Mexico's National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV), through the National Council for Financial Inclusion, published the National Financial Inclusion Policy (PNIF) 2025-2030, setting out a coordinated framework to expand access to and use of formal financial products and services by individuals and businesses, with the stated aim of strengthening financial well-being. The PNIF sets eight strategic objectives covering formal saving and deposit-taking products, access to formal financing, adoption and frequency of payment methods, and the supply and take-up of insurance and specialised services. It also introduces cross-cutting priorities on gender equality and the inclusion of vulnerable groups, plus enabling objectives on expanding financial system coverage and strengthening problem prevention, user protection and trust. The policy adds a transversal strand on producing and disseminating financial inclusion information and research, and sets 24 indicators with targets, including reaching 83% of the population with at least one financial product and 50% of businesses having accessed financing at least once by 2030. The PNIF is positioned separately from the National Financial Education Strategy (ENEF) and adopts an adaptive management approach allowing updates during implementation if considered necessary.