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Imagine you want to know how much one US dollar is worth in Mexican pesos. On Monday, July 13, 2026, the US dollar opened with a value of 17.47 Mexican pesos. This number comes from the Bank of Mexico (called Banxico), based on what happened at the close of transactions on the previous business day.
But what exactly is the "official exchange rate"? It’s like the reference price for the dollar that Banxico calculates. Here’s how they do it, step by step:
Important Callout: The official rate (17.47 pesos) is just an average from big trades. The price you get at a local bank or store may be different.
Different places in Mexico give different prices when you want to change dollars to pesos (or vice versa). Here are some examples from that day:
Why should you care about these numbers? Because the exchange rate behavior has direct effects on many parts of life for millions of people:
Callout: Even a small difference in the exchange rate can mean more or less food on the table for families relying on money from the US.
Since 2023, Mexico’s peso has been quite strong compared to the dollar. People call this the "superpeso." But here’s the twist: not everyone benefits from a strong peso.
Important: A strong peso sounds good, but for dollar earners and remittance receivers, it can mean tighter budgets.
Let’s recap the key points:
1. What is the official exchange rate?
It’s the reference price for the dollar calculated by Mexico’s central bank (Banxico) from an average of large market quotes, meant for operations liquidated on the second following business day.
2. Why do banks and transfer companies show different dollar prices?
Each business adds its own small profit margin or fees, so the price they offer you is not the same as the official average.
3. What does "superpeso" mean?
It’s a nickname for the Mexican peso when it is unusually strong against the dollar, so 1 dollar converts into fewer pesos than in weaker‑peso times.
4. How does a strong peso affect families receiving remittances?
Because the dollar becomes "cheaper" in peso terms, the pesos they get from US dollars are fewer, so their money buys less (lost purchasing power).
5. Does a strong peso affect travelers?
Yes, the article notes that exchange‑rate behavior directly affects travel and international transactions; a strong peso changes how many pesos a traveler gets for dollars or how many dollars a Mexican gets for pesos abroad.