← Blog

Streaming, TV & VPNs in Mexico for Expats 2026: Netflix, Sports & Home Entertainment

How streaming, cable, and VPNs really work in Mexico in 2026: keeping your home Netflix library, watching NFL and Champions League, and building a home entertainment setup that just works.

2026-07-11

The Short Version

Moving to Mexico does not mean losing your shows. Almost every major streaming service works here, the internet in cities and beach towns is genuinely good, and a smart TV plus a solid connection covers 90% of what most expats want. The wrinkles are three: your streaming catalog changes to the Mexican version, live sports are scattered across different platforms than back home, and some content you paid for at home may be geo-blocked or simply absent.

This guide walks through what actually works in 2026, what it costs, and how to set up a home entertainment system in Mexico that feels like home.

Your Streaming Accounts Still Work — With a Catch

If you already pay for Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, Prime Video, or Apple TV+, those accounts keep working when you cross the border. You log in the same way. What changes is the content library: streaming rights are sold country by country, so once your device is on a Mexican IP, you’ll see the Mexican catalog.

In practice that means:

  • Netflix shows a strong Mexican and Latin American library, plus most big global originals. Some US-licensed shows disappear; a few Mexico-only titles appear.
  • Disney+ in Mexico is bundled with Star (general entertainment and sports content that in the US lives on Hulu), which is actually a plus.
  • HBO Max is widely available and carries most premium series.
  • Prime Video works and often has more regional films.

Audio and subtitles are the pleasant surprise. Most titles default to English audio with optional Spanish subtitles, which makes them handy for language learning. You can switch audio tracks per title.

Netflix Household Rules

Since Netflix tightened its household and password-sharing rules, expats hit a snag: if your account is registered to a “home” back in the US or Canada and you’re now watching from Mexico full-time, you may be prompted to update your household or pay an extra-member fee. The clean fix is to set your Mexican home as the primary household once you’re settled. Traveling profiles still work for shorter stays.

Do You Need a VPN?

A VPN (virtual private network) makes your device appear to be in another country. Expats use them for three legitimate reasons:

  1. Access your home catalog — watch the US or Canadian Netflix/Hulu library you’re used to.
  2. Watch home-country live sports and news that aren’t licensed in Mexico.
  3. Security on public and building Wi-Fi.

The honest reality in 2026: streaming services actively detect and block many VPN servers, so it’s a bit of a cat-and-mouse game. The better-known paid VPNs invest in staying ahead and generally keep working; free VPNs almost never do and often sell your data. Expect to pay US$3–7 per month on an annual plan.

VPN use case Works well? Notes
Access home Netflix/Hulu Usually Choose a reputable paid VPN; be ready to switch servers
Watch US live sports (ESPN, etc.) Often Blackouts and login-with-cable-provider still apply
Banking / security on Wi-Fi Always Simple, reliable use case
Free VPN for streaming No Slow, blocked, and a privacy risk

A practical note: install the VPN on your phone and laptop easily, but getting one onto a smart TV is fiddly. Many people run the VPN on a small streaming stick, an Apple TV, or configure it at the router level so the whole house is covered.

Live Sports: The Real Homework

This is where expats spend the most time. Rights are fragmented, and the platform that carries your team in the US may not exist here.

  • Liga MX and Mexican soccer are everywhere and easy — often on broadcast TV and local streaming apps.
  • Champions League and European soccer are carried by regional sports streamers; availability shifts season to season.
  • NFL, NBA, and MLB are available through their own league passes (NFL Game Pass–style products, NBA League Pass, MLB.TV), which work well from Mexico, though blackout rules can be confusing.
  • US college football and niche US sports are the hardest — this is the classic VPN-plus-home-cable-login scenario.

Local sports bars in expat-heavy towns like Mérida, Playa del Carmen, and Puerto Vallarta reliably show the big games, which is often the easiest fix for a single event.

Cable and Local Pay-TV

You don’t have to stream everything. Mexico’s major providers offer traditional pay-TV and internet bundles:

  • Telmet / Telmex–izzi–Totalplay–Megacable and regional players provide fiber internet plus channel packages.
  • Bundles run roughly MX$500–1,200 per month (about US$28–68) depending on speed and channels.
  • Many expats skip cable entirely and put that money toward faster internet plus streaming subscriptions.

If you rent, ask whether internet is already installed and in whose name. Getting a new line installed can take days to a couple of weeks depending on the provider and neighborhood.

Internet: The Foundation

None of this matters without a solid connection. The good news: fiber is common in Mexican cities and growing in beach towns.

Location type Typical speeds 2026 Approx. monthly cost
Major city (Mérida, Guadalajara, CDMX) 100–500 Mbps fiber MX$400–900
Riviera Maya / beach towns 50–300 Mbps MX$500–1,000
Rural / small pueblo 20–100 Mbps, sometimes fixed wireless Varies
Anywhere as backup Starlink ~MX$1,100+/mo + hardware

For remote workers or anyone who can’t tolerate an outage, a backup option matters. Many expats keep a mobile hotspot plan or a Starlink unit as insurance, especially in areas prone to storm-related outages.

A Simple Setup That Works

For most people arriving in 2026, this stack covers everything:

  1. Fiber internet from a local provider, the fastest tier your budget allows.
  2. A smart TV or a streaming device (Apple TV, Fire Stick, or Chromecast) — buy locally to avoid plug and warranty issues, or bring your own; both work.
  3. Two or three streaming subscriptions you actually use.
  4. A reputable paid VPN installed on phone, laptop, and ideally the router or streaming stick.
  5. A sports plan for your specific league, plus knowledge of the nearest sports bar for the big games.

Buy electronics in Mexico when you can — voltage is the same as the US and Canada (127V, same plugs), so North American devices work without adapters, but local purchases come with local warranty support.

Common Gotchas

  • Roku availability and channel lineups differ; Apple TV and Fire Stick tend to be the most flexible for expats.
  • App store region: your Apple or Google account may be tied to your home country, which affects which apps you can download. You can create a Mexican App Store account, but you’ll lose access to some purchases — think before switching.
  • Payment methods: some services want a local card; others happily bill your foreign card. Keep both.
  • Power flicker: in some areas brief outages are common, so a small UPS (battery backup) on your router keeps you online through the blips.

Talk to a Local Real Estate Expert

Thinking about where to settle and want a home with the fiber, the view, and the setup already sorted? We help expats find properties that fit real life — including a fast, reliable connection. Message us on WhatsApp: https://wa.me/5219993788084

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.

💬 Chat on WhatsApp