Everything US and Canadian expats need to know about calling for help in Mexico: the 911 system, the tourist assistance line, poison control, and how to prepare before an emergency ever happens.
2026-07-11
Moving to Mexico is exciting, but one of the first practical things every new resident should do is learn how to get help fast. The good news is that Mexico’s emergency system is more unified and modern than many newcomers expect. The confusing part is that a few older numbers still float around online, and some services vary by state. This guide clears that up so you know exactly who to call, in what situation, and how to prepare before you ever need to.
Since 2016, Mexico has used 911 as its single national emergency number, exactly like the United States and Canada. It connects you to police, fire, and medical dispatch across the entire country. If you remember nothing else from this article, remember that 911 works from any phone, including cell phones without a local SIM card and phones with no active plan.
A few practical notes:
If your situation is urgent but not life-threatening, 078 is the national tourist assistance line operated by Mexico’s tourism authorities. This is the number to use when you’re lost, have been overcharged, need directions, want to report a minor scam, or need guidance in English. Operators on 078 are far more likely to speak English than a general 911 dispatcher.
Think of 078 as the “I need help but nobody is in danger” line. For anything involving injury, crime in progress, or fire, go straight to 911.
Here is a quick reference table of the most useful contacts for expats. Save these in your phone before you need them.
| Service | Number | Use it for |
|---|---|---|
| National emergency (police/fire/medical) | 911 | Any life-threatening or in-progress emergency |
| Tourist assistance (multilingual) | 078 | Directions, scams, non-urgent help in English |
| Green Angels (highway roadside help) | 078 | Breakdowns and roadside aid on federal highways |
| Anti-kidnapping hotline | 088 | Extortion, kidnapping, related threats |
| Red Cross ambulance (Cruz Roja) | 911 or local Cruz Roja | Ambulance dispatch (varies by city) |
| Citizen reporting / anonymous tips | 089 | Reporting crime anonymously |
If you drive Mexico’s federal highways, the Green Angels are a genuinely reassuring resource. This is a government fleet of green trucks staffed by bilingual mechanics who patrol major highways offering free roadside assistance, minor repairs, fuel, and directions. You pay only for parts and gas. Reach them through 078. They are one of Mexico’s best-kept travel secrets for expats making long drives between cities.
Mexico does not have a single national poison-control number the way the US does with 1-800-222-1222. Instead, poison emergencies route through 911, and larger cities have hospital-based toxicology centers. If you have young children or specific health concerns, ask your local hospital or clinic for their direct toxicology contact and save it.
Understanding the flow reduces panic. When you call:
Because response times are inconsistent, many expats keep a private ambulance service on speed dial in addition to 911. Private ambulances in cities like Guadalajara, Mérida, and the Riviera Maya often arrive faster and take you to private hospitals directly. Ask your insurer or local expat community for the reputable providers in your area.
Even basic Spanish can save critical minutes. Practice these:
Keep a written card in your wallet with your address in Spanish, any medical conditions, allergies, blood type, and an emergency contact. In a crisis, handing over a card is faster and clearer than speaking.
For US and Canadian citizens, your embassy or consulate is a crucial resource for serious situations: arrests, deaths, lost passports, natural disasters, or being a victim of a major crime. They cannot act as emergency responders, but they can connect you with local resources, English-speaking lawyers and doctors, and family back home.
Locate the consulate nearest your city and save both its daytime line and its after-hours emergency line.
The expats who handle emergencies best are the ones who prepared quietly in advance. A short checklist:
Mexico’s emergency system is simpler than the internet often makes it seem. 911 is your universal number for anything life-threatening, 078 is your multilingual line for non-urgent help and highway assistance, and 088 and 089 cover extortion and anonymous reporting. Pair those with a private ambulance contact, your consulate’s number, and a wallet card in Spanish, and you’ll be genuinely prepared. Preparation, not panic, is what keeps you safe.
If you’re planning your move and want help getting your safety setup, healthcare, and paperwork right from day one, the Mexico Living team is here for you. Give us a call or reach out on WhatsApp for personalized, straight-talking guidance tailored to the city you’re moving to.
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