Deputies approve 40-hour labor reform in committees

Mexico's Chamber of Deputies advanced the reform to reduce the workweek from 48 to 40 hours, approved unanimously in united committees. The measure will be implemented gradually until 2030, without salary cuts. While it does not include two rest days, it garners bipartisan support amid debates on further adjustments.

On Monday, the united commissions of Constitutional Points and Labor and Social Welfare of Mexico's Chamber of Deputies approved the labor reform proposal without changes, presented by President Claudia Sheinbaum. The initiative received unanimous support from the 61 deputies present and sets a gradual reduction of the workweek: 48 hours in 2026; 46 in 2027; 44 in 2028; 42 in 2029; and 40 hours in 2030, without cuts to wages, salaries, or benefits.

The reform maintains that for every six days of work, employees will have at least one day of rest with full pay. This point sparked debate, as the opposition, including PAN, PRI, and Movimiento Ciudadano, insisted on recognizing two rest days for five workdays, plus incentives to mitigate impacts on employment and productivity. Meanwhile, Morena, PT, and PVEM defended the gradual approach to allow sector-specific adjustments without affecting salaries.

Labor and Social Welfare Secretary Marath Bolaños backed the proposal and announced an electronic system to monitor compliance once in effect. He detailed that overtime will be paid at 100 percent additional, limited to 12 hours per week (distributed up to four hours daily over a maximum of four days), and double if exceeded. The rule prohibits overtime for those under 18.

In context, Tereso Medina Ramírez recently assumed the presidency of the Confederación de Trabajadores de México (CTM) for the 2026-2032 period, committing to defend this reform, strengthen real wages, and engage in dialogue with Sheinbaum's government and the private sector. Elected at the CTM's XVII National Congress before over 4.5 million affiliates, Medina will also advocate for improvements in health, housing, and tax reviews on benefits like year-end bonuses.

The opinion will be discussed in the full San Lázaro Plenary, where reservations and modifications will be presented. Bolaños highlighted prior labor advances, such as minimum wage increases and the elimination of abusive outsourcing.

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Mexican senators applauding in the Senate chamber after approving the 40-hour workweek reform.
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Senate approves reform to 40-hour workweek

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Mexico's Senate approved a constitutional reform on February 11, 2026, reducing the weekly workweek from 48 to 40 hours, with gradual implementation until 2030. The initiative, proposed by President Claudia Sheinbaum, passed by majority and was sent immediately to the Chamber of Deputies. It preserves one day off per six worked, without salary cuts.

Mexico's Chamber of Deputies approved the constitutional reform to reduce the work week to 40 hours, with gradual implementation until 2030. The proposal, driven by President Claudia Sheinbaum, received unanimous support in committees and sets rules for overtime and rest days. During the debate, Movimiento Ciudadano lawmakers criticized delays in other labor reforms and proposed extending deputies' work hours, an initiative that was rejected.

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Following congressional approval, President Claudia Sheinbaum signed a decree published March 3, 2026, in the Official Gazette, gradually reducing Mexico's workweek from 48 to 40 hours by 2030 without salary cuts. It mandates one paid day off per six worked, redefines overtime pay, and requires secondary law amendments within 90 days, prompting companies like Soriana and Walmart to adjust operations amid projected labor cost increases.

Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez asked lawmakers from the Labor Party and Morena for support on key reforms, including perfecting the electoral system and reducing the workday to 40 hours. At plenary meetings, she stressed that the electoral initiative will be nourished by the people's voice. Economic challenges ahead of the 2026 T-MEC review were also discussed.

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Chamber president Hugo Motta forwarded a PEC to the CCJ on Monday (9) to end the 6x1 work scale, a Lula government priority. He argued the discussion is unavoidable and started late in the country. The debate intensifies with an Ipea study on work hours reduction.

The Argentine government estimates it has secured the support of five governors to pass the labor reform, while businesses negotiate changes with Senator Patricia Bullrich to avoid judicial challenges. The bill, aimed at modernizing labor legislation, will be debated in the Senate in February. Business chambers back the overall spirit but seek amendments to specific articles impacting collective bargaining and entity funding.

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Business leaders from Córdoba's metalworking, cargo transport, and commerce sectors are working with national government technical teams on 10 'surgical' proposals to reduce litigation and enhance predictability without altering basic labor rights. Meanwhile, Córdoba unions unanimously reject the official project, though they differ on tactics, and plan a march this Thursday. Nationally, Milei's government faces hurdles in the Senate, relying on negotiations with governors over fiscal impacts.

 

 

 

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