Mexico's heavy vehicle market drops 31% in 2025

Mexico's heavy vehicle market saw a 31% decline in 2025, described as truly catastrophic by the National Association of Bus, Truck, and Tractor Producers (Anpact). The drop exceeded gloomy forecasts following 2024's record high and affected the entire production chain in the sector. Key factors include deteriorating business expectations and an uncertain economic environment.

Rogelio Arzate, executive president of the Anpact, delivered an alarming overview of Mexico's heavy vehicle market in 2025, noting a 31% contraction in sales. This outcome, worse than the 2020 pandemic slump, cannot be attributed solely to economic variables such as growth rates, exchange rates, or interest levels.

The fallout rippled through manufacturing, autoparts production, distribution, and the legal framework of the automotive industry. In the cargo segment, International led with 17.96% market share, followed by Isuzu (10.01%) and Hino (4.26%). For passenger vehicles, Mercedes-Benz topped with nearly 39%, with Scania (12.66%), Volvo (12.63%), International (11.7%), and Volkswagen (10.27%) rounding out the top five.

Diesel powered 98.19% of sales but also declined by 31%. Arzate pointed to deteriorating expectations among transport firms and companies with own fleets, worsened by reduced gross fixed investment, waning business confidence, cost pressures, and a complex international landscape, including shifts in U.S. trade relations.

Looking to 2026, Anpact forecasts a 10% rise in heavy truck sales, driven by internal market recovery and regulatory certainty, though still below 2024 peaks. The industry calls on the federal government to revise tariffs on used heavy truck imports, highlighting undervaluation, smuggling, and organized crime that undermine competitiveness.

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Mexican truckers dismantle highway blockade after pausing protests against government repression, amid trucks and protest signs.
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Truckers pause blockades after accusing Mexico government of repression

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Mexico's National Association of Truckers (ANTAC) paused road blockades initiated on April 6 in nine states, accusing the federal government of violence and intimidation against protesters. The action addressed highway insecurity and low grain prices but was scaled back from 20 planned states amid government claims of progress on demands.

In the first half of 2026, 754,394 light vehicles were sold in Mexico, surpassing the level reached in 2017.

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Building on its top position in US imports through February, Mexico posted a record $70.7 billion in total exports for March 2026, up 27.7% year-over-year, with a $5.9 billion trade surplus. Non-automotive manufactures drove the surge amid US supply chain shifts, while deseasonalized figures rose 8.5% from February.

Gas stations in Mexico are operating on tight margins of 70 cents per liter in diesel sales due to the federal government's price cap.

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Chile's National Automotive Association (ANAC) reported that 5,411 electrified vehicles were sold in May, an increase of nearly 90% from the same month in 2025. In the first five months of the year, 24,213 units were registered, equivalent to 68% of total 2025 sales.

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