Carla Huitron#12684

Carla Huitron

Carla is a member of the Corporate and Commercial Law Group since 2011, providing high qualified assistance to national and international clients advising them on their commercial needs. Among the work she develops is to support clients in drafting and reviewing documents such as: (i) service, distribution, merchandise, NDAs, franchise and license agreements; (ii) compliance of Mexican law for launching e-commerce and digital marketplaces (ii) company´s by-laws or corporate minutes; and (iii) providing legal opinions on civil, commercial, consumer´s protection, transparency in advertising, and data protection Law, among others.

Practice Areas

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Experience

  • Olivares (2011 - Present)
  • Citigroup (2005 - 2007)
  • Olivares (2000 - 2004)

Education

  • Master´s degree at Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain (2001-2002)
  • J.D., Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) (1995-2001)

1 Contributions by Carla Huitron

Mexico: 2025 Business Law and Regulatory Guide—Incorporation, AML/UBO, Tax, Labour, Immigration, Competition, Data Protection, Foreign Investment, Digital Platforms and IP
PRACTICE NOTES
Mexico: 2025 Business Law and Regulatory Guide—Incorporation, AML/UBO, Tax, Labour, Immigration, Competition, Data Protection, Foreign Investment, Digital Platforms and IP
Updated in October 2025 Introduction Mexico’s business, cultural and social landscape is continually advancing, as are the legal framework and the avenues for consolidation and ongoing expansion. Elements including consistent economic growth, a favourable demographic balance, structural reforms in pivotal industries, and Mexico’s enduring legal tradition position the country as a preferred jurisdiction for doing business. Mexico provides a range of grants and incentives to stimulate enterprise. Foreign-owned companies qualify for the same support as Mexican-owned entities. These incentives concentrate on employment generation, technological research and development, construction, and the expansion of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The business environment Mexico has an extensive network of free trade agreements spanning North America, Europe, Japan, the Transpacific Partnership and much of Latin America, creating a compelling platform for international trade with significantly reduced tariff and non-tariff barriers. Strong government measures have targeted inflation, seeking to position Mexico on a level comparable with leading global economies. In addition, Mexico is party to more than 60 international treaties to prevent double taxation with countries worldwide. Mexico’s strategic geographic location and work...
Commercial
Expert page AD
If you expected to see yourself on this page, click here.