Our Expert in Mexico
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Last updated: July 8, 2026
Infrastructure funds Mexico have entered a pivotal cycle. The 2026 Economic Package introduced meaningful changes to the withholding-tax framework for non-resident investors, while concurrent reforms to the Ley de Amparo have narrowed the procedural remedies available in fund-related disputes. At the same time, the CNBV has tightened ESG disclosure expectations for issuers of publicly listed development capital certificates (CKDs). For foreign sponsors, fund managers, and institutional LPs preparing cross-border subscriptions into Mexican infrastructure vehicles, these overlapping reforms demand a single, transaction-level roadmap, one that connects vehicle selection, regulatory filing, tax modelling, and capital repatriation into a coherent sequence of decisions. This guide provides that roadmap for 2026 closings.
Specifically, this article gives you:
Three legislative and regulatory streams converged in 2026 to reshape the environment for infrastructure fund structuring in Mexico. The 2026 Economic Package, published in the Diario Oficial de la Federación (DOF) and elaborated through explanatory notes issued by the Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público (SHCP), adjusted the income-tax treatment of distributions from trusts and CKDs to non-resident beneficiaries. Separately, amendments to the Ley de Amparo took effect, altering the scope of provisional injunctions that parties can obtain in disputes involving government concessions and regulated funds. Finally, the CNBV updated its guidance on sustainability-related disclosures for issuers of publicly listed certificates, including CKDs.
The government’s Infrastructure Investment Plan 2026–2030, framed within the broader Plan México initiative, channels public and private capital toward energy, transport, water, and digital-connectivity projects. By opening priority sectors to co-investment through CKDs and related vehicles, the plan creates a pipeline of assets that institutional investors, including foreign pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, can access via CNBV-registered instruments. Sponsors seeking to align their offerings with government priorities may benefit from streamlined concession approvals and potential tax incentives published in the DOF.
The 2026 amendments to the Ley de Amparo restrict the availability of suspensiones (provisional injunctions) in disputes involving public-interest infrastructure concessions. Industry observers expect this to reduce the frequency of court-ordered project stoppages that historically delayed construction timelines. For foreign investors, the practical effect is twofold: greater certainty that concession-backed cash flows will not be interrupted by third-party injunctions, but also a narrower set of remedies if fund-level disputes arise with government counterparts.
| Date | Action | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Q4 2025 | 2026 Economic Package published in DOF (SHCP) | New withholding rules for trust/CKD distributions to non-residents take effect January 1, 2026 |
| Q1 2026 | Ley de Amparo amendments enter into force | Narrower provisional injunctions in infrastructure-concession disputes |
| Q1 2026 | CNBV updated ESG disclosure circular published | Issuers of public certificates must include ESG risk sections in offering documents |
| Q2 2026 | SAT publishes updated withholding guidance for fund vehicles | Clarifies treaty-relief documentation and timing for non-resident beneficiaries |
A Certificado de Capital de Desarrollo (CKD) is a trust-issued certificate registered with the CNBV and listed on the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (BMV). CKDs Mexico are designed to channel institutional capital, primarily from Mexican pension funds (Afores) and, increasingly, from foreign investors, into private-equity-style investments in infrastructure, real estate, and other long-duration asset classes. Unlike a traditional stock or bond, CKD holders receive distributions linked to the performance of the underlying portfolio rather than a fixed coupon.
A CKD is issued through a Mexican trust (fideicomiso) administered by a regulated trustee (typically a Mexican bank). The trust deed appoints an administrador (fund manager) responsible for sourcing, underwriting, and managing the portfolio. Underlying assets are usually held through one or more special-purpose vehicles (SPVs), often structured as SAPIs (Sociedad Anónima Promotora de Inversión). Capital is called from certificate holders as deployment opportunities arise, and distributions flow back through the trust to investors. Governance is set by the trust deed, investor-committee bylaws, and applicable CNBV circulars. For sponsors considering broader fund formation concepts, our comprehensive guide to starting your own investment fund covers foundational principles.
