Building an E-commerce Platform in México: Tech Guide 2026
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Building an E-commerce Platform in México: Tech Guide 2026

Juan Carlos Guajardo|17 min|

Table of Contents

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The Mexican E-commerce Opportunity in 2026

México's e-commerce market is one of the fastest-growing in the world. The numbers tell a compelling story:

  • $85 billion USD in e-commerce revenue projected for 2026 (AMVO / eMarketer)
  • 38% year-over-year growth from 2024 to 2025
  • 68 million online shoppers (52% of the population)
  • Mobile accounts for 72% of e-commerce transactions
  • Average order value: $42 USD (growing 15% annually)
  • Social commerce (Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp) represents 18% of online sales

Why Now?

Three structural factors make 2026 the best time to invest in e-commerce in México:

1. Payment infrastructure maturity. CoDi (digital payments), SPEI instant transfers, OXXO cash payments, BNPL (buy now pay later), and credit/debit card penetration have reached critical mass. The payment barrier that limited Mexican e-commerce for years has been largely solved.

2. Logistics improvement. Last-mile delivery networks have expanded dramatically. 99 Minutos, Estafeta, Fedex México, DHL, and marketplace logistics (Mercado Libre, Amazon) now cover 90%+ of the population with 1-3 day delivery.

3. Consumer behavior shift. Post-pandemic habits are permanent. Mexican consumers now expect to buy everything online — groceries, fashion, electronics, industrial supplies, services. Companies without e-commerce are losing market share monthly.

The Competitive Landscape

The Mexican e-commerce market is dominated by three players:

  • Mercado Libre — 30% market share, Latin America's Amazon
  • Amazon México — 18% market share, growing aggressively
  • Walmart / Bodega Aurrerá Online — 12% market share

For brands and retailers, the question is not "sell on marketplaces or build your own platform" — it is both. Your own e-commerce platform provides control over the customer experience, data, and margins. Marketplaces provide reach and discovery.

This guide focuses on building your own e-commerce platform — the technology decisions, payment integrations, logistics, and compliance requirements specific to México.

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Platform Options: Build vs Buy vs Hybrid

Option 1: SaaS Platforms (Buy)

Shopify

  • Best for: D2C brands, small-to-mid retailers (<$10M online revenue)
  • Pros: Fast launch (2-6 weeks), no hosting management, app ecosystem, OXXO/SPEI built-in via Shopify Payments México
  • Cons: Transaction fees (0.5-2%), limited customization, scaling costs increase significantly
  • Cost: $29-$399/month + transaction fees. Shopify Plus: $2,300+/month
  • México-specific: Supports MXN, CFDI via apps, basic OXXO/SPEI integration

VTEX

  • Best for: Mid-to-enterprise retailers, B2B/B2C hybrid, marketplace operators
  • Pros: Strong LATAM presence, multi-seller marketplace capabilities, headless commerce option, native OXXO/SPEI/MercadoPago support
  • Cons: Higher cost, implementation complexity, vendor lock-in
  • Cost: Revenue-share model (typically 1-3% of GMV) + implementation $100,000-$500,000
  • México-specific: Excellent Mexican payment and logistics integrations, CFDI support, strong local partner network

Salesforce Commerce Cloud

  • Best for: Enterprise retailers with existing Salesforce ecosystem
  • Pros: Deep CRM integration, AI-powered personalization (Einstein), omnichannel capabilities
  • Cons: Expensive, complex implementation, requires specialized developers
  • Cost: Revenue-share (1-3% of GMV) + implementation $200,000-$1,000,000
  • México-specific: Integrates with Service Cloud and Sales Cloud for unified customer view

Option 2: Open Source Platforms (Build)

Medusa.js / Saleor

  • Best for: Tech-forward companies wanting full control, headless commerce
  • Pros: Free (open source), fully customizable, modern stack (Node.js/Python), headless-first architecture
  • Cons: Requires strong engineering team, no out-of-the-box LATAM payment integrations
  • Cost: Free software + $200,000-$600,000 custom development + hosting
  • México-specific: Requires custom integration for Mexican payments and fiscal compliance

WooCommerce (WordPress)

  • Best for: Small retailers, content-heavy brands
  • Pros: Low cost, huge plugin ecosystem, easy content management
  • Cons: Performance issues at scale, security requires vigilance, not enterprise-grade
  • Cost: Free software + $10,000-$80,000 setup + $50-$500/month hosting
  • México-specific: Mexican payment plugins available (Conekta, OpenPay, MercadoPago)

