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Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar)

Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar)

ACUERDO DE MEDIACIÓN FAMILIAR

Ley Nacional MASC — Código Nacional de Procedimientos Civiles y Familiares Artículo 1

I. LAS PARTES Y EL MEDIADOR CERTIFICADO

Primera Parte:

Nombre: [Party 1 Name]

CURP: [Party 1 CURP]

Parentesco: [Party 1 Relationship]

Segunda Parte:

Nombre: [Party 2 Name]

CURP: [Party 2 CURP]

Parentesco: [Party 2 Relationship]

Partes Adicionales:

[Additional Parties]

Mediador Certificado:

Nombre: [Mediator Name]

Número de Certificación: [Mediator Cert No.]

II. DESCRIPCIÓN DEL CONFLICTO Y PROCESO DE MEDIACIÓN

Tipo de Conflicto: [Dispute Type]

[Dispute Description]

Sesiones de Mediación: [Session Dates]

Las partes participaron voluntariamente en el proceso de mediación familiar conforme a la Ley Nacional de Mecanismos Alternativos de Solución de Controversias (Ley Nacional MASC) y el Artículo 1 del Código Nacional de Procedimientos Civiles y Familiares (CNCPF). El mediador actuó en todo momento con imparcialidad, neutralidad y confidencialidad.

III. ACUERDOS ALCANZADOS

[Agreement Terms]

Plazos de Cumplimiento:

[Performance Timeline]

Mecanismo de Seguimiento:

[Monitoring Mechanism]

IV. CONFIDENCIALIDAD

Todas las comunicaciones efectuadas durante el proceso de mediación tienen carácter estrictamente confidencial conforme a la Ley Nacional MASC. Ninguna de las partes ni el mediador podrán utilizar como prueba en procedimientos judiciales las comunicaciones realizadas durante las sesiones de mediación.

V. EJECUTABILIDAD DEL ACUERDO

Decisión sobre Homologación: [Homologation Choice]

Juzgado Familiar para Homologación: [Family Court]

Las partes se comprometen a cumplir los términos del presente acuerdo de buena fe. En caso de que se opte por la homologación judicial, las partes presentarán el presente convenio ante el juzgado indicado dentro de los 30 días naturales siguientes a la firma.

FIRMAS

El presente acuerdo se suscribe en [City], a [Date].

PRIMERA PARTE: [Party 1 Name]

Firma: _________________________

SEGUNDA PARTE: [Party 2 Name]

Firma: _________________________

MEDIADOR CERTIFICADO: [Mediator Name]

Certificación: [Mediator Cert No.]

Firma: _________________________

First Party (Primera Parte)

________________

Signature

Second Party (Segunda Parte)

________________

Signature

Certified Mediator (Mediador Certificado)

________________

Signature

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What Is a Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar)?

A Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar) is the written instrument documenting the terms reached by family members through a structured, confidential mediation process conducted by a certificado mediador (certified mediator), covering a broad range of family disputes that go beyond divorce — including conflicts over child custody modifications, inheritance and succession disputes, elder care arrangements, sibling disagreements over family property, family business governance, and parent-child financial obligations. Governed by the Ley Nacional de Mecanismos Alternativos de Solución de Controversias (Ley Nacional MASC) and the Código Nacional de Procedimientos Civiles y Familiares (CNCPF) Article 1, which establishes the principles of family justice and the priority of consensual resolution mechanisms in family matters, the agreement represents the outcome of Mexico's systematic promotion of alternative dispute resolution as the preferred pathway for resolving sensitive family conflicts.

The Ley Nacional MASC establishes uniform national standards for all alternative dispute resolution mechanisms — mediation (mediación), conciliation (conciliación), and collaborative law (derecho colaborativo) — in both civil and family matters across all Mexican states and CDMX. Certified mediators (mediadores certificados) operating under the Ley Nacional MASC must meet training, continuing education, and ethical standards established by the Secretaría Técnica del Consejo de Coordinación del Sistema Penal (SETEC) or the equivalent state certification authority. Each state Poder Judicial operates a Centro de Mecanismos Alternativos de Solución de Controversias (CEMASC) providing free or low-cost mediation services for family matters under the supervision of the Tribunal Superior de Justicia of the state.

