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Buyers pursuing mergers & acquisitions Mexico transactions in the mining sector face a materially altered risk landscape in 2026. Three concurrent reforms, the Paquete Económico 2026 (introducing corporate tax code amendments), the Ley Aduanera amendments (reshaping customs obligations for importers), and the SAT Regularización Fiscal program (offering limited-window remediation for historic tax non-compliance), create overlapping exposures that directly affect deal valuations, indemnity structures and closing conditionality. This article provides a transaction-level legal roadmap for in-house M&A teams, CFOs and general counsels evaluating or structuring mining M&A Mexico deals, covering targeted due diligence, contractual protections and post-close remediation strategies calibrated to the 2026 regulatory environment.
The central question for any acquirer of Mexican mining assets in 2026 is whether the target carries undisclosed or under-provisioned tax and customs liabilities that could erode deal value by a significant margin after closing. With the federal government intensifying enforcement, recovering mining concessions, broadening customs audit powers and tightening corporate tax compliance windows, the answer depends entirely on the quality of pre-signing diligence and the robustness of contractual protections.
Buyers should adopt a three-step immediate action plan:
The sections below provide the detailed playbook for each step, including checklists, comparison tables and sample contractual language suitable for mining M&A Mexico transactions.
Three pillars of the 2026 reform agenda converge to create new risk for acquirers. The Paquete Económico 2026, presented by the Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público (SHCP), introduced amendments to the Código Fiscal de la Federación (CFF), the Ley del Impuesto sobre la Renta (LISR) and the Ley de Ingresos de la Federación (LIF) that tighten reporting obligations, expand transfer-pricing scrutiny and adjust treatment of certain mining royalties and deductions. Concurrently, the Diario Oficial de la Federación (DOF) published a decree reforming, adding to and repealing various provisions of the Ley Aduanera, strengthening customs audit and penalty provisions for importers.
Finally, the SAT launched its Regularización Fiscal program, offering qualifying taxpayers a limited remediation window to resolve historic non-compliance, a mechanism with direct implications for mining deal structuring.
| Reform | Key Change | Key Due-Diligence Action |
|---|---|---|
| Paquete Económico 2026 (CFF / LISR / LIF amendments) | Expanded transfer-pricing documentation; adjusted mining-royalty deductibility; tighter electronic-invoicing (CFDI) requirements | Verify target’s tax returns, CFDI compliance and transfer-pricing files for the last five fiscal years; model deferred-tax impact of deductibility changes |
| Ley Aduanera amendments (DOF decree) | Enhanced customs audit powers; new obligations for bonded-warehouse operators; revised penalty matrix for import classification errors | Audit all active and historic import pedimentos; confirm customs-bond adequacy; search for outstanding customs liens or penalty proceedings |
| SAT Regularización Fiscal 2026 | Voluntary compliance program with defined eligibility thresholds; partial penalty and surcharge relief for qualifying taxpayers | Determine whether target or its subsidiaries are eligible; assess whether buyer can rely on seller’s regularization as a pre-close condition or post-close remedy |
Industry observers expect these reforms to generate a measurable uptick in SAT and customs enforcement actions throughout 2026, particularly in sectors, such as mining, with complex cross-border supply chains and significant import volumes.
The Paquete Económico 2026 introduces changes that can materially shift the economics of a mining acquisition. Practitioner analyses from leading advisory firms highlight three primary valuation impacts: (a) adjustments to the deductibility of certain mining-specific expenditures that increase effective tax rates on target operations, (b) expanded transfer-pricing documentation requirements that expose historic intercompany pricing to greater SAT scrutiny, and (c) stricter electronic-invoicing compliance that can trigger penalties for missing or defective CFDIs in prior periods.
For buyers, the practical effect is that the deferred-tax liability line in any financial model must be stress-tested against the new rules. Consider a simplified scenario: a target mining company reports annual EBITDA of MXN 500 million. Due diligence uncovers that MXN 80 million in mining-related deductions claimed over the prior three fiscal years may be disallowed under the 2026 amendments. At a combined federal and state effective tax rate of approximately 30%, the contingent tax liability (excluding penalties and surcharges) amounts to roughly MXN 24 million, a figure that could represent a meaningful percentage of enterprise value in a mid-market deal.
This type of exposure demands specific contractual treatment. Typical buyer protections in mergers & acquisitions Mexico deals now include:
The likely practical effect of the 2026 reforms will be to lengthen diligence timelines and increase the proportion of deal value held in escrow or subject to holdback, trends already visible in mining M&A Mexico transactions closed in early 2026.
The Ley Aduanera amendments published in the DOF expand customs authorities’ audit and enforcement toolkit, making historic customs non-compliance a more immediate and costly risk for acquirers. In a share-deal structure, the most common format for mining M&A Mexico transactions, the buyer inherits the target entity together with all its customs obligations, including underpaid duties, misclassified imports under the TIGIE (Tarifa de la Ley de los Impuestos Generales de Importación y de Exportación), unpaid compensatory duties, and bonded-warehouse irregularities.
Mining operations are particularly exposed because they typically import high-value capital equipment, explosives, chemical reagents and specialised spare parts, categories where tariff classification errors are common and duty differentials between headings can be significant. The 2026 amendments introduce enhanced penalties for classification errors discovered during post-importation audits and extend the period within which customs authorities can review and reassess duties on certain categories of goods.
