Our Expert in Mexico
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Last reviewed: June 8, 2026
Understanding how to incorporate a company in Mexico has become an urgent priority for founders, multinationals and nearshoring investors establishing operations in 2026. Tighter sequencing rules around the SRE name permit, SAT digital credentials and beneficial-owner reporting now mean that a missed step early in the process can delay bank-account opening by weeks. This guide maps every stage of Mexico company registration, from entity selection and notarial deed execution to RFC enrollment, e.firma issuance, UBO compliance and realistic bank KYC timelines, so that foreign and domestic founders can launch with confidence and avoid the most common rejection points.
Quick-answer sequence & estimated timelines:
Before starting a business in Mexico as a foreigner or domestic founder, the first decision is entity type. Mexico’s General Law of Commercial Companies recognises several vehicles, but two dominate corporate practice: the Sociedad Anónima de Capital Variable (S.A. de C.V.) and the Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (S. de R.L.). A branch office or representative office can also be registered, though neither creates a separate Mexican legal person.
Regardless of entity, the recommended compliance sequence in 2026 follows a strict order. Skipping or reversing steps, for instance, approaching a bank before the RFC and e.firma are ready, is the single most common cause of delays reported by practitioners advising nearshoring clients.
Recommended sequence:
| Step | Estimated timeframe | Responsible party |
|---|---|---|
| SRE name permit | 1–3 business days | Lawyer / applicant via Secretaría de Economía portal |
| Notarial deed execution | 3–10 business days | Mexican notary public |
| Public Registry of Commerce | 5–15 business days | Notary files; registrar processes |
| RFC registration | 1–5 business days | SAT office or online (with e.firma of legal rep) |
| e.firma enrollment | 1–7 business days (appointment dependent) | Legal representative at SAT office |
| UBO documentary pack | Concurrent, prepare alongside above steps | Lawyer / compliance team |
| Bank account opening | 2–8 weeks | Bank relationship manager / compliance |
Choosing the correct vehicle is a threshold decision that affects liability exposure, tax treaty benefits, governance flexibility and exit planning. Most foreign investors incorporating in Mexico select either the S.A. de C.V. or the S. de R.L., each governed by the General Law of Commercial Companies (Ley General de Sociedades Mercantiles).
The S.A. de C.V. (Sociedad Anónima de Capital Variable) is the default choice for companies anticipating multiple rounds of investment, public offerings, or frequent changes in shareholding. Shares are freely transferable unless the bylaws restrict them, making it attractive for joint ventures and private-equity structures. A minimum of two shareholders is required. The “Capital Variable” designation permits the authorised capital to increase or decrease without amending the articles of incorporation before a notary, which reduces ongoing administrative costs. Under the US-Mexico tax treaty, the S.A. de C.V. is generally treated as a corporation for US tax purposes, simplifying cross-border planning for US-based parent companies.
The S. de R.L. (Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada) functions similarly to a limited liability company in common-law jurisdictions. Partners hold partes sociales (equity interests) rather than shares, and transfer of those interests generally requires consent from the other partners, making it well suited for closely held businesses, family enterprises and situations where partner selection matters. The S. de R.L. is limited to a maximum of 50 partners. Industry observers expect this entity to grow in popularity among US-based investors seeking flow-through tax treatment, as the S. de R.L. may qualify as a partnership or disregarded entity for US federal income tax purposes when properly structured.
| Feature | S.A. de C.V. | S. de R.L. | Branch / Rep Office |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal personality | Separate Mexican entity | Separate Mexican entity | Extension of foreign parent, no separate personality |
| Liability | Limited to capital contributions | Limited to capital contributions | Parent bears full liability |
| Equity instrument | Shares (acciones) | Equity interests (partes sociales) | N/A |
| Transferability | Freely transferable (unless bylaws restrict) | Requires partner consent | N/A |
| Max owners | No statutory cap | 50 partners | N/A |
| US tax treaty treatment | Typically classified as corporation | May be classified as partnership or disregarded entity | Permanent establishment analysis applies |
| Typical use-case | Growth companies, JVs, capital-raising | SMEs, family businesses, US flow-through planning | Temporary or exploratory presence |
With the entity type selected, the Mexico company registration process follows three core procedural stages before the company can seek its tax identity. Each stage has specific documentary requirements and potential bottlenecks.
