Mexico Posts Record $23.6Bn In Foreign Direct Investment For First Quarter
Key Facts
- The figure: Mexico drew $23.591 billion in foreign direct investment in the first quarter of 2026, a record for any first quarter since records began in 1999.
- The growth: The total was up 10.4% on the same period of 2025, the Economy Ministry reported.
- The composition: Reinvested earnings made up the bulk at $22.222 billion, up 33%, while genuinely new investment was $1.705 billion, up 7.5%.
- The sources: The United States led with $10.21 billion, followed by Spain, Australia, Japan and Canada; the five together accounted for 73.5%.
- The caveat: Officials warned that domestic private investment remains weak, with business confidence below its 2024 level.
Mexico posted a record Mexico Q1 FDI figure of $23.591 billion in the first three months of 2026, the highest first-quarter total since records began in 1999 and a 10.4% rise on a year earlier. But the headline conceals a more cautious story: almost all of it was reinvested earnings from companies already in Mexico, while new capital and domestic private investment lagged.
What is behind the record Mexico Q1 FDI numberThe Economy Ministry reported the $23.591 billion total at a press conference, calling it unprecedented for a comparable period and a 10.4% increase over the preliminary $21.373 billion recorded in the first quarter of 2025. Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard presented the figures.
Mexico City remained the top destination state, followed by the State of Mexico, Nuevo León, Baja California and Jalisco. The government framed the result as confirmation of long-term confidence in the Mexican economy, particularly from investors integrated into North American supply chains.
The composition of the Mexico Q1 FDI inflowThe structure of the inflow matters as much as its size. Reinvested earnings, profits that existing foreign-owned companies chose to plough back into their Mexican operations rather than repatriate, rose 33% to $22.222 billion and made up the overwhelming majority of the total.
Genuinely new investment, money entering the country for the first time, came to just $1.705 billion. That figure did grow 7.5% year on year, but its small share signals that the record total reflects companies already present deepening their commitment, rather than a wave of fresh entrants.
Where the money came from and wentThe United States stayed the dominant source at $10.21 billion, a 23.6% annual rise, followed by Spain at $3.804 billion, Australia at $1.446 billion, Japan at $985 million and Canada at $894 million. Together the five accounted for 73.5% of the total.
By sector, financial services and insurance drew the most at $6.851 billion, up 28.8%, while vehicle manufacturing took in $4.033 billion, up 20.4%, and mining $3.034 billion, up 39.7%. Construction nearly doubled, and transport, postal and storage investment more than doubled, pointing to infrastructure as a fast-growing magnet.
The weak spot: domestic confidenceAnalysts flagged a less favorable counterpoint in national private investment. A business-expectations survey found only 40% of executives considered it a good moment to invest in Mexico, down from 54.4% in the first half of 2024.
The concern, as one analysis put it, is that foreign investment helps but does not substitute for domestic confidence. For Mexico to turn the moment into sustained growth, foreign and domestic private investment would need to move in the same direction, rather than one masking weakness in the other.
The trade backdropThe investment figures landed alongside a reported trade surplus, with officials noting Mexico exported more than it imported in the period. The Economy Ministry tied the inflows to Mexico's strategic role within North American economic integration and the certainty investors attach to that framework.
Ebrard noted that preliminary talks with United States representatives were taking place, ahead of the Mexican delegation travelling to Washington, situating the investment data within the wider trade-negotiation calendar.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much foreign investment did Mexico attract?$23.591 billion in the first quarter of 2026, a record for any first quarter since records began in 1999, up 10.4% year on year.
Was most of it new investment?No. Reinvested earnings accounted for $22.222 billion. New investment was only $1.705 billion, so the record reflects existing companies expanding rather than newcomers.
Which countries invested the most?The United States led with $10.21 billion, followed by Spain, Australia, Japan and Canada. The five together made up 73.5% of the total.
What is the main concern?Weak domestic private investment. Only 40% of executives in one survey saw it as a good moment to invest, down from 54.4% in early 2024.
Connected Coverage
For the wider context, see our analysis of whether Mexico's nearshoring boom is reaching workers and our coverage of the Banxico 2026 growth forecast.
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