Buyers should take three immediate actions:
Sample contractual language for customs indemnity provisions should include:
| Entity Type | Typical Customs Exposures | Typical Tax Exposures |
|---|---|---|
| Mexican subsidiary (share deal) | Full successor liability for all historic import duties, penalties and bonded-warehouse obligations; buyer inherits pending customs audits | Full successor liability for corporate income tax, VAT, payroll taxes and withholding obligations; existing SAT audit proceedings transfer with entity |
| Foreign SPV holding Mexican assets (share deal at SPV level) | Indirect exposure through the Mexican operating subsidiary; cross-border supply-chain arrangements may create customs agent joint-liability risk | Capital-gains tax on share transfer (buyer withholding obligation); transfer-pricing risk on intercompany arrangements between SPV and Mexican sub |
| Branch or permanent establishment | Direct liability for all imports conducted through the branch; customs brokers may have joint liability | Income attributed to the PE subject to Mexican corporate tax; risk of SAT recharacterisation of branch activities to expand taxable base |
This table serves as a negotiation checklist: for each entity type in a transaction structure, counsel should map the corresponding exposures and ensure they are covered by the appropriate representations, indemnities and escrow mechanisms.
Effective due diligence for mining M&A Mexico transactions in 2026 requires a structured, sector-specific approach that goes well beyond a generic corporate checklist. The following categories and items represent priority areas, calibrated to the current regulatory environment.
Corporate and title (mining concessions):
Fiscal and tax:
Customs and supply chain:
Environmental and community liabilities:
Permits, royalties and project finance mining liens:
Any one of these red flags should trigger an escalation to deal leadership and, in most cases, a specific contractual remedy (indemnity, escrow or closing condition).
Robust contractual architecture is the buyer’s primary defence against the regulatory risks outlined above. For mining deals in 2026, the following drafting checklist reflects current best practice:
Representations and warranties:
Survival periods: In mining M&A Mexico transactions, fundamental representations (tax, title, environmental) should survive for at least the applicable statute of limitations, typically five years under the CFF for tax matters. Industry observers expect that the heightened enforcement environment of 2026 will push buyers to negotiate extended survival periods where possible.
Indemnity mechanics:
Escrow and holdback provisions:
Representations and warranties (R&W) insurance: The Mexican R&W insurance market has matured, but policies in the mining sector carry higher premiums and more exclusions, particularly around environmental and title risks. Early indications suggest that underwriters are also scrutinising tax and customs exposures more carefully following the 2026 reforms. Buyers should obtain insurance quotes early in the deal process and treat R&W insurance as a complement to, not a substitute for, robust escrow and indemnity provisions.
When a buyer discovers historic non-compliance after closing, the 2026 regulatory landscape offers several remediation pathways, but each carries conditions and limitations that must be understood in advance.
SAT Regularización Fiscal program: The SAT’s voluntary compliance program permits qualifying taxpayers to regularise historic tax liabilities with partial relief from penalties and surcharges. Eligibility depends on meeting defined thresholds published in the SAT’s program rules and FAQ documentation. Critically, for M&A purposes, the buyer must determine whether the acquired entity (not the buyer itself) meets the eligibility criteria, and whether participation in the program would foreclose other remedies (such as administrative appeals). The program has defined enrollment windows, making timing a key consideration for post-close remediation planning.
Administrative appeals and litigation: For exposures that fall outside the SAT regularization program, or where the buyer determines that the target has strong substantive defences, administrative appeals (recurso de revocación) and tax litigation before the Tribunal Federal de Justicia Administrativa remain available. These processes are time-consuming (typically 12–24 months for a first-instance resolution) and require experienced Mexican tax litigation counsel.
Customs remediation: Under the amended Ley Aduanera, importers can in certain circumstances rectify tariff classification errors through a rectificación de pedimento process, paying the differential duties plus applicable surcharges. This mechanism is more limited in scope than the SAT program and does not extend to cases involving fraud or wilful misclassification. Buyers should map all customs exposures identified in diligence to the appropriate remediation pathway before closing.
Indemnity recovery: Where the buyer remediates a historic exposure using any of these mechanisms, the cost incurred should be recoverable under the seller’s indemnity obligation. The purchase agreement should expressly provide that remediation costs, including professional fees, duties, taxes, penalties and surcharges, constitute indemnifiable losses, and that the buyer has the right to draw on the escrow to fund remediation pending resolution of any indemnity claim.
The closing process for a mining M&A Mexico transaction in 2026 should incorporate the following deliverables and conditions precedent:
Each deliverable should be listed as a closing condition, with the buyer retaining the right to defer closing if any condition remains unsatisfied.
The 2026 regulatory environment in Mexico demands a higher standard of diligence and more sophisticated contractual protection than prior deal cycles. Buyers pursuing mining M&A Mexico transactions should immediately: (a) engage specialist tax, customs and mining counsel to scope transaction-specific exposures against the Paquete Económico 2026 amendments, the Ley Aduanera reforms and the SAT regularization program; (b) build a deal timeline that accounts for the lengthened diligence and remediation windows these reforms require; and (c) ensure that their purchase agreements include the full suite of protections, fundamental tax and customs representations with extended survival, dollar-one indemnities for identified exposures, appropriately sized escrows with milestone-based release triggers, and post-close cooperation covenants that facilitate remediation.
In this environment, the cost of inadequate preparation is not merely theoretical, it is quantifiable and, increasingly, material.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Enrique Rodríguez del Bosque at RB Abogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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