Market · Mexico · 10 min read · Updated April 2026

Chinese cars in Mexico —
export guide for 2026 dealers.

Mexico is a unique market — geographically adjacent to the US, tariff-complicated, and already served by strong Chinese manufacturer presence (Chery, MG/SAIC, Omoda). This is how independent dealers can still win.

Mexico is one of the more interesting markets for Chinese cars in 2026 — and also one of the more complicated. Geographically adjacent to the US, tariff-exempt under USMCA in some categories, and already home to a real Chinese automaker presence (Chery, MG, Omoda, GWM, JAC, and more). For independent importers, the question isn't "should I enter Mexico?" but "where do I fit in a market that already has official distributors?"

What's already there

Chinese automakers have moved aggressively into Mexico over the past 5 years. Partial list of brands with direct-distributor presence:

This has concentrated the easy entry points. A first-time importer can't easily out-compete Chery's Mexican operation on Omoda 5 pricing — Chery already runs factory-backed distribution and has a service network.

Where independent dealers still win

Regional independent dealers

Mexico is a geographically large country. Mexico City, Monterrey, and Guadalajara get most of the Chinese manufacturer direct-distributor attention. Secondary cities — Puebla, Querétaro, Mérida, Tijuana, Cancún, and many others — are less well-served. An independent dealer in these markets has room to operate, especially on specific models that the national distributor doesn't actively push.

Premium tier

Mexican premium EV demand is growing, and the Chinese official channels in Mexico still skew mainstream. Zeekr doesn't have a formal Mexican distributor as of early 2026, which opens a real gap for independent dealers willing to handle the homologation and service setup themselves.

Brands not in Mexico yet

Geely's main retail presence in Mexico is through Geely-branded dealerships that are still building out coverage. Specific Geely models — particularly the Starray EM-i 2026 super-hybrid, the EX5, and the EX2 — are strong candidates for independent imports in cities where the national dealer network hasn't reached.

Fleet sales

Corporate fleets, ride-hail platforms (Didi has deep presence in Mexico), and rental car companies often buy at volumes where Chinese manufacturer direct-distributors are slow to respond. An independent dealer with inventory can win these deals.

Tariff and homologation realities

Mexico's tariff structure for Chinese vehicles has been tightening. The duty on CBU (completely built up) Chinese cars has risen materially in 2024-26 as Mexico responds to US pressure over potential trans-shipment concerns. Current duty rates:

Homologation requires NOM compliance (Normas Oficiales Mexicanas). Most Chinese manufacturers producing for Latin America have NOM-compliant factory builds. Confirm per specific model and trim.

What US dealers should note

Some US dealers view Mexico as a potential trans-shipment route for Chinese EVs (exported to Mexico, then re-exported or transported into the US). This is increasingly risky. US Customs and the Inflation Reduction Act provisions have focused attention on country-of-origin compliance. Chinese vehicles exported to Mexico and subsequently registered and driven in the US face significant tax and homologation complications. We don't facilitate trans-shipment — our Mexican clients are selling vehicles in Mexico.

Our recommendation

For an independent Mexican dealer entering the Chinese vehicle market:

  1. Pick a regional focus — not national. Build strong operations in 1-2 cities before expanding.
  2. Choose a single brand-model as your anchor. Our top recommendation for Mexico is the Geely EX5 — factory NOM-compliant, 530-610 km CLTC, competitive with Chinese market-alternative vehicles already in Mexico.
  3. Consider Zeekr for premium. Undeveloped Mexican distribution creates a real opportunity for independent dealers comfortable handling GCC/NOM documentation themselves.
  4. Budget for Spanish-language documentation and marketing. This is non-optional for any real Mexican retail channel.

See our Latin America market overview for related notes on Chile, Peru, and Brazil.

Frequently asked.

Can I import Chinese cars into Mexico and re-export to the US?

In practice, no — US Customs and tax authorities have increased scrutiny on Chinese-origin vehicles regardless of the intermediate country. Vehicles imported to Mexico should be intended for the Mexican market. Trans-shipment to the US is not a business model we support.

Which Chinese brand has the best Mexico support infrastructure?

Chery has the most mature Mexican distribution — multiple dealership networks, parts supply, service capability. MG (SAIC) is strong but is often treated as a British brand in Mexico. For independent importers, the opportunity lies with brands that have less developed official Mexican presence, particularly Zeekr and specific Geely models.

What's the Mexico import duty on Chinese EVs in 2026?

Approximately 20% CBU import duty plus 16% IVA (VAT), depending on HTS classification. SKD and CKD enjoy lower duties if processed through a qualified Mexican assembler. Confirm current rates with a Mexican customs specialist before committing to pricing.

Ready to source your next shipment?

Send an RFQ via WhatsApp or email. Our Shanghai export desk will scope your requirements and return a qualified FOB / CIF / DDP quotation — typically within one Shanghai business day.

Chat on WhatsApp All Contact Channels →
Chat on WhatsApp