Residential Lease Requirements in Mexico
Know the legal requirements for a residential lease agreement in Mexico under the Federal Civil Code: written form, the role of a guarantor (Aval), and Legal...
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Ce contenu est fourni à titre d'information générale et éducative uniquement. Il ne constitue pas un avis juridique et ne doit pas être considéré comme tel. Les lois changent fréquemment – vérifiez toujours la réglementation en vigueur et consultez un avocat agréé dans votre juridiction pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques à votre situation. Landager est une plateforme de gestion immobilière, pas un cabinet d'avocats.Informations vérifiées pour la dernière fois le : March 2026.
A written agreement in Mexico is not merely an optional formality for your peace of mind; it is a strict legal obligation for the landlord. Residential leasing heavily favors the social character of housing, meaning informality massively advantages the tenant before any court. Strong contractual shielding from the outset is therefore demanded.
1. The Written Format (Art. 2406)
Under Article 2406 of the Federal Civil Code, the lease agreement must be granted in writing. The lack of this formality is "imputed to the landlord" (arrendador) by default in courts. This means if there is no written lease and a conflict occurs, the law grants the tenant's declarations (the "weaker" party) a greater presumption of veracity when alleging verbal rent amounts or other agreements, until the property owner proves otherwise (a very difficult task).
The indispensable minimum elements the contract must contain are:
- The names of the landlord (arrendador) and the tenant (arrendatario).
- The precise location and description of the property.
- The precise rent amount, fixed base dates, and form of payment (usually the first 5 days of the month by SPEI bank transfer to maintain a trail).
- The fee imposed as a security deposit.
- The central object of the agreement (e.g., "for exclusive use as residential housing").
2. Term of the Lease
Unlike commercial leasing contracts (which face extreme prolongation regulations up to decades), urban residential properties in Mexico are famously agreed upon unmovably for a period of one (1) obligatory year. Although it's entirely feasible to propose agreements for 6 months or other spans if the parties agree. Renewing requires generating and signing an Addendum reflecting its respective inflationary adjustment (frequently validated by a Póliza Jurídica and the same joint guarantor).
3. The Solidary Guarantor ("Aval" or "Fiador")
Demanding a guarantor (or "Fiador" with real estate) is the number one traditional market rule in Mexico. Because the institutional judicial framework of the country complicates rapid eviction, and credit inquiries are reserved mainly for the banking world (Credit Bureau Scores), landlords prefer as a guarantor:
- An individual who owns a lien-free real estate property within the same region/city (or "State"), whose information is duly registered in the Public Registry of Property.
- In robust contracts, the guarantor's property will operatively serve as the solid bond that will judicially respond in the event of the tenant's default.
4. Guarantor Replacement: The Legal Policy (Póliza Jurídica)
Faced with the impossibility for many residents and foreign executives to name a solidary guarantor with local properties, the use of administrative firms known as Lease Legal Policies (Pólizas Jurídicas de Arrendamiento) is now a standardized substitute. Upon paying the contract policy (usually equivalent to 30% to 50% of a month's rent):
- The Policy Company investigates and assumes the financial expertise, credit, or penal background checks, issuing an actionable approval.
- If the tenant stops paying rent, the policy immediately assumes a pre-constituted liability covering the fees for legal eviction trials without needing to charge the landlord a single peso for those services (or even covering profitability reimbursement if the policy was "premium/comprehensive").
5. Promissory Notes and Extra Signatures (Considerations)
Although in the past landlords required "blank signed promissory notes" (Pagarés) adjacent to the month-to-month lease (e.g., a dozen notes for 12 months), current theses and criteria of the judicial branch advise against it. Promissory notes derive into a problem of "double via" or duplicity, opposing them as executive civil judgments disadvantaged by the contract itself. A good practice focuses firmly on an approved "Transactions Agreement" and the aforementioned Póliza Jurídica.
Back to Mexico Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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