The adjustment was also reflected in the annual accumulated. Between January and November 2025, Mexico received 56,469 million dollars in remittances, a decrease of 5.1% compared to the same period in 2024. Even so, the flow remained at historically high levels and almost entirely arrived by electronic means, which accounted for 99.1% of the total.
On the other side of the scale, remittances sent from Mexico abroad totaled just 91 million dollars in November, with an annual decrease of 1.2%. In the accumulated of the first eleven months of the year, these expenses fell 11.4%, reaching 1,060 million dollars.
With this, the balance of the remittance account remained largely positive. In November, the surplus was 5,034 million dollars, although it was lower than that observed a year earlier. In the January-November period, the balance reached 55,409 million dollars, also below the level of 2024.
The seasonally adjusted data nuances the picture. In monthly comparison, remittance income grew 1.8% in November, which suggests a slight recovery after months of adjustments. Even so, the closing of 2025 made it clear that the great engine of family currencies began to lose strength, in a context of greater economic pressure for migrants in the United States.
