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Mexico motorhome travel rules

Mexico is a major overland motorhome destination, but planning depends on temporary vehicle import rules, toll-road costs, tourist road assistance, protected-area permissions and heat or hurricane-season routing.

CountryMexico
Reviewed5 de junio de 2026
Sources5

After the rules

Mexico: continue planning

Open CamperHub tools with Mexico already selected: route, rules, services, risks and budget.

Mexico

What to check

Overnight parking, RV parks and protected areas

Use RV parks, campsites, guarded parking, private permission and official protected-area camping rather than assuming roadside or beach camping is allowed.

  • CONANP protected areas can set specific camping, fire, access, waste and guide rules.
  • In beach towns, historic centres and tourist zones, overnight parking can be controlled by local police, signs or private operators.

What to check

RV parks, services and route spacing

Service density varies sharply: Baja and popular colonial or beach routes have more RV infrastructure than remote mountain, desert or jungle routes.

  • Confirm water, dump, electricity, height clearance, gate width, security and generator rules before arrival.
  • Plan fuel, cash, mobile coverage and daylight arrivals before long cuota/libre road choices.

What to check

Cuotas, CAPUFE and route costs

Mexico has a large paid-road network; toll costs can be significant for long motorhome routes and can differ by route and vehicle class.

  • Use CAPUFE tariff references for federal toll sections and compare cuota roads with libre alternatives for cost, time and safety.
  • Ángeles Verdes provides tourist road assistance coverage; save the current 078 contact and coverage notes before the trip.

What to check

Cities, checkpoints and size limits

There is no simple nationwide low-emission sticker for foreign motorhomes, but city restrictions, old streets, police checkpoints and parking geometry matter.

  • Mexico City and large metro areas are better handled from secure parking, transit, taxis or campsites.
  • Mountain towns, pueblos magicos, colonial centres and beach access roads can be unsuitable for long or high vehicles.

What to check

FMM, TIP, insurance and licence

For foreign-plated vehicles, treat the tourist entry document, vehicle Temporary Import Permit and Mexican insurance as core trip documents.

  • Temporary vehicle import is handled through Banjercito/SAT rules; cancel the permit correctly when leaving the applicable zone or country.
  • Carry passport, immigration status proof, registration, title or rental permission, licence, insurance and category coverage for trailers or heavy motorhomes.

What to check

Heat, hurricanes and mountain weather

Mexico can combine desert heat, tropical storms, high-altitude cold and mountain road closures in one long route.

  • Plan extra water, shade and cooling capacity for Baja, Sonora, deserts and lowland summer routes.
  • Check hurricane-season forecasts for Gulf, Caribbean and Pacific coast routes, and avoid night driving on unfamiliar rural roads.

Official links

This is an editorial planning reference. Before travel, check official pages, local signs, rental terms and insurance coverage.