in Tijuana
Explore our comprehensive manufacturing and logistics solutions tailored for this region.
Specialized manufacturing guides for Tijuana's key industrial clusters.
| Key Performance Metric | IVEMSA Shelter | NAPS Shelter | CPI (Collectron) Shelter | Tecma Shelter | Nearshore Navigator (Agile) Managed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speed to Market | 90-120 Days | 90 Days | 45-60 Days | 60-90 Days | 15-30 Days |
| Primary Strength | Historical depthFlexibility | Standardized complianceUSMCA expertise | SpeedSonora/Queretaro dominance | Low turnoverMassive footprint | 0 Capex LaunchReal-time AI monitoring |
| Pricing Structure | Percentage of payroll / Fixed Fee | All-inclusive monthly fee | Hourly rate based on labor hours | Fixed monthly per-employee fee | Success-based / Subscription |
| Agile Adaptability |
tijuanaHub Analysis
mexicaliHub Analysis
monterreyHub Analysis
Tijuana?
Wait times as low as 2 hours at Otay Mesa Application
Largest concentration of medical device manufacturing
Access to California's logistics infrastructure
Highly skilled bilingual workforce
How Manufacturing & Nearshoring Works in Tijuana
Tijuana is the most established nearshoring destination on the entire US-Mexico border, and for good reason. Positioned just 20 minutes south of San Diego, California, the city operates in the Pacific Standard Time zone — the same as the US West Coast — eliminating the scheduling friction that plagues offshore manufacturing in Asia. This geographic and temporal alignment means that US executives can visit their Tijuana production lines before lunch and return to their San Diego offices the same afternoon. No other nearshoring city in the world offers this level of operational immediacy.
The industrial backbone of Tijuana is its network of world-class industrial parks. Parque Industrial Pacifico, located along the Otay Mesa corridor, hosts some of the region's largest medical device and electronics manufacturers in Class A facilities with modern infrastructure, 24/7 security, and direct highway access to the Otay Mesa commercial border crossing. Parque Industrial El Florido, situated in the eastern manufacturing belt, is one of the oldest and most densely developed parks in the city, anchoring a massive ecosystem of automotive wire harness producers, electronics assemblers, and plastics injection molders. Finsa Tijuana, developed by one of Mexico's premier industrial real estate firms, offers built-to-suit and speculative Class A buildings with ceiling heights exceeding 32 feet and heavy power infrastructure suitable for advanced manufacturing. Parque Industrial Nordika, a newer development along the Tijuana-Tecate corridor, targets high-tech and clean manufacturing with modern environmental controls and fiber optic connectivity. The Otay Mesa industrial zone itself functions as a de facto free trade corridor, with dozens of manufacturing facilities positioned within a 10-minute drive of the commercial port of entry.
Tijuana's manufacturing ecosystem is anchored by three dominant industry clusters: medical devices, aerospace, and electronics. The city is the single largest producer of medical devices in Mexico, with over 70 medical device manufacturers — including global leaders like Becton Dickinson, DJO Global, and CareFusion — operating FDA-compliant production lines within Tijuana's industrial parks. The aerospace cluster, while smaller than Mexicali's, has been growing rapidly, with companies like Collins Aerospace and Eaton establishing precision machining and avionics assembly operations. Electronics manufacturing remains the city's original industrial DNA, dating back to the 1960s maquiladora era, with Samsung, Panasonic, and dozens of contract electronics manufacturers (CEMs) running high-volume surface mount technology (SMT) lines.
The Otay Mesa Port of Entry is the busiest commercial land border crossing in the western United States, processing over $50 billion in annual bilateral trade. For manufacturers, this crossing is the critical logistics artery. FAST-lane enrolled carriers can typically clear the border in under 90 minutes during standard business hours, while standard commercial crossings average 2-3 hours. The new Otay Mesa East Port of Entry, currently under construction, is projected to reduce commercial wait times to under 30 minutes upon completion, further cementing Tijuana's position as the premier just-in-time (JIT) manufacturing hub for California-based supply chains. Beyond trucking, Tijuana offers direct rail connectivity via the BNSF/Ferromex intermodal network and proximity to the Port of Long Beach for ocean freight consolidation.
As of 2026, fully-burdened labor rates in Tijuana for skilled manufacturing operators range from $7.50 to $9.00 USD per hour, inclusive of IMSS social security, INFONAVIT housing contributions, vacation premiums, and the mandatory profit-sharing (PTU) required under Mexican labor law. For comparison, equivalent roles in Southern California command $22-$35 per hour fully burdened, representing a 60-75% labor cost reduction. Tijuana's workforce is overwhelmingly bilingual (English/Spanish), with many operators and middle managers having been trained in US-standard quality systems including ISO 13485, AS9100, and IATF 16949. The city's proximity to San Diego means that engineering talent frequently circulates between both sides of the border, creating a uniquely bicultural management layer.
Under the USMCA (United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement), goods manufactured in Tijuana that meet the rules of origin are eligible for duty-free entry into the United States. For companies operating under Mexico's IMMEX (Maquiladora) program — the standard operating model for shelter services in Baja California — raw materials and components can be imported temporarily into Mexico duty-free for transformation, with the finished goods re-exported to the US without tariff exposure. This structure is particularly powerful in the current trade environment, where Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports range from 25% to 100% depending on the product category. By shifting production from China to Tijuana, US manufacturers can eliminate these tariffs entirely while simultaneously reducing logistics lead times from 30+ days (ocean freight from Shenzhen) to 1-2 days (truck from Tijuana to Los Angeles).
- Parque Industrial Pacifico
- Parque Industrial El Florido
- Finsa Tijuana
- Parque Industrial Nordika
- Otay Mesa Industrial Zone
The Otay Mesa Port of Entry processes over $50 billion in annual trade. FAST-lane crossings average under 90 minutes. The upcoming Otay Mesa East crossing will cut wait times to under 30 minutes. Direct access to I-5 and I-805 corridors into Southern California, plus BNSF rail intermodal connectivity.

Verified Strategy
Denisse Martinez
Principal Nearshore Advisor
"Our advisory team has overseen 200+ facility setups in Mexico. Every strategy is reviewed for USMCA compliance and operational feasibility."