Adobe Commerce (Magento)

  • Best for: Mid-to-enterprise retailers with complex catalog and pricing
  • Pros: Feature-rich, strong B2B capabilities, extensive customization
  • Cons: Heavy, slow without optimization, requires experienced Magento developers (scarce), expensive hosting
  • Cost: Community (free software) + $150,000-$500,000 development. Enterprise: $22,000-$125,000/year license + implementation
  • México-specific: Mature ecosystem with Mexican payment extensions

Option 3: Custom Build (Headless)

Next.js Frontend + Custom Backend

  • Best for: Companies with unique business models, complex pricing, or specific UX requirements
  • Pros: Complete control, optimal performance, unique competitive advantage
  • Cons: Highest development cost, longest timeline, requires ongoing engineering investment
  • Cost: $300,000-$1,500,000+ initial development + ongoing team costs
  • México-specific: Full flexibility to integrate any Mexican payment, logistics, and fiscal system

Decision Framework

FactorSaaSOpen SourceCustom
Time to market2-8 weeks8-20 weeks20-40 weeks
Upfront costLowMediumHigh
Ongoing costMedium-High (fees)Medium (hosting + dev)High (team)
CustomizationLimitedHighUnlimited
ScalabilityGood (vendor-managed)Good (self-managed)Excellent
Mexican payment supportVariesRequires workBuild anything
SAP/ERP integrationLimited-MediumMediumFull control
Best forQuick launch, simpleTech teams, controlComplex, unique
Need help choosing? Get an e-commerce architecture consultation →

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Mexican Payment Methods: The Complete Landscape

Understanding Mexican payment preferences is critical. What works in the US does not directly translate.

Payment Method Distribution (2026)

MethodMarket ShareTrend
Credit/Debit Card38%Stable
Digital Wallets (MercadoPago, PayPal)22%Growing fast
OXXO (Cash voucher)15%Stable
SPEI (Bank transfer)12%Growing
BNPL (Buy Now Pay Later)8%Growing fast
CoDi / QR Payments3%Growing
Cash on Delivery2%Declining

Credit and Debit Cards

Must support: Visa, Mastercard (primary). American Express (important for premium segments).

México-specific considerations:

  • MSI (Meses Sin Intereses): Interest-free installment plans are standard in Mexican e-commerce. Offering 3, 6, 12, or even 18 months without interest is a major conversion driver. This is not optional — it is expected.
  • Card penetration: Only 37% of Mexicans have a credit card, but those who do use it heavily for online purchases.
  • 3D Secure: Required by most Mexican banks for online transactions. Implement 3DS2 for better UX.

Payment processors for cards:

  • Conekta — Mexican-born processor, excellent MSI support, OXXO/SPEI integration
  • Stripe México — Global platform, launched México operations in 2023
  • OpenPay (BBVA) — Strong banking integration, MSI support
  • MercadoPago — Largest in LATAM, comprehensive payment methods

OXXO Payments

OXXO is México's largest convenience store chain (21,000+ stores). OXXO Pay allows customers to pay for online purchases at any OXXO store using a barcode or reference number.

How it works:

  • Customer selects OXXO Pay at checkout
  • System generates a barcode/reference with 72-hour expiration
  • Customer takes barcode to any OXXO, pays cash
  • OXXO notifies payment processor (webhook)
  • Merchant confirms payment and processes order

Why it matters:

  • 15% of e-commerce transactions
  • Essential for reaching unbanked customers (63% of population)
  • OXXO stores are within walking distance for 90% of Mexicans

Integration: Available through Conekta, Stripe, OpenPay, MercadoPago

SPEI (Sistema de Pagos Electrónicos Interbancarios)

México's instant bank transfer system. Free, real-time, available 24/7.

How it works:

  • Customer selects SPEI at checkout
  • System generates a CLABE (bank account number) and reference
  • Customer transfers via mobile banking
  • Transfer confirms in seconds (real-time)
  • Webhook notifies merchant of payment

Why it matters:

  • Zero transaction fees for the merchant (SPEI is free)
  • Instant confirmation
  • Growing adoption with mobile banking apps
  • Trusted by Mexican consumers

Integration: Conekta, Stripe, OpenPay, direct bank integrations

MercadoPago

Latin America's largest digital payment platform (part of Mercado Libre ecosystem).

