Mexico freight disruption lingers as truckers’ strike fractures

Mexico's trucker strike entered day 2 on April 7, 2026, blocking key freight corridors including Mexico City-Toluca and Federal Highway 136 to Veracruz. Strike fragmentation shows some groups suspending blockades while others continue protesting security issues and rising diesel costs.
Cross-border shipments from Mexico manufacturing hubs face indefinite delays, forcing sellers to pivot to domestic suppliers or expedited air freight. Check your Mexico-sourced inventory levels now -- typical 2-3 week lead times could stretch to 6+ weeks if strikes persist.
This highlights the fragility of nearshoring strategies as companies moved production from Asia to Mexico post-COVID, creating new single points of failure in North American supply chains.
Audit inventory reports for Mexico-sourced products -- if under 60 days stock, secure alternative suppliers immediately
Contact freight forwarders to reroute shipments through air cargo or alternative land crossings in next 7 days
Bottom Line
Mexico freight strikes mean supply chain 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 freight strikes mean supply chain delays for cross-border sellers.
Key Stat / Trigger
6,263 cargo truck robbery investigations opened in Mexico in 2025
Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.
Full Coverage
Mexico’s nationwide trucker and farmer strike stretched into a second day Tuesday, with ongoing highway blockades, mounting congestion around Mexico City and continued disruptions to key freight corridors across the country.
What began Monday as a coordinated protest across at least 20 states has evolved into a prolonged logistics disruption, with some transport groups signaling the strike could continue until the federal government delivers concrete security and cost relief measures.
Blockades persist across central Mexico, key corridors As of early Tuesday, road closures remained in several critical corridors linking the State of Mexico with Mexico City, creating a “mobility crisis” in the country’s most important freight hub, according to El Manana.
Authorities and media outlets reported continued disruptions on highways including: Mexico–Toluca corridor (La Venta toll plaza) Federal Highway 136 (Mexico City–Veracruz) Federal Highway 110 in Guanajuato Siglo XXI Highway in Morelos Key toll plazas and access roads in central Mexico In some locations, traffic was completely paralyzed for hours, with limited alternative routes and long queues of trucks and passenger vehicles.
Nationwide, protests were reported in at least 13 to 16 states, including Veracruz, Michoacán, Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas and Baja California, with truckers and farmers using tractor-trailers to block highways and intermittently allow traffic to pass.
Strike shows signs of fragmentation — but tensions rising Conflicting reports from Mexican media suggest the strike may be fragmenting. Some outlets report that ANTAC and allied groups have temporarily suspended blockades pending talks with federal authorities, while localized protests continue in parts of the country.
At the same time, several major trucking and business organizations have distanced themselves from the actions and called for dialogue, highlighting divisions within the sector and uncertainty around how long freight disruptions may persist.
Some reports also indicated that certain blockades were lifted late Monday following a proposal from Mexico’s Interior Ministry; other groups have continued or resumed protests Tuesday, underscoring divisions within the movement, according to El Sur.
Leaders from the National Association of Transporters (ANTAC) pushed back against the government’s claim that there is “no reason” for protests, arguing that authorities are ignoring widespread insecurity, extortion and violence facing drivers.
“To say there are no reasons is to ignore the serious insecurity on the highways, where colleagues lose their lives or their property every day,” the group said according to Aristegui News.
Major industry organizations such as CANACAR have distanced themselves from the blockades, warning that highway closures increase risks for drivers and cargo and can drive up freight costs and spoil perishable goods.
Security concerns, costs continue to drive protests Transporters and agricultural producers reiterated that the strike is rooted in longstanding issues, including: Cargo theft and violent highway robberies Extortion by criminal groups and alleged abuses at checkpoints Rising diesel prices and operating costs Lack of effective government response to security concerns Protest leaders say the situation is “unsustainable” and are demanding direct talks with President Claudia Sheinbaum, along with measures such as eliminating diesel taxes, increasing highway patrols and creating a specialized prosecutor for cargo theft.
Mexico cargo theft and highway security — by the numbers 6,263 cargo truck robbery investigations opened in Mexico in 2025 (official cases) 16,000+ estimated cargo theft incidents annually including unreported crimes 50–60 cargo theft incidents per day nationwide 7+ billion pesos estimated annual economic losses from cargo theft 20 states affected by April 6 trucker and farmer strike and blockades Major affected freight corridors include Mexico–Querétaro, Mexico–Puebla, Mexico–Pachuca, Federal Highway 45, and border crossings in Ciudad Juárez, Tijuana and Mexicali Risk to freight, cross-border flows The ongoing disruptions are hitting core domestic and cross-border supply chains, including routes connecting central Mexico to manufacturing hubs, ports and U.
S. border crossings. In northern Mexico, blockades in Tamaulipas disrupted access to routes feeding cross-border trade lanes, while elsewhere, protesters temporarily halted freight rail movements and blocked access to major industrial facilities.
Industry leaders warn that prolonged disruptions could lead to higher transportation costs, delivery delays and increased cargo theft risk as trucks remain stationary on highways.
“The movement of goods can be affected to the point that perishable products become unusable, and road blockades leave operators and merchandise vulnerable,” said CANACAR President Augusto Ramos Melo. Outlook: uncertain as negotiations stall As of Tuesday morning, ne
Original Source
This briefing is based on reporting from Freightwaves. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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