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Capital Gains Taxes (%) - Mexico Compared to Continent

Footnote

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Argentina 0.00%
Chile 0.00%
Costa Rica 0.00%
Uruguay 0.00%
El Salvador 2.14%
Ecuador 5.50%
Panama 10.00%
Paraguay 17.50%
Guatemala 22.32%
Mexico 23.80%
Venezuela 24.92%
Brazil 25.00%
Honduras 25.31%
Colombia 30.00%
Peru 30.00%
Nicaragua 31.87%

 

 

Mexico: Capital gains taxes (%).

In arriving at effective capital gains tax rates, the Global Property Guide makes the following assumptions:

  • The property is directly and jointly owned by husband and wife;
  • They have owned it for 10 years;
  • It is their only source of capital gains in the country
  • It has appreciated in value by 100% over the 10 years to sale
  • The property was worth US$250,000 or €250,000 at purchase.
  • It is not their sole or principal residence.


These assumptions are critical. In many countries a holding period of less than 5 years results in capital gains being taxable. But a longer holding period often results in no capital gains tax being payable. For more details see the Data FAQ


Source: Global Property Guide Research, Contributing Accounting Firms

 

No house price or rent statistics are published in Mexico. The Sistemas Nacionales Estadistico y de Informacion Geografica is a rather weak site, which appears to concentrate on census data. The Banco de Mexico is better and has reasonable time-series.




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