Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Got 1 min? New ‘home office law’ takes effect in Mexico

Mexican employers now have to cover work-related costs incurred by their employees who spend more than 40% of their workweek working from home or another remote location.

They are also required to comply with a range of other work-from-home regulations, which were issued by the Labor Ministry in June and took effect on Tuesday.

Those working from home must also be allowed time to support young children. (Omar Lopez/Unsplash)

To avoid falling foul of the so-called “home office law,” employers are required to:

  • Pay a portion of their employees’ internet and electricity costs.
  • Provide or pay for things that their workers need to work effectively at home, such as ergonomic chairs, desks and printers.
  • Verify that the places their employees are working from are safe and adequately lit and ventilated.
  • Respect the rights of people who work from home to join a union, participate in collective bargaining and have contact with colleagues based at the primary workplace.
  • Establish adequate means of communication with employees.
  • Respect standard work hours in compliance with employees’ “right to disconnect.”
  • Establish special protections for employees who may be at risk of becoming victims of domestic violence.
  • Respect nursing mothers’ right to take a break to feed their children or express milk.

Employers who fail to comply with the regulations face fines ranging from 25,935 pesos (US $1,500) to 518,700 pesos (US $30,000).

The new rules were developed last year by a team of government and business experts and members of labor unions before being sent to the government for evaluation and approval.

Employees will also be protected from having to work outside of contracted hours, with a “right to disconnect” at the end of the day. (Major Tom Agency/Unsplash)

The Labor Ministry estimates that remote positions could save companies more than 86,000 pesos (almost US $5,000) per employee per year while also increasing quality of life for those working from home.

As occurred in much of the world, working from home in Mexico became more common during the coronavirus pandemic, and many companies continued to allow the practice for at least part of the workweek even after COVID-restrictions were eased.

With reports from El Universal 

2 COMMENTS

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexican flag waving from a pole

Mexico moves up a notch on Swiss competitiveness ranking 

0
The Swiss academic institution IMD, which considers social and cultural factors as well as the usual economic indicators in its ranking, found Mexico to be the third most competitive country in Latin America.
men in suits seated around a conference table at G7

At the G7, Sheinbaum courts Canadian business leaders

3
The president's first meeting at the G7 was with the Business Council of Canada, whose leaders had urged Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to extend an invitation to Mexico.
night in Monterrey

Foreign investment is up in a key nearshoring state, despite threat of US tariffs

4
Companies based in the U.S. committed more than half of the total foreign direct investment announced in Nuevo León during the first quarter of 2025.