Contrôle qualité et inspection au Mexique. Automobile, électronique, dispositifs médicaux et alimentaire. Inspecteurs locaux à Monterrey, Guadalajara et Mexico.

Export Volume
$593 billion (2023)
Manufacturers
580,000+ manufacturing establishments
Trade Partners
United States (80%+ of exports), Canada, European Union
Third-largest auto exporter globally, with major assembly plants from BMW, Audi, Toyota, GM, Ford, Honda, Mazda, and Kia. Mexico produced over 3.5 million vehicles in 2023. The Bajío region and northern border cities host deep Tier 1/2/3 supplier networks. Factories follow IATF 16949 quality management standards, and the automotive workforce is among the most experienced in the Americas.
Growing aerospace cluster in Querétaro, Chihuahua, and Baja California producing components for Boeing, Airbus, and Bombardier.
Consumer electronics, electronic components, and EMS manufacturing in Tijuana, Ciudad Juárez, and Guadalajara.
One of the world's top medical device exporters, with clusters in Tijuana, Ciudad Juárez, and the Bajío region.
Processed foods, beverages, avocados, tequila, and beer for export.
À partir de 240 $/jour-homme · Planification sous 48h
Mexique is a key sourcing destination where quality control inspections are essential to protect your supply chain.
Our inspectors in Mexique understand regional manufacturing practices, common quality issues, and applicable standards.
Detailed photo-documented reports delivered within 24 hours of each inspection, giving you fast, actionable insights.
Every inspection follows internationally recognized AQL sampling standards (ISO 2859-1) for reliable, data-driven quality decisions.
Rapid scheduling within 48 hours of booking for inspections across Mexique's major manufacturing regions.
Comprehensive photo evidence of defects classified as critical, major, or minor for clear shipping decisions.
Reduce return rates, avoid customs rejections, and protect your brand reputation when sourcing from Mexique.
Le Mexique est le premier partenaire commercial des États-Unis et une puissance manufacturière positionnée au cœur des chaînes d'approvisionnement nord-américaines. Dans le cadre de l'accord commercial USMCA, le Mexique a attiré d'importants investissements étrangers dans les secteurs automobile, aérospatial, électronique et des dispositifs médicaux. Le contrôle qualité au Mexique est essentiel pour les acheteurs qui tirent parti des avantages du nearshoring, notamment la proximité, la capacité de livraison le jour même et l'accès commercial en franchise de droits.
Monterrey (Nuevo León) — Capitale industrielle du Mexique, excellant dans la fabrication automobile, l'acier, l'électronique et la fabrication avancée. Siège d'opérations multinationales majeures et d'une main-d'œuvre hautement qualifiée.
Région du Bajío (Querétaro, Guanajuato, Aguascalientes) — Pôle automobile et aérospatial en pleine croissance, accueillant BMW, Toyota, Honda, Mazda et de grandes entreprises aérospatiales comme Bombardier et Safran.
Ciudad Juárez et Tijuana — Centres manufacturiers frontaliers spécialisés dans l'assemblage électronique, les dispositifs médicaux et les faisceaux de câbles automobiles. La proximité avec les États-Unis permet des livraisons en juste-à-temps.
Guadalajara (Jalisco) — La « Silicon Valley » du Mexique, accueillant la fabrication électronique, le développement logiciel et l'industrie technologique en croissance du pays.
Puebla et Toluca — Sites de grandes usines d'assemblage automobile, notamment Volkswagen et Chrysler, avec des réseaux de fournisseurs profonds.
Le Mexique offre des avantages convaincants pour les acheteurs nord-américains cherchant la résilience de leur chaîne d'approvisionnement :
Les niveaux de qualité au Mexique varient selon le secteur et le niveau de fournisseur. Les usines automobiles et aérospatiales de rang 1 maintiennent des systèmes qualité de classe mondiale (IATF 16949, AS9100), tandis que les fournisseurs de rangs 2/3 et les fabricants plus petits peuvent disposer d'un management qualité moins développé. La rotation du personnel dans les villes frontalières peut temporairement affecter la cohérence qualité. Les inspections avant expédition et les audits d'usine aident à gérer la qualité dans le paysage manufacturier diversifié du Mexique.
Nos services au Mexique incluent inspections avant expédition, inspections en cours de production, contrôles initiaux de production, contrôles de chargement de conteneur, audits d'usine et vérifications de fournisseurs. Nous couvrons Monterrey, Querétaro, Guadalajara, Mexico, les villes frontalières et toutes les principales régions manufacturières. Contactez-nous pour un devis gratuit.
Mexico is the United States' largest trading partner and a manufacturing powerhouse positioned at the crossroads of North American supply chains. The country's manufacturing sector has grown significantly under the USMCA (formerly NAFTA) trade agreement, attracting massive foreign investment in automotive, aerospace, electronics, and medical devices. Mexico produced over 3.5 million vehicles in 2023, making it one of the world's top auto manufacturers, and the country's total manufacturing exports exceeded $593 billion — more than any Latin American country.
