Analysts forecast inflation above 4% in Mexico for 2026

Inflation in Mexico slowed to 3.69% at the end of 2025, but experts predict it will exceed 4% throughout 2026 due to the World Cup, wage hikes, new taxes, and tariffs. Factors like IEPS increases and duties on Chinese imports will pressure prices, particularly in services and goods. The Bank of Mexico may implement moderate interest rate cuts, adopting a cautious policy.

Inflation in Mexico ended 2025 at 3.69%, the lowest since 2020, driven by a drop in fruit and vegetable prices (-5.62%) and low growth in energy costs (0.18%). However, the underlying component accelerated to 4.33%, with rises in food and beverages (5.22%) and services (4.35%). This marked six months within the Bank of Mexico's 3% ±1 percentage point target range.

For 2026, analysts agree that general inflation will end between 4.1% and 4.2%, while underlying inflation reaches 4.3% to 4.4%. Ernesto Revilla of Citigroup warned it will be the sixth consecutive year outside the 3% target, highlighting pressures from the 2026 World Cup, which will raise service prices, such as Monterrey tickets comparable to flights to Europe. Carlos Capistrán of Bank of America noted that wage increases exceeding productivity keep service inflation high, despite a negative output gap.

Other factors include new tariffs on Chinese products, partially offset by peso appreciation, and IEPS adjustments on sodas and tobacco. Mexico's historical average inflation is 4.2%, and Revilla regretted the loss of credibility in Banxico's monetary policy. Bancoppel and Monex foresee volatility in the first quarter due to seasonal factors, but subsequent stability with moderate growth.

In response, experts like Gerónimo Ugarte of Valmex estimate total cuts of 50 basis points in the reference rate, closing at 6.50%. Alberto Ramos of Goldman Sachs urged caution amid high underlying inflation and fluctuating expectations.

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Illustration of Mexico's inflation rising to 4.63% in March 2026, featuring a market scene with rising prices and a billboard display.
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Mexico's annual inflation rises to 4.63% in early March

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Mexico's National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi) reported annual inflation at 4.63% for the first half of March 2026, exceeding analysts' estimates. The National Consumer Price Index (INPC) rose 0.62% from the previous half-month period.

The Bank of Mexico paused its rate-cutting cycle and kept the reference rate at 7.0 percent in its first monetary policy meeting of the year. It also revised its inflation expectations, delaying convergence to the 3.0 percent target until the second quarter of 2027. Analysts note a cautious stance amid fiscal impacts and upside risks.

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The Bank of Mexico cut its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 7% in its monetary policy decision on December 18, 2025. This move aligns with expectations for inflation to converge to the 3% target in the third quarter of 2026, despite recent inflationary pressures. The cut supported a slight appreciation of the Mexican peso against the dollar.

Chile's Central Bank released its December Monetary Policy Report, raising the GDP growth projection for 2026 to 2% to 3%, driven by higher investment and copper prices. Inflation will converge to 3% in the first quarter of 2026, in a more favorable scenario than anticipated. Experts agree on the optimism but highlight risks in the labor market and abroad.

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The Board of Directors of the Banco de la República voted by majority to keep the policy interest rate at 9.25% in its final meeting of the year, amid ongoing inflationary pressures above 5%. Two members, including Finance Minister Germán Ávila, favored a 50 basis point cut. Inflation eased slightly to 5.3% in November, but future expectations rose.

Building on Dane's initial report of 5.29% annual inflation for February 2026—below January's 5.35% and market expectations around 5.5%—Anif analysis credits a $500-per-gallon gasoline price reduction as the main factor. Without it, inflation would have accelerated to 5.38%. Services and food exerted upward pressure, offset by regulated price relief.

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Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%—the highest in over a year—in its first 2026 board meeting, citing persistent inflation above 5% for nearly six months and unanchored expectations from a 23.8% minimum wage hike decreed by President Petro's government. The decision, with a split 4-2-1 vote, drew market surprise and government criticism over economic contraction risks.

 

 

 

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