Fashion Law 2026

Last Updated June 02, 2026

Mexico

Trends and Developments


Author



Costinica & Asociados Abogados is a Mexican law firm with a specialised practice in intellectual property and fashion law, advising clients across the full spectrum of IP, brand protection and commercial matters affecting creative industries. The firm’s IP and fashion law team consists of a close-knit group of eight professionals who combine deep regulatory knowledge with a strong understanding of the fashion, design and luxury goods sectors. Headquartered in Mexico City, the firm maintains a strategic presence in key commercial hubs across Mexico. The team has particular expertise in IP protection and complex licensing agreements, while also drawing on related capabilities in commercial law, e-commerce regulation and dispute resolution. Recent representative work includes advising the biggest Mexican retail store and leading international fashion brands on nationwide trade mark portfolios; drafting and negotiating large-scale licensing agreements; and leading enforcement campaigns against counterfeiters in major retail and online marketplaces.

Protecting Designs Against Fast-Fashion Copying and Digital Disruption in Mexico in 2026

Introduction: the growing legal relevance of fashion in Mexico

The Mexican fashion industry has ceased to be perceived merely as a consumer sector and has consolidated itself as a strategic driver of creativity, the digital economy and international trade. Mexico ranks among the leading textile and apparel exporters in Latin America, with a sector that encompasses multinational retail chains, artisan co-operatives, independent designers and rapidly growing e-commerce platforms. Against this backdrop, fashion law has evolved into an essential legal practice – not only for major fashion houses, but also for emerging brands, independent designers and digital marketplaces.

In 2026, two phenomena are exerting particular pressure on the legal framework. On one hand, the proliferation of fast fashion and ultra-fast -fashion business models, which replicate entire collections within a matter of weeks, has eroded the competitive advantage that originality once provided. On the other hand, the accelerated digitalisation of fashion – with virtual collections, NFTs and garments designed for the metaverse – has introduced legal questions for which existing legislation was not designed. This article examines how Mexico’s legal order may adapt to protect creative value in an environment characterised by mass copying and technological disruption, and offers practical guidance for industry players seeking to build resilient intellectual property strategies.

It bears noting at the outset that Mexico does not yet have a standalone fashion law statute. Protection is instead offered by a patchwork of instruments spanning intellectual property, consumer protection, cultural heritage and, increasingly, sustainability regulation. Understanding how these layers interact is the first step towards effective legal strategy in the sector.

The Mexican legal toolkit for protecting fashion creations

In Mexico, the protection of fashion creations is distributed across several legal instruments, without any specific fashion law legislation in force. The classical framework rests on the following statutes, each with distinct requirements and limitations:

  • The Federal Law for the Protection of Industrial Property (Ley Federal de Protección a la Propiedad Industrial – LPI) permits the registration of trade marks and of industrial models or designs where the product presents a visible aesthetic configuration and is sufficiently individualised. Regarding industrial models or designs, registration before the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (Instituto Mexicano de la Propiedad Industrial – IMPI) confers exclusive rights for an initial five-year term, renewable up to a maximum of 25 years. Importantly, the LPI’s design protection is limited to the aesthetic appearance of a product; purely functional features remain outside its scope.
  • The Federal Copyright Law (Ley Federal del Derecho de Autor – LFDA) is applicable to patterns, illustrations, graphic designs, collections as complex works, and in certain cases, to the aesthetic conception of a garment itself where it attains a sufficient level of originality. Unlike industrial design, copyright arises automatically upon creation without formal registration, although registration with the National Copyright Institute (Instituto Nacional del Derecho de Autor – INDAUTOR) is strongly recommended for evidentiary purposes. Copyright protection subsists for the creator’s lifetime plus one hundred years, offering long-term security that industrial design registration does not.
  • The Federal Consumer Protection Law (Ley Federal de Protección al Consumidor – LFPC) may be invoked against items that imitate brands in a deceptive manner or that employ labels or advertising likely to mislead consumers as to origin, quality or composition. The Federal Consumer Protection Agency (Procuraduría Federal del Consumidor – PROFECO) has authority to impose administrative sanctions and order the withdrawal of non-compliant products from the market.
  • The Federal Law for the Protection of the Cultural Heritage of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican Peoples and Communities (Ley Federal de Protección del Patrimonio Cultural de los Pueblos y Comunidades Indígenas y Afromexicanas) deserves special mention as the legislation aimed at preventing the unauthorised commercial appropriation of traditional textile designs, embroidery patterns and other cultural expressions of indigenous communities. This law has attracted significant international attention in recent years and constitutes a distinctive feature of the Mexican legal landscape vis-à-vis other jurisdictions.

