Mexico receives 4.8 million cruise passengers in 2026 and strengthens its maritime tourism industry

Mexico continues consolidating itself as one of the leading cruise tourism powers in Latin America after registering the arrival of 4.8 million cruise passengers during the first four months of 2026, according to Mexico’s Tourism Minister, Josefina Rodríguez Zamora.

According to the head of Mexico’s Ministry of Tourism, the figure represents a 14.8 percent increase compared to the same period in 2025, reflecting the strengthening of the maritime tourism sector across the country’s ports.

In addition, between January and April, Mexico recorded 1,425 cruise ship arrivals at ports nationwide, a 10 percent increase compared to the same period last year.

“The arrival of cruise ships generates direct benefits for host communities by boosting spending at restaurants, businesses, tourism services, transportation, and recreational activities, while also contributing to job creation in ports and tourist destinations,” Rodríguez Zamora emphasized.

The official highlighted that the results, based on data from Mexico’s Ministry of the Navy, reflect Mexico’s strength as an international tourism destination and the growing importance of the cruise industry to the national economy.

Mexico’s Pacific region posted one of the country’s strongest growth rates for the sector, recording 1,708,341 passengers and 540 cruise ship arrivals during the first four months of the year.

The figures represent increases of 39.9 percent in passengers and 22.4 percent in arrivals compared to the same period in 2025.

Among the fastest-growing ports was Puerto Chiapas, which reported an 83.3 percent increase in arrivals and an 80.5 percent rise in passenger volume, consolidating itself as one of the country’s fastest-growing emerging cruise destinations.

Meanwhile, the Gulf-Caribbean region continued concentrating the lion’s share of the nation’s cruise activity.

During the first four months of 2026, the region registered 3.1 million passengers and 885 cruise arrivals, equivalent to increases of 4.6 percent and 3.5 percent, respectively.

Within that region, Cozumel remained the country’s leading cruise port after receiving 1,987,695 passengers and 571 cruise ship arrivals.

Those figures represent increases of 7.1 percent in passengers and 5.2 percent in arrivals compared to the same period the previous year.

For years Mexico has remained among the most important cruise destinations in the Western Hemisphere thanks to strategic ports in the Caribbean and Pacific, as well as its proximity to the United States, the principal source market for cruise travelers visiting the region.

The cruise industry also represents a major source of income for thousands of small businesses, tour operators, restaurants, artisans, and service providers in Mexican port cities.

Federal authorities have stated that the growth of maritime tourism forms part of the national strategy to position Mexico among the five most visited countries in the world in the coming years.

Source: Mexican Press Agency