Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Aguascalientes becomes 13th state to implement smoking ban

A law passed on September 29 in Aguascalientes bans smoking in work places and indoor public locations.

Under the new law, anyone who allows smoking in public places can be fined with up to 4,000 times the Unit of Measure and Update, or UMA — approximately 340,000 pesos or US $17,000 — and jailed for up to 36 hours. The ban also applies to schools, health centers, libraries, public transit and other public places.

Aguascalientes is the 13th state in Mexico to pass a ban on smoking in public places.

Electronic cigarettes, whether or not they contain tobacco or nicotine, are included in the prohibition.

The law was praised by an anti-tobacco organization, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

“While the new law marks a great step forward for tobacco control in Mexico, the national Congress must now follow the example of Aguascalientes and adopt a federal law that would grant all Mexican citizens 100% smoke-free environments, as is already the case in 20 countries in the region of the Americas,” the group said in a statement.

There are 210,000 smokers in Aguascalientes, representing 24.7% of the population, which makes it the state with the second-highest rate of smoking, after Mexico City, where 30.8% of people smoke. However, fewer than half of the smokers in Aguascalientes smoke regularly.

Source: El Heraldo de Aguascalientes (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Omar García Harfuch at a podium

Security Minister: Abducted miners were mistaken for members of a rival cartel faction

1
Security Minister García Harfuch told reporters on Tuesday that four members of the Los Chapitos faction of the Sinaloa Cartel had been arrested and that they admitted to confusing the miners for members of Los Mayos.
Facade of GNP Saguaros

Medical inflation and tax changes are increasing health insurance premiums by up to 40%

0
Mexico is projected to have the highest medical cost inflation globally in 2026, with an estimated average rate of 14.8%. According to industry experts, this could lead to three million Mexicans dropping their private health insurance this year.
U.S. delegation to San Miguel de Allende

Bipartisan US delegation visits San Miguel to reinforce binational ties

0
The revival of the inter-parliamentary meeting was celebrated by San Miguel's mayor, who took the opportunity to request a revision of the current U.S. travel advisory for Guanajuato.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity