Maintenance and Habitability: Rental Laws in Mexico
Obligations dictated by the Federal Civil Code regarding property maintenance, the civil concept of habitability, and necessary versus minor repairs.
Avis de non-responsabilité légale
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.
Ensuring structural hygiene and the conservation of a dwelling in Mexico is not a conceptual void; it is directly protected by the Federal Civil Code. The divide between "Necessary Repairs" and "Wear and Tear Repairs" usually creates friction, and the dividing line rests on who must pay for them.
1. The General Obligation of Habitability (Art. 2412)
Article 2412 of the Federal Civil Code, fraction II, is commanding as it asserts that the lessee (landlord or "arrendador") is strictly obligated:
"To conserve the leased item in the same state, during the lease, making for this purpose all necessary repairs."
From this article originates the legal notion of "habitability" in Mexico. The rented property must at all times fully retain "the aptitude to serve or yield for what it was contracted" - which in this case, is simply secure lodging for human use. What are known as "Major/Structural Repairs" must be covered 100% by the landlord.
These include but are not strictly limited to:
- A collapse or dangerous thick fissures in walls (e.g., caused by settling or earthquakes, or original builder defects).
- Master building plumbing irreversibly damaged and soil pipe leakages that generate unsanitary conditions.
- Systemic leakage of a master natural gas supply line (before reaching the burners).
- Massive hurricane damage to slabs and roofing, leading to imminent water infiltration (waterproofing the roof shell).
2. Tenant Responsibilities ("Minor Repairs")
Article 2444 of the Federal Code states inversely that the tenant ("arrendatario") is responsible for paying or reimbursing for work the leased units imperatively demand stemming from proper and recurrent normal use by the individual or deteriorations created by the tenant’s provable negligence or that of their associates (also called "deteriorations of little importance").
Examples of these fall under:
- Regularly burned-out light bulbs or lamps.
- Gaskets and seals cracked by time in sink faucets or mechanical looseness in toilet hardware.
- Minor maintenance, repainting, and deep general cleaning of dirty AC systems obstructed by the individual.
- Repairing burns to furniture or floors caused by their negligence.
The Obligation to Notify (Art. 2415)!
It is an unavoidable obligation of the tenant to provide entirely on their "absolute and own account all due notice to the landlord, and as soon as possible, of any urgency for those repairs", under severe pecuniary penalties and negligence charges. The individual becomes unavoidably responsible for additional resulting damages due to their own omission in notifying (e.g., knowingly leaving large drips for weeks in the toilets, damaging underlying walls or another unit below).
3. Validated Withholding of Rent (Notice and Reimbursement)
Mexico establishes very strong explicit rights. If the landlord and owners were pertinently notified and ignored an urgent repair fully within their competence and obligational habitability, and the lack of a resolution resulted in partially or gravely preventing the right to use their home (e.g., totally lacking water supply pipes): the Tenant has the faculty to rescind without the slightest penalty, or realistically, to appear personally with a certified receipt in courts (via Jurisdicción Voluntaria) to consign the exact money of their rent payment in deposit. This is placed in favor uniquely of the necessary repair, judicially deducting the consequent exigible, validly demonstrated, and verifiable expenses against what is owed for that month's rent. However, valid notarial means or the appropriate legal avenue must be used (not a capricious solitary omission that originates arrears). Therefore, ignoring reports legally puts an owner's income at latent risk of justified withholdings by a judge.
Back to Mexico Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Források és hivatalos hivatkozások
📬 Soyez informé lorsque ces lois changent
Nous vous enverrons un e-mail lorsque les lois sur les propriétaires et les locataires seront mises à jour dans Pas de spam — uniquement des changements de loi.




