Dollar to in Banco de México - USD/MXN
Last update: Mon 30/03/2026 - Central Time Zone, Mexico ShareTable of changes FIX
| Change | |
|---|---|
| 7 days | 0.32531.83% |
| 30 days | 0.88405.13% |
Table of changes Interbancario 48 horas
| Change | |
|---|---|
| 7 days | 0.34521.94% |
| 30 days | 0.89355.19% |
According to data from Banco de México, FIX, the Dollar is quoted at $18.1033 MXN for purchase this Monday 30/03/2026. The selling rate recorded an increase of $0.0366 compared to the previous session (0.20%). The MXN/USD exchange rate reaches 0.0552.
| Mínimo | Máximo | |
|---|---|---|
| 30/03/2026 | 18.093 | 18.14 |
| Fecha | Mínimo | Máximo |
|---|---|---|
| 30/03/2026 | 18.093 | 18.14 |
| 27/03/2026 | 17.984 | 18.15 |
| 27/03/2026 | 17.984 | 18.15 |
| Fecha | Opening | Closing |
|---|---|---|
| 30/03/2026 | 18.0985 | 18.1253 |
| 27/03/2026 | 18.0373 | 18.1292 |
| 27/03/2026 | 18.0373 | 18.1292 |
Other rates from Banco de México, FIX
| Change (today) | Average Price (MXN) | |
|---|---|---|
| EUR | 0.00% | $20.7998 |
| CAD | 0.00% | $13.0039 |
| JPY | 0.00% | $0.1134 |
Mexican Peso News >>
Frequently asked questions about the dollar at Banco de México
The US dollar is the most widely used foreign currency in Mexico for international transactions, savings, and investments. Below we answer common questions about the exchange rate and currency exchange services at Banco de México.
When was Banco de México founded, what body or legal framework is it part of, and where is its main headquarters?
Banco de México opened its doors on September 1, 1925. It is not privately owned: it is Mexico’s autonomous central bank, governed by its own legal framework and constitutional mandate. Its headquarters are in the historic center of Mexico City, Mexico. Unlike a commercial bank, Banxico’s role is institutional and macro-financial: it manages monetary policy, supports financial stability and operates key payment infrastructure. For readers, the main point is that Banco de México depends on public law rather than on a corporate parent, so its relevance comes from legal authority and policy responsibility, not from retail products.
What does Banco de México do in Mexico and how is it useful for an everyday user?
Banco de México is the country’s central bank and the key authority for monetary policy, financial stability, payment systems, and reference data such as FIX. In Mexico, its value does not come from taking deposits or making retail loans, but from providing an institutional, regulatory, technical, or reference function. That is why it is usually consulted for its impact on payments, contracts, compliance, data, or financial-system rules. Understanding exactly what Banco de México does prevents users from treating it like a commercial bank when it actually serves a different role inside the Mexican ecosystem.
What portal, platform, or digital tools does Banco de México offer?
Banco de México runs platforms such as SIE and foreign-exchange portals and publishes statements, minutes, and reports online. That matters because much of the practical value of an institution or reference now depends on online access: search tools, portals, data series, filing services, official documents, or technology integration. For users in Mexico, it helps to review ease of access, update frequency, authentication, and whether the tool is only for consultation or also allows the full procedure to be completed online.
What main services, functions, or tools does Banco de México offer?
Banco de México it does not offer retail banking products; instead it provides regulation, statistics, payment-system infrastructure, publications, and financial references. In cases like this, “services” do not necessarily mean an account or a loan, but tools, publications, rules, platforms, or references that help people operate correctly in Mexico. For the user, the key is identifying whether the main value lies in consulting information, meeting an obligation, processing payments, following the market, or connecting to a payments network. That changes completely how the entity should be understood versus a traditional bank.
What important costs, requirements, or conditions should be reviewed when using Banco de México?
Banco de México does not extend credit to the public as a retail bank, so the key point here is the cost and usage conditions of the systems and frameworks it regulates. In basic accounts governed under Banxico rules, opening, maintenance, debit-card issuance, deposits, withdrawals, and balance inquiries at the same bank must be fee-free, and the general basic account requires no minimum opening amount and no minimum average monthly balance. For dollar transfers, SPID is aimed at legal entities holding U.S.-dollar demand accounts in Mexico. In practice, Banxico sets rules, publishes reference values, and operates infrastructure, but it does not publish a retail loan rate table comparable to a commercial bank.
