How credit works in Mexico, why your US or Canadian score doesn't transfer, and the 2026 playbook for expats to build a Buró de Crédito history — from secured cards and departmental cards to your first real bank card.
2026-07-08
One of the quiet shocks of moving to Mexico is discovering that your carefully-built US or Canadian credit history is worth exactly nothing here. Mexico has its own credit bureau system, and to Mexican banks you arrive as a complete unknown — a blank file. That is not a disaster, but it does mean you start over, and understanding the local system saves you months of frustration.
This 2026 guide explains how Mexican credit works and gives you a realistic, step-by-step path from “no history” to a proper bank credit card.
This is general information, not financial advice. Terms vary by bank and change often; confirm current requirements directly with the institution.
Mexico’s credit reporting is run mainly by Buró de Crédito (and a smaller bureau, Círculo de Crédito). Every loan, card, and even some phone or store-financing accounts get reported. Your file builds a score over time based on how reliably you pay.
Key differences from the US and Canada:
Everything starts here. Open a checking/debit account, route some income or regular transfers through it, and let a few months pass. Your own bank is your most likely first lender.
Mexican department stores and their financial arms are famously willing to extend a first line of credit to people the banks won’t touch yet. These cards are the classic on-ramp: easy approval, they report to Buró de Crédito, and a few months of on-time payments create real history. Interest rates are high, so pay in full and never carry a balance.
Some banks offer a secured card where you deposit a guarantee amount and receive a credit line against it. It behaves like a normal card, reports to the bureau, and is often the cleanest way for an expat to build bank-level history.
After six to twelve months of a bank relationship and clean payments, apply for an entry-level unsecured card from your own bank. Approval odds jump dramatically once you are a known, well-behaved customer.
Representative figures — always confirm current terms, since Mexican card rates are high and move frequently.
| Product type | Typical approval difficulty | Reports to Buró? | Typical annual rate (CAT range) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Departmental/store card | Easy | Yes | High (often 60%–110% CAT) | First-ever history |
| Secured bank card | Easy–moderate | Yes | Moderate–high | Building bank-level credit |
| Entry-level bank card | Moderate | Yes | High (often 50%–90% CAT) | First real bank card |
| Premium/rewards card | Hard | Yes | High | Established customers only |
Note the CAT (Costo Anual Total) — Mexican law requires lenders to disclose this all-in annual cost figure. It is your best apples-to-apples comparison tool, and it will look alarmingly high compared to US rates. That is normal for Mexico; the fix is to never carry a balance.
Have these ready before you walk into a branch or apply online. Missing paperwork is the number-one reason expat applications stall.
The CURP is issued automatically when you get residency. The RFC (tax registration) is a separate step through the SAT tax authority, and getting one early smooths not just credit applications but property purchases, some bank services, and formal employment. Many expats put it off and then scramble; do it sooner.
Set expectations honestly. Building usable Mexican credit is a months-long project, not a weekend errand.
| Milestone | Realistic timeline from arrival |
|---|---|
| Residency + CURP in hand | Before or shortly after arrival |
| Mexican bank account open | Week 1–4 |
| First store/departmental card | Month 1–3 |
| Secured card approved | Month 2–4 |
| First unsecured bank card | Month 6–12 |
| Eligible for a mortgage/auto loan | Month 12–24+ |
Patience and perfect payment behavior are the whole game. There is no shortcut that beats a clean, growing Buró file.
Honestly, many expats live in Mexico happily on debit cards, cash, and their existing US/Canadian credit cards (watching foreign-transaction fees). You need Mexican credit mainly if you want to:
If none of those apply, building Mexican credit is optional. If they do, start early — it takes months, not weeks.
Mexican credit is expensive by US and Canadian standards, and there’s no way around it. The law-mandated CAT (Costo Anual Total) rolls interest plus fees into a single annual percentage so you can compare products honestly. Seeing an 80% or 100% CAT on a store card is normal here — it reflects Mexico’s higher rates and the risk lenders price in.
The practical response is simple:
While you build local credit, your existing foreign cards still work across Mexico. Two cautions:
Your foreign credit score means nothing in Mexico, but rebuilding is straightforward if you follow the ladder: open a bank account, get a store or secured card, pay it perfectly for several months, then graduate to a real bank card. Watch the eye-watering CAT rates, never carry a balance, and let time do the work. Within a year most disciplined expats have a legitimate Buró de Crédito history and access to local financing.
Planning a move and wondering how banking, credit, and buying property fit together in Mexico? The Mexico Living team helps expats navigate the practical side of settling in — from choosing a bank-friendly city to connecting you with the right local resources. Book a call or reach out on WhatsApp and let’s get you set up.
Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.
💬 Chat on WhatsApp