municipalities of Mexico

{{Short description|Second-level administrative divisions of Mexico}}

{{Infobox subdivision type

| name = Municipality
{{small|Municipio (Spanish)}}

| alt_name =

| map = File:Municipalities of México (black borders).svg

| caption = Municipalities of Mexico as of January 2020

| category = Municipio / Municipality

| territory = {{MEX}}

| upper_unit = Mexican states

| start_date =

| legislation_begin =

| legislation_end =

| end_date =

| current_number = 2,462

| number_date = December 2024

| type =

| status =

| exofficio =

| population_range = Smallest:
81 (Santa Magdalena Jicotlán, Oax.)
Largest:
1,922,523 (Tijuana, B.C.)

| area_range = Smallest:
{{Convert|2.2|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} (Natividad, Oax.)
Largest:
{{Convert|32953.3|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} (Mulegé, B.C.S.)

| density_range =

| government = Municipal council (Ayuntamiento)

| subdivision = Localities

}}

{{Politics of Mexico}}

Municipalities ({{langx|es|Municipios}}) are the administrative divisions under the states of Mexico according to the constitution. Municipalities are considered as the second-level administrative divisions by the federal government. However, some state regulations have designed intrastate regions to administer their own municipalities. Municipalities are further divided into localities in the structural hierarchy of administrative divisions of Mexico. As of December 2024, there are 2,462 municipalities in Mexico.https://www.infobae.com/mexico/2024/03/27/estos-son-los-municipios-de-mas-reciente-creacion-en-mexico-se-encuentran-en-guerrero/

In Mexico, municipalities should not be confused with cities ({{langx|es|ciudades}}). Cities are locality-level divisions that are administered by the municipality. Although some larger cities are consolidated with its own municipality and form a single level of governance. In addition, the 16 boroughs of Mexico City are considered municipality equivalent, this makes the total number of municipality-level divisions to be 2,478.

The internal political organization and their responsibilities are outlined in the 115th article of the 1917 Constitution{{cite act|title=Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos |language=es |date=1917 |article=115 |articletype=Article |url=https://www.juridicas.unam.mx/legislacion/ordenamiento/constitucion-politica-de-los-estados-unidos-mexicanos#10668 |access-date=January 5, 2018 }} and detailed in the constitutions of the states to which they belong. {{em|Municipalities}} are distinct from {{em|cities}}, a form of Mexican locality, and are divided into colonias (neighborhoods); some municipalities can be as large as full states, while cities can be measured in basic geostatistical areas or city blocks.

Structure

File:Palacio Municipal de Puebla.JPG City Hall]]

All Mexican states are divided into municipalities. Each municipality is autonomous; citizens elect a municipal president ({{langx|es|presidente municipal}}) who heads a municipal council ({{langx|es|ayuntamiento}}), responsible for providing all the public services for their constituents. This concept, which originated after the Mexican Revolution, is known as a municipio libre (free municipality).

The municipal president is elected by first-past-the-post voting system for a three-year term and cannot be reelected for the next immediate term. The municipal council consists of a cabildo (chairman) with a síndico and several regidores (trustees).

If the municipality covers a large area and contains more than one city or town (collectively called localidades), one city or town is selected as a cabecera municipal (head city, seat of the municipal government) while the rest elect representatives to a presidencia auxiliar or junta auxiliar (auxiliary presidency or council). In that sense, a municipality in Mexico is roughly equivalent to the counties of the United States, whereas the auxiliary presidency is equivalent to a township. Nonetheless, auxiliary presidencies are not considered a third-level administrative division since they depend fiscally on the municipalities in which they are located.

North-western and south-eastern states are divided into small numbers of large municipalities (e.g. Baja California is divided into only seven municipalities), and therefore they cover large areas incorporating several separated cities or towns that do not necessarily conform to one single conurbation. Central and southern states, on the other hand, are divided into many small municipalities (e.g. Oaxaca is divided into 570 municipalities), and therefore large urban areas usually extend over several municipalities which form one single conurbation. Although an urban area might cover an entire municipality, auxiliary councils might still be used for administrative purposes.

Municipalities are responsible for public services (such as water and sewerage), street lighting, public safety, traffic, supervision of slaughterhouses and the cleaning and maintenance of public parks, gardens and cemeteries. They may also assist the state and federal governments in education, emergency fire and medical services, environmental protection and maintenance of monuments and historical landmarks. Since 1983, they can collect property taxes and user fees, although more funds are obtained from the state and federal governments than from their own collection efforts.

