Around 11,000 migrants have been deported to Mexico from the United States since Trump took office on 20 January.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announced the figures during a press conference on Friday morning.
The migrants included around 2,500 non-Mexicans. President Sheinbaum said that her country has already begun voluntary repatriation to Honduras.
Earlier this week, President Sheinbaum reached an agreement to pause US tariffs on Mexican goods in exchange for the deployment of 10,000 Mexican national-guard soldiers to the border to prevent crossings.
A similar agreement has been reached between the US and Canada.
Both President Trump and Border Czar Tom Homan have expressed frustration that the number of deportations is not higher.
“It’s driving him [Trump] nuts they’re not deporting more people,” a source told NBC.
Another source told NBC that in his daily conference call with ICE agents Homan has been making his frustrations known.
The Trump administration would have to deport 2,700 migrants a day to reach a million deportations a year.
“After four years of the Biden administration’s outright incompetence and negligence, the Trump administration has re-established a no-nonsense enforcement of and respect for the immigration laws of the United States,” Kush Desai, a White House spokesperson, said in a statement.
“Hundreds of violent, predatory, and gang-affiliated criminal illegal aliens have already been rounded up and deported by ICE since President Trump took office — and the Trump administration is aligned on securing our borders and ensuring that mass deportations are conducted quickly and effectively to put Americans and America First.”