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Property Taxes in Mexico: Predial, Rental Income, and Capital Gains, Plainly

The short answer: annual property tax in Mexico (predial) is famously low, most owners on this coast pay a few hundred dollars a year, not the thousands you know from the US or Canada. Rental income is taxed and worth doing properly with an accountant. Capital gains when you sell run either 25 percent of the gross sale or up to 35 percent of the net gain, your choice of method, calculated by the notario. All figures here are orientational; your notario and accountant give exact ones.

Taxes are where I most insist on the line between orientation and advice. This page orients. Your professionals advise. Here is the honest map.

Predial: the pleasant surprise

The annual property tax is calculated on the cadastral value, an official assessment that typically runs below market value. Effective rates in this region are a fraction of a percent. In practice, owners of even substantial coastal homes commonly pay the equivalent of a few hundred dollars a year, and municipalities offer a meaningful discount for paying early in January. For Americans used to one to two percent of market value every year, this single line changes the total cost of ownership math more than people expect. It is the quiet superpower of owning here.

Rental income: real obligations, manageable ones

If you rent your property, short or long term, that income is taxable in Mexico, and the state adds a small lodging tax on short-term stays that platforms and managers typically collect. If you are American or Canadian, the income is also reportable at home, with treaty credits preventing double taxation when it is done right. The phrase that matters: done right. A cross-border accountant who handles owners on this coast will set you up once, cleanly, and the system runs. What I will not do is quote you rates and thresholds in a chat, because they shift with your residency, your structure, and the year. Orientation: budget for taxes on rental income, hire the accountant, sleep well.

Capital gains when you sell

Foreign sellers choose between two methods: roughly 25 percent of the gross declared sale value, or up to 35 percent of the net gain after documented costs, improvements with official invoices, and commissions. The notario runs both calculations and applies the better one. Two practical notes that save real money later: keep official invoices (facturas) for every improvement you make, and remember the deed registered in pesos on your closing day, so exchange-rate movement affects the math. There is a primary-residence exemption in Mexican law, but it generally requires Mexican tax residency, so most foreign owners should not count on it without professional confirmation.

The honest summary

Owning costs little. Renting pays but wants an accountant. Selling has a real tax moment that good record-keeping softens. None of it is a reason to hesitate; all of it is a reason to set things up properly in the first month.

Want to understand the full carrying cost of a place you are considering, taxes included, in ballpark terms? Tell me the town and the price range in the chat and I will sketch it honestly. Free, and in confidence.

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