In practice, the most stable protection typically derives from the strategic combination of these instruments. Trade mark rights allow control over trade names and logos, providing the strongest enforcement tool given their visibility in the market. Industrial design registration protects aesthetic form where it meets the novelty threshold. Copyright covers technical documentation, graphic prints and artistic elements of collections. The interplay between these instruments means that a well-advised designer may stack protections: a garment bearing a registered trade mark, incorporating a registered industrial design and featuring graphic prints protected by copyright will have a considerably stronger legal position than one relying on a single instrument.

Nevertheless, the protection of basic silhouettes, simple cuts or functional elements remains limited under all of these instruments, leaving considerable room for the lawful imitation of certain garments. This structural limitation is inherent to most intellectual property systems worldwide, including that of Mexico, and reflects the legislative policy of not granting monopolies over utilitarian forms. It is within this gap that fast-fashion operators have found their most significant legal shelter.

Fast-fashion, copy-cat products and enforcement challenges

Ultra-fast-fashion supply chains have fundamentally transformed the product life cycle – from the runway to the physical store or digital platform, only days or even hours may elapse. Platforms operating under this model have perfected the practice of scanning social media, identifying trending designs and deploying manufacturing networks capable of producing near-identical garments at scale before the original designer can reach the market. This dynamic places Mexican designers under significant pressure, particularly those in the mid-market segment whose collections are swiftly copied without any efficient enforcement mechanism in place.

The enforcement landscape in Mexico presents both opportunities and limitations. On the administrative side, IMPI is the primary authority with jurisdiction over industrial property infringement, and its proceedings – while more expeditious than civil litigation – can still take months to resolve. On the judicial side, federal courts have jurisdiction over intellectual property disputes, but the evidentiary burden and procedural timelines often disadvantage rights holders seeking rapid relief.

The available legal avenues include the following:

  • Precautionary measures (medidas cautelares) either before IMPI or federal courts, seeking the seizure or suspension of sales of identical or confusingly similar items. These measures may be requested on an ex parte basis and, where granted, can be enforced swiftly. However, the applicant must provide adequate security to compensate the respondent in the event that the measures are ultimately found to have been unwarranted.
  • Infringement proceedings before IMPI, which has the authority to impose administrative sanctions, order the cessation of infringing activities and refer matters to the Public Prosecutor’s Office where criminal conduct is suspected. IMPI proceedings also allow for precautionary measures, including the seizure of infringing goods at the administrative level.
  • Complaints before PROFECO in respect of misleading advertising, false labelling or deceptive commercial practices that misrepresent the origin or characteristics of fashion products.
  • Civil actions for damages (acciones civiles por daños y perjuicios) before federal courts, where unfair competition or the improper use of distinctive signs can be demonstrated. These actions may be brought cumulatively with IMPI infringement proceedings and may include claims for lost profits, reputational harm and the surrender of the infringer’s gains.
  • Criminal actions against piracy and counterfeiting, which are filed and followed in association with the Public Prosecutor’s Office.

In practice, the effectiveness of these tools depends critically on the early documentation of the creative work. Designers and brands are strongly advised to maintain organised archives of sketches, digital files, mood boards, pattern files and dated correspondence that evidence the creative process. Time-stamped digital records, whether stored internally or through third-party platforms offering proof-of-existence services, can be determinative in proceedings where the priority date of a design is in dispute.

Cross-border enforcement deserves particular attention. Many ultra-fast-fashion platforms operate from jurisdictions outside Mexico, fulfilling orders through international logistics networks. In such cases, rights holders may need to co-ordinate enforcement actions across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously, leveraging Mexico’s treaty obligations under the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) – which contains enhanced intellectual property provisions relative to its predecessor – and bilateral agreements with key trading partners. The USMCA, in particular, introduced significant upgrades to Mexico’s intellectual property enforcement framework, including obligations relating to digital enforcement and border measures.

Digital disruption: NFTs, virtual fashion and metaverse collections

The emergence of digital fashion adds further layers of legal complexity to an already demanding landscape. Virtual collections, clothing NFTs and “skins” for metaverse platforms are still being analysed through the lens of industrial property, copyright and contract law, rather than through any specific regulation governing digital fashion. Mexico has yet to enact legislation specifically addressing non-fungible tokens or virtual goods, leaving practitioners and rights holders to navigate a framework that was designed for the physical world.

Several fundamental legal questions arise in this context:

  • What is the object of protection? Is it the virtual garment as displayed, the graphic design embedded within it, the underlying code that generates the visual representation, or the blockchain token that evidences ownership? The answer may vary depending on which legal instrument is invoked, and different answers will produce different rights and remedies.
  • What rights does the NFT acquirer actually have? The acquisition of an NFT does not, under Mexican or any other law, automatically transfer the underlying intellectual property rights in the associated work. The scope of the licence – whether it permits personal use only, commercial exploitation, sublicensing or resale – must be established by express contractual terms. In the absence of such terms, acquirers may find themselves with a token with a severely constrained commercial value.
  • How is unauthorised reproduction controlled in open environments? In metaverse platforms and online gaming environments, the technical ease of copying visual assets creates enforcement challenges that have no clear analogue in the physical world. Screen capture, asset extraction and reverse engineering of virtual garments are difficult to prevent through legal means alone, making technical protection measures an important complement to intellectual property rights.

