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Startup Investment Agreement Mexico

Startup Investment Agreement Mexico

CONTRATO DE INVERSIÓN EN STARTUP

Ley General de Sociedades Mercantiles Artículos 87–206 — Código Civil Federal Artículo 1792

PARTES

En [Closing City], a [Closing Date]:

La EMPRESA: [Company Name], RFC: [Company RFC], constituida el [Incorporation Date], domicilio social: [Company Address], representada por [Founder Name].

El INVERSIONISTA: [Investor Name], RFC: [Investor RFC], domicilio: [Investor Address], representado por [Investor Representative].

CLÁUSULA PRIMERA — MONTO, VALUACIÓN Y ESTRUCTURA DE LA INVERSIÓN

Monto de Inversión: [Investment Amount]

Valuación Pre-Money: [Pre-Money Valuation]

Porcentaje Accionario Post-Inversión: [Ownership Percentage]

Estructura de la Inversión: [Investment Structure]

Serie / Clase de Acciones: [Share Series]

Preferencia en Liquidación: [Liquidation Preference]

El pago de la inversión se realizará mediante: [Payment Method].

CLÁUSULA SEGUNDA — DERECHOS DEL INVERSIONISTA

Protección Anti-Dilución: [Anti-Dilution]

Derechos de Preferencia (Pro-Rata): [Pro-Rata Rights]

Representación en Consejo: [Board Seat]

El Inversionista también tendrá derecho a: (a) estados financieros mensuales/trimestrales; (b) estados financieros anuales auditados; (c) acceso al Libro de Registro de Accionistas; (d) participar en asambleas de accionistas con voz y voto según clase accionaria.

CLÁUSULA TERCERA — CONSOLIDACIÓN DE ACCIONES DE FUNDADORES (VESTING)

Calendario de consolidación para fundadores: [Founder Vesting]

Las acciones no consolidadas al momento de la salida de un fundador serán recompradas por la Empresa al valor nominal establecido en los estatutos sociales, conforme al convenio de accionistas que las partes suscribirán simultáneamente al presente contrato.

CLÁUSULA CUARTA — DISPOSICIONES PROTECTORAS (VETO DEL INVERSIONISTA)

La Empresa no podrá realizar las siguientes acciones sin el consentimiento previo y por escrito del Inversionista:

a)

Emitir nuevas acciones o cualquier clase de valores convertibles en acciones.

b)

Contraer deuda superior al equivalente a $500,000.00 MXN en un período de 12 meses.

c)

Vender o enajenar activos materiales fuera del curso ordinario del negocio.

d)

Modificar los estatutos sociales de manera que afecte los derechos del Inversionista.

e)

Aprobar o modificar el plan de opciones sobre acciones para empleados (plan ESOP).

CLÁUSULA QUINTA — DECLARACIONES Y GARANTÍAS DE LA EMPRESA

La Empresa y sus fundadores declaran y garantizan que, a la fecha del cierre: (a) la Empresa está debidamente constituida y en buen estado conforme a la LGSM; (b) las acciones emitidas al Inversionista son válidas y libres de gravamen; (c) no existe litigio pendiente material no revelado; (d) la propiedad intelectual de la Empresa está correctamente titulada a nombre de la Empresa, libre de cualquier reclamación de terceros; y (e) la Empresa cumple con todas las obligaciones fiscales ante el SAT y laborales ante el IMSS/INFONAVIT.

CLÁUSULA SEXTA — LEY APLICABLE Y RESOLUCIÓN DE CONTROVERSIAS

Este contrato se rige por la Ley General de Sociedades Mercantiles (Artículos 87–206), el Código Civil Federal (Artículo 1792), y demás leyes mexicanas aplicables. Las controversias se resolverán mediante arbitraje vinculante ante el Centro de Arbitraje de México (CAM) conforme a su Reglamento, con sede en Ciudad de México, en idioma español.

FIRMAS

LA EMPRESA:

[Company Name]

[Founder Name]

Firma: _________________________

EL INVERSIONISTA:

[Investor Name]

[Investor Representative]

Firma: _________________________

Startup Company (Empresa Receptora)

________________

Signature

Investor (Inversionista)

________________

Signature

Maintained by Vladislav Sergienko, Founder·Template last modified: ·Report an error

What Is a Startup Investment Agreement Mexico?

