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Mexico’s Senate backs 40-hour workweek in initial vote

By Thomson Reuters Feb 11, 2026 | 4:46 PM

MEXICO CITY, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Mexico’s Senate on Wednesday approved a presidential proposal to reduce the legal workweek ​to 40 hours from 48, ‌overriding resistance from both unions and the opposition with a revamped version of a previously proposed reform.

The initiative was unanimously approved in ‌general ​terms with 121 votes, ⁠and now moves to ⁠the lower house of Congress for final debate.

After years of back-and-forth between Congress and the private sector, President Claudia ​Sheinbaum in December formally introduced a bill to gradually implement the ⁠40-hour workweek.

The proposal aims ⁠to reduce the workweek by ​two hours per year until 2030 for ​some 13.4 million workers.

Opposition lawmakers and union ‌leaders have called it a watered-down proposal, arguing that it leaves loopholes that would not substantially reduce weekly workloads.

If ⁠the bill passes, the reform would take effect on May 1st, with the first two-hour ⁠reduction implemented ‌in January 2027.

Mexico leads ⁠rankings in the Organisation for ​Economic ‌Cooperation and Development (OECD) for longest working ​hours, ⁠with 2,226 hours per person annually. It also has the lowest labor productivity and lowest wages among the 38 member states.

(Reporting by Diego Ore, Editing by Daina ​Beth Solomon)