For US producers, talent agreements in Mexico used to look like a translation exercise — lift the SAG-AFTRA template, swap in pesos, sign. That stopped being a safe approach in 2026. Mexico’s recent reforms to the Federal Copyright Law (LFDA) and Federal Labor Law gave performers explicit, separate rights over their image, voice, and AI-generated likeness — rights that don’t transfer automatically with the production agreement.
This guide walks US producers through what changed, how to structure a compliant Mexican talent agreement, and the specific clauses every contract now needs when hiring talent in Mexico.
Why Mexico Treats Talent Agreements Differently from US Productions
Under US law, a SAG-AFTRA performer signing a typical engagement contract conveys broad rights to the producer through the work-made-for-hire doctrine and standard buy-out language. Mexican law starts from the opposite position: image, voice, and likeness are personal rights that remain with the performer unless transferred with specific written consent for specific uses.
That means a contract enforceable in Los Angeles can be partially unenforceable in Mexico City — particularly the broad “all media now known or later devised” language US producers are used to. For the broader compliance picture, see Mexico Film Production Compliance Guide for US Producers.
The 2026 Image-Rights Reform: What Changed in Mexican Copyright Law
In 2026, Mexico amended the LFDA and Federal Labor Law to address AI-generated likenesses, voice cloning, and digital replicas head-on. The reform was characterized by the International Federation of Actors as Mexico setting a new global standard. Three articles matter most for US producers:
Article 87: Express Consent for Image and Voice
Article 87 of the LFDA has long required express consent for the use of a person’s portrait. The 2026 amendment expanded this into an exclusive right for performers over the use of their voice and image — including the characters they portray — even when the use involves AI technologies such as voice cloning or digital replicas. A general appearance release no longer covers AI-derived uses.
Article 121: Why AI and Voice Cloning Need a Separate Clause
Article 121 establishes a rebuttable presumption that a performer transfers rights in audiovisual productions to the producer. The 2026 reform was explicit: this presumption does not extend to voice or image cloning. Prior written consent — separately and specifically — remains mandatory for any AI-derived use. Detailed analysis: Mexico Advances Landmark Reforms to Federal Labor Law and Federal Copyright Law (FisherBroyles).
Why “Standard SAG-AFTRA Language” Isn’t Enough in Mexico
US producers routinely rely on standard performer agreements that grant rights “in all media now known or later devised, throughout the universe, in perpetuity.” Under the 2026 LFDA reform, that language fails the “separately and specifically” test for AI uses. A Mexican court — or a performer’s post-production claim — can carve AI-derived exploitation out of the rights bundle even when the rest of the contract is enforceable.
How to Structure a Compliant Mexican Talent Agreement
A Mexican talent agreement that survives both production and post needs four specific architectural pieces. None of them are expensive to add — they’re missing because US templates predate the 2026 reform.
Image Consent and Scope of Use
Treat image consent as a separate, signed instrument referencing Article 87 LFDA. Define the scope by media (film, streaming, social, behind-the-scenes), territory (Mexico, North America, worldwide), and duration. Open-ended language won’t survive a challenge; closed lists will.
AI, Voice Cloning, and Digital Replica Rights
Add a separate written consent for each of: voice cloning, digital replica generation, AI-derived performances (including post-mortem use), and likeness training data. If the production has no current plan to use AI, the contract should still grant or expressly reserve those rights — a future buyer of the title will ask for the chain-of-title and silence is a problem.
Residuals, Royalties, and Recurring Exploitation
Where US contracts often buy out residuals up front, Mexican performers retain certain economic rights to recurring public communication of their performance. Decide whether to negotiate a clean buy-out (typically priced higher) or structure ongoing royalty payments through a collective-management entity. Get this on paper in the original agreement — not at distribution.
IP Assignment That Holds Up Under Mexican Law
Mexican IP transfers must be express, in writing, and reasonably specific about scope and consideration. Vague “all rights, title, and interest” recitals do not transfer rights cleanly under LFDA. Pair the assignment with a separately compensated, separately signed instrument for the image and AI rights.
