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Las empresas del sector secundario absorbieron 3.7 millones de metros cuadrados industriales en México entre el primer trimestre de 2025 y 2026, un crecimiento interanual de 3.9%. Aunque el inventario ocupado sigue dominado por la producción exportadora, los datos muestran que la cadena vinculada al consumo doméstico comienza a ganar velocidad. Ese cambio empieza a reflejarse en los sectores que concentraron la mitad del crecimiento total.
Vehículos y partes encabezó la absorción industrial en México. En un año incorporó poco menos de 650,000 metros cuadrados, equivalente al 17% de la expansión nacional. Sin embargo, el dato cambia de escala al considerar que el sector concentra uno de cada cuatro metros cuadrados industriales ocupados del país. Sobre esa base, su expansión fue menor a 3%, por debajo del promedio nacional, mientras su participación dentro del inventario ocupado cayó de 26% a 25%. La diferencia parece menor, pero...
In general, the data suggests that Mexico’s industrial growth is beginning to rely on a base less dependent on a single sectoral engine, without necessarily displacing export manufacturing. The distinction is relevant because it brings a growing portion of industrial demand closer to the behavior of the domestic market. Operationally, this implies a system less concentrated around large export cycles and more exposed to activities that require warehousing, logistics, and continuous expansion of operating capacity.
The shift is also beginning to alter the territorial distribution of industrial demand, as large manufacturing cycles tend to concentrate in highly specialized corridors, while activities tied to consumption and logistics require a presence closer to population centers, distribution routes, and continuous operating nodes.
The difference also shows in how each activity consumes industrial space. While sectors such as vehicles and parts kept their average footprint per occupant practically stable over the last year, consumer products began expanding it more aggressively. Between the first quarter of 2025 and 2026, the sector’s average occupied space per tenant increased by nearly 900 square meters. The figure suggests that part of the growth no longer comes exclusively from new participants, but also from existing operators expanding capacity to respond to more recurrent demand.
Overall, the industrial real estate sector appears to be moving toward a more fragmented, distributed expansion among multiple operators, in contrast to previous cycles dominated by large, isolated additions. Under that logic, growth is no longer measured solely by the size of the plants arriving in the country, but also by the system’s ability to sustain more diversified expansion.
For more analysis on Mexico’s industrial market, visit SiiLA Market Analytics or contact us at contacto@siila.com.mx.











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