CNCPF Article 1 establishes the foundational principles of the new unified national civil and family procedure code — including the principio de interés superior del menor (best interest of the child as a primary consideration in all family proceedings), the principio de igualdad y no discriminación, and the mandato de promover la solución consensual (mandate to promote consensual resolution) before adversarial proceedings. Under this framework, Mexican family judges are required to actively promote mediation and other alternative dispute mechanisms throughout all phases of family proceedings.

Family mediation in Mexico addresses a uniquely broad range of disputes that arise within the family unit — the Ley Nacional MASC authorises mediation for any matter where the parties have the capacity to negotiate and reach agreements (materias disponibles — matters within the parties' autonomy). This includes succession disputes among heirs after a death, conflicts between guardians (tutores) and wards (pupilos), disputes between grandparents and parents over access to grandchildren, elder care arrangements when aging parents require support from multiple adult children, and governance disputes in family-owned businesses (empresas familiares). Disputes involving mandatory rights of public policy (derechos irrenunciables) — such as minimum child support under the CCF or rights established by the Ley General de los Derechos de Niñas, Niños y Adolescentes — cannot be waived in mediation but can be structured in mediation agreements in ways that exceed legal minimums.

For inheritance disputes, the Ley Nacional MASC authorises certified mediators to broker agreements among heirs (herederos) and legatarios regarding the partition and valuation of estate assets, the appointment and oversight of the albacea (executor), and the distribution timeline — agreements that can be incorporated into extrajudicial succession proceedings before a Notario Público or submitted to the Juzgado Civil handling the juicio sucesorio. A successfully mediated inheritance agreement can compress the typical 18 to 48 month contested probate timeline to 3 to 9 months while preserving family relationships that adversarial litigation would likely damage permanently.

Forms-legal.com offers this Family Mediation Agreement Mexico template as a documentation resource for families and mediators across Mexico. The agreement must be executed by a certificado mediador operating under the Ley Nacional MASC, and any agreement addressing matters within judicial family jurisdiction must be submitted for homologación (judicial approval) to the competent Juzgado Familiar.

When Do You Need a Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar)?

A Family Mediation Agreement Mexico is needed whenever a dispute arises within a family that the parties wish to resolve through a structured, neutral mediation process rather than adversarial court proceedings — recognising that preserving family relationships requires a different approach than commercial disputes.

The agreement is needed when siblings (hermanos) disagree about the administration or disposition of inherited property — particularly when an estate includes real property in multiple states, a family business (negocio familiar), or assets of sentimental value where the legal entitlements are clear but the practical arrangements for use or sale require negotiation.

A Family Mediation Agreement is required when adult children and their parents need to formalise elder care arrangements — defining which family members will provide care, financial contributions from each family member toward care costs, housing arrangements for the elderly parent, and mechanisms for making medical decisions under the Ley General de Salud when the parent's capacity is diminishing.

The agreement is needed when there is a post-divorce dispute between former spouses over modification of custody or child support terms — where both parties prefer to resolve the modification request through mediation rather than returning to the Juzgado Familiar for a contested modification proceeding, which can take 6 to 18 months.

A Family Mediation Agreement is needed when grandparents seek to establish or protect their right of convivencia (visitation and relationship) with grandchildren after a family rupture — under CCF art. 416 Bis and CNCPF, grandparents have a legally recognised right to a relationship with grandchildren that can be structured through mediation without requiring a judicial order.

Under the Ley Nacional MASC and CNCPF art. 1, the agreement is needed when a family-owned business (sociedad de capital cerrado with multiple family shareholders) faces governance disputes — succession planning for the business when the founding owner retires or dies, profit distribution conflicts, disagreements about management direction, or buy-out of a dissenting family member's interest. Family business mediation through the CEMASC or a private mediador certificado provides a confidential forum for resolving these disputes without public judicial proceedings that can damage the business's reputation.