A Startup Investment Agreement Mexico is a formal legal contract governing the terms under which an external investor — an angel investor (inversionista ángel), seed fund (fondo semilla), venture capital firm (firma de capital de riesgo), or corporate strategic investor (inversionista corporativo) — provides capital to a Mexican startup company in exchange for equity (acciones), convertible debt (deuda convertible), or hybrid financial instruments (instrumentos híbridos). The agreement is governed primarily by the Ley General de Sociedades Mercantiles (LGSM), published in the Diario Oficial de la Federación on 4 August 1934, which regulates the issuance and transfer of shares (acciones) in Mexican Sociedades Anónimas (S.A.) and S.A. de C.V. entities under Articles 87 through 206, and by the Código Civil Federal Article 1792 for the general contractual obligations between the parties.

Mexican startup investment structures differ from US and European practice primarily because Mexican corporate law (LGSM) historically lacked statutory frameworks for preferred stock (acciones preferentes with full liquidation preferences), weighted voting rights (voto ponderado), and automatic conversion mechanisms that are standard in US Delaware corporation investment documents. The Ley para Regular las Instituciones de Tecnología Financiera (Ley Fintech), published in the DOF on 9 March 2018, introduced some additional flexibility for fintech startups and crowdfunding platforms, but the primary vehicle for Mexican venture investment remains the S.A. de C.V. (Sociedad Anónima de Capital Variable) or the newer Sociedad por Acciones Simplificada (S.A.S.) introduced by LGSM reform in 2016 for companies with annual revenues below MXN 5 million.

The 2021 reform to LGSM introduced by the federal government added critical provisions enabling Mexican S.A.s to issue acciones con características especiales (shares with special characteristics) that may provide preferential economic rights (derechos económicos preferenciales), such as cumulative preferred dividends (dividendos preferentes acumulativos) and liquidation preferences (preferencia en liquidación), alongside limited voting rights (voto restringido) on ordinary corporate matters but full voting on matters affecting the class. This reform significantly modernised the legal tools available for structuring Mexican startup investments without requiring a costly and complex offshore structure.

Pre-reform startup investment in Mexico frequently relied on offshore holding company structures — typically a US Delaware C-Corp or a Cayman Islands exempted company at the top of the structure, with the Mexican operating entity (opco) as a wholly-owned subsidiary — to achieve the preferred stock and governance terms that US venture capital investors required. Post-reform, many early-stage Mexican startup deals can now be structured entirely onshore using Mexican corporate vehicles, reducing formation costs, tax complexity, and regulatory compliance burdens.

The Secretaría de Economía (SE) administers the Programa de Aceleración de Empresas (PAE) and the Fondo de Innovación Tecnológica (FIT) co-investment programmes that provide matching capital alongside private investors for qualifying Mexican technology startups. The Nacional Financiera (NAFIN) and the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT) also operate programmes (ProINNOvación, FONDO PYME) supporting early-stage technology investment. These government programmes typically require that the investee company be a Mexican persona moral (legal entity) with active SAT registration and IMSS affiliation for its employees.

When Do You Need a Startup Investment Agreement Mexico?

A Startup Investment Agreement Mexico is needed whenever a Mexican startup company or its founders seek to close a formal capital investment round with an external investor — whether a seed-stage angel investment, a Series A venture capital round, or a corporate strategic investment.

The agreement is essential when an angel investor or angel group (red de inversionistas ángel) such as members of the Asociación Mexicana de Capital Privado (AMEXCAP) or the Angel Ventures México network commits capital to a startup in exchange for equity — without a formal investment agreement, the investor has no contractual protection regarding their ownership percentage, anti-dilution rights, information rights, or exit preferences, and the investment is governed only by the company's estatutos sociales under LGSM, which provide minimal investor protections for minority shareholders.

The contract is required when a startup issues a nota convertible (convertible note) or instrumento de financiamiento convertible — a debt instrument that automatically converts into equity at a future funding round, typically with a valuation cap (tope de valuación) and a discount rate (descuento de conversión) of 15% to 25% over the next round price. Convertible notes are common for pre-revenue Mexican startups where a fixed valuation is premature — the note structure delays valuation negotiation to the next priced round while giving the startup immediate capital. Convertible notes in Mexico are structured as pagarés convertibles under LGTOC Article 170 combined with a conversion agreement, given the LGSM's requirements for formal corporate resolutions (acuerdos de asamblea) to issue new shares.

The investment agreement is needed when a US or international venture fund (fondo de capital de riesgo extranjero) invests in a Mexican startup through a direct equity purchase, requiring representation and warranty provisions (declaraciones y garantías), a cap table (tabla de capitalización) with pre-money and post-money valuations, and closing conditions (condiciones de cierre) including due diligence completion and regulatory clearances. Cross-border investments into Mexico above USD 1 million threshold may require notification to the Comisión Nacional de Inversiones Extranjeras (CNIE) under LIE Article 17 if the investor is foreign and the target operates in regulated sectors.

