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Understanding how to obtain a mining concession in Mexico in 2026 is essential for any company, investor or project developer planning mineral exploration or extraction activities in the country. Mexico’s Ley Minera (Mining Law) governs the grant, transfer and cancellation of mining concessions, and a wave of 2026 regulatory reforms, including mass cancellations of inactive titles and reported changes to concession terms, has materially altered the application landscape. This guide walks through the full procedure from pre‑application due diligence to post‑grant compliance, sets out every document you will need, and explains what changed this year so you can plan accordingly.
Whether you are filing a new application, acquiring an existing concession or defending one against a cancellation notice, the step‑by‑step process below applies.
A mining concession (concesión minera) in Mexico is the legal instrument that grants the holder the exclusive right to explore for and exploit minerals within a defined area. It is distinct from the various environmental permits, water‑use authorisations and land‑access agreements that are also required before any work can begin on site. The Ley Minera classifies all minerals found in national territory as property of the nation, meaning private parties can only access them through a government‑issued concession.
Three federal bodies sit at the centre of the process. The Secretaría de Economía (Ministry of Economy) is the granting authority for mining concessions. The Registro Público de Minería (Public Mining Registry) records all concessions, assignments and encumbrances. The Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (SEMARNAT) administers environmental impact authorisations and closure‑plan obligations.
Applicants should be aware that there are several distinct paths to holding a concession in Mexico today:
Before filing any paperwork, applicants must confirm they meet the eligibility criteria set out in the Ley Minera. The core requirements are:
Mexico’s Foreign Investment Law permits up to 100 % foreign ownership of a Mexican mining company, subject to registration with the National Foreign Investment Registry. The standard structure is for the foreign parent to incorporate a Mexican subsidiary (sociedad anónima or sociedad de responsabilidad limitada), obtain an RFC, appoint a legal representative domiciled in Mexico and register the subsidiary’s articles of incorporation with the Public Registry of Commerce. The Mexican subsidiary then applies for the concession in its own name. Industry observers note that the 2026 reforms have increased scrutiny of beneficial‑ownership disclosures, making early compliance planning essential for foreign ownership mining concession structures.
Holding a mining concession does not automatically confer a right to enter or occupy the surface. Applicants must negotiate a surface‑occupation agreement (permiso de superficie or convenio de ocupación) with the landowner. Where the land is held by an ejido (communal agrarian community), a resolution from the ejido assembly is required, which can add weeks or months to the timeline. Where Indigenous communities may be affected, Mexico’s international obligations require a process of free, prior and informed consultation before activities commence.
The following seven steps outline the typical procedure for how to obtain a mining concession in Mexico in 2026. Durations are indicative; actual timescales depend on the complexity of the project, the location and current regulatory workloads.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preliminary checks & landowner permission | Applicant / Counsel / Local representatives | 2–8 weeks |
| 2. Technical / geological dossier preparation | Applicant / Technical consultants | 4–12 weeks |
| 3. Application submission to Secretaría de Economía (or bid) | Applicant / Mexican legal representative | 1–3 months |
| 4. Environmental & other permits (SEMARNAT, water, municipal) | Applicant / Environmental consultants | 3–12+ months (parallel; common bottleneck) |
| 5. Payment of fees & provision of financial guarantee | Applicant / Financial institution / Counsel | 2–6 weeks |
| 6. Registration in Public Mining Registry & title issue | Secretaría de Economía / Registro Público de Minería | 1–3 months after clearance |
| 7. Post‑grant reporting & compliance | Concession holder | Ongoing (annual) |
Search the Registro Público de Minería to confirm that the target area is free, not already conceded, reserved or subject to a pending application. Simultaneously, begin landowner outreach: identify whether the surface is private, ejido or national land and start negotiating the surface‑occupation agreement. If the area overlaps with a protected natural area, confirm with SEMARNAT whether mining activity is permissible. At this stage, legal counsel should also verify whether a community or Indigenous consultation process will be required and, if so, begin coordinating with the relevant federal authority.
Engage a registered mining engineer or geologist to prepare the technical‑geological report (memoria técnica) and the accompanying topographic maps. Maps must specify the concession boundaries using UTM coordinates. The dossier typically includes a description of the minerals targeted, the proposed work programme, geological justification for the area requested and, where available, preliminary feasibility data. This is the foundation of the application and will be scrutinised by the Secretaría de Economía’s technical staff.
