Mexico Visa for Papua New Guinean Citizens2026 Requirements, Fees & Documents

Visa required

Papua New Guinean passport holders need a visa to enter Mexico. Apply at a Mexico embassy or consulate, or the official visa portal, before travelling.

Max stay
Varies
Visa cost
USD 56
How to apply
Embassy / visa centre
Processing
1-10 days

How Papua New Guinean citizens apply for a Mexico visa

  • → Apply for a visa at the Mexico embassy/consulate or official visa application centre before travelling. Apply here ↗

No advance visa with these documents

Mexico officially admits Papua New Guinean citizens without a pre-arranged visa when they hold certain third-country visas or residence permits.

Visa-free · up to 180 days

US visa (any valid type)Schengen visa (any member state)UK visaEU / Schengen residence permit or PRUS Green Card / permanent residentUK ILR / settled statusCanada permanent residentJapan visa or residenceCanada visaColombia permanent resident (Pacific Alliance)Chile permanent resident (Pacific Alliance)Peru permanent resident (Pacific Alliance)

Visa must be valid, multiple-entry, and stamped in passport. Conditions vary slightly per document - check each rule via the official source.

consulmex.sre.gob.mx ↗

Check what all your documents unlock at once →

Mexico visa cost for Papua New Guinean citizens

Visitor visa without permission to engage in remunerated activities (consular sticker visa)

USD 56

typically up to 180 days per stay; visa validity commonly 180 days single entry (up to 10 years multiple-entry in some cases)official source
embamex.sre.gob.mx ↗

Fees checked 2 Jul 2026

Mexico visa types

Visitor Visa - Non-Lucrative (Visa de Visitante sin Permiso para Realizar Actividades Remuneradas)

Allows foreign nationals to visit Mexico for tourism, transit, business meetings, studies, or medical treatment without engaging in paid activities. Covers activities that do not generate income within Mexico.

180 dayssingle entry1-10d processing
  • Citizens of 50+ nationalities are visa-exempt and may enter without a visa for up to 180 days.
  • Those requiring a visa must apply at a Mexican consulate.
  • Immigration officer determines the exact authorized stay up to 180 days.
  • FMM card issued at land borders must be retained for departure.
  • UK temporary residents (students, workers) who are not permanent residents must apply for this visa even if their nationality is on the visa-free list.
Apply here ↗

Visitor Visa - Business (Visa de Visitante con Permiso para Realizar Actividades Remuneradas)

Allows foreign nationals to enter Mexico to carry out paid or lucrative activities on a temporary basis, such as short-term contracts, conferences, or professional services paid from abroad.

180 dayssingle entry1-10d processing
  • This category authorizes remunerated activities during the visitor stay.
  • Applicants must demonstrate the purpose of the visit and source of remuneration.
  • Issued at Mexican consulates abroad.
  • For stays intended to exceed 180 days or for full employment in Mexico, a Temporary Resident Visa with work authorization is required instead.
Apply here ↗

Transit Visitor Visa (Visa de Visitante en Tránsito)

Permits foreign nationals to transit through Mexico en route to a third country, covering layovers or brief stops that require passing through Mexican immigration.

30 dayssingle entry1-10d processing
  • Visa-exempt nationals do not require a transit visa.
  • Citizens of nationalities that require a visa must obtain one prior to transit.
  • Transit visas are covered under the Visitor Visa framework in Mexico's Ley de MigraciĂłn. The standard non-lucrative visitor visa also covers transit purposes for those who require a visa.
Apply here ↗

Regional Visitor Card (Tarjeta de Visitante Regional, TVR)

Allows nationals and permanent residents of Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador and Honduras to make short, repeated visa-free visits to Mexico's southern border states.

7 daysmultiple entry1d processing
  • Free of charge; valid 5 years with multiple entries.
  • Each entry permits transit/visit of up to 7 calendar days limited to five southern border states: Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco, Quintana Roo and Yucatan.
  • Does NOT authorize paid/remunerated activities.
  • Issued on the spot at one of seven designated southern-border internation points after biometric capture; no online application.
  • Eligible: nationals of Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador and Honduras (and permanent residents of those countries).
Apply here ↗
Other Mexico visa categories (14)

These don't apply to a typical short visit, but cover other reasons people travel to Mexico. Eligibility varies by visa type - some are limited to specific nationalities, so check each one's conditions.

Temporary Resident Visa - Studies (Residente Temporal - Estudiante)

Allows foreign nationals to reside in Mexico for the purpose of studying at an accredited educational institution for a period exceeding 180 days.

