Send Money to Mexico — Exchange Rates, Fees & What Your Recipient Really Gets
Sending money to Mexico? As of June 6, 2026, the official exchange rate is about 17.3 MXN per US dollar, while the parallel (black market) rate is roughly 17.4 MXN. Most international transfer services convert at or near the official rate — so a $500 transfer typically lands as about 8,642 MXN, even though those same dollars are worth around 8,708 MXN on the street.
In Mexico the gap between the two rates is small right now, so the rate you are quoted is close to the dollar's real local value. This page still helps you compare fees and corridors so you keep more of every dollar you send.
What does your recipient really get in Mexican Peso?
When you send US dollars to Mexico, the transfer service converts them to Mexican Peso at its own rate — usually pegged to the official Bank of Mexico (Banxico) rate of about 17.3 MXN per dollar, plus a margin. But on Mexico's parallel market, one dollar trades for roughly 17.4 MXN. So while $1,000 might be paid out as about 17,284 MXN through a money-transfer operator, the street value of $1,000 is closer to 17,415 MXN.
Because the rates are close in Mexico right now, the main thing to compare is the upfront fee and the provider's exchange-rate margin rather than any large parallel-market gap.
How to send money to Mexico
Popular ways to send money to Mexico are bank deposits, online remittance apps, cash pickup, and debit-card or wallet payouts. Each option carries different fees, speed and exchange-rate spreads, so the cheapest route depends on how your recipient wants to collect the Mexican Peso.
Before sending, compare three things across providers: (1) the upfront transfer fee, (2) the exchange rate they apply versus the live rate, and (3) how and how fast your recipient can collect the Mexican Peso. A slightly higher fee with a better exchange rate often delivers more money than a "zero-fee" transfer with a poor rate.
Typical fees and corridors for Mexico
Remittance costs to Mexico vary by corridor (the country you send from), payout method, and amount. Sending from regions with lots of competition and digital options is usually cheaper than cash-to-cash corridors. As a rule of thumb, the total cost of a transfer is the visible fee plus the exchange-rate margin — and the margin is where the parallel-market gap quietly bites.
Recipients in Mexico who can receive dollars directly (for example into a domiciliary or foreign-currency account) and convert them locally sometimes capture more value than those paid out in Mexican Peso at a provider's official-linked rate — precisely because of the parallel-market premium. Always weigh convenience against the effective rate.
Sending money to Mexico safely
Use licensed, regulated money-transfer providers and confirm the current foreign-exchange rules in Mexico before sending. Many countries require remittances to be paid out in local currency through approved channels, and rules change frequently. The rates shown here are aggregated for information and price-transparency only — they are not an offer to trade and are not financial or legal advice.
Treat the parallel rate as a benchmark for what the dollar is really worth in Mexico, so you can judge whether a provider's quoted rate is fair — not as a recommendation to use informal channels. Use our currency converter to check any amount against both the official and parallel rates before you send.
Money-transfer services for Mexico — and how each sets its rate
These operators commonly serve the Mexico corridor. The column nobody else shows is how each one sets its exchange rate — because that, not the headline fee, is usually the bigger cost. Services on the mid-market or stablecoin rate get your recipient closer to the dollar's real local value in Mexican Peso; those on the official rate plus a margin quietly leave the parallel-market gap on the table.
| Service | Type | Payout | Speed | How the rate is set |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Remitly | Cash + digital | Bank, wallet, cash pickup | Mins–days | Official rate + margin |
| Western Union | Cash + digital | Cash pickup, bank, wallet | Minutes | Official rate + margin |
| MoneyGram | Cash + digital | Cash pickup, bank | Minutes | Official rate + margin |
| Xoom (PayPal) | Digital app | Bank, wallet, cash pickup | Minutes | Official rate + margin |
| Ria | Cash + digital | Cash pickup, bank | Mins–same day | Official rate + margin |
| Wise | Digital app | Bank deposit | Mins–2 days | Mid-market rate + upfront fee |
| Crypto P2P (e.g. USDT) | Stablecoin / P2P | Local bank via P2P trade | Mins–hours | Parallel / market rate |
Informational only. Service availability, payout methods, speed and rate-setting approach are summarised from public information and change over time — we do not publish live fees or rates, and we do not partner with or endorse any provider. Always confirm the current Mexican Peso payout and terms with the provider before sending.