Mexico City’s Historic Center, recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site, is currently undergoing a significant transformation. In a mere four years, the number of temporary and permanent residences granted to Chinese citizens has surged by an astonishing 245%, leaping from 2,674 in 2020 to a projected 9,224 in 2024. This uptick represents a profound shift in the demographic landscape of the city.
🚨🇲🇽🇨🇳 CHINESE INVASION IN THE HEART OF CDMX
In just four years, the issuance of residences to Chinese citizens in Mexico has soared by 245%: from 2,674 in 2020 to 9,224 in 2024 📊.
The Historic Center has become the focal point of this surge, where Mexican merchants…
— Códigos X 💵👑 (@El_Codigo_X) September 27, 2025
This migratory wave, significantly driven by evolving bilateral trade relations, is heavily concentrated in the capital, where over 3,500 Chinese enterprises constitute 20% of all local commerce. These businesses are cited for displacing Mexican vendors through aggressive pricing strategies known as dumping—selling products below cost and saturating the market with low-priced “Made in China” offerings.
The situation becomes even more staggering when looking at enforcement records: in just one year (2023-2024), 29,818 Chinese nationals were detained for being in the country without proper documentation, a stark increase from the 1,312 cases recorded between 2019 and 2022. Notably, Mexico City is also absorbing 75% of Chinese investment, reaching $1.074 billion in 2024, right alongside this residency growth.
By 2023, approximately 5,018 Chinese nationals obtained temporary residencies—up 157% from 2019—positioning China as the third-largest migrant source in Mexico, following the United States and Colombia. The driving forces behind this migration are multifocal: China’s GDP experienced a mere 5.2% growth in 2023, its lowest in decades, highlighting significant economic distress, alongside issues such as a 15% youth unemployment rate and ongoing geopolitical friction with the West.
Many Chinese migrants perceive Mexico as a strategic gateway to the United States or a favorable environment for business. The relocation of Chinese manufacturing to Mexican soil—largely spurred by the USMCA trade agreement—has injected capital into the economy but also intensified competition for local businesses.
In the Historic Center, the ramifications are readily apparent. Streets like Mixcalco, Miguel Alemán, and San Antonio Tomatlán have transitioned from bustling markets of wedding dresses and traditional attire to warehouses stuffed with Chinese synthetic textiles.
Dumping practices underpin this dramatic shift. Chinese exports such as footwear, textiles, and electronics flood the Mexican market at prices 5-14% lower than those of local producers, driven by state subsidies and customs undervaluation. In 2024, imports of Chinese footwear saw a staggering 59% increase, eroding 10% of local production and resulting in an estimated 22,000 job losses in the domestic sector.
In response, the Ministry of Economy has introduced compensatory tariffs ranging from 17-35% on Chinese footwear and sneakers as of September 2025, recognizing the economic damage inflicted since 2020. The impact on Mexican artisans is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.
At the Paseo de la Reforma Artisan Expo, mass-produced pre-Hispanic embroidery by Chinese manufacturers undercuts local artisans, with prices so low that they make authentic Mexican craftsmanship look exorbitant. Crafts such as huipiles, molcajetes, and nativity scenes are appearing in markets like the Zócalo and Alameda Central, often sporting “Made in China” labels that imitate traditional designs.
SILENT INVASION OF CHINESE GOODS IN MEXICAN MARKETS
The mass influx of Chinese products into Mexico is taking a toll on SMEs and eroding our cultural identity. From flags to food products with protected designations, these imitations are convenient for consumers. pic.twitter.com/rsYo3yL8ok— El Despertador de Yucatan (@despertador_Yuc) September 23, 2025
E-commerce platforms such as Temu and Shein further exacerbate this predicament, offering holiday decorations for just 50 pesos, while local artisans struggle to sell their authentic pieces at 500 pesos. Estimates suggest that as much as 20% of the 20,000 businesses in the Historic Center are now owned by Chinese interests.
This takeover reaches beyond mere commerce. Trucks laden with goods rumble through narrow streets at dawn, wreaking havoc on the pedestrian experience and degrading urban infrastructure. Sidewalks are redefined as loading zones, while Chinese street vendors directly compete with Mexico’s expansive informal sector.
Conflicts between Chinese and Korean communities over space, particularly in Tepito and the growing Chinatown area, underscore rising tensions. Chinese businesses, using significant capital, are outcompeting Koreans and even forging alliances with groups such as the Unión Tepito for protection.
From an economic standpoint, Mexico imports a staggering $10.64 billion monthly from China in sectors like telecommunications, automotive parts, and textiles, yet exports a mere $686 million in minerals. This stark trade imbalance—a deficit of $9.954 billion as of May 2025—deepens Mexico’s economic dependency.
According to the National Chamber of Commerce, unfair competition in the clothing market alone costs the country 65 billion pesos annually, compounded by 38 billion pesos tied to tax evasion.
The traditional Chinatown, nestled between Independencia and Victoria streets, no longer exists as a cultural enclave; instead, it increasingly resembles a rapidly spreading cancer, threatening to consume the unique identity of the Historic Center.
This phenomenon transcends economic implications—it’s also an insidious attack on Mexico’s cultural and labor sovereignty. While Beijing continues to subsidize its industrial surpluses, flooding the market with 20,000 tons of e-commerce goods daily, progressive Mexican administrations seem to prioritize globalization at the expense of artisans and small businesses.
How much longer will we permit “Made in China” products to suffocate our rich heritage? The response must involve substantial tariffs, robust promotion of “Made in Mexico,” and a reevaluation of immigration policies that currently favor unfair competitors over national interests.
About The Author
Joana Campos
Joana Campos is a lawyer and editor with over ten years of experience managing international development projects, focused on sustainability and positive social impact. She previously worked as a corporate lawyer and is a graduate of the University of Guadalajara.