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Safety in Mexico for Expats in 2026: Real Talk, No Myths

An honest, data-driven look at safety in Mexico for expats in 2026 — what the numbers actually say by state, why Yucatán ranks #1, and how it compares to the US and Canada.

2026-07-10

The Question Everyone Asks First

“But is Mexico safe?” It’s the first thing family, friends, and coworkers say when you mention moving here. It’s a fair question — and it deserves a better answer than either the fear-mongering headline version or the defensive “it’s totally fine everywhere!” version.

The truth is more useful and more nuanced than either. Mexico is a large country of nearly 130 million people and 32 states. Safety varies enormously by region — arguably more than in most countries. Treating “Mexico” as a single safety data point makes about as much sense as treating “the United States” as one: the reality of daily life in a quiet college town has nothing to do with the statistics of a high-crime city hundreds of miles away.

This article gives you the honest version, grounded in data, with none of the myths.

What the Data Actually Says

Mexico tracks crime through SESNSP (the national public security system), which publishes homicide rates by state. The spread is dramatic. Some states have homicide rates comparable to conflict zones; others are safer than large parts of the United States.

Here’s the landscape for expat-relevant states, using intentional homicide rate per 100,000 residents (2025 figures, the most recent full-year data available going into 2026):

State Homicide rate (per 100k) Notes for expats
Yucatán ~2 Consistently Mexico’s safest state
Campeche ~5 Very safe, low-key
Aguascalientes ~6 Safe interior state
Querétaro ~7 Safe, popular with expats
Quintana Roo (Cancún/Tulum) ~25 Tourist zones safer than state average
Jalisco (Guadalajara/Vallarta) ~15 Varies sharply by area
Baja California Sur (La Paz/Los Cabos) ~12 Tourist areas generally calm

For reference: the US national homicide rate is roughly 6 per 100,000; Canada’s is around 2. Yucatán, in other words, is statistically on par with Canada — and safer than the US average.

That last line is the one that surprises people. Yucatán’s homicide rate is comparable to Canada’s and lower than many US states. Mérida is routinely ranked among the safest cities in the Americas, and it has held that distinction for years, not just one lucky cycle.

Why the Variation Is So Extreme

Mexico’s violence is overwhelmingly concentrated and specific. The overwhelming majority of homicides are tied to organized crime and territorial disputes — a world that runs almost entirely parallel to the life of an expat or retiree. It clusters along particular trafficking corridors and contested territories, which is why states like Yucatán and Campeche, which sit outside those dynamics, are so calm.

This matters because the crime that affects residents’ daily lives — burglary, theft, scams — follows a completely different and much more ordinary pattern. It’s the kind of risk you manage the same way you would in any city: reasonable precautions, situational awareness, and not being careless with valuables.

The Real Risks You’ll Actually Face

Let’s be honest about what expats do encounter, because pretending there’s zero risk is its own kind of dishonesty:

  • Petty theft and opportunistic crime. Phones, bikes, and unlocked-car contents. Common in any city; Mexico is no exception.
  • Burglary of unoccupied homes. Absentee-owner properties are targets. Good locks, a caretaker, or a security system matter.
  • Scams and overcharging. From rigged taxi meters to real-estate fraud. The property scams are the ones that actually cost expats serious money — always use a proper notary and title verification.
  • Corruption-adjacent hassles. Occasional shakedown attempts by low-level officials. Less common than folklore suggests, but not zero.

None of these are unique to Mexico. What’s notable is that in the safest states, even this ordinary crime is low.

Common Sense That Actually Moves the Needle

You reduce your risk profile dramatically with a handful of habits that would be second nature to anyone who’s lived in a real city:

  1. Choose your location deliberately. This is 80% of the equation. Living in Mérida or coastal Yucatán is a fundamentally different risk environment than living in a contested border region.
  2. Blend in. Don’t flash expensive watches, cameras, or cash. Ostentation attracts opportunists everywhere.
  3. Use registered transport at night. Ride-hailing apps and hotel-called taxis over flagging random cars.
  4. Secure your property. Especially if you’ll be away part of the year. A trusted local caretaker is worth every peso.
  5. Learn some Spanish. The ability to understand what’s happening around you and to de-escalate is a real safety asset.