What relationship does Banco de México have with exchange rates, payments, transfers, or financial procedures?
In Mexico, Banco de México is central to the FIX reference exchange rate, foreign-exchange policy, and the country’s payment infrastructure. That relationship may be direct, as with a benchmark used to convert obligations or publish FIX, or indirect, as with rules that affect payments, acceptance, or tax procedures. For users, understanding the exact link prevents confusion between official, bank, contractual, and market exchange rates. That distinction becomes critical whenever a payment, invoice, or filing depends on a precise reference.
What differentiates Banco de México from other financial institutions or reference sources in Mexico?
Banco de México is different because it is Mexico’s central bank, not a commercial lender. Its job is to conduct monetary policy, support financial stability and operate or supervise key payment infrastructure, so people consult it for official data, policy signals and reference rates rather than for retail accounts or loans. That institutional role makes Banxico a legal and technical reference for banks, companies, analysts and the public. In Mexico, understanding that difference matters because Banxico influences inflation expectations, benchmark rates, exchange-rate references and payment rails even though ordinary users do not bank with it in the retail sense.
What important changes, developments, or updates has Banco de México had in the last year?
Over the last year, Banco de México continued adjusting monetary policy, including the reduction that brought the target rate to 7.00% in December 2025 and the decision to keep it unchanged in February 2026. It also kept publishing minutes, inflation reports, payment-system information and exchange-rate references such as FIX. As of late March 2026, the next scheduled monetary-policy announcement was set for March 26, 2026. For users, analysts and businesses in Mexico, those publications remain essential because Banxico’s communications influence expectations for inflation, credit costs, the peso and short-term financial conditions.
Conversion Table for dollar to mexican peso in Banco de México
| Quantity | Average Price |
|---|---|
| 1 USD | 18.1033 MXN |
| 2 USD | 36.2066 MXN |
| 5 USD | 90.5165 MXN |
| 10 USD | 181.033 MXN |
| 20 USD | 362.066 MXN |
| 50 USD | 905.165 MXN |
| 100 USD | 1,810.33 MXN |
| 200 USD | 3,620.66 MXN |
| 250 USD | 4,525.83 MXN |
| 500 USD | 9,051.65 MXN |
| 750 USD | 13,577.48 MXN |
| 1000 USD | 18,103.30 MXN |
| 2000 USD | 36,206.60 MXN |
| 5000 USD | 90,516.50 MXN |
Conversion Table for mexican peso to dollar in Banco de México
| Quantity | Average Price |
|---|---|
| 1 MXN | 0.0552 USD |
| 2 MXN | 0.1104 USD |
| 5 MXN | 0.276 USD |
| 10 MXN | 0.552 USD |
| 20 MXN | 1.104 USD |
| 50 MXN | 2.76 USD |
| 100 MXN | 5.52 USD |
| 200 MXN | 11.04 USD |
| 250 MXN | 13.80 USD |
| 500 MXN | 27.60 USD |
| 750 MXN | 41.40 USD |
| 1000 MXN | 55.20 USD |
| 2000 MXN | 110.40 USD |
| 5000 MXN | 276 USD |
Exchange rates of dollar to mexican peso in other banks/institutions
| Banks | Change (today) | Buy / Sell * |
|---|---|---|
| Citibanamex | -0.17% | $17.55$18.55 |
| Elektra | 0.00% | $16.65$18.74 |
| Banorte | -0.30% | $16.85$18.50 |
| BBVA Bancomer | 1.89% | $17.28$18.41 |
| Afirme | 0.00% | $17$18.60 |
| Banco Santander | 0.85% | $18.0501 |
| Bancoppel | 0.53% | $17.10$18.69 |
| Bank of America | 0.69% | $17.1527$19.1571 |
| DOF | 1.52% | $18.0667 |
| Grupo Financiero Multiva | 0.00% | $18.17 |
| Intercam | 0.16% | $17.6052$18.6157 |
| FX Market | 0.19% | $18.1121 |
| Para pagos | 0.00% | $17.7957 |
| SAT | 1.52% | $18.0667 |
| Scotiabank | 0.00% | $15.60$19.10 |
| Ve por más | -0.37% | $17.5332$18.7332 |
| Visa | 0.20% | $18.1033 |




