A remote worker's honest guide to internet in Mexico for 2026: Telmex, Totalplay, Izzi and Starlink compared, real speeds by city, fiber coverage, backup options, and costs.
2026-07-10
If you’re moving to Mexico to work remotely, your internet connection isn’t a convenience — it’s your livelihood. The good news: in major cities, Mexican fiber is fast, cheap, and genuinely competitive with what you’d get in the US or Europe. The bad news: coverage is wildly uneven, installation can be a bureaucratic ordeal, and in some beach and jungle destinations the “fiber” you were promised doesn’t actually reach your street.
This guide covers the real providers, honest speeds, city-by-city reliability, and — most importantly — how to build a redundant setup so a single outage never costs you a client call.
Exchange rate used: roughly 18.5 MXN = 1 USD.
The incumbent, owned by América Móvil. The widest fiber footprint in the country and usually the most reliable in established residential areas.
Fiber-first competitor, often the favorite of remote workers where available. Frequently the fastest real-world experience.
Cable/fiber hybrid from Grupo Televisa. Broad urban coverage, mixed reliability.
Strong in western and central Mexico (Guadalajara region especially).
| Provider | Typical speed | Monthly (MXN) | Monthly (USD) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Telmex | 100 Mbps–1 Gbps | 500–1,200 | $27–65 | Reliability, reach |
| Totalplay | 150 Mbps–1 Gbps | 500–1,300 | $27–70 | Speed, remote work |
| Izzi | 100–500 Mbps | 450–1,000 | $24–54 | Availability, bundles |
| Megacable | 100–500 Mbps | 450–900 | $24–49 | West/central Mexico |
| Starlink | 50–200 Mbps | ~1,100 | ~$60 | Rural/backup |
Advertised fiber speeds in Mexican cities are usually honest for download. The catch is upload — which matters enormously for video calls, cloud backups, and file transfers.
A realistic expectation on a good urban fiber plan: stable 200–500 Mbps down, adequate upload, low latency to US servers. That handles multiple simultaneous video calls, large uploads, and streaming without issue.
| City / Area | Fiber availability | Reliability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico City | Excellent | Very good | All major providers, gigabit common |
| Guadalajara | Excellent | Very good | Megacable strong here |
| Monterrey | Excellent | Very good | Business-grade options |
| Querétaro | Very good | Very good | Fast-growing nomad hub |
| Mérida | Very good | Good | Fiber widespread in the city |
| Puerto Vallarta | Good | Good | Solid in developed areas |
| Playa del Carmen | Good | Good | Fine in town; check the specific building |
| Cancún | Good | Good | Good in urban zones |
| Tulum | Patchy | Poor–fair | Fiber unreliable; Starlink common |
| Small towns / coast | Variable | Poor | Assume you’ll need Starlink |
The consistent pattern: big cities are excellent, smaller beach/jungle towns are risky. Never assume — verify coverage at the exact address before signing a lease if your income depends on connectivity.
The single most important lesson for remote workers in Mexico: have a backup that doesn’t share a failure point with your primary connection. Fiber goes down, neighborhood power blips, or the ISP has a regional outage — and it always seems to happen mid-client-call.
A dual-WAN travel router that fails over automatically from fiber to a Telcel SIM is the gold-standard setup for serious remote workers.
Starlink is fully available in Mexico and has been a game-changer for anyone in a fiber dead zone.
For Tulum, small coastal towns, and off-grid living, Starlink is often the difference between being able to work there at all and not.
Pros
Cons
If you’re setting up in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Querétaro, or Mérida, you’ll likely have a better, cheaper connection than you had back home. If you’re headed to Tulum or a coastal town, plan a redundant setup from day one — fiber plus Telcel plus, in the sketchier areas, Starlink — and never rely on a single link for a paycheck-critical call.
Want help figuring out which city and neighborhood will actually support your remote-work setup — including which buildings have real fiber? The Mexico Living team can save you weeks of trial and error. Book a call or message us on WhatsApp and we’ll help you land somewhere your connection won’t let you down.
Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.
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