Crypto Law Profile

Mexico Income Tax Act Crypto-Asset Tax Treatment

Mexico’s LISR applies general income and asset-disposal rules to crypto-related income and gains; no standalone crypto-tax chapter is identified in the statute.

Mexico Effective Act Jan 1, 2014

At a glance

Status In force since Jan. 1, 2014; official text shows latest LISR reform on Apr. 1, 2024.
Crypto rule No standalone cryptocurrency tax chapter or express crypto definition appears in the LISR.
Income scope Resident persons are taxed under broad general income provisions for cash, goods, credit, services, and other income.
Adjacent AML SAT treats certain virtual-asset operators as vulnerable-activity subjects under LFPIORPI.

Overview

Mexico’s Ley del Impuesto sobre la Renta (LISR) is the federal income tax statute most relevant to crypto-asset income and gains in Mexico. As of June 30, 2026, the LISR is in force. The official consolidated text states that the current law was published in the Diario Oficial de la Federación on Dec. 11, 2013, entered into force on Jan. 1, 2014, and was last reformed on Apr. 1, 2024.

This profile tracks the LISR as it applies to crypto-assets through general income and asset-disposal concepts. It should not be read as legal, tax, investment, or compliance advice. The LISR does not create a standalone cryptocurrency tax chapter, does not define “cryptocurrency,” and does not expressly assign every token activity to a single tax category.

Key income tax treatment for crypto-assets in Mexico

Article 1 of the LISR sets the basic jurisdictional scope for income tax. Mexican resident individuals and legal entities are subject to income tax on income regardless of where the source of wealth is located, while non-residents are covered when income is attributable to a Mexican permanent establishment or to Mexican-source income.

For legal entities, Article 16 provides that resident legal persons accumulate all income received in cash, in goods, in services, in credit, or of any other type. For individuals, Article 90 uses similarly broad language for resident individuals who obtain income in cash, in goods, in credit, in services where specified by law, or of any other type. These provisions are the main starting point for analyzing whether crypto-related receipts, disposals, business income, mining income, staking rewards, or other token-linked amounts may be income under Mexican law.

Asset disposal and gains framework

Where a crypto-asset transaction is analyzed as an asset disposal, the relevant LISR provisions are in Title IV, Chapter IV, on income from the alienation of goods. Article 119 provides that income from the alienation of goods is determined by reference to the cases provided in the Código Fiscal de la Federación, and Article 120 sets the annual income-tax calculation for gains from those disposals.

Article 121 lists deductions available to individuals for disposals, including verified acquisition cost and certain commissions or mediation payments connected with acquisition or disposal. Article 126 contains provisional-payment rules, including a provision for the alienation of “other goods” under which the payment may be calculated at 20% of the total transaction amount, subject to the article’s conditions and exclusions. Because the statute does not expressly mention crypto-assets, editors should frame this as the general statutory framework that may be relevant, not as a bespoke crypto-tax rule.

Regulatory context for “virtual assets”

The financial-regulatory definition comes from the Ley para Regular las Instituciones de Tecnología Financiera. Article 30 defines a virtual asset as an electronically recorded representation of value used by the public as a means of payment for legal acts and transferable only through electronic means. It excludes Mexican legal tender, foreign currency, and assets denominated in legal tender or foreign currency. The same article states that fintech institutions may operate only with virtual assets determined by Banco de México and require prior authorization.

The Servicio de Administración Tributaria also treats certain virtual-asset activities as vulnerable activities under Mexico’s anti-money laundering framework. SAT guidance describes non-financial entities that provide exchange platforms, wallets, purchase and sale sites, ATMs, or similar digital platforms as supervised for this activity under the LFPIORPI framework. That AML registration and notice regime is separate from the income tax rules in the LISR.

Status and editor notes

A February 2024 Cámara de Diputados Gaceta initiative proposed adding a crypto reference to Article 129 of the LISR. The official consolidated LISR text used for this profile does not show that proposal as operative law. Editors should monitor future tax reform packages, SAT rules, and judicial or administrative interpretations before describing any crypto-specific income tax regime as enacted.

Key provisions

Income tax scope

Article 1 subjects Mexican residents to ISR on income from all sources, while non-residents are covered for Mexican PE or source income.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2014 Source

Corporate income accumulation

Article 16 requires resident legal entities to accumulate income in cash, goods, services, credit, or any other type.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2014 Source

Individual income scope

Article 90 applies broad income concepts to individuals, including income in cash, goods, credit, services where specified, or any other type.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2014 Source

Asset-disposal framework

Articles 119-121 govern income and gain from alienation of goods; CFF article 14 defines alienation broadly as transmission of property.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2014 Source

Provisional payment context

Article 126 includes provisional-payment rules for other goods, including a 20% rule on total transaction amount subject to statutory conditions.

Taxation & Reporting Jan 1, 2014 Source

Virtual-asset context

The fintech law defines virtual assets for financial regulation; that definition informs context but is not itself an LISR crypto-tax rule.

Market Structure & Regulatory Source

Timeline

  1. LISR published

    New Ley del Impuesto sobre la Renta published in the Diario Oficial de la Federación.

    Enacted Source
  2. LISR enters into force

    Transitory provision set Jan. 1, 2014 as the LISR effective date unless otherwise provided.

    In force Source
  3. Fintech Law enacted

    Mexico’s fintech law introduced the statutory virtual-asset framework outside the LISR.

    Enacted Source
  4. SAT AML registration option

    SAT opened registration for persons carrying out virtual-asset vulnerable activities under LFPIORPI.

    Effective Source
  5. Crypto amendment proposed

    A Cámara de Diputados initiative proposed adding crypto wording to LISR article 129; it is not treated here as operative law.

    Introduced Source
  6. Latest LISR reform in official text

    Cámara consolidated LISR text identifies Apr. 1, 2024 as the latest published reform.

    Enacted Source

Who it affects

Actors

Banco de México, Cámara de Diputados, Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público, Servicio de Administración Tributaria

Asset classes

Crypto assets, Virtual assets

Official sources

Editorial note

Profile focuses on general LISR provisions relevant to crypto-assets. The statute does not expressly define cryptocurrency or create a standalone crypto-tax chapter. Not legal or tax advice.