Every new Mexican company must obtain authorisation for its corporate name from the Secretaría de Economía (formerly SRE for foreign-investment purposes). The application is filed electronically through the Ministry’s portal. Applicants typically submit three name options ranked by preference; the Ministry checks each against existing registrations and reserved names. If the preferred name is available and does not conflict with existing trademarks or restricted terms, the permit is issued within one to three business days. The permit is valid for a limited period, typically 180 calendar days, within which the notarial deed must be executed. A Mexico company register search through the portal before submitting the application can reduce rejection risk.
Key tips: Avoid generic or descriptive names that may be rejected. Include the entity-type suffix (e.g., “S.A. de C.V.”) in the application. If the company will have foreign shareholders, the SRE permit may also address the Calvo Clause, the constitutional requirement for foreigners to agree to be treated as Mexican nationals regarding the company’s assets.
Unlike common-law jurisdictions where incorporation is a filing exercise, Mexican law requires the articles of incorporation, bylaws and initial shareholder resolutions to be formalised before a Notario Público, a specially licensed legal officer. The notary verifies identities, ensures the documents conform to the General Law of Commercial Companies and the SRE permit, witnesses signatures and creates the escritura pública (public deed). This process typically takes three to ten business days, depending on document complexity and notary availability.
For foreign shareholders who cannot appear in person, a power of attorney (poder notarial) executed abroad and apostilled under the Hague Convention is required. All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by a certified Spanish translation.
After the notary executes the deed, it must be inscribed in the Public Registry of Commerce (Registro Público de Comercio) in the state where the company will have its corporate domicile. The notary generally handles this filing. Processing times vary significantly by state, from as few as five business days in more digitalised registries to fifteen or more in others. The company acquires full legal capacity to contract and operate from the date of registration. A certified copy of the registered deed becomes part of the permanent KYC file for banks and commercial counterparties.
Once the company is registered, the next critical milestone is obtaining its tax identity and digital credentials from the Servicio de Administración Tributaria (SAT). In 2026, the RFC and e.firma have become gatekeeping requirements: without them, no Mexican bank will open an account and no electronic tax invoice (CFDI) can be issued.
The RFC (Registro Federal de Contribuyentes) is a unique alphanumeric tax identification code assigned by SAT to every legal entity and individual taxpayer in Mexico. For legal entities, the RFC consists of three characters derived from the corporate name, the date of incorporation expressed as six digits (YYMMDD), and a three-character verification key, twelve characters in total. Registration is initiated by the legal representative at a SAT local office or, where the representative already holds a valid e.firma, through the SAT online portal. Processing typically takes one to five business days. RFC status can be verified through the SAT public-validation tool, which confirms whether the taxpayer is active, suspended or cancelled.
The e.firma (Firma Electrónica Avanzada) is SAT’s advanced electronic signature, functioning as a digital certificate that enables the company and its legal representative to file tax returns, issue CFDIs and interact with government portals. Enrollment requires an in-person appointment at a SAT office, the legal representative must present official identification, the company’s RFC confirmation, the notarial deed and proof of domicile. Appointments can be booked through the SAT portal. The likely practical effect of nearshoring demand is that SAT office appointment slots fill quickly in major business cities; early scheduling is strongly recommended. Obtaining the e.firma before approaching a bank is the single most impactful step founders can take to compress their overall incorporation timeline.
Mexico’s tax and anti-money-laundering framework requires companies to identify, document and, when requested, report their beneficiario controlador (beneficial owner). Since 2022, the Código Fiscal de la Federación has imposed obligations on legal entities to obtain, maintain and provide information about every natural person who directly or indirectly holds 25% or more of ownership or exercises ultimate effective control. In 2026, enforcement of these requirements has intensified, particularly for newly incorporated entities with foreign ownership structures.
