The Mexico Brief is a free, public briefing on Mexico's economy and conditions, built from official data. It exists for people looking at Mexico from the outside: investors, journalists, people moving here, and anyone who wants the actual numbers in one place instead of scattered across a dozen institutional websites.
Most people outside Mexico form their view of the country from headlines. The official record is public, but it lives in separate portals, in Spanish, behind unfamiliar interfaces. The Mexico Brief collects that record in one place and refreshes it every six hours.
Mexico's own institutions: INEGI, Banxico, SHCP, CONEVAL, and others, plus international bodies where they are the primary source. Each figure links back to the institution that published it.
You can check each of these on the page in front of you:
The data refreshes every six hours. New official sources are added as they become available. When one stops publishing, its last value stays up, marked with the date it stopped.
The Mexico Brief reports numbers; it does not give opinion or investment advice. It is independent, with no affiliation to any government or party. Each page is built ahead of time from the sources it cites, not generated by an AI when you load it.
Every figure links to its source. If you find an error, tell us and we will correct it with a note. Start with the Sources page, which lists every feed and when it last updated.