Why it matters:

  • 80+ million users in Latin America
  • Checkout Pro (hosted checkout) provides a trusted, recognizable payment experience
  • Supports all Mexican payment methods in one integration
  • Buyer protection increases consumer confidence
  • Installment support (MSI)

Integration complexity: Low-Medium. Well-documented APIs. SDKs for major platforms.

BNPL (Buy Now, Pay Later)

Growing rapidly in México. Key providers:

  • Kueski Pay — México's largest BNPL, 4 installments
  • Aplazo — 4-12 installments, strong in fashion/electronics
  • Mercado Crédito — MercadoPago's BNPL offering
  • Nelo — US-México cross-border BNPL

Impact on conversion: BNPL increases average order value by 30-45% and conversion rate by 15-25% for purchases over $50 USD.

Need all payment methods in one integration? iTech builds payment-ready e-commerce →

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Logistics and Fulfillment in México

The Mexican Logistics Challenge

México's logistics landscape is more complex than the US:

  • Geographic diversity: Dense urban areas (CDMX, Monterrey, Guadalajara) coexist with remote rural areas where delivery is expensive and slow
  • Address standardization: Mexican addresses are inconsistent. Colonias, manzanas, and lotificaciones do not always map cleanly to geocoding services
  • Security concerns: Package theft and fraud are higher than in the US, requiring signature confirmation and insurance for valuable items
  • Returns logistics: Mexican consumers return less than US consumers (8% vs 20+%), but returns infrastructure is less developed

Shipping Providers

ProviderCoverageSpeedBest For
EstafetaNational1-5 daysGeneral e-commerce, B2B
99 MinutosMajor citiesSame-day / Next-dayFast delivery in metro areas
FedEx MéxicoNational + International1-3 daysPremium, time-sensitive
DHL MéxicoNational + International1-3 daysInternational, enterprise
RedpackNational2-5 daysBudget-friendly
PaquetexpressNational2-4 daysHeavy/bulky items
Mercado EnvíosNational1-3 daysMercado Libre sellers
Amazon LogisticsMajor cities1-2 daysAmazon sellers

Multi-Carrier Strategy

Do not depend on a single carrier. Implement a multi-carrier strategy:

  • Fast delivery (metros): 99 Minutos or Rappi for same-day in CDMX, MTY, GDL
  • Standard delivery (national): Estafeta or Redpack for 2-5 day national delivery
  • Premium delivery: FedEx or DHL for time-sensitive orders
  • Heavy/bulky: Paquetexpress for furniture, appliances, etc.
  • International: FedEx or DHL for cross-border shipments

Shipping Cost Management

StrategyDescriptionImpact
Free shipping threshold"Free shipping on orders over $799 MXN"+25% AOV
Flat rate shippingFixed $99-$149 MXN regardless of weightSimplicity, trust
Real-time carrier quotesShow actual carrier prices at checkoutAccuracy, lower margin hit
Click and collectIn-store or locker pickup-30% shipping cost
Subscription/membershipFree shipping for loyalty membersRetention

Fulfillment Models

Self-Fulfillment: Operate your own warehouse(s). Best for companies with existing physical operations and 100+ orders/day.

3PL (Third-Party Logistics): Outsource fulfillment to a provider. Best for companies scaling online without warehouse infrastructure. Key Mexican 3PLs: Estafeta Fulfillment, Cubbo, Pack&Pack.

Dropshipping: Supplier ships directly to customer. Low investment but low control over experience.

Hybrid: Own fulfillment for core markets (metro areas) + 3PL or carrier partnerships for national coverage.

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SAP and ERP Integration for E-commerce

This is where most e-commerce implementations get complicated — and where iTech Corp LLC excels.