The maquiladora model — export-oriented factories in border cities that import materials duty-free and re-export finished goods — has evolved into sophisticated manufacturing clusters that increasingly perform high-value activities including engineering, design, and R&D. Monterrey is Mexico's industrial capital, excelling in automotive, steel, and electronics with a highly educated workforce. The Bajío region (Querétaro, Guanajuato, Aguascalientes) has emerged as a world-class automotive and aerospace hub, attracting BMW, Audi, Toyota, and Honda assembly plants along with their supplier networks. Ciudad Juárez and Tijuana are electronics and medical device manufacturing centers, benefiting from cross-border logistics with El Paso and San Diego respectively. Puebla and Toluca house major automotive assembly plants for Volkswagen and Chrysler.
Mexico's manufacturing quality has improved significantly as global OEMs have invested heavily in local workforce training, quality systems, and supplier development programs. Many Tier 1 factories operate under rigorous quality management systems — IATF 16949 for automotive, AS9100 for aerospace, and ISO 13485 for medical devices — to meet the exacting requirements of their multinational customers. The nearshoring trend accelerated by pandemic-era supply chain disruptions has brought additional investment and quality improvement across the manufacturing sector.
Quality control in Mexico benefits from proximity to the US market, enabling just-in-time delivery and rapid response to quality issues — a defective batch can be replaced within days rather than weeks. However, challenges include high workforce turnover in border cities (where workers can easily switch between competing maquiladoras), varying quality levels among Tier 2 and Tier 3 suppliers that may lack formal quality management systems, and regional security considerations in certain areas. Regular pre-shipment inspections and supplier audits are essential to maintain supply chain reliability across Mexico's diverse manufacturing landscape.
USMCA rules of origin determine duty-free access to US and Canadian markets, with specific automotive content requirements — 75% regional value content for vehicles and key components. Mexico's NOM (Normas Oficiales Mexicanas) are mandatory technical standards for products sold domestically, covering safety, labeling, and performance requirements across hundreds of product categories. The IMMEX (Industria Manufacturera, Maquiladora y de Servicios de Exportación) program provides duty-free import of raw materials and components for manufacturing and re-export, significantly reducing production costs. The automotive sector follows IATF 16949 quality standards, aerospace follows AS9100, and medical devices follow ISO 13485 and FDA 21 CFR Part 820. Food exports must comply with FDA, USDA, and FSIS requirements for the US market, with SENASICA (Mexico's food safety authority) overseeing domestic food safety standards.
Tip 1
Spanish is the business language, though English is widely spoken in export-oriented factories, especially in border regions and major industrial cities like Monterrey and Querétaro.
Tip 2
Business relationships are important — take time for personal interaction and small talk before getting down to business details.
Tip 3
Avoid scheduling critical activities during Semana Santa (Holy Week, typically in March/April) and the December holiday season (mid-December to early January), when many factories shut down completely.
Tip 4
Northern Mexico tends to have a more direct, US-influenced business culture, while central and southern regions are more formal and relationship-oriented.
Tip 5
Punctuality expectations vary by region — be on time but expect flexibility.
Tip 6
Most Mexican manufacturers are professional and experienced with international quality requirements, particularly in the automotive and aerospace sectors.
Common quality issues vary by sector. In automotive, issues may include dimensional tolerances and surface finish defects in Tier 2/3 suppliers. In electronics, soldering quality and component placement accuracy are key concerns. In food products, labeling compliance and packaging integrity are common areas requiring attention. Workforce turnover in border cities can temporarily affect quality consistency.
Inspection services in Mexico cost $340 per man-day — all-inclusive with no hidden fees. Factory audits start at $540 per man-day. Inspector coverage is strong in major manufacturing cities like Monterrey, Querétaro, Guadalajara, and border cities. Contact Tetra Inspection for pricing specific to your location and inspection type.
Nearshoring to Mexico offers several advantages for North American buyers: proximity enabling same-day or next-day delivery to the US, USMCA duty-free access, similar time zones facilitating real-time communication, lower shipping costs and shorter lead times than Asia, and reduced supply chain risk from geopolitical disruptions. Many companies are relocating or establishing secondary manufacturing in Mexico as part of supply chain diversification strategies.
USMCA doesn't directly set quality standards, but its rules of origin requirements mean buyers must verify that products meet specific regional content thresholds to qualify for duty-free treatment. For automotive products, 75% regional value content is required. Tetra Inspection can conduct audits to verify manufacturing processes and component sourcing comply with USMCA origin requirements.
Tetra Inspection provides comprehensive services in Mexico including pre-shipment inspections, during-production inspections, factory audits, supplier verification, and social compliance audits. Our inspectors cover all major manufacturing regions from border cities to central Mexico, with reports delivered within 24 hours.
USMCA compliance verification involves confirming that products meet rules of origin requirements to qualify for duty-free access to the US and Canadian markets. For automotive products, this means 75% regional value content must be achieved. Tetra Inspection can conduct supplier audits that include verification of manufacturing processes, component sourcing documentation, and regional value content calculations. Our inspectors can verify that claimed Mexican-origin products are genuinely manufactured in Mexico and not simply transshipped or minimally processed. This due diligence is increasingly important as US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) conducts more rigorous origin verification checks.
Nos inspecteurs en Mexique sont prêts à protéger votre chaîne d'approvisionnement. Obtenez un devis en quelques minutes.
Nos inspecteurs en Mexique réservent 2 à 3 semaines à l'avance