The interdependence of migration and family formation has been studied extensively in scholarly research.Less common are studies that consider the embeddedness of this interdependence within gender and class relations.Most of the existing research includes gender and class separately as determinants of family events or transitions, instead of analyzing how the intersections of both shape full family formation trajectories.We overcome this gap by using an intersectionality framework to analyze trajectories of family formation and migration collected by the Mexican and Latin American Migration projects .Using retrospective information, we reconstruct full family formation and dissolution trajectories for 16,000 individuals and apply sequence and cluster analysis to define a six-category typology of ideal family formation trajectories.Furthermore, we associate this typology with individuals' sex, age at migration (internal, international), and educational attainment.Our results suggest that the relationship between migration and typical family trajectories depends mainly on class and gender, positioning migration as a secondary disruptive factor.Family trajectories among socially and economically privileged individuals do not seem to be affected by migration; patterns by class are clearer for women than men, which signals that women's trajectories are more rooted in their social class than those of their male counterparts.