Paying for Your Property
Most foreigners buy in Mexico with cash — but "cash" here means a bank-to-bank wire, not a suitcase of bills. Financing exists too, from developer plans to cross-border mortgages. This guide explains exactly how the money moves, how to protect it, and what it costs.
Mexican mortgage rates for locals are high by U.S. or Canadian standards, and financing a resale home as a foreigner is difficult. As a result, the large majority of international buyers purchase outright — funding the deal from savings, the sale of a property back home, or a home-equity line drawn on a property in their own country.
Paying cash is not only common, it is an advantage: cash buyers close faster, negotiate harder and avoid the fees and delays of Mexican lending. If you can free up the capital at home, it is usually the cleanest path.
If you do need financing, you have three realistic routes, each with trade-offs:
Funds travel by international wire from your home bank to a Mexican account — typically the notary’s trust account, an escrow account, or (for pre-construction) the developer’s account named in your contract. You will need the beneficiary’s full banking details including the CLABE (an 18-digit Mexican account number) and SWIFT code.
Never send funds to a personal account or to details received only by email without confirming them by phone or in person — wire-fraud impersonation is the single biggest risk in any real-estate closing, in Mexico as everywhere. Verify the account directly with your notary or agent before you send a peso.
Mexico does not use escrow as universally as the U.S., but reputable transactions increasingly do — and you should insist on it, especially when buying remotely. A licensed escrow company (often U.S.-based, serving cross-border deals) holds your funds and releases them only when contractual conditions are met and title transfers.
For pre-construction, protection comes from the payment schedule tied to build milestones and from a well-drafted contract rather than escrow. Have a bilingual lawyer review any developer contract before you send the first payment.
Property in Mexico is often listed in USD (especially coastal and resort areas) but transacts in pesos at closing. The notary records the deed value in pesos at the official exchange rate on the closing date. To avoid the poor rates and fees of a standard bank wire, many buyers use a licensed currency-exchange (FX) service to convert and transfer larger sums — the savings on a six-figure purchase can be thousands of dollars.
Keep records of every transfer. When you eventually sell, proving the amount you brought in (and improvements you paid for) can reduce your Mexican capital-gains tax.
It is possible but limited. Developer financing on pre-construction is the most accessible option; a few lenders offer USD cross-border mortgages requiring 30–50% down and full documentation. Most foreign buyers pay cash.
By international bank wire to the notary’s trust account, an escrow account, or the developer’s account named in your contract. Always confirm the banking details (CLABE and SWIFT) directly by phone before sending to guard against wire fraud.
Use a licensed escrow company that releases funds only when title transfers, insist on a bilingual lawyer to review contracts, and never wire to details received only by email without verbal confirmation. These three steps eliminate almost all risk.
Prices may be quoted in USD but the deed is recorded in pesos at closing. Using a currency-exchange service rather than a bank wire usually gives a better rate and saves significant money on a large purchase.
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