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Temporary Resident Visa

The Temporary Resident Visa is a Residency pathway for Mexico. Below is a clear summary of who it is for, what it costs, and how long it typically takes, followed by the official source so you can verify every detail.

Temporary residency lets you live in Mexico for more than 180 days and up to four years, with the option to bring dependents and to request work authorisation. It is the default status for remote workers, retirees with moderate income, students, and people with Mexican family ties.

The most common route is proving economic solvency through monthly income or savings at a Mexican consulate, after which you exchange your visa for a resident card in Mexico. After four continuous years you can apply for permanent residency, making this the usual first step toward settling long term.

Who the Temporary Resident Visa is for

The Mexico Temporary Resident Visa is the country's flexible long-stay status for anyone who wants to live in Mexico for more than 180 days and up to four years. It is the route most remote workers, moderate-income retirees, students on long programmes, investors and people with Mexican family ties choose, because it allows multiple entries, lets you bring dependents, and can be upgraded to include work permission.

Unlike the tourist FMM, temporary residency gives you a CURP (national ID number), the ability to open a Mexican bank account, import a foreign-plated car under a temporary permit, and build the continuous residency that leads to permanent status. If your goal is to settle in Mexico gradually rather than make a single qualifying investment, this is almost always the visa you start with.

Financial requirements and eligibility in 2026

The dominant qualifying route is economic solvency. As a guide, consulates commonly look for net monthly income of roughly US$4,300-4,500 over the last six months, or savings/investment balances of roughly US$70,000-75,000 held over the previous twelve months. Exact thresholds are set in Mexican minimum-wage units (UMA) and vary slightly by consulate, so always confirm the current figure with the specific consulate where you will apply.

You can also qualify through a job offer in Mexico, family unity with a Mexican or resident relative, ownership of Mexican property above a set value, or significant company investment. Documents typically include a valid passport, the consular application form, a passport photo, original and copied bank or pay statements, and proof of the qualifying ground. Because solvency is judged on your own accounts, joint income usually counts only for the named account holder.

Two-step application process: consulate then INM

Temporary residency is a two-stage process and you cannot complete it entirely inside Mexico. First, you book an appointment and apply at a Mexican consulate abroad, where the visa is granted as a sticker in your passport. Consular decisions commonly take two to six weeks depending on appointment availability.

Within 180 days of that approval you must enter Mexico and, crucially, within 30 days of arrival begin the canje (exchange) process with the Instituto Nacional de Migracion (INM). You submit biometrics and forms locally, pay the resident-card fees, and receive a physical Temporary Resident card valid for one year initially, renewable for up to three additional years. Missing the 30-day INM window is the single most common mistake applicants make, so plan your arrival around it.

Renewals, working rights and the path to permanent residency

Your first card is issued for one year; you then renew for one-, two- or three-year blocks up to a four-year maximum. To work legally you request a permiso para trabajar either at the consulate or when a Mexican employer sponsors you; without it the visa is residence-only. Many remote workers earning from foreign clients live on temporary residency without local work permission, which is permitted because the income is earned abroad.

After four continuous years of temporary residency you become eligible to apply for permanent residency, and time as a temporary resident also counts toward naturalisation. Keep your card valid, avoid long absences that break continuity, and retain your renewal receipts, because INM will ask for the full history when you upgrade your status.

Costs, processing time and documents in practice

Planning around the real numbers makes the Temporary Resident Visa far less stressful. On cost, ~US$40 consulate fee + resident card fees in Mexico. On timing, 2-6 weeks at the consulate, then finalized in Mexico via INM. Budget a little extra for document translation, certified or notarised copies, any required medical examination, photos to specification, and travel to a consulate or biometrics appointment. These smaller costs add up and are easy to overlook. Start gathering your documents early. Proof of monthly income (commonly around US$4,400) or sufficient savings, applied for at a Mexican consulate abroad. Beyond those specifics, almost every applicant needs a passport valid well beyond the intended stay, recent photographs, and proof of funds or income. Where papers are issued in another language, official translations and sometimes an apostille or legalisation are expected, so confirm the exact format before booking your appointment.

Tips to strengthen your application and avoid delays

These routes usually turn on proving stable income or savings, so assemble several months of bank statements and any pension, rental, or investment evidence in the format the authorities expect. Decide whether to apply at a consulate abroad or in-country, as the steps and timing differ. Once approved, diarise your renewal dates well ahead, letting a card lapse can reset your path to permanent status. Keep proof of address and your tax registrations current, and retain every receipt and approval letter, because you will likely need them again at renewal and when you eventually apply for permanent residency.

DetailSummary
CategoryResidency
RequirementsProof of monthly income (commonly around US$4,400) or sufficient savings, applied for at a Mexican consulate abroad.
Processing time2-6 weeks at the consulate, then finalized in Mexico via INM
Typical cost~US$40 consulate fee + resident card fees in Mexico

This content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or immigration advice. Rules change, always verify on the official government site before applying.

Official source: www.gob.mx

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Frequently asked questions

~US$40 consulate fee + resident card fees in Mexico