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Mexico Property Closing Costs Explained: What You Really Pay in 2026

Closing costs on a Mexican property purchase typically run 5–8% of the price. Here is the honest, line-by-line breakdown of acquisition tax, notary fees, appraisal, trust, and SRE permit for 2026.

2026-07-10

The Number Nobody Tells You Upfront

The listing price is not what you pay. In Mexico, closing costs generally run 5% to 8% of the purchase price, and for lower-priced properties the percentage runs higher because several fees are fixed rather than proportional. Yet buyers routinely budget only for the deposit and the price, then get blindsided at the notary’s office.

This guide breaks down every line item, who customarily pays it, and what it actually costs in 2026. The golden rule: in Mexico, the buyer pays most closing costs; the seller pays the capital gains tax. That split is customary, not statutory, and everything is negotiable — but that is the baseline.

The Line Items, One by One

1. Acquisition Tax (ISABI / ISAI)

This is the big one. The Impuesto Sobre Adquisición de Bienes Inmuebles (ISABI, sometimes ISAI) is a state and municipal transfer tax paid by the buyer. Rates vary by state and municipality, but in 2026 they typically land between 2% and 4.5% of the higher of the sale price or the official appraised value.

  • Quintana Roo (Cancún, Tulum, Playa): ~2–3%
  • Yucatán (Mérida): ~2%
  • Jalisco (Puerto Vallarta, Guadalajara): ~2–3%
  • Baja California Sur (Los Cabos): ~2–3%

This single tax is often the largest closing cost.

2. Notary Fees (Honorarios del Notario)

In Mexico the notary is a specialized, state-appointed attorney — not a rubber-stamp clerk. The notary verifies title, calculates and remits taxes, drafts the deed (escritura), and registers it. Fees are regulated and typically run 0.5% to 1.5% of the transaction value. The buyer chooses and pays the notary.

3. Property Appraisal (Avalúo)

A certified appraisal is required to set the tax basis. Cost is usually $300 – $800 USD depending on property value and location. Paid by the buyer.

4. Public Registry & Certificates

Registering the deed with the Registro Público de la Propiedad, plus title-search certificates, no-lien certificates, and up-to-date property tax (predial) certificates. Collectively $500 – $1,200 USD.

5. Fideicomiso Setup (Restricted Zone Only)

If the property is within 50 km of coast or 100 km of a border, a foreign buyer needs a bank trust. This adds:

  • SRE (Foreign Affairs) permit: $1,500 – $2,000 USD
  • Bank trust setup + first-year fee: $1,000 – $1,800 USD

Outside the restricted zone (e.g., inland Mérida, Guadalajara, San Miguel de Allende), no trust is needed and these costs disappear.

Realistic Total: A Worked Example

Here is a full breakdown for a $300,000 USD beachfront condo in the restricted zone, 2026 estimates:

Cost Item Amount (USD) % of Price Paid By
Acquisition tax (ISABI ~2.5%) $7,500 2.50% Buyer
Notary fees (~1%) $3,000 1.00% Buyer
Appraisal (avalúo) $600 0.20% Buyer
Public registry + certificates $900 0.30% Buyer
SRE permit $1,800 0.60% Buyer
Fideicomiso setup + year 1 $1,500 0.50% Buyer
Legal/attorney review (optional) $2,000 0.67% Buyer
Total closing costs ~$17,300 ~5.8% Buyer

For an inland property of the same price (no trust, no SRE permit), the total would drop to roughly $14,000 (≈4.6%).

Who Pays What: The Customary Split

Cost Buyer Seller
Acquisition tax (ISABI)
Notary fees
Appraisal
Registry & certificates
Fideicomiso / SRE permit
Capital gains tax (ISR)
Real estate agent commission ✔ (typically)

The agent’s commission (often 5–7%) is customarily paid by the seller and is usually already baked into the listing price. The capital gains tax on the sale is the seller’s obligation, handled by the notary at closing.

Costs That Catch People Off Guard

  • The percentage is higher on cheap properties. A $100,000 lot still needs a full appraisal, registry filing, and trust — fixed costs that can push closing to 8–10% of price.
  • Peso/dollar timing. Many fees are set in pesos. Exchange-rate swings between offer and closing can move your final USD total by a few percent.
  • Trust annual fee. Not a closing cost, but budget the recurring $500 – $850/yr trust fee from day one.
  • “All-in” quotes that aren’t. Ask specifically whether a quoted closing figure includes the SRE permit and trust setup, not just tax and notary.

The Timeline: When Each Cost Hits

Closing costs are not all due on the same day. Understanding the sequence helps you manage cash flow and avoid last-minute scrambles.

  1. Offer accepted / promissory agreement (contrato de promesa). You typically place a deposit (often 5–10%, held in escrow or by the notary). Appraisal is commissioned here.
  2. Due diligence period. Title search, no-lien certificates, and predial certificates are pulled — small registry fees paid.
  3. SRE permit application (if restricted zone). Filed early because it can take several weeks; the permit fee is due at application.
  4. Trust drafting. Bank acceptance fee and first-year trust fee are paid as the fideicomiso is set up.
  5. Closing (firma de escritura). The bulk — acquisition tax (ISABI), notary fees, registry fees — is settled here, and the deed is signed.

Budget for a total elapsed time of 6 to 12 weeks for a restricted-zone purchase, shorter for a straightforward inland cash deal.

Escrow: Use It

Mexico does not have a deeply standardized escrow culture the way the US does, but professional escrow services exist and you should use one, especially as a foreign buyer.

  • Funds are held by a neutral third party and released only when contractual conditions are met.
  • It protects you against the nightmare scenario of wiring a large sum directly to a seller who then disappears or fails to deliver clean title.
  • Escrow fees are modest (often a few hundred to ~$1,000 USD) and are cheap insurance on a six-figure transaction.

Never, under any circumstances, wire the purchase price to a seller’s personal bank account outside of a notary or escrow structure.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Get a written closing cost estimate from the notary before you sign the promissory agreement.
  • Confirm the tax basis being used — sale price versus appraised value — since ISABI is charged on the higher figure.
  • Retain your own attorney, independent of the seller and agent, for anything above a routine transaction.
  • Never wire funds to a personal account. Legitimate closings route through the notary or an escrow service.

The Bottom Line

Plan for 5–8% in closing costs, weighted toward the buyer, and add the SRE permit and trust setup if you are buying near the coast. The taxes and notary fees are non-negotiable and non-avoidable — treating them as a surprise is what turns an exciting purchase into a stressful one. Budget for them from the start and closing day is smooth.

If you want a property-specific closing estimate — with your target state’s actual ISABI rate and whether a trust applies — the Mexico Living team can build that number with you before you make an offer. Schedule a call or message us on WhatsApp and we will make sure there are no surprises at the notary’s desk.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.

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