Why Integration Matters

Without ERP integration, your e-commerce platform becomes an isolated island:

  • Inventory displayed online does not reflect actual warehouse stock → overselling
  • Orders require manual entry into SAP → delays and errors
  • Pricing updates require dual maintenance → inconsistencies
  • Customer data lives in two systems → no unified view
  • Financial reporting requires manual reconciliation → audit risk

Core Integration Points

Data FlowDirectionFrequencyPriority
Product catalog (items, descriptions, images)ERP → E-commerceDaily batch or real-timeCritical
Pricing (list price, discounts, promotions)ERP → E-commerceReal-time or near-real-timeCritical
Inventory availabilityERP → E-commerceReal-time (for ATP)Critical
OrdersE-commerce → ERPReal-timeCritical
Order status (fulfillment, shipping)ERP → E-commerceReal-time eventsHigh
Customer master dataBidirectionalNear-real-timeHigh
Invoices (CFDI)ERP → E-commerce (for customer access)Event-drivenHigh
Returns / CreditsE-commerce → ERPReal-timeMedium
Analytics (sales, inventory, customer)Both → BIBatch (hourly/daily)Medium

SAP Business One Integration

For SMBs running SAP Business One:

  • Service Layer (REST API): SAP B1 10.0+ provides a REST API (Service Layer) that enables direct integration
  • DI API: Server-side API for complex operations (order creation, inventory posting)
  • Integration Add-ons: Boyum IT, Beas Manufacturing provide e-commerce connectors
  • Custom Integration: For complex scenarios, build a middleware layer using Node.js or .NET

Typical integration effort: 8-16 weeks, $40,000-$120,000

SAP S/4HANA Integration

For enterprises running S/4HANA:

  • OData Services: S/4HANA exposes hundreds of standard OData APIs for product, pricing, inventory, orders
  • SAP CPI (Cloud Platform Integration): SAP's iPaaS for orchestrating integrations
  • SAP Commerce Cloud: SAP's own e-commerce platform, natively integrated (but expensive)
  • MuleSoft + SAP Connector: Pre-built connectors for common integration patterns
  • Custom RFC/BAPI calls: For deep integration with custom SAP functionality

Typical integration effort: 12-24 weeks, $80,000-$250,000

Architecture Pattern: SAP-Integrated E-commerce

```

┌─────────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ ┌───────────────┐

│ E-commerce │────>│ Integration │────>│ SAP ERP │

│ Frontend │<────│ Layer │<────│ (B1/S4) │

│ (Next.js) │ │ (MuleSoft/ │ │ │

│ │ │ Node.js) │ │ - Inventory │

│ - Product page │ │ │ │ - Pricing │

│ - Cart │ │ - API GW │ │ - Orders │

│ - Checkout │ │ - Transform │ │ - Invoicing │

│ - Account │ │ - Cache │ │ - Customer │

└─────────────────┘ └──────────────┘ └───────────────┘

│ │

▼ ▼

┌─────────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐

│ Payment │ │ Logistics │

│ Gateway │ │ Platform │

│ (Conekta/ │ │ (Multi- │

│ Stripe) │ │ carrier) │

└─────────────────┘ └──────────────┘

```

Building e-commerce with SAP integration? This is our specialty →

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CFDI and Tax Compliance for E-commerce

Electronic Invoicing (CFDI)

Every e-commerce transaction in México that requires a factura must generate a CFDI (Comprobante Fiscal Digital por Internet) compliant with SAT regulations.

Key requirements:

  • CFDI 4.0 is mandatory since January 2024
  • Must include RFC of buyer (or generic RFC for público en general: XAXX010101000)
  • Must include uso del CFDI (purpose of invoice)
  • Must include régimen fiscal of buyer
  • XML signed with valid CSD (Certificado de Sello Digital)
  • Stamped by an authorized PAC (Proveedor Autorizado de Certificación)

E-commerce implementation:

  • Automatic CFDI generation at order completion
  • Customer self-service portal for requesting facturas (common in México)
  • Integration with PAC provider (Facturama, SW SmarterWeb, Finkok)
  • Storage of XML and PDF in cloud storage for 5 years
  • Complemento de Pago for installment payments (MSI)

Tax Considerations

TaxRateApplication
IVA (VAT)16%All goods and services (8% in border regions)
IEPSVariableSpecific products (sugary drinks, alcohol, tobacco)
ISR withholdingVariableDigital services by foreign providers
Import dutiesVariableCross-border e-commerce (above de minimis threshold)

Carta Porte

For e-commerce shipments, the Carta Porte complement may be required when:

  • Goods are transported on public roads
  • Distance exceeds 30 km
  • Third-party carriers are used

Your e-commerce platform should automatically determine when Carta Porte is required and generate the appropriate CFDI complement.

