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Residency in Mexico for Expats: Temporary vs Permanent (2026)

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EXPATS IN MEXICO · EXPATS · MEXICO, 1 JUNE 2026

Passport and Mexican visa documents illustrating residency in Mexico for expats

Key Facts

Two statuses. Residency in Mexico for expats comes in two forms — temporary (residente temporal, up to four years) and permanent (residente permanente, indefinite). You almost always apply at a Mexican consulate abroad and then finish the process at INM after you arrive.

You start abroad. Tourists already inside Mexico generally cannot switch to residency without leaving. The consulate places a visa sticker in your passport, and you complete the exchange (the canje) at the immigration institute within 30 days of entering.

Money matters most. The usual route is economic solvency: proof of monthly income or twelve months of healthy bank balances. The thresholds track Mexico’s minimum wage and the UMA index, rise every year, and are higher for permanent status.

A four-year bridge. Temporary residency can convert to permanent after four continuous years without leaving the country. Retirees with sufficient pension income and people with close Mexican family may qualify for permanent residency directly.

Plan the timeline. Budget a few hundred US dollars in fees and expect the whole process to take from a few weeks to two or three months, driven mainly by consulate appointment availability.

Residency in Mexico for Expats: The Two Main Statuses

Mexico’s migration law recognises three broad categories: the visitor (the tourist permit, valid up to 180 days), the temporary resident (residente temporal) and the permanent resident (residente permanente). For anyone planning to stay beyond a holiday, residency in Mexico for expats means one of the latter two.

One rule shapes the entire journey: you almost always begin at a Mexican consulate in your home country, not inside Mexico. The consulate issues a visa sticker; you then finish with the National Institute of Migration (INM) after arrival. In-country exceptions are narrow — chiefly family unity with a Mexican spouse or child. The first practical tasks once your card is issued are your CURP and RFC.

Temporary Resident: Who It Is For

A temporary resident card is issued for one year at first and renewed for up to three more, to a maximum of four years. It suits remote workers, people on a job offer, those joining family, and anyone who does not yet meet the bar for permanent status.

Temporary residents can bring dependents, open a bank account, obtain a CURP and RFC, and apply for permission to work. After four continuous years you can usually convert to permanent residency from inside Mexico, without returning to a consulate.

Permanent Resident: Who Qualifies

Permanent residency has no expiry date and carries the right to work without any extra permit. It is normally granted to retirees who show sufficient pension income, to applicants who meet a higher savings or income threshold, to people with a Mexican spouse or children, and to those completing four years as a temporary resident.

One practical catch: permanent residents cannot keep a foreign-plated car in Mexico, so if you plan to drive, budget for a Mexican-plated vehicle.

Temporary vs Permanent at a Glance

Feature Temporary resident Permanent resident
Validity 1 year, then renewable Indefinite, no expiry
Maximum term Up to 4 years Permanent
Right to work Needs permission / employer Yes, no extra permit
Path to permanent After 4 continuous years N/A
Foreign-plated car Allowed (temporary import) Not allowed
Typical applicant Remote workers, job offers, savers Retirees, family ties, long-stayers

Proving Financial Solvency

The most common qualifying route is economic solvency. Consulates ask either for proof of regular monthly income or for healthy average bank balances over the past twelve months. Pensioners often qualify on income alone, while others rely on savings.

Because the thresholds are pegged to Mexico’s minimum wage and the UMA index, they increase every year and are higher for permanent than for temporary residency. The exact figures — and whether your specific documents are accepted — vary noticeably between consulates. Always confirm the current numbers and the required format before booking, bring originals plus clear copies, and make sure names and dates match across every statement.

The Application: From Consulate to INM

The process has two clear stages. Get the first one right and the second is mostly administrative.

  • At the consulate (abroad): book an appointment, submit your passport, photographs, financial evidence and application form, and attend a short interview. If approved, you receive a visa sticker valid for 180 days to enter Mexico.
  • The canje (in Mexico): within 30 days of arriving, begin the exchange at an INM office, submitting forms, photographs and fingerprints and paying the card fee. INM generates your CURP and issues your physical resident card shortly afterwards.

Missing the 30-day canje window after arrival is the single most common and costly error, so treat it as your first priority once you land.

Costs and Timelines

Budget for the consular visa fee abroad, often around fifty US dollars, plus the INM card fee in Mexico, which scales with the length of the card and runs from a few thousand pesos upward. All told, most applicants spend a few hundred US dollars.

Timing usually ranges from a few weeks to two or three months, driven mostly by how quickly your consulate offers appointments and how busy your local INM office is.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Four errors derail most applications: trying to start the process from inside Mexico on a tourist permit; underestimating the 30-day canje deadline after arrival; presenting bank statements that do not meet the consulate’s format or balance requirements; and letting the entry permit lapse before the canje begins. Read your consulate’s checklist carefully, and when in doubt ask them directly rather than relying on forum threads.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I apply for residency in Mexico from inside the country on a tourist visa?

Usually no. The process normally starts at a Mexican consulate in your home country. Limited in-country exceptions exist, such as family unity with a Mexican spouse or child, but most applicants must apply from abroad.

How much income or savings do I need to qualify?

It depends on the consulate and the year, because the thresholds track Mexico’s minimum wage and the UMA index. As a rough guide, temporary residency often requires several thousand US dollars in monthly income or twelve months of healthy bank balances, and permanent residency requires more. Confirm the current figures with your specific consulate.

How long does the whole residency process take?

Typically a few weeks to two or three months. That covers the consulate stage abroad plus the 30-day canje at INM after you arrive in Mexico.

Can I work on a temporary resident visa?

Not automatically. You can request permission to work or be sponsored by an employer. Permanent residents, by contrast, may work without any additional permit.

Does temporary residency lead to permanent residency?

Yes. After four continuous years as a temporary resident you can usually apply to switch to permanent status, and retirees or applicants with close Mexican family may qualify for permanent residency directly.

Do I need to speak Spanish or pass a test for residency?

No. There is no language or civics test for residency. Those requirements apply only later, if you decide to pursue Mexican citizenship through naturalisation.

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