Under LGSM Articles 87–206, CCF Article 1792, LIE Articles 6–17, and SAT CFDI issuance rules for capital contributions, every startup investment agreement must document the corporate resolutions authorising the share issuance, the valuation methodology used, the investor rights being granted, and the tax treatment of the investment for both the company and the investor under applicable ISR and IVA rules.

What to Include in Your Startup Investment Agreement Mexico

A valid Startup Investment Agreement Mexico under LGSM Articles 87–206 and CCF Article 1792 must include the following essential elements:

Investment Amount and Valuation (Monto de Inversión y Valuación): The total investment amount in Mexican pesos (MXN) or US dollars (USD), the pre-money valuation (valuación pre-money) and post-money valuation (valuación post-money) established for the round, the price per share (precio por acción) derived from the agreed valuation, and the resulting ownership percentage of the investor on a fully-diluted basis (base totalmente diluida) including outstanding stock options (opciones sobre acciones) and convertible instruments. The valuation methodology — discounted cash flow (flujo de caja descontado), comparable company analysis (comparables de mercado), or negotiated angel round multiple — should be referenced in the agreement.

Share Structure and Class Rights (Estructura Accionaria y Derechos): The class of shares (ordinarias or preferentes con características especiales under the 2021 LGSM reform) being issued to the investor, with a complete description of the economic and governance rights attached: liquidation preference (preferencia en liquidación) — whether participating (participantes) or non-participating; cumulative preferred dividends (dividendos preferentes acumulativos) if any; anti-dilution protection mechanism — full ratchet or weighted average (promedio ponderado) — under LGSM Article 132; and voting rights on ordinary and extraordinary assembly resolutions under LGSM Articles 178–200.

Investor Protective Rights (Derechos Protectivos del Inversionista): The contractual protective provisions (derechos de veto or derechos protectivos) granted to the investor, typically requiring investor consent before the company takes specified actions, including: issuance of new shares or classes of shares; incurring debt above a threshold amount; sale of material assets; change of business purpose; approval of annual budgets above agreed thresholds; and appointment or removal of key executive officers. These protections are implemented through amendments to the estatutos sociales and/or through a shareholders' agreement (convenio de accionistas) under LGSM Article 196.

Pre-emptive Rights and Right of First Refusal (Derechos de Tanto): The investor's right to participate in future investment rounds (derechos de preferencia or pro-rata rights) to maintain their ownership percentage, under LGSM Article 132 as adapted by the estatutos sociales. A right of first refusal (derecho del tanto) on transfers of shares by founders or other shareholders, pursuant to LGSM Article 130, giving the investor the right to match any third-party offer before founders sell to an external buyer.

Drag-Along and Tag-Along Rights (Derechos de Arrastre y Acompañamiento): Drag-along rights (derechos de arrastre) allowing a majority shareholder coalition to compel minority shareholders — including the investor — to sell their shares in an approved exit transaction on the same terms. Tag-along rights (derechos de acompañamiento) allowing the investor to participate in any sale by controlling shareholders on the same terms. Both rights must be incorporated into the estatutos sociales or a binding shareholders' agreement under LGSM Article 196.

Information and Inspection Rights (Derechos de Información): The investor's right to receive monthly or quarterly financial statements (estados financieros), annual audited accounts (estados financieros auditados), and annual budget and business plan; board meeting minutes (actas de asamblea); cap table updates; and access to the company's books and records upon reasonable notice. Under LGSM Articles 166–168, shareholders already have statutory inspection rights at the registered office, but investment agreements typically expand these rights for institutional investors.

Founder Vesting and Equity Lockup (Consolidación de Acciones de Fundadores): A vesting schedule (calendario de consolidación) for founder shares — typically 4 years with a 1-year cliff — ensuring founders' equity is earned over time and subject to buy-back at cost if a founder departs early. This provision protects the investor from founding team turnover and is a standard requirement of institutional investors. The vesting mechanism is implemented through a shareholders' agreement or estatutos amendment establishing the company's right to repurchase unvested shares at nominal value upon a founder's departure.

Forms-legal.com provides this Startup Investment Agreement Mexico template as a reference. Startup investment transactions require specialised legal counsel from a Licenciado en Derecho with expertise in corporate law, venture capital, and foreign investment — particularly for cross-border transactions involving foreign investors or offshore holding structures. AMEXCAP (Asociación Mexicana de Capital Privado) publishes model investment documents adapted for the Mexican legal framework that serve as industry benchmarks.

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@misc{formslegal-startup-investment-agreement-mexico,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Startup Investment Agreement Mexico (Mexico)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/mexico/business/corporate/startup-investment-agreement-mexico}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer

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