Mexico · Residency
Key Facts
The shortcut is gone. Permanent residency direct from abroad is now open only to retirees and pensioners.
The new path. Everyone else must hold temporary residency for at least four years before converting to permanent.
Higher bars. Temporary now needs roughly US$4,400 a month or US$74,000 in savings; permanent, about US$7,300 a month or US$294,000.
Doubled fees. A November 2025 law roughly doubled every immigration fee from January 1, 2026.
Confirm it. Figures change and consulates vary — verify with INM and your consulate; this is not legal advice.
For anyone planning a 2026 move to Mexico, the welcome mat is smaller than it used to be. This year’s applicants are the first to meet the country’s tougher residency regime in full — higher income bars, doubled fees, and a direct route to permanent residency now closed to all but retirees.
Why it bites now
This is the first application season in which every one of Mexico’s recent residency changes is live at once. The fees doubled at the start of the year, the income thresholds were reset for 2026, and the direct path to permanent residency is now closed to all but retirees.
The enforcement has hardened to match. Consulates are turning applicants away over small shortfalls, and immigration-office appointment waits inside Mexico have stretched to two or three months.
What actually changed
For years, applicants with enough savings or income could qualify for permanent residency straight away at a Mexican consulate, skipping the temporary stage entirely. That economic-solvency shortcut is now closed to working-age applicants.
Under rules introduced in 2025, consulates grant permanent residency on financial grounds only to those who can show retirement or pension income. Everyone else is directed to the temporary-residency track instead.
The new four-year path
If you are not retired, the route to a permanent card now runs through temporary residency first. You generally hold temporary status for four consecutive years before you can convert to permanent.
The clock matters, because the four years must be continuous and tied to renewals you cannot miss. Plan the timeline before you move, not after you arrive.
The money: higher bars and doubled fees
The financial thresholds were rebased in 2025 and are now markedly higher. Temporary residency generally requires about US$4,400 a month in income or roughly US$74,000 in savings, while permanent residency runs to about US$7,300 a month or some US$294,000 in savings.
Route
Rough monthly income
Or savings/balance
Temporary residency
~US$4,400
~US$74,000
Permanent (retirees only, from abroad)
~US$7,300
~US$294,000
On top of that, a law passed in late 2025 roughly doubled government immigration fees from January 1, 2026. The resident card alone climbed from about US$371 to around US$742, before lawyer or facilitation costs.
Who is still fine
Retirees and pensioners are the clear winners here, since they keep the direct path to a permanent card from abroad. If you can document a steady pension that clears the bar, the old one-step route still works for you.
Anyone already holding temporary residency is also unaffected by the closure, and continues counting toward the four-year mark. The change bites hardest on those who have not yet started.
What it means for nomads and pre-retirees
For remote workers, freelancers and investors under retirement age, the easy leap to permanent residency is gone. The realistic plan is now temporary residency first, then conversion once the four years are in.
That is a longer commitment, but temporary residency still grants the right to live in Mexico, open bank accounts and import goods. For most newcomers it remains the practical entry point.
What to do now
Decide which track fits before you book a consulate appointment, since the financial proof differs by route and consulate. Gather several months of statements that clearly clear the threshold for your chosen path.
Build the higher fees into your budget, and confirm the current figures against the INM tariff schedule and your consulate’s checklist. When in doubt, a reputable immigration lawyer is cheaper than a refused application.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still get Mexican permanent residency directly from abroad?
Only if you are a retiree or pensioner who can prove qualifying income. Other applicants must now obtain temporary residency first and convert later.
How long does the temporary route take?
You generally hold temporary residency for four continuous years before converting to permanent. Renewals must be kept current throughout.
What are the income requirements now?
Temporary residency needs roughly US$4,400 a month or about US$74,000 in savings, and permanent around US$7,300 a month or some US$294,000. Consulates vary, so confirm the exact figures.
Did the fees really double?
A late-2025 law roughly doubled immigration fees from January 1, 2026, with the resident card rising from about US$371 to around US$742. Professional help is extra.
Is this immigration advice?
No. Rules and figures change and consulates apply them differently, so confirm with INM and your consulate or a licensed immigration lawyer before acting.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



