According to INFONAVIT guidance (Criterio Normativo 01/2025) and as confirmed by recent court rulings, employers’ obligations are limited to deducting and remitting loan repayments to INFONAVIT only when salary is actually paid (e.g., during employer-paid sick leave or family leave). If no salary is paid (e.g., unpaid leave or leave covered only by social security), there is no basis for deduction, and employers are not required to make any loan repayment on employees’ behalf. The key new point is that loan repayment obligations still accrue even when no salary is paid, and employees must arrange to cover these liabilities themselves; employers are not required to fund any shortfalls out of pocket.
Recent amendments to the Law of the National Housing Fund Institute for Workers (INFONAVIT, in Spanish) require employers of employees on sickness, disability or family leave who have outstanding housing loans from INFONAVIT to make loan payments on behalf of those employees. The reforms also expand INFONAVIT’s responsibilities to include a new social leasing program for INFONAVIT-owned housing, with an option for tenants to purchase the property at a reduced cost.
The legislation calls for employers to comply with the new requirements by September 17, 2025 (the loan payment due date for the July to August 2025 period). While potential challenges to the constitutionality of the amendments are likely, employers are encouraged to assess how many of their employees have active INFONAVIT loans, update their payroll systems as needed, evaluate the financial impact and obtain legal counsel on compliance specifics. According to INFONAVIT data, as of March 2025 there were 5.7 million active housing loans, with a total outstanding balance of MXN 1,869.29 billion (approximately USD 97 billion). The estimated average loan balance is around MXN 327,946 (USD 16,900). With 22.4 million employees registered with the IMSS at that time, an estimated 26% of the IMSS-covered workforce holds an active INFONAVIT loan. Failure to make the required loan payments on behalf of employees may result in fines ranging from three to 350 times the daily value of UMA (MXN 113.14 as of February 1, 2025), among other penalties.