,127,927.00 – 1,503,902.9932.00%
1,503,903.00 – 4,511,707.9934.00%
4,511,708.00 and above35.00%
Income Tax Rates in Mexico (2024)

Employers are responsible for withholding income tax from their employees’ salaries and remitting it to the Mexican tax authorities (Servicio de Administración Tributaria or SAT).

Payroll Cost

When hiring employees in Mexico, employers must consider various mandatory contributions and benefits that add to the overall payroll cost. These include:

  1. Social Security (IMSS) contributions
  2. National Housing Fund (INFONAVIT) contributions
  3. Retirement Savings System (SAR) contributions
  4. State Payroll Tax

Here’s a breakdown of the typical employer contributions:

ContributionRate
Social Security (IMSS)24.95% – 33.58% (varies based on risk class)
National Housing Fund (INFONAVIT)5%
Retirement Savings System (SAR)2%
State Payroll Tax1% – 3% (varies by state)
Employer Contributions in Mexico

The total payroll cost for employers in Mexico typically ranges from 33% to 43% of an employee’s base salary, depending on the specific circumstances and location.

Overtime Pay

Mexican labor law stipulates strict regulations regarding overtime work and compensation. The standard workweek in Mexico is 48 hours, typically divided into six 8-hour workdays. Any work performed beyond these hours is considered overtime and must be compensated accordingly.

Overtime pay rates in Mexico are as follows:

  1. First 9 hours of overtime per week: 200% of the regular hourly rate
  2. Additional overtime hours: 300% of the regular hourly rate

It’s important to note that employees are not required to work more than 3 hours of overtime per day, and no more than 3 times per week.

Last reviewed

23 mars 2026

Sources

Reviewed by PIO Compliance Research Team against public labor, payroll tax, social contribution, leave, termination, and employer compliance references relevant to the approved country guide set.

Referenced sources

What is SUA?
Social insurance authorityJurisdiction: Mexico
Open source

Publisher

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social

Checked

24 mars 2026

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