
Mexico is one of the world’s most important automotive production hubs. The automotive industry accounts for approximately 7.5% of GDP and is a core pillar of the manufacturing sector. In 2024, foreign direct investment (FDI) in transportation equipment accounted for 50% of total investment in Mexico. The auto industry contributes 4.5% of GDP, 31% of manufacturing exports, and significant foreign exchange earnings (22% more than remittances and tourism combined).
In terms of market size, Mexico is the world’s fourth-largest auto parts producer and exporter. Its share of total U.S. auto parts imports has continued to rise, reaching 44.67% in Q1 2026, ranking first. In January 2026, Mexico’s auto parts production value reached US$8.79 billion, generating a trade surplus of US$3.78 billion.
Growth forecasts:
All three segments are on a steady growth trajectory. Overall market summary (2024): Approx. US$100 billion, and the aftermarket (replacement + tuning) exceeding US$15 billion, growing faster.
Mexico is a North American manufacturing hub, hosting 37 OEM plants from global brands (GM, Ford, VW, Toyota, Nissan, Audi, BMW, etc.), forming a highly concentrated industrial cluster. Auto parts production is highly concentrated in Coahuila, Guanajuato, Nuevo León, etc. The top three states account for ~42% of national output; top ten states account for 86.7%. The stable procurement demand from OEMs forms the fundamental base of Mexico’s auto parts market.
In Q1 2026, local procurement demand exceeded 1,100 items, worth over US$8.8 billion, up 18% YoY. This growth is closely tied to the upcoming six-year review of the USMCA – OEMs are proactively increasing regional content to meet rules of origin pressure.
Breakdown by category (January 2026 production value, top five):
The aftermarket demand base is extremely solid, driven by:
Chinese brands account for ~10% of new car sales in Mexico, but only 1.2% of the total vehicle parc (4.5% for commercial vehicles). The stock market remains dominated by traditional brands – meaning aftermarket demand is still largely for conventional parts and repair services. Demand for Chinese-brand vehicle parts will be a medium-to-long-term incremental story.
Mexico is at a structural inflection point from ICE to electrification. In 2024, new energy vehicle (NEV) production doubled to 220,000 units. By 2026, BEV+PHEV are expected to account for 28.6% of Mexico’s total production (was 18.9% in 2024). By 2030, Mexico is expected to account for over 60% of total EV demand in Latin America.
The structural shift is already visible:
Mexico is moving from traditional strengths (seats, glass, interiors) toward high-value electrical products (thermal management, lightweight structures, electronic modules, battery systems). By end-2025, passenger car EV penetration was ~6.1%, expected to reach 10.6% in 2026 – each 1 percentage point increase corresponds to hundreds of millions of dollars in new parts demand.
USMCA (effective 2020, replacing NAFTA) introduced new rules: auto parts must meet 75% North American regional content for zero tariff (up from 62.5% under NAFTA), plus 40%-45% of auto value must be produced by workers earning at least US$16/hour. These rules directly pressure Chinese parts suppliers relying on exports.
The ongoing USMCA six-year review (outcomes expected to affect 2026-2032) is the most critical variable. Industry associations explicitly state that market growth in 2026 will be directly determined by the USMCA review results.
Additionally, Mexico has been raising tariff barriers:
As a result, Chinese auto parts exports to Mexico face direct cost pressure. Mexico also launched a trade/investment barrier investigation against Chinese restrictive measures in September 2025.
Tariff pressure is already visible in capital flows: FDI in Mexico’s auto parts sector declined 5.2% in 2025 to US$2.3 billion. At the same time, Mexico is vigorously promoting import substitution – in Q1 2026, local supplier demand from the auto industry grew 18% YoY, which will fundamentally reshape parts import demand in the coming years.
Mexico’s auto parts market exhibits three simultaneous characteristics:
Implications for Chinese suppliers: Direct exports to Mexico face rising tariff pressure and local substitution. In the long term, exporting directly will become increasingly unsustainable. Setting up manufacturing facilities in Mexico and integrating into the USMCA regional supply chain will be the necessary path to access both Mexico and the broader North American market.
Chinese companies are already accelerating local investment – Zhejiang Rongtai, Jintai Tai’an, Zhongding Group, Tongling Technology, among others, have established production bases in Mexico, marking a strategic shift from “product export” to “capacity export” for Chinese auto parts enterprises.