PROFECO Compliance

PROFECO (Federal Consumer Protection Agency) regulates e-commerce in México:

  • Clear pricing: Must show total price including IVA
  • Return policy: Minimum 5 business days for returns (no questions asked for online purchases)
  • Terms and conditions: Must be available in Spanish
  • Privacy notice (Aviso de Privacidad): Mandatory on every e-commerce site
  • Delivery commitments: Must communicate delivery timeframe and honor it

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Mobile Commerce: México Is Mobile-First

Mobile Dominates

  • 72% of e-commerce transactions in México happen on mobile devices
  • Average mobile session duration: 8.2 minutes (vs 11.4 desktop)
  • Mobile conversion rate: 2.8% (vs 4.1% desktop) — there is still a gap to close
  • WhatsApp commerce: 35% of Mexican consumers have purchased via WhatsApp

Mobile-First Design Principles

  • Performance is conversion. Every 100ms of load time = -1% conversion. Target <2.5 seconds LCP on 4G.
  • Touch-first UI. Buttons minimum 44px, generous tap targets, swipeable product galleries.
  • One-page checkout. Mexican mobile users abandon multi-step checkouts. Collapse to a single scrollable page.
  • Mobile payment optimization. Apple Pay, Google Pay, and MercadoPago one-click checkout reduce friction dramatically.
  • Progressive Web App (PWA). Offline browsing, push notifications, home screen installation — native app experience without app store friction.

WhatsApp Commerce

WhatsApp has 95 million users in México. It is the primary communication channel. For e-commerce:

  • WhatsApp Business API for automated order confirmations, shipping updates, and customer service
  • WhatsApp Catalog for sharing products directly in chat
  • WhatsApp Payments (rolling out in México) for in-chat transactions
  • Conversational commerce: AI chatbot (GPT-powered) handles product inquiries, recommendations, and order placement via WhatsApp

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B2B vs B2C E-commerce in México

B2C E-commerce

Characteristics:

  • Individual consumers
  • Impulse and considered purchases
  • Standard pricing (visible to all)
  • Payment: credit card, OXXO, SPEI, BNPL
  • Delivery: last-mile to home/office
  • Returns: 5+ business day return window

Key success factors:

  • Product photography and descriptions
  • Reviews and social proof
  • Competitive pricing and promotions
  • Fast delivery and free shipping thresholds
  • Mobile-optimized experience
  • Social media presence and influencer marketing

B2B E-commerce

Characteristics:

  • Business buyers (procurement, operations)
  • Repeat orders with negotiated pricing
  • Customer-specific pricing, catalogs, and credit terms
  • Payment: SPEI, credit terms (net 30/60/90), credit card
  • Delivery: to warehouse/office, often scheduled
  • Integration: buyer's procurement/ERP systems

Key success factors:

  • Customer-specific pricing and discounts (tied to SAP/ERP)
  • Bulk ordering and quick reorder
  • Credit line management and invoice payment
  • Requisition approval workflows
  • Punch-out / procurement system integration (SAP Ariba, Coupa)
  • Account manager access to customer portal

B2B is a massive opportunity in México. Most Mexican B2B transactions still happen via phone, email, and WhatsApp. Companies that offer self-service B2B e-commerce with ERP-integrated pricing and inventory gain significant competitive advantage.

Building a B2B e-commerce platform? iTech specializes in SAP-integrated B2B commerce →

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Performance, Security, and SEO

Performance Targets

MetricTargetImpact
LCP (Largest Contentful Paint)<2.5sCore Web Vital, SEO ranking
FID (First Input Delay)<100msCore Web Vital, user experience
CLS (Cumulative Layout Shift)<0.1Core Web Vital, visual stability
Time to Interactive<3.5sUser engagement
Server response time (TTFB)<200msFoundation for all other metrics

Performance Optimization for México

  • CDN with México PoPs: Cloudflare, Azure CDN, or AWS CloudFront with edge locations in Querétaro/CDMX
  • Image optimization: WebP/AVIF with lazy loading. Product images are typically 60%+ of page weight
  • Edge computing: Run dynamic content at the edge (Vercel Edge Functions, Cloudflare Workers)
  • Database optimization: Read replicas, query optimization, caching (Redis)
  • Critical rendering path: Inline critical CSS, defer non-critical JavaScript

