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Mexico Freight Corridor Heats Up as Uber Freight Reports Earlier Peak Season and Strong Cross-Border Demand

By MGN EditorialJune 7, 2026 at 12:00 PM

Uber Freight is registering an earlier-than-usual peak season driven by robust Mexico freight demand, as the broader Mexico trucking sector outpaces the national economy and major logistics infrastructure investment takes shape in the US Southwest.

## Mexico Freight Corridor Heats Up Ahead of Schedule Cross-border freight activity between the United States and Mexico is accelerating ahead of its typical seasonal curve, with Uber Freight reporting stronger-than-expected demand and an earlier onset of peak season conditions, according to FreightWaves. The digital freight platform's observations align with broader data showing Mexico's freight trucking sector outperforming the country's overall Q1 economic output — a signal that nearshoring trends and supply chain realignment continue to drive sustained cargo volumes along the US-Mexico trade corridor. ### Nearshoring Momentum Sustains Freight Growth The strength of Mexico-origin freight reflects an ongoing structural shift in North American supply chains. Manufacturers and retailers that have relocated or expanded production capacity in Mexico — partly in response to tariff pressures and a desire to reduce dependence on trans-Pacific shipping lanes — are generating consistent freight demand that is now translating into earlier seasonal peaks for logistics providers. For maritime industry stakeholders, the trend carries downstream implications. Increased overland freight volumes moving through Mexican manufacturing hubs ultimately feed into Gulf of Mexico and Pacific Coast port activity, influencing container throughput at facilities such as the Port of Manzanillo, Lázaro Cárdenas, and Veracruz, as well as US Gulf ports receiving finished goods and components. ### Major Logistics Hub Planned for Phoenix Region Supporting the infrastructure buildout required to handle growing cross-border volumes, a 1.1 million-square-foot logistics center is in the planning stages for the Phoenix metropolitan area, FreightWaves reports. The facility would position the region as a key inland distribution node for freight transiting the US-Mexico border, complementing existing intermodal and port-side warehousing capacity. Phoenix's proximity to the Nogales and San Luis border crossings makes it a strategically significant location for freight consolidation and distribution serving both domestic US markets and onward supply chains. ### Outlook The combination of an earlier peak season, outperforming trucking metrics, and significant logistics investment suggests that the US-Mexico freight corridor remains one of the most dynamic trade lanes in North America. Shipping lines, port operators, and intermodal providers with exposure to this corridor should anticipate sustained volume pressure through the second half of 2025. *Source: FreightWaves Borderlands Mexico*
#cross-border freight#nearshoring#Mexico trade corridor#intermodal logistics#supply chain#US-Mexico trade#freight demand

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