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Airbnb Regulations in Mexico: A 2026 Guide for Hosts

A 2026 guide to Airbnb regulations in Mexico for hosts: registration rules, lodging taxes by state, HOA restrictions, income tax basics, and how to stay compliant.

2026-07-09

Modern vacation rental terrace overlooking a Mexican beach at golden hour

Short-term rentals have been one of the great real-estate stories in Mexico, turning second homes into cash-flowing assets for owners across Quintana Roo, Yucatán, Jalisco, and Baja. But 2026 finds the landscape maturing fast. States and municipalities that once ignored short-term rentals now regulate them, tax them, and in a few tourist-heavy zones, cap them. If you own or plan to buy a property to rent, understanding the rules is no longer optional. This guide breaks down what hosts need to know to operate legally and profitably in 2026.

The big picture: regulation is now the norm

There is no single federal short-term-rental law in Mexico. Instead, a patchwork of state and municipal rules governs registration, taxes, and operating limits, and that patchwork has thickened considerably. Mexico City led the way with registration requirements and night caps, and popular tourist states have followed with their own frameworks. The practical takeaway: rules depend heavily on exactly where your property sits, and you must check at both the state and municipal level.

Platforms themselves have also become collection agents. In most states, Airbnb and similar platforms now withhold and remit lodging tax and, in many cases, a portion of income tax directly, which changes what you owe and how you file.

Registration and licensing

More jurisdictions now require hosts to register their short-term rental, typically with the state tourism authority or the municipality, and to display a registration number on listings.

  • Mexico City requires registration in a host registry and enforces an annual cap on the number of nights a property can be rented (historically around 180 nights per year for certain properties), with additional restrictions in social-housing units.
  • Quintana Roo (Cancún, Playa del Carmen, Tulum) requires lodging operators to register for the state lodging tax and, increasingly, with municipal tourism registries.
  • Yucatán, Jalisco, and Baja California Sur each maintain lodging-tax registration and, in some municipalities, additional operating rules.

Check your specific municipality’s current requirements before listing. Rules change annually, and enforcement has tightened.

Lodging tax (Impuesto sobre Hospedaje) by state

The lodging tax is a state-level tax on the accommodation charge, usually collected from the guest and remitted by the host or the platform. Typical 2026 rates:

State Lodging tax rate
Quintana Roo 3–4%
Yucatán 3%
Jalisco 3%
Baja California Sur 3%
Mexico City ~3.5%
Nayarit 3%

Where platforms remit this automatically, your job is to confirm it is happening and keep records. Where they do not, you must register and remit it yourself, generally monthly.

Income tax and the platform withholding regime

Rental income is taxable in Mexico regardless of your residency. Since Mexico formalized platform-economy tax rules, digital platforms withhold income tax (ISR) and value-added tax (IVA) on payments to hosts. For resident hosts registered with the tax authority (SAT) under the appropriate regime, withholding rates are lower and creditable against your annual return; for those not registered, platforms withhold at higher default rates.

Key points for 2026:

  • Register with SAT and obtain an RFC. This lets you access lower, creditable withholding rates rather than the punitive default.
  • IVA (16%) generally applies to short-term lodging services. Platforms typically collect and remit it.
  • Keep your CFDI records. Proper electronic invoicing is the backbone of compliance and of any deductions you claim.
  • Non-residents are still liable for Mexican tax on Mexican-source rental income; the platform withholding often covers the baseline obligation, but professional advice is wise.

A local accountant (contador) who handles short-term rentals is not a luxury here; the invoicing and filing mechanics are genuinely complex, and a good contador usually saves more than they cost.

HOA and condominium rules

Some of the most consequential restrictions are private, not governmental. Condominium regimes and homeowner associations increasingly limit or ban short-term rentals to preserve residential calm and security. Before you buy a property intending to rent it:

  1. Read the condominium bylaws (reglamento) and the constitutive act.
  2. Confirm in writing that short-term rentals are permitted, and note any minimum-stay rules.
  3. Check for restrictions on guest access to amenities, key handoffs, and lockboxes.
  4. Ask whether the HOA charges rental-related fees or requires guest registration.

A building that bans rentals can gut your investment thesis overnight, and these rules are tightening in popular developments.

The restricted zone and foreign ownership

If your rental is within roughly 50 km of the coast or 100 km of a border, you as a foreign owner hold title through a bank trust (fideicomiso) or a Mexican corporation. Renting through a fideicomiso is fully permitted, but if you operate at scale, some owners use a Mexican corporation for cleaner tax and liability treatment. Discuss the structure with a notario and accountant before buying.

A compliance checklist for 2026 hosts

  • Register your property with the relevant state and municipal authorities.
  • Obtain an RFC and register with SAT under the correct regime.
  • Confirm which taxes the platform withholds and remits, and which you must handle.
  • Verify HOA/condominium permission in writing before listing.
  • Keep meticulous CFDI invoicing and monthly records.
  • Engage a local contador experienced with short-term rentals.
  • Carry appropriate liability insurance for guest stays.
  • Review the rules annually, since they change.

The bottom line

Short-term rentals in Mexico remain a strong income opportunity in 2026, but the days of operating informally are ending. The hosts who thrive are the ones who register properly, structure ownership correctly, respect HOA rules, and keep clean books. Done right, compliance is a manageable cost of doing business, and it protects the asset you have invested in.

If you are buying with rental income in mind and want to be sure a property is genuinely rentable, structured correctly, and free of HOA landmines, we can help you evaluate the numbers and the rules before you commit. Reach out for a free consultation or message us on WhatsApp.

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