The use of AI to generate fashion designs or to employ likenesses of individuals without consent raises a further set of issues. AI-generated designs may not qualify for copyright protection under current Mexican law, which requires human authorship as a condition of subsistence. Where AI tools are used in the creative process, careful structuring of human contribution is advisable to preserve copyright eligibility. The unauthorised use of individuals’ images and likenesses – including through deepfake technology – in fashion advertising or virtual try-on applications raises personality rights and data protection concerns that require frameworks analogous to those being developed in the European Union.

In Mexico, the solution to many of these digital challenges currently resides in contractual precision. Well-drafted agreements must address ownership of AI-assisted creations, prohibitions on the commercial resale of digital assets, the scope of trade mark licences in virtual environments, and liability for third-party-generated content on platforms associated with the brand. Intellectual property protection remains necessary but insufficient in the absence of robust contractual architecture that anticipates the specific risks of the digital environment.

Key contractual issues for fashion brands and designers

In order to operate effectively in an environment exposed to copying and digitalisation, brands and designers must structure their business relationships with a preventative legal approach. Contract law is the foundation upon which intellectual property rights are deployed in practice, and poorly drafted agreements are a frequent source of disputes in the fashion sector. Among the most critical contractual issues are the following:

  • Design agreements – these must clearly define the ownership of copyright and industrial property rights, including whether the designer is creating works as an employee or as an independent contractor (a distinction that has significant consequences under both the LFDA and the LPI). Agreements should also address the possibility of future registration of designs created under the contract, the use of the designer’s name in marketing, and whether royalties or other forms of remuneration are payable in connection with the commercial exploitation of the work.
  • Manufacturing and outsourcing agreements – these must establish quality standards, liability for counterfeit or copied items produced in the supply chain, and penalties for the disclosure of patterns, designs or technical specifications to third parties. Non-disclosure obligations should extend beyond the term of the agreement, and the agreement should specify the consequences of a breach, including the right to seek precautionary measures without prior notice.
  • Influencer and digital platform agreements – these must regulate the scope of the trade mark licence granted to the influencer or platform, the tone and content of communications, the campaign duration, exclusivity obligations and the prohibition on associating the brand with inappropriate conduct or content. Given the reputational risks involved, these agreements should include robust termination provisions allowing the brand to terminate immediately and without liability in the event of conduct that is incompatible with its values.
  • Supply chain traceability – increasingly, fashion brands are implementing technological tools (including blockchain-based traceability systems) to guarantee the authenticity and ethical origin of materials. Contractual obligations requiring suppliers to participate in these systems, and to permit audits of their compliance, are becoming standard in the sector and are increasingly required by international retail partners and institutional investors.

In practice, confidentiality, intellectual property and early termination clauses are as commercially significant as price or delivery terms. A brand that invests in design but fails to secure adequate contractual protection will find its competitive advantage eroded, regardless of the strength of its registered rights.

Sustainability: from voluntary commitment to legal obligation

At the global level, fashion regulation is shifting decisively towards sustainability, supply chain transparency and environmental accountability. European standards on eco-design, textile carbon footprint and consumer information obligations are exerting pressure on brands that export or sell online to OECD markets. What was once a matter of voluntary corporate social responsibility is increasingly becoming a compliance obligation, with material legal and financial consequences for non-compliance.

At the international level, voluntary commitments such as the Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Action – which contains 16 principles aimed at reducing carbon emissions, improving the selection of sustainable materials and raising consumer awareness – reflect an industry-wide recognition that environmental performance is now a competitive and reputational imperative. Mexican brands operating in international markets cannot afford to ignore these frameworks, as foreign retail partners and institutional buyers are increasingly incorporating sustainability criteria into their procurement and vendor selection processes.

One of the most significant recent developments in the Mexican landscape is the entry into force of the Sustainability Information Standards (Normas de Información de Sostenibilidad – NIS), published by the Mexican Council of Financial and Sustainability Information Standards (Consejo Mexicano de Normas de Información Financiera y Sostenibilidad – CINIF) in 2024. The NIS require certain entities – in particular those that issue financial statements under Mexican Financial Reporting Standards (Normas de Información Financiera – NIF) and securities issuers registered with the National Banking and Securities Commission (Comisión Nacional Bancaria y de Valores – CNBV) – to disclose structured information regarding their environmental and social performance, including climate change risks, greenhouse gas emissions and waste management.

