HOA and condo fees in Mexico can make or break your investment. Here is what 2026 maintenance fees cover, typical costs, red flags, and how to protect yourself as a foreign buyer.
2026-07-09
When foreigners shop for property in Mexico’s resort and city markets, the headline is almost always the purchase price. But the number that quietly shapes your long-term ownership experience is the monthly HOA or condo fee — known in Mexico as the cuota de mantenimiento. Get a great fee for a well-run building and your investment thrives. Buy into a poorly managed condominio with an underfunded reserve, and the surprises can be expensive.
This guide explains how HOA and condo fees work in Mexico in 2026: what they cover, what they typically cost, how they’re governed, and the red flags every foreign buyer should check before signing. This is general information, not legal advice — always have a Mexican attorney review the condo regime and its financials.
In a Mexican condominium, ownership is split between your private unit and a share of the common areas (áreas comunes). Your monthly fee funds the upkeep of everything shared:
The last item is the one buyers most often overlook — and the most important.
Condo fees in Mexico are usually charged per square meter of your unit per month, then billed as a monthly total. Rough 2026 ranges:
Fees scale with amenities. A tower with concierge, multiple pools, a spa, beach club, and 24/7 security costs far more to run than a simple four-unit building in a colonial town center — where fees might be minimal or even informally shared.
Mexican condominiums operate under a régimen de propiedad en condominio, governed by a state-level condominium law plus the building’s own reglamento (bylaws). Owners form an asamblea (assembly), elect an administrator or hire a professional management company, and vote on budgets and special assessments. As a foreign owner, you have the same voting rights as any other owner in proportion to your unit.
Two practical realities for foreigners:
A healthy fondo de reserva is what separates a building that ages gracefully from one that hits owners with sudden special assessments (cuotas extraordinarias). When the reserve is underfunded and the elevators fail or the seawall cracks, the money has to come from somewhere — and that means a surprise bill to every owner, sometimes thousands of dollars.
Before you buy, ask for:
Watch for these before committing:
If you’re buying to rent, model the fee into your returns realistically. On a beachfront condo grossing, say, USD 30,000/year, an USD 400/month HOA fee is USD 4,800/year — a meaningful line item, but also one that’s tax-deductible against rental income if you file properly. And in short-term-rental buildings, remember that amenities like a pool and beach club (funded by those fees) are exactly what command higher nightly rates. The fee is often buying you occupancy.
Your attorney and the notary should verify:
HOA and condo fees aren’t a nuisance to minimize — they’re the operating budget of your investment, and the reserve fund is your insurance against ugly surprises. A slightly higher fee in a transparent, well-managed building is almost always the better buy than a bargain fee in a building running on fumes.
If you’d like help reading a building’s financials, understanding rental-restriction bylaws, or comparing fee structures across developments you’re considering, our team knows these buildings well. Schedule a free call or WhatsApp us and we’ll help you look under the hood before you buy.
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