File the formal application with the Secretaría de Economía (Dirección General de Minas). The filing package includes the application form, the technical‑geological dossier, corporate documents (Acta constitutiva, RFC, power of attorney), the Public Mining Registry extract showing the area is free, and proof of payment of the application fee. Under the amended Ley Minera, certain recovered areas may be allocated through a public bidding process rather than a first‑come‑first‑served application, the Secretaría publishes which areas are subject to bidding. Where bidding applies, the applicant submits a sealed technical and economic proposal in accordance with the terms of reference published for that lot.
In parallel with the mining application, file for the environmental impact authorisation (MIA, Manifestación de Impacto Ambiental) with SEMARNAT. Larger projects require a full regional MIA; smaller or lower‑impact projects may qualify for a particular or preventive report. If the project will use water, a separate concession from the Comisión Nacional del Agua (CONAGUA) is required. Municipal building and land‑use permits may also apply. Environmental clearance is the most common bottleneck in the mining concession timeline, processing can exceed 12 months for complex projects, and public consultation requirements can extend timelines further.
Once the Secretaría de Economía approves the application (or the bid is awarded), the applicant must pay the registration and concession fees and provide the required financial guarantee (garantía financiera). The financial guarantee is typically a bank bond or insurance policy, the amount of which is determined by the work programme and the size of the concession area as specified in the Ley Minera and its regulations. Retain official receipts, these are required for registration and for demonstrating compliance in any future audit.
The Secretaría de Economía issues the concession title (título de concesión) and registers it in the Registro Público de Minería. Registration makes the concession enforceable against third parties and is the point at which the holder’s rights, and ongoing obligations, formally begin. The concession title sets out the area, the term, the minerals covered and any specific conditions.
Obtaining the title is not the end of the process. Concession holders must comply with continuous obligations including:
Failure to meet any of these obligations can trigger the cancellation procedure, a risk that has become sharply more real in 2026.
The table below consolidates the documents needed for a mining concession application. Applicants should assemble these early, as missing or defective documentation is one of the most common causes of delay.
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Key Requirements) |
|---|---|
| Certificate of incorporation and bylaws (Acta constitutiva) | Issued by the Public Registry of Commerce. Official certified copy required. If the parent company is foreign, apostille and Spanish‑language sworn translation are mandatory. Must include RFC. |
| Power of attorney for Mexican representative | Notarised before a Mexican notary public (or foreign notary plus apostille/legalisation). Must identify the authorised filer and the scope of powers granted. |
| Technical‑geological report and maps (memoria técnica / plano topográfico) | Prepared by a registered mining engineer or geologist. Digital and printed maps required. Concession boundaries in UTM coordinates. |
| Proof of landowner/surface‑use permission (permiso de superficie) | Signed agreement with the surface owner. Ejido resolutions required for ejido land. Local notarisation recommended. |
| Environmental pre‑clearance documents / SEMARNAT forms | Varies by project type, full MIA, particular MIA or preventive report. Filed with SEMARNAT; prepared by environmental consultants. |
| Financial guarantee (fianza / garantía financiera) | Bank guarantee or insurance bond as required by the Ley Minera. Amount determined by work programme and concession area. |
| Official identification of legal representative, RFC and contact details | INE credential for Mexican nationals; passport for foreign nationals. Company RFC issued by SAT. |
| Proof of payment of application/registration fees | Official receipts from the Secretaría de Economía / Registro Público de Minería. |
| Updated extract from the Registro Público de Minería (consulta) | Confirms no conflicting concessions or pending applications over the target area. Obtained directly from the Registry. |
| Surface‑occupation maps and land‑use plan | Prepared by a surveyor. Shows access routes, surface disturbance areas and infrastructure layout. |
| Community / Indigenous consultation documents (if applicable) | Minutes of consultation sessions, evidence of free, prior and informed consent measures. |
| Environmental management plan (PAMA) commitment | Typically a post‑grant obligation. Content and timeline specified by SEMARNAT. Early preparation is advisable. |
End‑to‑end, a new mining concession application in Mexico typically takes 8 to 24 months from the start of preliminary due diligence to receipt of the registered title. The widest variable is SEMARNAT’s environmental review, which can be run in parallel with the mining application but often becomes the critical path.