ANDA: When Your Mexican Cast Means Union Cast
The Asociación Nacional de Actores (ANDA) is the principal performers’ union in Mexico, founded in 1934 and recognized for film, theater, television, dubbing, and stunts. In October 2023, ANDA signed a cooperative agreement with SAG-AFTRA — meaning unionized US performers and Mexican performers now have a formal framework for working together cross-border.
Practically, that means: if your production hires ANDA-affiliated talent, expect collective-bargaining minimums, mandated rest periods, on-set conditions, and reporting obligations to apply. Budget for them at scoping rather than discovering them at wrap. The inspection regime that enforces this is covered in Filming in Mexico Inspections: A Guide for US Producers.
IMSS and the Independent Contractor Trap
US productions often classify performers as independent contractors. Mexican labor authorities apply a substance-over-form test: if the production directs the performer’s work, sets the schedule, and provides the location and equipment, the relationship can be reclassified as an employment relationship with IMSS, INFONAVIT, and severance obligations attaching retroactively.
Recurring engagements (multi-day shoots, returning characters in a series) carry the highest reclassification risk. The same payment-flow rules that affect crew also apply to talent — full discussion in Paying Film Crew in Mexico: A Guide for US Producers.
Working with Minors in Mexican Productions
Minor performers are subject to Mexico’s Federal Labor Law protections, which require special authorization from labor authorities, mandatory parent or guardian presence, restricted hours, education accommodations, and supervised on-set conditions. Productions that try to handle minor casting under standard adult templates trigger inspections that can pause a shoot mid-day. Build the additional documentation — medical clearance, school approvals, supervised hours log — into pre-production rather than into trailer paperwork.
A 7-Point Talent Agreement Checklist for US Producers
Before sending a Mexican talent agreement out for signature, confirm each item below. Each is a reform-aware fix to language that worked pre-2026 but no longer does:
- Express, specific consent referencing Article 87 LFDA for image and voice.
- Separate written consent for AI, voice cloning, and digital replica uses (Article 121).
- Closed-list scope — media, territory, duration — rather than open-ended language.
- Residuals decision — buy-out at premium or structured royalty stream.
- Worker classification analysis — ensure independent-contractor structure can survive a substance-over-form review.
- ANDA compliance if any cast member is union-affiliated.
- Minor-specific protocols with all required authorizations attached.
Productions that meet these requirements also preserve the 30% federal tax credit and 0% VAT exemption — a non-compliant talent chain can disqualify the entire production from those incentives.
Conclusion: Performance Rights Are Now a Pre-Production Issue
Mexico’s 2026 LFDA reform is not a defensive update for performers — it’s an operational reset for producers. Image, voice, and AI rights are no longer wrapped into a standard performer agreement. They are individually consented, separately documented, and independently enforceable. The good news is the fix is structural, not expensive: a properly drafted talent agreement under the new framework looks longer on paper but operates cleaner in the audit trail.
Casting for a Mexico shoot in the next 12 months? Have ANFEPA review the talent agreement template before you send the first offer — the cheapest place to fix a contract is before it’s signed.
FAQ: Hiring Talent in Mexico
Do US-style SAG-AFTRA talent agreements work in Mexico?
Partially. The performance and standard buy-out provisions usually function, but the broad “all media” language and especially any AI/voice-cloning clauses must be rewritten to meet the 2026 LFDA “separate written consent” standard.
What did Mexico’s 2026 image-rights reform actually change?
It amended Article 87 of the Federal Copyright Law to give performers an exclusive right over their voice and image, including AI-generated uses, and clarified in Article 121 that the audiovisual-production transfer presumption does not extend to voice/image cloning.
Do I need a separate AI consent in every Mexican talent contract?
Yes. Even if the production has no current plans to use AI, a separately signed AI-rights provision (granted or reserved) preserves chain-of-title for future buyers and avoids post-distribution claims.
What is ANDA and do I have to deal with it?
ANDA is Mexico’s principal performers’ union. If any cast member is ANDA-affiliated, collective-bargaining minimums and on-set conditions apply. ANDA also has a cooperative agreement with SAG-AFTRA dating from October 2023.
Can a Mexican performer reclaim rights to their image after wrap?
Possibly, if the original agreement lacked the specificity required under Article 87. The reform gives performers stronger grounds to challenge open-ended consents — particularly for AI-derived uses created after the original engagement.