For the fashion and textile sector, this means that brands with more complex corporate structures must account for their environmental impact across a range of indicators: water and carbon footprint, textile waste management, use of sustainable fibres, labour conditions throughout the supply chain, and circular fashion policies. In practice, a Mexican fashion house that is listed on the Mexican Stock Exchange (Bolsa Mexicana de Valores) or that forms part of a group subject to financial reporting, cannot limit itself to declaring “sustainable fashion” in its marketing materials; it must document and evidence those commitments through measurable indicators, periodic reports and, where appropriate, independent external audits. Greenwashing – the practice of making unsubstantiated environmental claims – is not merely a reputational risk but increasingly a legal one, as consumer protection authorities in multiple jurisdictions are moving to prosecute misleading sustainability claims.

A concrete example of this trend is the incorporation of circular fashion and textile waste management principles into draft local environmental regulations, including proposed environmental standards for the comprehensive management of textile waste in Mexico City. Brands that proactively adopt practices of reuse, refurbishment or garment return schemes will be well positioned under the NIS framework, which aligns the demands of financial transparency with those of sustainability and corporate social responsibility. Conversely, brands that defer action until compelled by regulation may face both compliance costs and reputational disadvantage in a market that is increasingly attentive to environmental credentials.

Practical recommendations for fashion industry players

In light of the challenges outlined above, Mexican fashion brands and designers are advised to adopt an integrated protection strategy. The following are recommended as best practices for rights holders operating in the Mexican market:

  • Early and strategic registration – of trade marks before IMPI, industrial designs for aesthetically distinctive products, and copyright registration with INDAUTOR for graphic works, collections and technical documentation. Registration should be supported by maintained archives of dated documents evidencing the creative process. In international markets, the filing strategy should take account of the Madrid System for the international registration of marks and the Hague System for the international registration of industrial designs.
  • Having clear and comprehensive contracts – with suppliers, designers, collaborators, influencers and digital platforms. Agreements should anticipate scenarios of copying, improper use of trade marks or problematic content, and should include clearly defined remedies that allow rapid action without the need for lengthy dispute resolution procedures.
  • Proactive monitoring of the market – both in physical retail channels and across digital platforms and social media, supported by brand protection tools capable of detecting infringing listings at scale. Many rights holders are now deploying AI-assisted monitoring solutions that can identify copy-cat products before they gain significant market traction. Co-operation with customs authorities for border enforcement is also increasingly valuable in preventing the importation of counterfeit goods.
  • Sustainability compliance planning – brands subject to NIS reporting obligations should begin building the internal systems and data collection processes required to produce credible sustainability disclosures. Those not yet subject to mandatory reporting are advised to adopt voluntary frameworks in anticipation of forthcoming regulatory requirements and market expectations.
  • Having specialist legal counsel – selecting a legal team with expertise not only in intellectual property, but also in civil liability, e-commerce, data protection and consumer protection law. The multidisciplinary nature of fashion law means that a siloed approach to legal advice is likely to leave significant gaps in a brand’s protection strategy.

Conclusion

Fashion law in Mexico is no longer a niche practice. The convergence of fast-fashion disruption, digital transformation and sustainability regulation has elevated the legal dimension of the fashion industry to a central strategic concern for brands and designers, both big and small. The Mexican legal framework, while still evolving, offers a reasonably comprehensive set of tools for rights holders who engage with it proactively and strategically.

The key insight is that fashion law in Mexico is not merely about registering a trade mark or a design in isolation; it is about building a legal ecosystem around creativity. That ecosystem encompasses registered rights, contractual protections, monitoring and enforcement capabilities, and increasingly, sustainability compliance infrastructure. Brands that invest in constructing this ecosystem will be best positioned to survive and thrive in an environment characterised by rapid copying, accelerated digitalisation and ever-increasing expectations from consumers, investors and regulators alike.

Costinica & Asociados Abogados

Zacatecas 24-704
Roma Norte
Cuauhtemoc
Mexico City, 06700
Mexico

+52 55 62784346

+52 55 42027874

abogado@costinica.com.mx www.costinica.com.mx
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Trends and Developments

Author



Costinica & Asociados Abogados is a Mexican law firm with a specialised practice in intellectual property and fashion law, advising clients across the full spectrum of IP, brand protection and commercial matters affecting creative industries. The firm’s IP and fashion law team consists of a close-knit group of eight professionals who combine deep regulatory knowledge with a strong understanding of the fashion, design and luxury goods sectors. Headquartered in Mexico City, the firm maintains a strategic presence in key commercial hubs across Mexico. The team has particular expertise in IP protection and complex licensing agreements, while also drawing on related capabilities in commercial law, e-commerce regulation and dispute resolution. Recent representative work includes advising the biggest Mexican retail store and leading international fashion brands on nationwide trade mark portfolios; drafting and negotiating large-scale licensing agreements; and leading enforcement campaigns against counterfeiters in major retail and online marketplaces.

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