LogisticsIndustry ContextMonday, April 6, 20263 min read

Mexico truckers block key freight routes in nationwide strike

Freightwaves3d agoamazonwalmarttarget
Mexico truckers block key freight routes in nationwide strike
Executive Summary

Mexican truckers and farmers launched a nationwide strike on April 6, 2026, blocking major freight corridors and US-Mexico border crossings in 20+ states due to cargo crime, high fuel costs, and infrastructure issues. Blockades hit key routes including Mexico City access roads and border crossings in Ciudad Juárez, Tijuana, and Mexicali.

Our Take

Cross-border inventory replenishment from Mexican suppliers will face delays, potentially creating stockouts for sellers relying on just-in-time inventory strategies. Check your supplier geographic concentration - if 30%+ of your supply chain touches Mexico, prepare for 1-2 week delays and consider air freight alternatives.

What This Means

This highlights the fragility of North American supply chains and the need for geographic diversification as labor disputes increasingly disrupt just-in-time inventory models.

Key Takeaways

Check Inventory Performance Dashboard in Seller Central - if any SKUs show <30 days supply and use Mexican suppliers, expedite orders via air freight immediately

Contact Mexican suppliers today to confirm shipment status and establish backup logistics routes through alternative border crossings

Bottom Line

Mexico trucker strike means supply delays for cross-border sellers.

Source Lens

Industry Context

Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.

Impact Level

medium

Mexico trucker strike means supply delays for cross-border sellers.

Key Stat / Trigger

6,263 cargo truck robbery investigations in 2025

Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.

Relevant For
SellersBrands

Full Coverage

A nationwide strike by Mexican truckers and farmers blocked major highways and freight corridors across Mexico on Monday, disrupting access to Mexico City, industrial zones and several U. S. -Mexico border crossings.

The protest, organized by the National Association of Transporters (ANTAC) and the National Front for the Rescue of the Mexican Countryside (FNRCM), included road blockades in at least 20 states and began around 7 a. m. CST, with disruptions expected to last several hours or longer in some areas.

The groups say the strike is in response to rising cargo crime, high diesel and operating costs, deteriorating road infrastructure and a lack of progress on agreements with the federal government related to highway security and extortion.

Major freight corridors affected According to Mexican media reports, blockades were reported on several of Mexico’s most important freight routes, including: Mexico–Querétaro Mexico–Puebla Mexico–Pachuca Mexico–Cuernavaca Federal Highway 45 in the Bajío region Culiacán–Mazatlán corridor Guadalajara–Colima and Mexico–Guadalajara routes Access roads to Mexico City Border crossings in Ciudad Juárez, Tijuana and Mexicali These corridors connect Mexico’s manufacturing hubs, ports and border crossings, making them critical for domestic distribution and cross-border trade.

The strike is affecting access to industrial corridors, customs facilities and toll roads, similar to protests in November 2025 that disrupted more than 40 highways and access to industrial zones and customs facilities.

Security and costs drive protests Transport and agricultural groups say insecurity remains one of the biggest issues facing freight operators in Mexico.

Official government data shows 6,263 investigations into cargo truck robberies were opened in 2025, but industry groups estimate the true number of cargo theft incidents — including unreported cases — exceeded 16,000, with losses topping 7 billion pesos annually.

Protesters are demanding: Increased National Guard presence on highways Action against extortion and corruption at checkpoints Lower operating costs, including diesel Support programs and policy changes for agricultural producers Farmers joining the strike say insecurity, high fuel costs and agricultural pricing pressures are hurting rural producers and transport operators alike.

Government pushes back Mexico’s Interior Ministry said the government has held multiple meetings with transport and agricultural groups and has provided billions of pesos in support to farmers, arguing there is “no reason” for the protests and warning that blockades affect third parties and the broader economy, according to Omnia.

Still, organizers say the strike could continue if no agreements are reached, raising the risk of ongoing disruptions to supply chains and freight movement across Mexico. The post Mexico truckers block key freight routes in nationwide strike appeared first on FreightWaves.

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Freightwaves. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

View original
LinkedIn Post Generator

Style

Audience