Some municipalities in Mexico are subdivided into internal, third-level administrative organizations. All municipalities of Baja California are subdivided into boroughs, or delegaciones. Mexicali municipality, for example, is divided into 14 boroughs besides the City of Mexicali, which comprises the municipal seat and three additional metropolitan boroughs.{{cite web|url=http://www.mexicali.gob.mx/transparencia/normatividad/ordenamientos/actual/030.pdf|title=Territorial Statutes of Mexicali Municipality's Interior Boroughs|language=es|publisher=Gobierno de Mexical|access-date=2021-02-08}} Querétaro municipality is subdivided into seven boroughs.{{cite web|url=https://gobqro.gob.mx/coespo/queretaro-delegaciones/|title=Boroughs of Querétaro|language=es|publisher=Gobierno de Querétaro|access-date=2021-02-08}} Nonetheless, the heads of government of the boroughs are not elected by the residents but rather appointed by the municipal president.

Mexico City is a special case in that it is not organized into municipalities. As a result of the Political Reforms enacted in 2016, it is no longer designated as a Federal District and became a city, a member entity of the Mexican federation, seat of the Powers of the Union and the capital of Mexico.{{cite web|url=https://data.consejeria.cdmx.gob.mx/images/leyes/estatutos/Constitucion_Politica_de_la_Ciudad_de_Mexico_3.pdf|title=Constitution of Mexico City|language=es|publisher=Gobierno de la Ciudad de México|access-date=2021-02-08}} Mexico City is divided in 16 boroughs, officially called demarcaciones territoriales, substituting the old delegaciones. The boroughs are considered as third-level territorial divisions for statistical data collection and cross-country comparisons.

Statistics

According to Mexico's National Institute of Statistics and Geography, there are in total 2,462 municipalities under the 31 states of Mexico as of December 2024. [https://www.inegi.org.mx/app/ageeml/ Catálogo Único de Claves de Áreas Geoestadísticas Estatales, Municipales y Localidades] Consider also the 16 boroughs of Mexico City, the total number of municipality-level divisions to be 2,478.

class="wikitable sortable"

! Code !! State !! Municipalities !! Main

align=center| {{mono|01}}{{flag|Aguascalientes}}align=center| 11Municipalities of Aguascalientes
align=center| {{mono|02}}{{flag|Baja California}}align=center| 7Municipalities of Baja California
align=center| {{mono|03}}{{flag|Baja California Sur}}align=center| 5Municipalities of Baja California Sur
align=center| {{mono|04}}{{flag|Campeche}}align=center| 13Municipalities of Campeche
align=center| {{mono|05}}{{flag|Coahuila}}align=center| 38Municipalities of Coahuila
align=center| {{mono|06}}{{flag|Colima}}align=center| 10Municipalities of Colima
align=center| {{mono|07}}{{flag|Chiapas}}align=center| 124Municipalities of Chiapas
align=center| {{mono|08}}{{flag|Chihuahua}}align=center| 67Municipalities of Chihuahua
align=center| {{mono|10}}{{flag|Durango}}align=center| 39Municipalities of Durango
align=center| {{mono|11}}{{flag|Guanajuato}}align=center| 46Municipalities of Guanajuato
align=center| {{mono|12}}{{flag|Guerrero}}align=center| 85Municipalities of Guerrero
align=center| {{mono|13}}{{flag|Hidalgo}}align=center| 84Municipalities of Hidalgo
align=center| {{mono|14}}{{flag|Jalisco}}align=center| 125Municipalities of Jalisco
align=center| {{mono|15}}{{flag|México (state)|name=México}}align=center| 125Municipalities of the State of Mexico
align=center| {{mono|16}}{{flag|Michoacán}}align=center| 113Municipalities of Michoacán
align=center| {{mono|17}}{{flag|Morelos}}align=center| 36Municipalities of Morelos
align=center| {{mono|18}}{{flag|Nayarit}}align=center| 20Municipalities of Nayarit
align=center| {{mono|19}}{{flag|Nuevo León}}align=center| 51Municipalities of Nuevo León
align=center| {{mono|20}}{{flag|Oaxaca}}align=center| 570Municipalities of Oaxaca
align=center| {{mono|21}}{{flag|Puebla}}align=center| 217Municipalities of Puebla
align=center| {{mono|22}}{{flag|Querétaro}}align=center| 18Municipalities of Querétaro
align=center| {{mono|23}}{{flag|Quintana Roo}}align=center| 11Municipalities of Quintana Roo
align=center| {{mono|24}}{{flag|San Luis Potosí}}align=center| 59Municipalities of San Luis Potosí
align=center| {{mono|25}}{{flag|Sinaloa}}align=center| 20Municipalities of Sinaloa
align=center| {{mono|26}}{{flag|Sonora}}align=center| 72Municipalities of Sonora
align=center| {{mono|27}}{{flag|Tabasco}}align=center| 17Municipalities of Tabasco
align=center| {{mono|28}}{{flag|Tamaulipas}}align=center| 43Municipalities of Tamaulipas
align=center| {{mono|29}}{{flag|Tlaxcala}}align=center| 60Municipalities of Tlaxcala
align=center| {{mono|30}}{{flag|Veracruz}}align=center| 212Municipalities of Veracruz
align=center| {{mono|31}}{{flag|Yucatán}}align=center| 106Municipalities of Yucatán
align=center| {{mono|32}}{{flag|Zacatecas}}align=center| 58Municipalities of Zacatecas

