How to set up electricity, water, LP gas, and internet in a new home in Mexico in 2026 — CFE, JAPAY, Telmex, Izzi, Totalplay, putting accounts in your name, deposits, and realistic timelines.
2026-07-11
You’ve found the house or apartment. The keys are in your hand. Now comes the unglamorous but essential part of settling in Mexico: getting the electricity, water, gas, and internet working and, ideally, in your own name. The process is very doable, but it runs on Mexican paperwork logic, and a little preparation saves a lot of frustration.
Here’s how each utility actually works, city-agnostic where possible and with Yucatán specifics where they apply.
Electricity across Mexico is supplied by the CFE (Comisión Federal de Electricidad), a government monopoly. There’s only one provider, so there’s no shopping around.
Key things to know:
To put CFE in your name (cambio de titular / cambio de nombre):
Practical tips:
Water is municipal, so the provider and rules depend on your city. In Yucatán, the state provider is JAPAY (Junta de Agua Potable y Alcantarillado de Yucatán). Other cities have their own agencies (e.g., SACMEX in Mexico City, SIAPA in Guadalajara).
What to expect:
Most Mexican homes cook and heat water with LP gas (gas LP), not natural gas or electricity. There are two systems:
| System | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Estacionario (stationary tank) | Fixed tank refilled by a truck; you call or use an app | Houses, higher usage; cheaper per liter |
| Cilindro (portable cylinder) | Swap-out bottles delivered by truck | Apartments, low usage |
How to manage it:
This is where you finally get to choose a provider. The three national players:
| Provider | Strengths | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Telmex (Infinitum) | Widest coverage, reaches smaller towns | Older copper lines in some areas; speeds vary |
| Totalplay | Fastest fiber, great for remote work | Coverage limited to fiber zones; customer service mixed |
| Izzi | Good bundles with TV | Coverage patchy outside cable areas |
Regional and smaller fiber ISPs also exist and are sometimes the best local option — ask neighbors what actually works on your street.
To set up internet:
Remote workers: if your income depends on connectivity, get a backup. Options include a second provider, a mobile hotspot on a different carrier (Telcel has the best coverage), or Starlink, which is widely available in Mexico and a lifesaver in rural areas.
| Utility | Time to set up | Deposit? |
|---|---|---|
| CFE (electricity) | Same day to a few days for name change; may already be active | Usually none for name change |
| Water | Same day to a week | Minimal or none |
| LP gas | Same day (just call for a fill) | None; you pay per fill |
| Internet | 3-10 business days | Sometimes first month + install |
If you’re renting, many of these will already be active in the landlord’s or previous tenant’s name — decide with your landlord whether to transfer them or leave them as-is and reimburse.
A few things aren’t “utilities” in the strict sense but belong on your move-in checklist:
Setting up utilities in Mexico is straightforward once you know the players: CFE for electricity (mind the DAC tier), your local municipal provider like JAPAY for water (and buy garrafones to drink), LP gas by tank or cylinder, and a fiber ISP like Telmex, Totalplay, or Izzi for internet. Gather your ID, residency card, and a recent bill, and most of it can be done in a week.
If you’re setting up a home in Mexico and want a checklist tailored to your city — or a warm handoff to reliable local providers — Mexico Living is glad to help. Message us on WhatsApp at https://wa.me/5219993788084 or reach out through mexicoliving.mx/contacto. We’ve turned on the lights in more than one new home and we’ll help you skip the headaches.
Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.
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