| Vehicle | Key Reporting & Regulatory Obligations | Typical Investor Profile / Repatriation Implication |
|---|---|---|
| CKD (Certificados de Capital de Desarrollo) | CNBV registration, ongoing quarterly and annual disclosure, BMV listing rules, ESG reporting | Afores, institutional investors, foreign LPs; distributions subject to withholding depending on beneficiary residence and treaty status |
| Mexican trust (fideicomiso) | Trustee-level filings; not always CNBV-supervised unless publicly listed; governed by deed terms | Flexible structuring; repatriation tax depends on trust classification and beneficiary residence |
| FIBRA / CBFI | CNBV and BMV rules for REIT-equivalent vehicles; regular disclosures, distribution requirements | Domestic and international real-estate investors; distinct dividend and capital-gain tax regime |
| SAPI (private equity) | No mandatory CNBV registration if private; lighter disclosure; subject to corporate and tax law | Qualified/sophisticated investors; repatriation via dividends or share sales with applicable withholding |
Foreign investors accessing CKDs Mexico must choose a structuring route that balances regulatory compliance, tax efficiency, and operational simplicity. Each option carries distinct implications for CNBV filings, withholding tax, and repatriation timing. The principal structures are summarised below.
In this arrangement, a non-Mexican entity (the “feeder”) aggregates commitments from foreign LPs and subscribes to the CKD certificates through the feeder’s own account. Key considerations include:
A foreign LP may subscribe directly to CKD certificates without an interposed feeder. This simplifies the chain and may improve treaty-relief eligibility because the LP, rather than an interposed entity, claims the treaty benefit directly with the SAT. However, direct subscription introduces operational complexities: the foreign LP must open a Mexican securities account (or use a global custodian with BMV access), provide Mexican tax identification, and comply with ongoing reporting. Nominee or “advised account” arrangements through a global custodian can mitigate some of these frictions while preserving the direct treaty claim, provided the nominee is properly disclosed to the trustee and CNBV as part of the offering mechanics.
Intermediate loan structures, where a foreign entity lends to a Mexican SPV rather than subscribing for CKD certificates, may appear tax-efficient because interest payments can attract lower withholding rates under certain treaties. However, the SAT has intensified scrutiny of thin-capitalisation arrangements and back-to-back loans that lack commercial substance, particularly after the 2026 Economic Package tightened documentation requirements for cross-border intercompany debt. Sponsors considering this route should model the net after-tax return alongside a direct or feeder subscription before committing.
Securing CNBV approval is the critical gate for any CKD issuance. The registration process is governed by CNBV circulars, the Securities Market Law (Ley del Mercado de Valores), and supplementary guidelines published in the DOF. Below is a practical step-by-step checklist and timeline for sponsors preparing a 2026 filing.
| Step | Key Document / Action | Estimated Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre-filing consultation | Informal meeting with CNBV to discuss structure and disclosure expectations | 2–4 weeks before formal filing |
| 2. Formal filing | Submission of complete package (trust deed, prospectus, opinions, KYC) | Day 0 |
| 3. Completeness review | CNBV confirms receipt and identifies missing documents or queries | 10–20 business days |
| 4. Substantive review & comments | CNBV issues observations; sponsor/counsel respond with amendments | 20–40 business days |
| 5. Final approval & registration | CNBV issues registration number; certificates authorised for listing | 5–10 business days after final response |
| 6. BMV listing & issuance | Certificates listed on BMV; capital calls commence per trust deed terms | 5–10 business days post-approval |
Once registered, the CKD issuer must comply with periodic disclosure obligations established by the CNBV. These include quarterly financial reports, annual audited statements, material-event notices (eventos relevantes), and, under the updated 2026 circular, ESG performance reports. Failure to file on time may result in CNBV sanctions, trading suspensions, or delisting proceedings. Sponsors should budget for a dedicated compliance function or outsource reporting to a specialised service provider familiar with CNBV requirements.
Tax planning is where infrastructure fund structuring succeeds or fails for foreign investors in Mexico. The Mexican Income Tax Law (Ley del Impuesto sobre la Renta, LISR), as amended by the 2026 Economic Package and published in the DOF, governs how distributions from CKDs and other fund vehicles are taxed when received by non-resident beneficiaries. The SAT administers withholding collection and treaty-relief claims.
