Jimenez last year pleaded guilty to racketeering and wire fraud conspiracies in a US court after accepting bribes worth several hundred thousand dollars in exchange for media and marketing rights for key matches.
He was arrested while drunk in a posh Guatemala City suburb in January of last year and extradited to the United States.
A statement from the judicial arm of FIFA's ethics committee said Jimenez was "banned for life from all football-related activities (administrative, sports or any other) at national and international level."
Over the last two years, US prosecutors in New York have indicted 40 football and sports marketing executives over allegedly receiving tens of millions of bribes and kickbacks in the largest corruption scandal in the history of football.
A trial is scheduled to begin November 6 for five defendants currently in the United States who have pleaded not guilty.
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