ISO 3166-2:MX
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ISO 3166-2:MX is an ISO standard which defines geocodes; it is the subset of ISO 3166-2 which applies to Mexico.
ISO 3166-2:MX covers 1 federal district and 31 states. The first part of the code is MX, the ISO 3166-1 code for Mexico; the second part is a sequence of three letters, shown in the table below.[1][2][3]
[edit] Codes
| Abbrevations for the states of Mexico |
| Name of state | Conventional abbreviation |
2-letter code | 3-letter code (ISO 3166-2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aguascalientes | Ags. | MX - AG | MX-AGU |
| Baja California | B.C. | MX - BC | MX-BCN |
| Baja California Sur | B.C.S. | MX - BS | MX-BCS |
| Campeche | Camp. | MX - CM | MX-CAM |
| Chiapas | Chis. | MX - CS | MX-CHP |
| Chihuahua | Chih. | MX - CH | MX-CHH |
| Coahuila | Coah. | MX - CO | MX-COA |
| Colima | Col. | MX - CL | MX-COL |
| Distrito Federal | D.F. | MX - DF | MX-DIF |
| Durango | Dgo. | MX - DG | MX-DUR |
| Guanajuato | Gto. | MX - GT | MX-GUA |
| Guerrero | Gro. | MX - GR | MX-GRO |
| Hidalgo | Hgo. | MX - HG | MX-HID |
| Jalisco | Jal. | MX - JA | MX-JAL |
| México | Méx. | MX - ME | MX-MEX |
| Michoacán | Mich. | MX - MI | MX-MIC |
| Morelos | Mor. | MX - MO | MX-MOR |
| Nayarit | Nay. | MX - NA | MX-NAY |
| Nuevo León | N.L. | MX - NL | MX-NLE |
| Oaxaca | Oax. | MX - OA | MX-OAX |
| Puebla | Pue. | MX - PB | MX-PUE |
| Querétaro | Qro. | MX - QT | MX-QUE |
| Quintana Roo | Q. Roo. | MX - QR | MX-ROO |
| San Luis Potosí | S.L.P. | MX - SL | MX-SLP |
| Sinaloa | Sin. | MX - SI | MX-SIN |
| Sonora | Son. | MX - SO | MX-SON |
| Tabasco | Tab. | MX - TB | MX-TAB |
| Tamaulipas | Tamps. | MX - TM | MX-TAM |
| Tlaxcala | Tlax. | MX - TL | MX-TLA |
| Veracruz | Ver. | MX - VE | MX-VER |
| Yucatán | Yuc. | MX - YU | MX-YUC |
| Zacatecas | Zac. | MX - ZA | MX-ZAC |
[edit] See also
- ISO 3166-2, the reference table for all country region codes.
- ISO 3166-1, the reference table for all country codes, as used for domain names on the Internet.
[edit] References
- ^ ISO 3166-2, International Organization for Standardization. Accessed on line October 21, 2007.
- ^ States of Mexico, statoids.com. Last updated April 23, 2007; accessed on line October 21, 2007.
- ^ ISO Codes table and translation, Alioth. Accessed on line October 21, 2007.

