Mexico is experiencing its largest wave of foreign direct investment in history, driven by companies relocating manufacturing from China and other Asian countries to take advantage of proximity to the US market, USMCA tariff preferences, competitive labor costs, and reduced supply chain risk. In 2025-2026, over $40 billion in new manufacturing investments were announced for Mexico, spanning automotive, electronics, aerospace, medical devices, and consumer goods. For US companies, nearshoring offers clear strategic advantages — but the customs and trade compliance landscape is more complex than many expect.
The most expensive mistake nearshoring companies make is establishing manufacturing operations before fully understanding the customs and trade compliance requirements. Engage a qualified customs broker and trade compliance advisor at the planning stage — not after the factory is built.
Companies successfully navigating nearshoring share a common approach: they invest in digital trade infrastructure from day one. Automated classification handles the dual-tariff-schedule challenge, document management systems track IMMEX compliance, and integrated platforms provide the visibility needed to optimize USMCA origin calculations. Camtom supports all of these use cases with specific features designed for cross-border manufacturing operations.
Camtom Team
Trade Intelligence
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