Security

MeasureDescriptionPriority
SSL/TLSHTTPS everywhere (mandatory for payments)Critical
PCI DSS Level 1If processing card data directlyCritical
WAFWeb Application Firewall (Cloudflare, AWS WAF)High
Bot protectionCAPTCHA, rate limiting for checkout and loginHigh
DDoS protectionCDN-level + infrastructure-levelHigh
Data encryptionAt rest (AES-256) and in transit (TLS 1.3)High
AuthenticationMFA for admin, secure customer auth (OAuth 2.0)High
Penetration testingAnnual third-party pen testMedium
Fraud detectionTransaction scoring, velocity checks, address verificationCritical

SEO for Mexican E-commerce

  • Spanish-language content with Mexican Spanish (not Spain Spanish)
  • Hreflang tags if operating in multiple languages/regions
  • Structured data (Product, Offer, Review, BreadcrumbList, FAQPage schemas)
  • Mexican keyword research — search patterns differ from US/Spain
  • Local SEO if you have physical stores (Google Business Profile)
  • Page speed — Google rewards fast sites in rankings
  • Mobile-first indexing — Google indexes the mobile version first

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FAQ

How much does it cost to build an e-commerce platform in México?

SaaS platform (Shopify): $5,000-$30,000 setup + monthly fees. Mid-range custom (WooCommerce, Medusa.js): $80,000-$250,000. Enterprise custom (Next.js + headless): $300,000-$1,500,000. With SAP integration, add $40,000-$250,000 depending on complexity.

What payment methods must I support in México?

At minimum: credit/debit cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex), OXXO, SPEI, and MercadoPago. Strongly recommended: MSI (interest-free installments) and at least one BNPL provider (Kueski Pay or Aplazo). This combination covers 95%+ of Mexican online shoppers.

How do I handle OXXO payments on my e-commerce site?

Integrate with a payment processor that supports OXXO (Conekta, Stripe, OpenPay, MercadoPago). At checkout, the system generates a barcode with a 72-hour expiration. The customer pays cash at any OXXO store. You receive a webhook confirming payment. Process the order.

Do I need to issue CFDI for every e-commerce sale?

You must be able to generate CFDI 4.0 for any customer who requests a factura. For sales to "público en general" (no RFC provided), you can issue a daily global invoice. Most Mexican e-commerce platforms implement a self-service factura portal where customers enter their RFC post-purchase.

Can I integrate my e-commerce platform with SAP?

Yes. iTech Corp LLC specializes in SAP e-commerce integration. SAP Business One connects via Service Layer (REST API). SAP S/4HANA connects via OData APIs or SAP CPI. Key integrations: product catalog, pricing, inventory (ATP), order creation, invoicing, and customer master data.

Which e-commerce platform is best for México?

It depends on your scale and requirements. Shopify for quick launch and simplicity. VTEX for mid-enterprise with strong LATAM features. Custom (Next.js + headless) for maximum control and unique business models. Salesforce Commerce Cloud for companies already in the Salesforce ecosystem.

How important is mobile optimization for Mexican e-commerce?

Critical. 72% of transactions happen on mobile. A non-mobile-optimized site is losing 70%+ of potential customers. Implement responsive design, fast loading (<2.5s LCP), one-page checkout, and mobile payment methods (Apple Pay, Google Pay).

What shipping options should I offer?

Multi-carrier strategy: same-day/next-day for metros (99 Minutos), 2-5 day national (Estafeta, Redpack), premium (FedEx/DHL), and click-and-collect if you have physical stores. Free shipping above a threshold ($799-$999 MXN is typical) drives 25%+ higher average order value.

How do I handle returns in Mexican e-commerce?

PROFECO requires a minimum 5-business-day return window for online purchases. Implement a self-service returns portal with prepaid return labels. Offer store returns if you have physical locations (reduces cost). Process refunds within 15 business days to comply with regulations.

Is WhatsApp commerce worth investing in for México?

Absolutely. WhatsApp has 95 million users in México. 35% of consumers have purchased via WhatsApp. Implement WhatsApp Business API for: order confirmations, shipping updates, customer service, and conversational commerce (product discovery and ordering via chat). AI-powered WhatsApp commerce is a differentiator in 2026.

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Build Your E-commerce Advantage

The Mexican e-commerce market is growing at 38% per year. Companies that invest in robust, locally-optimized e-commerce platforms now will capture disproportionate market share. Those that wait will face higher competition and higher costs to catch up.

Start your e-commerce project → iTech Corp LLC builds e-commerce platforms with native Mexican payment integration, SAP/ERP connectivity, mobile-first architecture, and full fiscal compliance. From strategy to launch in 12-20 weeks.

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