Reshoring vs. Nearshoring: What Canadian Companies Need to Know in 2026 Quick Answer Reshoring vs. nearshoring for Canadian companies: Reshoring returns production or sourcing to Canada; nearshoring moves it to Mexico under CUSMA/USMCA. Reshoring offers superior supply chain visibility, lower logistics cost, and stronger quality control but higher labour costs. Nearshoring delivers labour cost advantages but adds complexity, lead time, and execution risk. The right choice depends entirely on your product’s total cost of ownership, not unit labour cost alone. As US tariffs reshape the economics of North American supply chains, Canadian companies are evaluating two strategic options: bring production back to Canada, or move it to Mexico. Here is the definitive comparison to help you decide. The conversation about reshoring and nearshoring has moved rapidly from academic strategy to operational urgency. For Canadian companies facing US tariffs on their exports and retaliatory tariffs on US inputs, the question is no longer hypothetical: does it make more economic sense to build supply chain resilience in Canada, or to leverage Mexico's position within the CUSMA free trade zone? This is one of the most consequential strategic decisions a Canadian manufacturer can make and it is being made under time pressure, with incomplete information, in a volatile policy environment. This guide provides the framework you need to evaluate both options rigorously, with an honest accounting of costs, risks, and timelines. For help navigating the broader trade policy environment, explore SCA's tariff navigation solutions. Table of Contents Defining the Options Reshoring vs. Nearshoring Comparison Total Cost of Ownership Trap When Reshoring Wins When Nearshoring Wins Building the Business Case Phased Approach FAQ Defining the Options Clearly What is Reshoring? Reshoring also called onshoring means relocating production, assembly, or sourcing back to Canada from offshore locations (typically Asia) or from the United States. For Canadian companies, reshoring typically involves establishing or expanding Canadian manufacturing capacity, developing domestic Canadian suppliers, or shifting distribution and assembly operations back across the border. What is Nearshoring? Nearshoring means relocating production or sourcing to a geographically proximate country for Canadian and US companies, this almost exclusively means Mexico. Mexico's combination of relatively low manufacturing wages (approximately one-fifth of Canadian levels in many categories), CUSMA free trade status, established industrial infrastructure, and proximity to North American markets makes it the primary nearshoring destination for the continent. Why Now? The confluence of US tariffs on Canadian goods, post-COVID supply chain fragility lessons, and rising costs in traditional Asian manufacturing markets has created a genuine strategic window for both reshoring and nearshoring. Companies that act now while industrial real estate, labour availability, and supplier capacity in both Canada and Mexico are relatively accessible will have advantages that those who wait may not be able to replicate. The Definitive Comparison: Reshoring vs. Nearshoring The following comparison evaluates both strategies across eight dimensions that matter most for total cost of ownership and operational risk. This is the framework SCA uses when helping clients evaluate location decisions as part of ournetwork optimization practice. The Total Cost of Ownership Trap The most common mistake companies make when evaluating reshoring vs. nearshoring is using unit labour cost as the primary or sole decision variable. Labour cost is highly visible and easy to compare but it typically represents only 15 to 35 percent of total product cost. When you model the full TCO, the labour cost advantage of nearshoring is often substantially smaller than it appears in a direct wage comparison. The hidden costs that frequently close the gap or reverse it include: Inventory carrying cost: Longer supply chains require more safety stock. A 15-day lead time from Mexico versus a 2-day lead time from a Canadian supplier can require 3 to 5 times more safety stock for equivalent service levels at carrying costs of 20 to 30 percent of inventory value annually. Transportation cost: Mexico's labour advantage is partially offset by higher inbound freight, border crossing costs, and more complex customs processes. For heavy or bulky products, this offset can be substantial. Quality and rework cost: Greater physical distance from production means quality issues are detected later, corrective action takes longer, and the cost of a quality event (rework, scrap, customer service) is higher. Management overhead: Operating across a third country requires additional management capacity, travel, and coordination infrastructure that is often underestimated in the initial business case. Currency risk: Mexican peso volatility has been significant in recent years. Canadian companies contracting in pesos face exchange rate exposure that requires hedging (at cost) or represents uncovered risk. Our network optimization team builds full TCO models that capture all of these variables and the results regularly surprise clients who assumed nearshoring was the obvious cost winner. When Reshoring Makes More Sense Based on our work with Canadian manufacturers across multiple industries, reshoring tends to deliver the strongest ROI in the following scenarios: Reshoring to Canada: Best-Fit Scenarios Reshore – Short Product Lifecycles or High Customization Products that require frequent design changes, high mix/low volume configurations, or rapid response to customer specifications benefit enormously from geographic proximity to Canadian customers and markets. Reshore – High Transportation Cost Relative to Labour Heavy, bulky, or hazardous goods where freight cost is a large proportion of total landed cost construction materials, chemicals, large industrial components often find the labour premium of Canadian production more than offset by logistics savings. Reshore – Strong Government Incentive Eligibility Canada’s SR&ED tax credit, Strategic Innovation Fund, and provincial manufacturing incentives can materially reduce the effective labour cost of Canadian production. Companies that invest in R&D or advanced manufacturing often find the post-incentive cost gap with Mexico significantly narrowed. Reshore – High IP Sensitivity For products involving proprietary processes, formulations, or technology, the IP protection environment in Canada is substantially stronger. Companies with genuine IP risk may find the cost premium of Canadian production justified purely on a risk-adjusted basis. When Nearshoring to Mexico Makes More Sense Nearshoring to Mexico: Best-Fit Scenarios Nearshore – Labour-Intensive, Standardized Assembly Products with high labour content, standardized specifications, and stable demand profiles electronics assembly, garment production, automotive sub-assembly are where Mexico’s wage advantage is most pronounced and least offset by the factors