A complete UBO documentary pack should include:
SAT may issue a formal request for beneficiario controlador information at any point after RFC registration, though requests are most common during the first year of operations or following a change in ownership. According to practitioner guidance on Mexico’s key corporate compliance obligations for 2026, companies must respond within 15 business days of receiving such a request. Failure to respond, or providing incomplete data, can result in significant penalties. Early indications suggest that companies that prepare their UBO pack concurrently with incorporation, rather than reactively, face fewer delays and lower compliance risk.
Opening a corporate bank account in Mexico is routinely cited as the most unpredictable stage of the incorporation process. Banks have intensified know-your-customer procedures in response to regulatory pressure, and nearshoring-driven incorporations with complex foreign ownership chains face particularly rigorous scrutiny.
While requirements vary between institutions, Mexican banks typically request the following documents for a new corporate account:
Industry observers expect the timeline for account opening to range from two to four weeks for straightforward domestic structures, extending to six to eight weeks, or longer, for multi-jurisdictional ownership chains or industries deemed higher-risk by compliance teams.
Foreign investors asking whether a foreigner can open a company in Mexico will find that Mexican law is broadly permissive. Foreigners may hold 100% of shares or equity interests in most economic sectors, with limited exceptions in areas such as hydrocarbons, telecommunications and certain land near borders or coasts. A legal representative (apoderado legal) with a Mexican tax domicile must be appointed; this person acts as the company’s agent before tax authorities and government agencies.
If foreign investment exceeds certain thresholds, or the company operates in a regulated sector, registration with the National Registry of Foreign Investment (Registro Nacional de Inversiones Extranjeras) administered by the Secretaría de Economía is required. Capital contributions from abroad must comply with anti-money-laundering reporting obligations and should be documented through the banking system to facilitate future repatriation of profits. For US-Mexico structures, founders should also evaluate whether to register a subsidiary in Mexico or operate through a branch, weighing permanent-establishment risk against treaty benefits.
The cost of starting a business in Mexico varies by entity type, state, notary and complexity. The following table provides conservative estimates for a standard S.A. de C.V. or S. de R.L. incorporation in 2026. All figures are approximate and should be confirmed with local counsel.
| Item | Estimated cost (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SRE name permit | $20–$50 | Government fee; paid electronically |
| Notary fees (deed execution) | $800–$3,000 | Varies by state and capital structure |
| Public Registry of Commerce filing | $100–$400 | State-dependent filing fees |
| RFC and e.firma (SAT) | $0 (no government fee) | Administrative cost only (time and appointment) |
| Legal / lawyer fees | $1,500–$5,000+ | Depends on complexity and advisory scope |
| Translations and apostilles | $200–$1,000 | Per document; foreign-parent structures cost more |
| Bank account opening | $0–$500 | Some banks charge account-setup fees |
| Total (typical range) | $2,600–$10,000+ | Simple to moderately complex structures |
Incorporation is only the starting point. Mexican companies must maintain corporate books, hold annual shareholders’ or partners’ meetings and file minutes with the company records. Tax obligations include monthly provisional income-tax payments, VAT returns and annual income-tax returns, all filed electronically through SAT using the e.firma. Every invoice issued or received must be in CFDI (Comprobante Fiscal Digital por Internet) format, Mexico’s mandatory electronic invoicing standard.
If the company hires employees, it must register with the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) and the national housing fund (INFONAVIT), and withhold payroll taxes. Industry observers expect regulators to continue tightening digital compliance requirements, making corporate housekeeping services, ongoing statutory maintenance, books, filings and beneficial-owner updates, an essential part of operational planning rather than an afterthought.
For founders ready to incorporate a company in Mexico in 2026, the three highest-priority actions are: reserve your corporate name with the Secretaría de Economía, appoint a qualified legal representative, and schedule SAT appointments for RFC registration and e.firma enrollment at the earliest opportunity. Following the structured sequence outlined in this guide, SRE permit, notarial deed, registry, RFC, e.firma, UBO preparation and bank KYC, will compress timelines and reduce the risk of costly delays. Engaging experienced Mexican corporate counsel early is the single most effective way to navigate the process efficiently.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martha Villalobos at Villalobos & Moore, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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