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HomeTopicsWork and Legal Basics

Mexico City

Work and Legal Basics

Contract checks and legal onboarding essentials.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that navigating work and legal basics in Mexico City can be complex, especially for newcomers. Most newcomers are surprised to learn that they can own property in most of Mexico, but with some restrictions, such as a 100km limit from international borders. To work legally, you'll need to register for an RFC (Registro Federal de Contribuyentes) by booking an SAT appointment at sat.gob.mx. Watch out for incorrectly stamped FMM cards at the airport, as this can lead to issues with your 180-day tourist visa. A common mistake is not understanding the timeline for residency and working rights, which typically takes 180 days to establish. Today, take the first step by visiting the INM website (gob.mx/inm) to learn more about the requirements for your specific situation.

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INM — Mexico's immigration authority

Trust L1Updated May 4, 2026

Santa Fe · Experience date Feb 17, 2026

INM (Instituto Nacional de Migración) is Mexico's immigration authority. Website: gob.mx/inm. Key INM tasks for expats: extending or changing visa status, applying for residente temporal, receiving biometric data for residency cards. INM offices in CDMX: Insurgentes Norte and other locations — appointments required, book via gob.mx/inm. Documentation: always bring originals and copies of all documents. INM processing times: typically 20–30 business days for residency applications. FMM (tourist form): since 2021, the paper FMM form has been replaced by a digital record — you no longer receive a physical card to keep. Overstaying: if you overstay your 180-day tourist authorisation, you will be required to pay a fine of approximately $600–4,000 MXN when you depart.

Contributor: Fatima Al-Rashid

Property ownership rights for foreigners in Mexico

Trust L1Updated Mar 25, 2026

Polanco · Experience date Jan 30, 2026

Foreigners can own property in most of Mexico with some restrictions. Restricted zone: 100km from international borders and 50km from coastlines — foreigners cannot own directly but can use a fideicomiso (bank trust) or Mexican corporation. Mexico City: no restricted zone — foreigners can own property in CDMX directly in their own name. Purchase process: requires a notario, payment of acquisition tax (2% of property value), ISAI (Impuesto Sobre Adquisición de Inmuebles). Foreign buyer ban: does NOT exist in Mexico — unlike Canada (2023–2026 ban), Mexico actively welcomes foreign property investment. Most CDMX expats rent rather than buy, but buying is increasingly popular for long-term residents — Roma Norte 1-bedroom condos: $2.5–4M MXN ($125,000–200,000 USD).

Contributor: James Wilson

Digital nomad reality in Mexico — tax and legal status

Trust L1Updated Dec 26, 2025

Centro · Experience date Nov 22, 2025

Mexico City is one of the world's most popular digital nomad cities, but the legal situation is nuanced. Working remotely for a foreign company on a tourist visa: legally ambiguous — INM (immigration authority) policy has historically not enforced against remote workers paying taxes in their home country. The risk: technically, working (even remotely) for income while on a tourist visa violates Mexican immigration law. In practice: enforcement against digital nomads is rare and Mexico has not passed a dedicated digital nomad visa (unlike Portugal or Germany). Long-term security: if staying 6+ months, consider applying for a temporary resident visa (residente temporal) — gives legal status and ability to open a bank account more easily. Tax residency triggers at 183 days.

Contributor: Fatima Al-Rashid

Latest from the community

Temporary resident visa for stays over 180 days

May 7, 2026

Centro · Experience date Jan 17, 2026

Applied for Temporary Resident visa at the Mexican consulate before arriving. Needed proof of income ($1,500 USD/month) and bank statements. Allows 1-4 years stay and can lead to permanent residency.

Contributor: MVP User

Tourist visa allows 180 days — get the stamp right at the airport

May 7, 2026

Benito Juárez Airport · Experience date Jan 12, 2026

Mexico gives most nationalities 180 days on arrival. Make sure the immigration officer stamps your FMM card correctly and gives you the full 180 days — some try to give fewer. Keep your FMM card safe, you need it to leave.