Applicants should build a project calendar that identifies parallel workstreams. Steps 1 and 2 (due diligence and technical dossier) can run simultaneously. Step 4 (environmental permits) should be initiated as soon as the project concept is defined, waiting until after the mining application is filed can add six months or more to the overall mining concession timeline.
For concession holders who receive a cancellation notice under the 2026 enforcement initiative, the response timeline is compressed:
The total mining concession application cost varies widely depending on the size and complexity of the project, but the following table provides indicative ranges for the major cost categories.
| Item | Indicative Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Application / registration fee (Secretaría de Economía) | Government‑set fixed fee, varies by application type | Consult the current Ley Federal de Derechos fee schedule published by the Secretaría de Economía. |
| Public Mining Registry registration fee | Government‑set tariff | Paid at registration. Confirm current amount with the Registro Público de Minería. |
| Financial guarantee (bank bond or insurance) | Typically USD tens of thousands to >USD 100,000 | Amount depends on the work programme, concession area and statutory formula under the Ley Minera and its regulations. |
| Technical / geological report and mapping | US $5,000–US $100,000+ | Varies by scope, depth of studies, number of target minerals and terrain complexity. |
| SEMARNAT / environmental studies (EIA / MIA) | US $10,000–US $500,000+ | Full regional MIA for large projects can exceed this range. Includes consultant fees and public consultation costs. |
| Legal and transaction costs | US $5,000–US $150,000 | Includes counsel fees, translations, notarisations and apostilles. Higher end for concession assignments or M&A structures. |
| Annual concession fees (derechos sobre minería) | Statutory per‑hectare fees, escalating schedule | Calculated on a per‑hectare basis; rates increase with the age of the concession. Verify current rates in the Ley Federal de Derechos. |
In addition to concession fees, holders are subject to Mexico’s general corporate tax regime and to special mining duties, including a 7.5 % special mining right on operating profits and a 0.5 % extraordinary mining right on revenue from the sale of gold, silver and platinum, as outlined in Mexico’s fiscal framework for mining.
The 2026 environment for mining concessions in Mexico is markedly different from prior years. Three developments stand out.
Mass concession cancellations. In early 2026, the Mexican government accelerated its programme to recover inactive or non‑compliant concessions. Press reports indicate that approximately 1,200 concessions were cancelled or in the process of recovery, targeting titles where holders had failed to commence work, had not paid annual fees or had not met minimum investment commitments. This initiative reflects a broader policy objective of ensuring that Mexico’s mineral resources are actively developed rather than held speculatively.
Statutory amendments to concession terms and renewals. Amendments to the Ley Minera approved by Congress have altered the terms under which concessions are granted and renewed. Early indications suggest that the reforms tighten renewal conditions, strengthen reporting obligations and may reduce the maximum initial term available for new concessions compared with the prior 50‑year standard. Implementing regulations are expected to be clarified by mid‑2026, and applicants should monitor publications in the Diario Oficial de la Federación (DOF) for final terms.
New allocation mechanisms. For areas recovered through the cancellation programme, the amended law provides for a public bidding process rather than the traditional first‑come‑first‑served model. The likely practical effect will be to increase competition, and cost, for high‑value mineral lots, while also increasing transparency in the allocation process. Industry observers expect the Secretaría de Economía to publish bid schedules and terms of reference for recovered lots on a rolling basis throughout 2026.
Understanding how to obtain a mining concession in Mexico in 2026 requires careful attention to a regulatory environment in active transition. The combination of mass concession cancellations, statutory amendments to term lengths and renewal conditions, and the introduction of public bidding for recovered areas means that applicants face higher standards of preparation and compliance than at any point in recent memory. By following the step‑by‑step procedure outlined above, assembling the required documents early, budgeting realistically for costs and, critically, maintaining rigorous post‑grant compliance records, applicants can position themselves to secure and retain a concession under the new rules.
For tailored guidance on any step of the application process, or for urgent assistance responding to a cancellation notice, consult an experienced mining law practitioner through our Mexico lawyer directory.
Last reviewed: 14 June 2026. This article will be updated following any further Diario Oficial de la Federación publications affecting the Ley Minera or its implementing regulations.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martha Villalobos at Villalobos & Moore, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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