History

File:Ver-Pal Mpal.jpg City Hall]]

Since the Conquest and colonization of Mexico, the municipality became the basic entity of the administrative organization of New Spain and the Spanish Empire. The first city council in Mexico was established by Hernán Cortés in 1519 in Veracruz; it was also the first in the American mainland.{{Cite web |url=http://www.ilo.int/public/spanish/dialogue/sector/papers/port-vc/mex2.htm |title= Estudio sobre reestructuración portuaria - Impacto Social Sinopsis Histurica del Puerto de Veracruz |first=Jaime R |last=Sanchez Diez |publisher= Puerto de Veracruz Organización Internacional |location=Mexico |language=es |trans-title=Study about the port's restructuring- Social Impact Historic Sinopsis of the Port of Veracruz |date=18 October 2000 |access-date=29 October 2009 }} Settlements located in strategic locations received the status of ciudad (the highest status within the Empire, superior to that of villas and pueblos) and were entitled to form an ayuntamiento or municipality. During the first decades, the local authorities had full powers on the public and economic administration of each municipality, but successive reforms diminished their attributions.{{Cite web|url=https://archivos.juridicas.unam.mx/www/bjv/libros/9/4457/7.pdf|title=El municipio en España y Nueva España|language=es|access-date=May 19, 2018}}

After Independence, the 1824 Constitution did not specify any regulation for the municipalities, whose structure and responsibilities were to be outlined in the constitution of each state of the federation. As such, every state set its own requirements for a settlement to become a municipality (usually based on population).

The Constitution of 1917 abolished the jefatura política ("political authority"), the intermediate administrative authority between the states and converted all existing municipalities into municipios libres ("free municipalities"), that is, gave them full autonomy to manage local affairs, while at the same time restricting the scope of their competencies.[http://hdr.undp.org/docs/reports/national/MEX_Mexico/Mexico_2004_sp.pdf Inform sobre Desarrollo Humano México 2004] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070126115843/http://hdr.undp.org/docs/reports/national/MEX_Mexico/Mexico_2004_sp.pdf |date=2007-01-26 }} p. 50 However, in 1983 the 115th article was modified to expand the municipalities' authority to raise revenue (through property taxes and other local services) and to formulate budgets.

Since the 2015 Intercensal Survey, the following municipalities have been created by the state governments.