1461 daysmultiple entry1-10d processing
  • Issued for stays exceeding 180 days and up to 4 years (annual renewals).
  • Requires acceptance letter from a Mexican educational institution.
  • Holder must apply for a Temporary Resident Card (Tarjeta de Residente Temporal) at INM within 30 days of arrival.
  • Short-term study programs of up to 180 days may use the non-lucrative visitor visa instead.
Apply here ↗

Temporary Resident Visa with Authorization for Paid Activities (Residente Temporal con Permiso para Realizar Actividades Remuneradas)

Allows foreign nationals to reside in Mexico and engage in paid employment or professional activities under a Mexican employer or contract for stays exceeding 180 days.

1461 daysmultiple entry1-10d processing
  • Requires an offer of employment or contract from a Mexican company.
  • The employer typically initiates the process with INM to obtain a work authorization (oficio de autorizaciĂłn) before the applicant applies at the consulate.
  • Issued for up to 1 year, renewable annually up to 4 years total.
  • Holder must register at INM within 30 days of arrival for Temporary Resident Card.
Apply here ↗

Temporary Resident Visa - Remote Worker / Digital Nomad (Residente Temporal - Solvencia EconĂłmica)

Allows foreign nationals with income from outside Mexico to reside in the country for more than 180 days without taking local employment, serving as the de facto digital nomad pathway.

1461 daysmultiple entry1-10d processing
  • Mexico has no separately named digital nomad visa.
  • Remote workers apply for the standard Temporary Resident Visa under economic solvency.
  • Requirements: minimum monthly income of approximately $3,738 USD (equivalent to ~400 UMA days/month based on UMA $117.31/day as of February 2026) evidenced for 6 months, OR savings of approximately $73,258 USD.
  • Income must originate from outside Mexico.
  • Valid for 1 year, renewable annually up to 4 years.
  • No minimum presence requirement.
Apply here ↗

Temporary Resident Visa - Rentista / Economic Solvency (Residente Temporal - Solvencia EconĂłmica / Rentista)

Allows retirees and persons with passive income or sufficient assets to reside in Mexico on a temporary basis without working locally.

1461 daysmultiple entry1-10d processing
  • Financial requirements (based on UMA $117.31/day as of February 2026): average monthly income equivalent to ~400 UMA days (~MXN $46,924/month) for 6 months; OR average monthly bank balance of ~20,000 UMA days (~MXN $2,346,200) for 12 months; OR real property in Mexico exceeding ~40,000 UMA days (~MXN $4,692,400) in assessed value.
  • Grants up to 4 years temporary residency, renewable.
  • After 4 years can apply for Permanent Residency.
Apply here ↗

Temporary Resident Visa for Investors (Residente Temporal - InversiĂłn)

Allows foreign nationals who have made qualifying investments in Mexico to reside there on a temporary basis for up to 4 years.

1461 days1-10d processing
  • Investment threshold: equity stake, assets, or business activity exceeding approximately MXN $5,378,663 (45,850 UMA days at $117.31/day as of February 2026; approximately EUR 256,127 per Belgium embassy page).
  • Can also qualify by employing at least 3 Mexican workers.
  • Visa must be used within 180 days of issuance.
  • Does not authorize paid employment in Mexico.
  • Must apply for Temporary Resident Card at INM within 30 days of arrival.
  • After 4 years of temporary residency can apply for Permanent Residency.
Apply here ↗

Temporary Resident Visa - Family Unity (Residente Temporal - Unidad Familiar / VĂ­nculo Familiar)

Allows immediate family members (spouse, children, dependent parents) of Mexican citizens, permanent residents, or temporary residents to live in Mexico under family reunification.

1461 daysmultiple entry1-10d processing
  • Issued to spouses, children, and dependent parents of Mexican nationals or of foreigners holding temporary or permanent resident status.
  • Duration mirrors the principal holder's residency or up to 4 years.
  • Holder must apply for Temporary Resident Card at INM within 30 days of arrival.
  • Can lead to Permanent Residency after required period.
Apply here ↗

Permanent Resident Visa (Visa de Residente Permanente)

Grants indefinite authorization to reside in Mexico without the need for periodic renewal, available to those who have completed 4 years as a Temporary Resident, qualify through marriage to a Mexican national, or meet the economic solvency threshold for permanent residency.

multiple entry1-10d processing
  • Pathways to permanent residency include: (1) completing 4 consecutive years as a Temporary Resident; (2) being the spouse or dependent child of a Mexican citizen; (3) economic solvency - requires average monthly bank balance exceeding approximately $292,859 USD (12-month period).
  • Grants indefinite right of residence.
  • Work authorization included.
  • After the required period of actual physical residence, permanent residents may apply for Mexican nationality by naturalization.
Apply here ↗

Diplomatic and Official Visa (Visa Diplomática / Visa Oficial)

Issued to holders of diplomatic, official, service, or consular passports traveling to Mexico on official missions or private visits, under bilateral agreements between Mexico and the issuing country.

