The Expat InvestorSee if you qualify
Foreign property ownership

Can a foreigner buy property in Mexico?

Foreigners can own property, via a bank trust (fideicomiso) in the restricted coastal and border zones.

Before you buy in Mexico, always:

General guidance only — rules change; confirm the current position with a qualified local lawyer.

Our free ownership checker and the Overseas Property Playbook walk through how foreign ownership works step by step — the questions to ask and the traps to sidestep.

What it costs to buy in Mexico

On the coast or near a border, foreign buyers hold property through a bank trust (fideicomiso), which adds a setup fee and annual charge. Expect total closing costs of about 5-8% inland and 7-12% where a trust is needed, including acquisition tax (ISAI) of 2-4% plus notary and registration; completion often takes one to two months.

Where foreigners tend to buy in Mexico

Lake Chapala and Ajijic for a large, established lakeside expat community; San Miguel de Allende for colonial charm; Merida for a safe, cultured city in the Yucatan; and Puerto Vallarta for beach living.

Healthcare and everyday life

Private hospitals in the big cities and expat hubs are good and far cheaper than in the US or UK, with English-speaking doctors common in expat areas. Legal residents can enrol voluntarily in the public IMSS scheme for roughly US$500-700 a year, though it excludes some pre-existing conditions, so many pair it with private insurance. Safety varies sharply by region, so the settled expat towns are calm while some areas are best avoided; they drive on the right, and English is widely spoken in expat hubs though Spanish helps everywhere else.

Thinking seriously about Mexico?

Two honest Brits, a private call, and straight answers — see if a freehold home abroad is a fit for you.

See if you qualify →

Everything on Mexico

Cost of retiring in MexicoRetirement visas for Mexico

Buying property in other countries