| Payment Type | Domestic Withholding Rate (LISR) | Typical Treaty-Reduced Rate Range |
|---|---|---|
| Dividends / profit distributions | 10% | 5%–10% (varies by treaty) |
| Interest (on intercompany loans or bonds) | 4.9%–35% depending on lender type and instrument | 4.9%–15% under most treaties |
| Capital gains (sale of shares/certificates) | 25% of gross or 35% of net gain | Exempt or reduced under certain treaties if conditions met |
| Trust distributions classified as income | Withholding at applicable rate by income category | Treaty rate applies if SAT treaty-relief documentation is filed |
A European pension fund holds CKD certificates directly and receives a cash distribution classified as dividend income. Under the LISR, the trustee withholds 10% at source. The fund’s home jurisdiction has a tax treaty with Mexico that reduces the dividend withholding rate to 5% for qualifying pension-fund investors. To claim the reduced rate, the fund files a treaty-relief application with the SAT (see steps below), providing its tax-residency certificate, beneficial-ownership declaration, and evidence of pension-fund status. If the claim is approved, the trustee applies the 5% rate prospectively; the fund may also apply for a refund of the 5% differential already withheld.
An offshore feeder domiciled in a Caribbean jurisdiction with no Mexico treaty subscribes to CKD certificates. Distributions to the feeder attract the full domestic withholding rate (10% on dividends). The feeder’s ultimate LPs, some of whom reside in treaty jurisdictions, cannot individually claim treaty relief because the treaty benefit belongs to the direct recipient, the feeder. This scenario illustrates why feeder-jurisdiction selection is critical: a feeder in a treaty jurisdiction with adequate substance can claim the reduced rate, whereas a feeder in a non-treaty jurisdiction bears the full domestic withholding cost, reducing net returns to underlying LPs.
Repatriation of proceeds from infrastructure funds Mexico follows standard cross-border payment channels. Distributions net of withholding are credited to the investor’s Mexican securities or bank account and then transferred outward through the banking system. Banco de México does not impose exchange controls, but outbound transfers above certain thresholds trigger reporting obligations under Mexico’s anti-money-laundering framework. Additionally, the trustee and the Mexican paying bank must file FATCA reports (for US-connected investors) and CRS reports (for investors in CRS-participating jurisdictions) with the SAT, which in turn exchanges information with the investor’s home-country tax authority.
The CNBV’s updated 2026 circular requires issuers of publicly listed certificates, including CKDs, to integrate environmental, social, and governance (ESG) risk factors into their offering documents and ongoing reporting. For sponsors of infrastructure funds Mexico, this means addressing climate-transition risk, community-impact assessments, and governance standards at both the trust and SPV levels.
A practical ESG disclosure compliance checklist includes:
Fund documentation for CKDs should specify a clear dispute-resolution mechanism. Most institutional-grade CKDs designate Mexican courts in Mexico City as the competent forum, though arbitration clauses (typically ICC or CANACO rules) are increasingly common for disputes between the sponsor/manager and foreign LPs. The choice matters: the 2026 amparo reform, published in the DOF, has narrowed the scope of provisional injunctions in disputes involving public-interest concessions. This means that investors who rely on amparo proceedings to suspend adverse government actions, such as revocations of permits underlying fund assets, may find it harder to obtain interim relief.
Protective measures sponsors should embed in documentation include escrow arrangements for disputed distributions, conditional subscription mechanics that permit LP withdrawal if key permits are revoked, and indemnification provisions backed by manager-level insurance. Engaging local counsel experienced with post-reform amparo practice is essential for any CKD holding concession-dependent assets.
Foreign investors subscribing to CKDs Mexico should prepare the following documentation and complete these steps before closing:
Exiting an infrastructure fund Mexico position involves one of three primary routes, each with distinct repatriation tax consequences:
In all cases, repatriation follows the banking channel described above: net-of-withholding proceeds are credited to the investor’s account and transferred outward, with FATCA/CRS reporting obligations triggered at the trustee and bank levels.
Infrastructure funds Mexico present a compelling deployment opportunity in 2026, supported by the government’s Infrastructure Investment Plan 2026–2030 and a maturing CKD market. However, the regulatory environment demands careful structuring. The interplay between CNBV registration requirements, the 2026 Economic Package’s withholding-tax amendments, updated ESG disclosure obligations, and narrowed amparo remedies creates both opportunity and risk for sponsors and foreign investors alike.
Three immediate action items should guide your next steps:
For further guidance, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with specialists in Mexican capital markets and infrastructure fund structuring.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jonatan Graham Canedo at Graham Abogados S.C., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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