The agreement is needed when family members dispute the care and living arrangements for an elderly or incapacitated parent — who provides day-to-day care, how costs are shared among adult children, whether the parent remains in their home or moves to a care facility, and who holds medical decision-making authority under the Ley General de Salud. A mediated family care agreement avoids the expense and delay of court-ordered tutelage proceedings before the Juzgado Familiar.

What to Include in Your Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar)

A valid Family Mediation Agreement Mexico under the Ley Nacional MASC and CNCPF Article 1 must contain the following essential elements to have legal validity, protect the parties' interests, and qualify for judicial homologación where required.

Mediator Credentials: Full name, certification number, and certification authority of the mediador certificado (CEMASC state center or private certified mediator registered with SETEC or equivalent state authority). The mediator's certification must be current and valid throughout the mediation process. The number, dates, and location of all mediation sessions should be recorded.

Party Identification: Legal names, CURP, RFC (for adults), domiciles, and official identity document numbers of all family members who are parties to the agreement. For minors, their CURP, age, and the identity of their legal representatives (padres o tutores). For elderly parties with reduced capacity, a declaration of the party's capacity to consent and, where a tutor or guardian is involved, the tutor's legal authorization reference.

Dispute Description (Descripción del Conflicto): A neutral, factual description of the family dispute that was the subject of mediation — identifying the family relationship between the parties, the specific issues in dispute, and any prior judicial or administrative proceedings related to the same dispute. The dispute description must be agreed by all parties to avoid post-agreement challenges based on scope limitations.

Terms of Agreement (Acuerdos Alcanzados): The specific, clear, and enforceable terms reached in mediation, organised by topic. For each agreement item: the exact obligation of each party, the timeline for performance, the mechanism for verification, and the consequences of non-performance. Ambiguous or vague terms (e.g., "reasonable" financial contributions, "adequate" care) should be avoided — replace with specific figures, dates, and measurable standards.

Confidentiality Clause: Confirmation that all communications made during mediation sessions — including offers, concessions, and statements — are confidential under the Ley Nacional MASC and cannot be used as evidence in any judicial proceeding if mediation fails. This clause protects both parties and the integrity of future mediation attempts.

Children's Interests Protection: For any agreement affecting minor children, an explicit statement that the agreed terms reflect the interés superior del menor (best interest of the child) as required by the Convención sobre los Derechos del Niño, the Ley General de los Derechos de Niñas, Niños y Adolescentes (LGDNNA), and CNCPF. For children over age 12, a note on whether the child's views were considered in mediation (derecho a ser escuchado).

Enforcement Mechanism: Specification of whether the agreement will be submitted for judicial homologación before the Juzgado Familiar (giving it the force of a sentencia ejecutoriada), or whether it will remain as a private binding agreement (convenio privado) enforced through civil contract law. Agreements affecting child custody, child support, or matters within mandatory family jurisdiction must be homologated.

Monitoring and Review Clause: For long-term family agreements (elder care, ongoing child support, family business governance), a provision for periodic review — the frequency, format, and process for reviewing the agreement's operation and making adjustments as family circumstances change. Forms-legal.com provides this Family Mediation Agreement Mexico template as a preparation resource — mediación certificada under the Ley Nacional MASC is required for a legally recognised agreement. Domestic Violence Safeguard: Under Ley Nacional MASC art. 27, the certified mediator must assess for domestic violence (violencia familiar) before and during mediation — if violence exists, mediation is suspended and the affected party is referred to the Centro de Justicia para las Mujeres (CJM) or equivalent authority under the Ley General de Acceso de las Mujeres a una Vida Libre de Violencia (LGAMVLV) for protective measures.

Forms-legal.com provides this Family Mediation Agreement Mexico template as a documentation resource for families and mediators across Mexico.

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BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-family-mediation-agreement-mexico,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Family Mediation Agreement Mexico (Acuerdo de Mediación Familiar) (Mexico)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/mexico/personal/family/family-mediation-agreement-mexico}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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Statute-referenced template — Template last modified June 2026

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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