Interactive guide · Agrarian land

Is That Mexican Land Ejido? Take the 2-Minute Test

You found land in Mexico. The price looks wonderful. Before you fall further in love, let's run the test every buyer should run — because roughly half of Mexico is ejidoEjido: communal agrarian land created after the Mexican Revolution, governed by its own legal system and registry. Foreigners cannot acquire ownership of it. land, and what circulates around it is posesiónPosesión (possession): holding and using land — on the agrarian system's terms. Not ownership. The entire ejido trap is paying an ownership price for a possession status., never ownership you can register.

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The Ejido Risk Test

3 questions · your answers stay on your device

Question 1 of 3

How does the price compare to similar titled properties in the area?

Question 2 of 3

What paperwork does the seller talk about?

Question 3 of 3

How would the deal close — and how fast do they want your money?

Your result

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Why these three questions?

Each one probes a different wall of the trap. The price question detects risk being discounted into the deal. The paperwork question catches the single most reliable tell: sellers of ejido land talk about rights, never title — because title is the thing they cannot give you. And the closing question reveals whether the deal can even end in a registered deed — or only in a private paper and a hurry.

The trap inside "the asamblea approved it"
The asambleaAsamblea: the ejido's supreme governing body — the general meeting of ejidatarios that decides the community's land matters. Powerful inside the agrarian world; unable to convert communal land into your private property. is genuinely powerful inside the agrarian world — which is why its minutes look so convincing. But its power has a boundary: it can bless your possession; it cannot create ownership for you. Official-looking is not the same as legally effective.
The trap inside "it's being regularized"
There IS a real process (dominio plenoDominio pleno: the legal process by which ejido parcels can, in some cases, become private property. Takes years, depends on community votes, fails more often than it succeeds.) by which ejido land can become private property. That grain of truth is what makes this pitch work. But the process takes years, depends on votes you don't control, and fails more often than it succeeds. Paying today for that maybe is financing someone else's long shot.

Your next steps — check them off as you go

The 10-Minute Verification

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This interactive guide provides legal information, not legal advice; no attorney-client relationship is created by using it. Your test answers and checklist never leave your device. © 2026 Terra Firma Attorneys at Law.