Frequently asked questions about Mexico
Which prop firms accept Mexican residents?
FTMO, FundedNext, Apex Trader Funding and most major offshore prop firms accept Mexican residents per their public terms. Mexico is one of the more open LATAM jurisdictions for offshore prop-firm participation. Verify each firm's current jurisdiction list before paying for an evaluation.
Why are Mexican crypto trading tournaments rare?
Mexico's Ley Fintech regulatory framework has been conservative on retail-trader incentives, and the ITF licensing cost has been high relative to local-exchange revenue. Bitso, the dominant local crypto exchange, has not run a Trading Cup since 2020. Current Mexican crypto contest activity centers on Bitso's Onchain XP leaderboard (Perps beta) rather than headline prize tournaments.
How are tournament prize winnings taxed in Mexico?
Tournament prize income is generally reportable as miscellaneous income under Mexican income-tax law (ISR). Crypto-asset gains follow SAT guidance on virtual digital assets. The exact treatment depends on whether the activity is hobby or business activity; consult a Mexican contador for amounts above modest thresholds.
What's Reto Actinver?
Mexico's flagship trading-tournament — an annual simulator competition run by Actinver with MXN 2M+ in prize pool across approximately 30 participating universities. Held October-November each year; the most-attended retail trading contest in Mexico.
Can Mexican residents enter international championships?
Yes — WCTC and the U.S. Investing Championship accept Mexican residents as international entrants. The audited-statement structure is the same; foreign-currency prize income is reportable under Mexican income-tax law.