  • January 6, 2016: Puerto Morelos in Quintana Roo{{cite news|author=Norma Anaya|title=Puerto Morelos nuevo municipio de Quintana Roo |url=http://www.elfinanciero.com.mx/nacional/puerto-morelos-nuevo-municipio-de-quintana-roo.html |publisher= El Financiero |language=es|date=November 5, 2015|access-date=December 21, 2015}}
  • September 6, 2017: Capitán Luis Ángel Vidal and Rincón Chamula San Pedro in Chiapas.
  • July 15, 2018: Honduras de la Sierra in Chiapas. {{cite act |url=http://www.congresochiapas.gob.mx/new/Info-Parlamentaria/LEY_0002.pdf?v=MjU=|title=Constitución Política del Estado Libre y Soberano de Chiapas |article=2 |language=es |date=September 6, 2017 |access-date=January 5, 2018}}
  • January 1, 2019: Coatetelco, Hueyapan, and Xoxocotla in Morelos,{{cite news |url=https://www.diariodemorelos.com/noticias/habr%C3%A1-partir-de-2019-4-municipios-ind%C3%ADgenas-en-morelos |title=Habrá a partir de 2019 4 municipios indígenas en Morelos |language=es |newspaper=Diario de Morelos |date=November 9, 2017 |access-date=January 2, 2018}}
  • February 27, 2020: San Quintín in Baja California. {{Cite web|url=https://www.congresobc.gob.mx/Documentos/ProcesoParlamentario/Dictamenes/20200212_29_GOBERNACION.pdf |title=Decreto de Creación municipio San Quintín|access-date=February 2, 2021|website=www.congresobc.gob.mx}}
  • January 1, 2021: Seybaplaya and Dzitbalché in Campeche. {{cite news |date=26 April 2019 |title=Decreto Número 45 |url=http://periodicooficial.campeche.gob.mx/sipoec/public/periodicos/201904/PO0919SS26042019.pdf |language=es |work=Periódico Oficial del Estado de Campeche, Segunda Sección |pages=3–4 |access-date=17 October 2020}}
  • March 5, 2021: Eldorado and Juan José Ríos in Sinaloa.
  • August 31, 2021: Las Vigas, Ñuu Savi, San Nicolás, and Santa Cruz del Rincón in Guerrero
  • January 1, 2022: San Felipe in Baja California.
  • July 22, 2024: Villa de Pozos in San Luis Potosí.

Ranking of municipalities

=By population=

{{Main|List of municipalities in Mexico by population}}

Data from the 2020 Mexican National Census.{{cite web|url=https://www.inegi.org.mx/app/scitel/Default?ev=9|title=Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020 - SCITEL|language=es|publisher=INEGI|access-date=2021-01-27}}

File:Bellas_Artes_01.jpg

class=wikitable

! Ranking !! Municipality !! State !! Population

1Mexico CityMexico City9,209,944
2TijuanaBaja California1,922,523
3LeónGuanajuato1,721,215
4PueblaPuebla1,692,181
5EcatepecMexico1,645,352
6JuárezChihuahua1,512,450
7ZapopanJalisco1,476,491
8GuadalajaraJalisco1,385,629
9MonterreyNuevo León1,142,994
10NezahualcóyotlMexico1,077,208
2,450San Mateo TlapiltepecOaxaca229
2,451Santiago NejapillaOaxaca174
2,452Santiago TepetlapaOaxaca130
2,453Santo Domingo TlatayapamOaxaca113
2,454Santa Magdalena JicotlánOaxaca81

=By area=

Data from the 2020 Mexican National Census.

{{cite web|url=https://www.inegi.org.mx/app/areasgeograficas/default.aspx|title=México en cifras - Medio Ambiente - Superficie continental|date=January 2016|publisher=INEGI|language= es| access-date=February 12, 2021}}

File:El Vizcaíno Biosphere Reserve Landsat picture annotated.jpg

class="wikitable"
scope="col" rowspan=2|Rankingscope="col" rowspan=2|Municipalityscope="col" rowspan=2|Statescope="col" data-sort-type="number" colspan=2|Land Area
km2

! sq mi

1MulegéBaja California Sur{{convert|32953.3|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2San QuintínBaja California{{convert|32009.9|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
3OcampoCoahuila{{convert|26024.4|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
4EnsenadaBaja California{{convert|19526.8|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
5ComondúBaja California Sur{{convert|18318.6|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
6AhumadaChihuahua{{convert|16910.0|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
7HermosilloSonora{{convert|15724.3|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
8La PazBaja California Sur{{convert|15413.7|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
9MexicaliBaja California{{convert|14528.3|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
10CalakmulCampeche{{convert|13987.5|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2,450Ánimas TrujanoOaxaca{{convert|3.0|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2,451San Pedro CajonosOaxaca{{convert|2.8|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2,452Santa Inés YatzecheOaxaca{{convert|2.4|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2,453Santa Cruz AmilpasOaxaca{{convert|2.3|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}
2,454NatividadOaxaca{{convert|2.2|km2|sqmi|adj=ri1|1|disp=table|sortable=on}}

=By location=

See also

References

{{reflist}}