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Charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in Mexico: the key to last-mile fleets

By MOVE Editorial TeamUpdated: 10 January 20267 min read
Charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in Mexico: the key to last-mile fleets

Charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in Mexico is evolving fast, shifting from constraint to strategic enabler for urban logistics. CDMX concentrates 22% of the country's charging points, favored by driving restrictions on combustion vehicles.

Current Landscape

Mexico City leads in charging infrastructure, followed by Monterrey and Guadalajara. This urban concentration makes it easier to operate electric fleets along the country's main distribution routes.

Identified Technical Challenges

• **Intercity corridors** (Puebla-Guadalajara) need more fast chargers

• **Demand management** for large fleets (smart charging, V2G)

• **DC fast charging** for double shifts in last-mile operations

Enterprise Solutions

Leading companies are implementing:

• **Dedicated charging yards** with AC/DC plus photovoltaics to cut energy costs

• **Collaboration with utilities** such as Enel X and Huawei Digital Power

• **Smart charging** that optimizes consumption and avoids demand peaks

Strategy for Last-Mile Fleets

For last-mile fleets, route diagnostics are key: not every route can be electrified immediately. Controlled pilots make it possible to validate charging windows and scale progressively.

Competitive Advantage

Companies with their own infrastructure control energy costs and guarantee operational continuity. This translates into higher service reliability and better compliance with delivery windows.

Charging infrastructure is no longer a barrier — it is an opportunity to stand out. Companies that invest in smart charging solutions will gain lasting operational advantages.