Mexico has confirmed a 13% increase in the general minimum wage for 2026, raising it to MXN 315.04/day nationwide and MXN 440.87/day in the Northern Border Zone. This continues the government’s multi-year effort to lift real incomes through yearly increases. Meanwhile, lawmakers have presented an updated version of the 40-hour workweek reform.
Why it matters: For employers, the combination of a higher wage floor and shorter working hours represents a continued shift in Mexico’s labor model towards stronger protections at higher costs for employers with Mexican operations.
Minimum wage is now close to the median wage: Unlike most countries where minimum wage sits far below median pay, Mexico’s sustained double-digit increases have pushed the floor closer to the middle of the wage distribution. This creates three key challenges for multinational employers:
- Salary compression becomes unavoidable.
Supervisors, technicians, and experienced line workers who once earned comfortably above minimum wage are now much closer to it. Companies will face pressure to re-establish meaningful pay differentials, raising costs above the 13% floor increase.
- Overall labor costs will rise — not just the minimum wage.
When the bottom moves, overtime, bonuses, and statutory benefits also increase. The upcoming workweek reduction, without wage cuts, will raise effective hourly costs even further.
- Mexico’s cost advantage is narrowing.
Mexico remains competitive (from an operating cost standpoint) relative to the U.S. and Canada, but the gap is shrinking. This could influence location strategy, automation investments, and supplier diversification across North America.
While wages increase, productivity remains stagnant: Politically, Mexico’s minimum wage strategy has delivered clear wins: it has reduced poverty, strengthened household consumption, and helped address U.S. and Canadian concerns about creating a more level playing field by narrowing wage gaps across the region. But as Bloomberg notes, Mexico still faces limited progress in skills, technology adoption, industrial upgrading, and capital investment. Higher wages without higher productivity risks undermining competitiveness over the medium term.
The updated 40-hour proposal: Slower pace, same direction: An updated legislative proposal for shorter work weeks includes a phased reduction starting in 2027 and continuing roughly two hours per year until reaching 40 hours by 2030. Wages and benefits would remain unchanged.
Employer considerations: Even with gradual phase-in, multinationals—especially in manufacturing, logistics, and shared services—will need to plan for shift redesign, overtime exposure, and higher hourly labor costs. Here are some actions that global members should consider doing now:
- Conduct multi-year salary-compression analysis
- Reassess staffing and productivity under a 2027–2030 workweek transition
- Link pay increases to productivity investments, leveraging automation, technology and upskilling.
- Start preparing communication strategies for employees and unions.
Join us to learn more: HR Policy Global will host a member meeting in Monterrey on April 29th to discuss all the changes – stay tuned for more information and registration details!