Geo Logistics

Freight knowledge hub · 9 min read

Cross-Border Freight to Mexico: A 2026 Shipper Guide

Nearshoring has put Mexico back at the center of North American supply chains. Here's what U.S. shippers need to know about cross-border freight in 2026.

By Geo Logistics Dispatch Team · Published · Updated

HomeBlogCross-Border Mexico Guide

Why Cross-Border Volume Is Up

Mexico overtook China as the United States' largest trading partner in 2023 and has held that position through 2026. Nearshoring of automotive, electronics, and appliance manufacturing has tripled cross-border freight volumes through Laredo since 2018. If you're a U.S. shipper, the odds you'll touch a Mexico lane in 2026 are roughly 1 in 3.

The Three Border-Crossing Models

1. Bonded Continuous (Best for Expedited)

A bonded U.S. carrier hauls cargo across the border to a Mexican partner carrier without breaking the load. Same truck, same seal, same chain of custody. Transit Detroit → Monterrey: ~36 hours.

2. Drayage Relay

A U.S. carrier delivers to a warehouse on the U.S. side. A drayage carrier (with both U.S. and Mexican authority) moves the trailer across the border. A Mexican carrier picks up on the south side. Slower (4–6 days), cheaper, higher damage risk from re-handling.

3. Through-Trailer (Common for FTL)

A U.S. tractor drops a trailer at a U.S.-side yard. A transfer driver shuttles it across the bridge. A Mexican tractor picks it up south of the border. Trailer never opens. Standard for full-truckload non-expedited.

Documents Required

DocumentPurposeRequired by
Commercial InvoiceCustoms valuationU.S. CBP + Mexican SAT
Packing ListCargo manifestU.S. CBP + Mexican SAT
Bill of LadingCarrier contractBoth sides
USMCA CertificateTariff preferenceVoluntary, but saves duty
Carta PorteMexican electronic waybillMexican SAT (mandatory since 2022)
SAAM e-ManifestCustoms filingMexican carrier files
PedimentoCustoms declarationMexican broker files

The Carta Porte Requirement

Since 2022 (with full enforcement in 2024), all freight moving inside Mexico requires a Carta Porte — an electronic waybill that ties the shipment to a CFDI (electronic invoice). It includes 200+ data fields covering cargo type, weight, route, carrier, and driver. Get it wrong and the load can be impounded.

U.S. shippers don't file the Carta Porte directly — your Mexican partner carrier does — but you need to provide accurate cargo descriptions and HS codes for them to file correctly.

Where Goods Cross

CrossingU.S. sideMX sideBest for
Laredo / Nuevo LaredoLaredo, TXNuevo Laredo, Tamps40% of all cross-border. Default for most freight.
El Paso / JuárezEl Paso, TXCd. Juárez, ChihElectronics, appliances, automotive
Eagle Pass / Piedras NegrasEagle Pass, TXPiedras Negras, CoahAuto OEMs, steel
Otay Mesa / TijuanaSan Diego, CATijuana, BCElectronics, medical

Transit Time Benchmarks (from Michigan)

2026 Pricing Benchmarks

Spot rates spike 15–30% in fall (Q4 automotive demand) and around Mexican holidays. Plan your inventory accordingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a USMCA certificate?

Only if you want preferential (lower or zero) duty treatment. If your goods qualify under USMCA rules of origin, the certificate is worth the paperwork.

How long does customs take at Laredo?

Typical bonded transit through Laredo/Nuevo Laredo runs 2–6 hours. Adds depend on commodity, broker availability, and inspection rate. Plan for 4 hours average.

Can I ship hazmat across the border?

Yes, but it requires both U.S. (DOT) and Mexican (SCT) hazmat authority and additional documentation. Plan 2–3× the normal lead time.

Need a quote now? Call dispatch at 586-782-6436 or email dispatch@geologisticsllc.com. 24/7, Michigan-based.