described above. Nearshore – Existing Asia Production Transitioning to North America For companies currently producing in China or Southeast Asia and looking to move closer to North American markets, Mexico offers a meaningful improvement in lead time, supply chain visibility, and CUSMA compliance without the full cost premium of a Canadian operation. Nearshore – Large Volume, Relatively Stable SKU Mix High-volume, stable SKU environments allow the management overhead and logistics complexity of a Mexican operation to be spread across a large production base, reducing its proportionate impact on unit cost. Nearshore – Strong US Sales Volume to Serve Companies with significant US sales alongside Canadian sales may find Mexico optimally positioned within the CUSMA zone to serve both markets particularly if US volume is growing while Canadian volume is more stable. Building the Internal Business Case Gaining internal alignment for a reshoring or nearshoring investment requires a business case that speaks to multiple stakeholders: finance (ROI, payback period, risk profile), operations (implementation risk, quality performance), and the executive team (strategic fit, competitive positioning). Here is the structure we recommend: Baseline current state costs: Establish a complete, fully-loaded current cost-to-serve for the affected product categories, including all the hidden costs described above. This often reveals that the status quo is more expensive than assumed. Model three scenarios: (a) Status quo with tariff costs, (b) reshoring to Canada, (c) nearshoring to Mexico. Use full TCO for all three not just labour cost. Stress-test each scenario: What happens to the economics if tariffs change? If Mexican peso depreciates 15%? If Canadian labour costs increase 5% annually? Scenario sensitivity tells you which option is most robust to uncertainty. Quantify the transition cost and timeline: Capital expenditure, implementation cost, productivity loss during transition, and the time to steady-state performance all affect the payback period and should be explicitly modelled. Apply government incentive offsets: Identify all applicable Canadian federal and provincial incentive programs and apply them to the reshoring scenario. This step is often missed and can materially change the economics. Our value chain planning team and network optimization practice can build this analysis for you typically within three to four weeks. For companies in the industrial, CPG, or footwear and apparel sectors, we have benchmark data that can significantly accelerate the modelling process. 💡 Key Insight The companies that are making the best reshoring and nearshoring decisions right now are not the ones who have the most conviction about which option is right they are the ones who are doing the most rigorous modelling. The analysis itself almost always reveals surprises that change the initial assumption. Build the model before you build the case. A Phased Approach: How to Reduce Implementation Risk One of the most effective ways to manage the risk of either a reshoring or nearshoring transition is to start small with new business, new product lines, or pilot volumes before committing to full operational transition. This phased approach offers several advantages: It allows you to validate the cost model against actual production experience before scaling. It builds supplier and operational capability incrementally, reducing the risk of a disruptive "big bang" transition. It preserves optionality if the pilot reveals unexpected challenges, you have not yet committed to irreversible capital investment. It creates a learning environment for your team to develop the competencies needed to manage the new supply structure effectively. This approach requires careful demand and supply planning to manage dual-source complexity during the transition period, but it substantially reduces the probability of a costly failed transition. Our operational excellence team has managed dozens of these transitions and can help you design and execute a phased approach that works for your specific context. Not Sure Whether to Reshore or Nearshore? Supply Chain Alliance builds the financial models and strategic frameworks that turn this complex decision into a clear, data-driven recommendation. Our network optimization team has the Canadian market knowledge and North American operating experience to help you get it right. Explore Network Optimization → Frequently Asked Questions What is the difference between reshoring and nearshoring for Canadian companies? Reshoring means returning production or sourcing to Canada — from offshore (typically Asia) or from the US. Nearshoring means relocating production to Mexico, which is geographically proximate and within the CUSMA free trade zone. Both strategies aim to reduce supply chain risk and optimize total cost in the context of tariff disruption, but they have very different cost structures, implementation timelines, and operational profiles. For help evaluating both options, see SCA's network optimization consulting services. Is reshoring to Canada worth it given higher labour costs? Reshoring can deliver a strong ROI when total cost of ownership is modelled not just unit labour cost. For products with high transportation costs, complex specifications, short lead time requirements, or significant IP sensitivity, reshoring often outperforms nearshoring on a full TCO basis. Government incentive programs (SR&ED, Strategic Innovation Fund, provincial programs) can also materially reduce the effective labour cost gap. The answer is different for every product category and company situation which is why rigorous modelling is essential before reaching a conclusion. How long does reshoring or nearshoring take? Simple sourcing transitions switching from a US or Asian supplier to a Canadian or Mexican one — can often be completed in 60 to 120 days. More complex moves involving manufacturing relocation, facility setup, and workforce development typically require 6 to 18 months for reshoring and 12 to 24 months for a full nearshoring operation. A phased approach starting with pilot volumes can compress the time to first production while managing risk. Our operational excellence team manages these transitions for clients across industries. What Canadian government programs support reshoring? Key programs include the SR&ED (Scientific Research and Experimental Development) tax credit for manufacturers investing in process innovation, the Strategic Innovation Fund for large-scale industrial projects, the Canada Digital Adoption Program for technology-enabled manufacturing, and a range of provincial manufacturing incentive programs that vary by province. A supply chain consultant with experience in the Canadian market can help you identify and apply for the incentives most relevant to your reshoring investment. Continue Reading It's Time to Optimize Your NetworkStrategies for Procurement Planning Amid Rising US Tariffs Enhancing Supply Chain Resilience Amid Trade Policy Shifts What is Supply Chain Consulting & Why Do You Need It?