The Honest US/Canada Comparison

Here’s what nobody wants to say plainly: for the specific expat life most people are planning — settling in a safe state, in a decent neighborhood, living an ordinary daily routine — you are likely no less safe, and often safer, than you were back home.

A retiree in Mérida faces lower homicide risk than in most US metros. The mass-shooting phenomenon that shapes American public life essentially doesn’t exist here. What you trade is a familiar system for an unfamiliar one — different police, different legal recourse, a language barrier — and that unfamiliarity feels like risk even when the statistics say otherwise.

That psychological gap is real and worth naming. It’s not that the danger is higher; it’s that when something does go wrong, you’re navigating it in a second language and a foreign bureaucracy. That’s a legitimate reason to prepare — good insurance, a local network, some Spanish — rather than a reason to stay away.

Women, Solo Travelers, and Retirees: A Note

The generic “is it safe” question hides some real differences by situation, and it’s worth being specific:

  • Solo women report that Yucatán and Mérida in particular feel notably comfortable — walkable at night in good areas, low harassment relative to many large cities worldwide. Ordinary big-city caution still applies, especially in nightlife zones, but the baseline is reassuring.
  • Retirees are the largest expat cohort in the safe states precisely because daily life there is calm and predictable. The main risks skew toward property (burglary of empty homes) and scams (real-estate and financial), not personal violence.
  • Families overwhelmingly gravitate to Mérida, Querétaro, and similar safe-state cities, where schools, healthcare, and low crime line up. Many parents describe letting kids have more independence than they would back home.

The point is that “safe for whom, doing what” produces a more useful answer than a single national verdict ever could.

Getting Reliable Local Information

One underrated safety skill is knowing where to get your information once you’re on the ground:

  1. Local expat groups (neighborhood and city-specific) are gold for real-time, block-level knowledge — which streets to avoid, which developments have had break-ins, which services are trustworthy.
  2. Your neighbors. Long-time local residents know the texture of an area far better than any statistic. Cultivate those relationships early.
  3. Official advisories with a grain of salt. Government travel advisories are issued at the state level and can lump a huge, varied state under one warning. Read them, but understand they rarely reflect the specific city or neighborhood you’re considering.
  4. Ignore the fear-porn. Sensational social-media clips and clickbait “Mexico horror” content are engineered for engagement, not accuracy. They tell you nothing about daily life in a safe colonia.

What About the Drive Down and Border Regions?

A specific worry deserves a specific answer: many expats picture the northern border and its associated headlines. It’s true that some border-state corridors carry genuine risk tied to trafficking routes. But this has almost nothing to do with life in a safe interior or southern state hundreds of miles away.

  • Flying in sidesteps the question entirely — most expats never touch the northern border.
  • Driving down is done safely by thousands of people every year by sticking to main toll highways (cuotas), driving only in daylight, and not lingering in high-risk corridors. It requires planning, not courage.
  • Once you’re settled in a safe state, the border’s dynamics are as relevant to your daily life as a distant city’s crime rate would be back home — which is to say, not very.

Don’t let the geography of a few contested corridors define your picture of a country the size of Western Europe.

The Bottom Line

Mexico is not uniformly dangerous, and it is not uniformly safe. It is a country where where you choose to live is the single biggest safety decision you’ll make. Choose one of the safe states — with Yucatán at the top of the list — apply the ordinary common sense you’d use anywhere, and your day-to-day risk is genuinely low.

The fear-mongering headlines are describing a real Mexico, but not your Mexico. And the “it’s all totally fine” crowd is glossing over risks worth managing. The grown-up answer sits in between, and it points clearly toward the calm, safe corners of the country where most sensible expats end up.

Want a Straight Answer for Your Situation?

Safety questions are personal — they depend on where you’re coming from, where you’re headed, and how you plan to live. If you’d like an honest, unhyped conversation about the safety picture for a specific city or neighborhood you’re considering, the Mexico Living team is glad to talk it through by call or WhatsApp. We’ll give you the real read, not a sales pitch.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.

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