Contributor: MVP User

Mexican employment law — basic rights

May 4, 2026

Del Valle · Experience date Feb 12, 2026

Mexico's Federal Labour Law (Ley Federal del Trabajo) protects all workers, including foreigners with work permits. Key rights: minimum wage (currently $248.93 MXN/day in CDMX — around $12 USD/day), annual bonus (aguinaldo) of at least 15 days' salary paid before December 20, vacation days (6 days after 1 year, increasing annually), vacation premium (25% bonus on top of vacation days' pay), IMSS registration (employer must register you — provides health, disability, and pension benefits). Termination: wrongful dismissal entitles you to 3 months' salary + 20 days per year of service. STPS (Secretaría del Trabajo): Mexico's labour authority for complaints. Unions: some sectors in Mexico are strongly unionised — varies by industry.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

Getting a CURP — Mexico's population ID

Apr 24, 2026

Santa Fe · Experience date Apr 12, 2026

CURP (Clave Única de Registro de Población) is Mexico's individual identification code for all residents, including foreigners. Required for: accessing government services, some banking requirements, healthcare, and various administrative processes. For foreigners: obtainable with a valid immigration document (residency card or FMM). Get it online: gob.mx/curp — enter your passport details and immigration number. Processing: immediate (online system generates it). Print your CURP certificate — it's a useful document to carry. Without a residency card: some portals may not accept a CURP generated from a tourist FMM record, but it's still useful to have. The CURP complements the RFC for a complete Mexican administrative identity.

Contributor: Chloe Bennett

Residency and working rights timeline

Apr 22, 2026

Insurgentes · Experience date Dec 22, 2025

Immigration timeline for CDMX expats: Day 1 to 180: tourist status, no legal right to work for Mexican companies or earn Mexican-source income. Day 1+ (with planning): apply for Residente Temporal at Mexican consulate before arriving — allows legal work. Year 1–4: Residente Temporal, renewable annually. After 4 years: Residente Permanente — no further renewal required, full work rights. CURP: get immediately from gob.mx. RFC: get within first weeks — enables banking, renting, and financial services. For most digital nomads: 6–12 months on tourist visa, then evaluate residency application based on whether Mexico City will be a long-term base. Key advantage of residency: simplifies banking, IMSS access, lease agreements, and tax compliance.

Contributor: Amira Hassan

Working legally in Mexico — work permits

Apr 18, 2026

Polanco · Experience date Mar 3, 2026

Working legally for a Mexican employer: your employer must obtain a work permit (permiso de trabajo) through INM on your behalf. Types: FM2 (non-immigrant work visa), or included in the Temporary Residency card (Residente Temporal). Your employer files at INM (Instituto Nacional de Migración). Required documents: job offer letter, academic credentials, passport. Processing time: 4–8 weeks. Technically any employment-related activity by a foreigner in Mexico requires a work permit — consulting, freelancing, or any income from Mexican sources. For formal employment: the employer typically manages the permit process. Freelancers working for foreign clients only: lower enforcement risk but same legal requirement exists.

Contributor: Omar Khalil

Visa options for Mexico City — tourist, temporary resident, permanent

Apr 3, 2026

Centro · Experience date Apr 3, 2026

Mexico entry options for expats: Tourist visa (FMM — Forma Migratoria Múltiple): most nationalities receive 180 days on arrival — free. Temporary Resident Visa (Visa de Residente Temporal): apply at a Mexican consulate in your home country. Categories: work, family reunification, or retirement income. Temporary residency: requires proof of income ($2,700 USD/month minimum for basic approval, or $43,000 USD in bank) or a job offer from a Mexican company. Temporary resident status: renewable annually for up to 4 years, then converts to permanent. Permanent Resident Visa: after 4 years of temporary residency, or if you retire with sufficient pension income. Many digital nomads stay on consecutive tourist visa renewals (border runs) — legal but increasingly monitored.

Contributor: Priya Sharma
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