Overview
- Starting September 12, customers can send letters, post cards, and administrative, legal or academic documents without commercial value to the United States from more than 1,500 post offices.
- Parcel, courier services, printed publications, magazines and books remain halted until further notice, according to the government announcement.
- Mexico paused postal and parcel shipments in late August after U.S. Executive Order 14324 ended the de minimis exemption and subjected all incoming packages to duties.
- Authorities say the items now accepted are not subject to tariffs, enabling limited correspondence to continue while broader commercial flows stay on hold.
- The Mexican government reports ongoing coordination with U.S. counterparts and postal bodies to define procedures and restore full services in an orderly manner.