90 days1d processing
  • No consular fee applies.
  • Many countries' diplomatic/official/service passport holders are visa-exempt under bilateral agreements (see conditional_access entries).
  • Where a visa is required, it is issued within 1 working day of submitting complete documentation.
  • A verbal note from the applicant's diplomatic representation is required.
  • US diplomatic/official passport holders receive 180 days (not 90).
  • Pakistan diplomatic passport holders receive 3 months.
  • Passport must remain valid from entry date onward.
Apply here ↗

Visa ElectrĂłnica / SAE (Sistema de AutorizaciĂłn ElectrĂłnica)

An electronic visa (officially called 'Visa ElectrĂłnica' by the SRE) required for certain nationalities traveling to Mexico by air. Applied for online before travel; classified as e_visa not ETA because the SRE itself calls it a visa.

180 dayssingle entryonline
  • Currently covers: Brazil (air travel only, effective February 5, 2026; 180 days max stay); Russia, Turkey, Ukraine (air travel only; stay duration determined by immigration officer at port of entry, not fixed by the document).
  • Authorization valid 30 days from issuance.
  • Single entry.
  • Land and sea entry by these nationalities still requires a traditional consular visa.
  • Apply online at visaelectronica.sre.gob.mx.
  • The SRE program page at gob.mx/sre/acciones-y-programas/visa-electronica-sae confirms this is officially called 'Visa ElectrĂłnica'.
Apply here ↗

Working Holiday Visa (Visa de Trabajo y Vacaciones) - Mexico-New Zealand

Allows young New Zealand nationals (aged 18-30) to travel in Mexico for up to one year while undertaking incidental short-term work or study to help fund the holiday, under the reciprocal Mexico-New Zealand Working Holiday agreement.

365 daysmultiple entry
  • Reciprocal bilateral scheme.
  • New Zealand citizens aged 18-30 inclusive at time of application, no accompanying dependents.
  • Holder must not work for the same employer for more than 3 months and may take one training/study course of up to 3 months.
  • Apply at the Embassy of Mexico in Wellington.
  • On arrival the holder must register with INM within 30 days to obtain a one-year Temporary Resident Card.
  • New Zealand was Mexico's first working-holiday partner; Mexico also has an in-force Vacaciones y Trabajo (Working Holiday) agreement with France (see separate entry).
Apply here ↗

Border Worker Visitor Card (Tarjeta de Visitante Trabajador Fronterizo, TVTF)

Allows Guatemalan and Belizean nationals holding a job offer to work legally in Mexico's southern border states.

365 daysmultiple entry1d processing
  • For nationals of Guatemala and Belize with a written job offer.
  • Authorizes paid/remunerated work with multiple entries and exits, limited to four southern border states: Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco and Quintana Roo.
  • Valid 1 year, renewable.
  • Fee approximately MXN $581 (2026 rate, ~31 USD); applicants earning the regional minimum wage are exempt from the fee.
  • Issued at designated southern-border internation points; not available online.
Apply here ↗

Humanitarian Visitor Visa (Visa / Condicion de Estancia de Visitante por Razones Humanitarias)

Issued to foreign nationals who need to enter or remain in Mexico for humanitarian reasons - e.g. victims or witnesses of crime, unaccompanied minors, asylum seekers, persons whose life or integrity is at risk, or those providing disaster relief.

365 daysmultiple entry
  • Statutory condicion de estancia under Article 52(V) of the Ley de Migracion.
  • May be requested at a Mexican consulate (consular authorization valid 30 business days to enter) or applied for / regularized inside Mexico at INM.
  • Grounds include family ties where a relative is a victim of disaster or violence or is in a serious state of health, and members of relief/rescue organizations on temporary non-remunerated missions; applicants are also advised of the right to request refugee status on entry.
  • The resulting card is valid up to 1 year and is renewable while the humanitarian cause subsists; the humanitarian-visitor condition permits paid work in Mexico.
Apply here ↗

Adoption Visitor Visa (Visa de Visitante para Realizar Trámites de Adopción / Visitante con Fines de Adopción)

Issued to a foreign national carrying out the adoption of a Mexican minor, authorizing them to remain in Mexico until the adoption is finalized and the child can lawfully leave the country with the adoptive parent(s).

single entry
  • Statutory condicion de estancia 'Visitante con fines de adopciĂłn' under the Ley de MigraciĂłn (Art. 52).
  • Applicable to foreign nationals who are nationals or habitual residents of a country party to the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, or of a country with which Mexico has a bilateral adoption agreement.
  • Requires the adoptability/pre-assignment report issued by the DIF (Sistema Nacional para el Desarrollo Integral de la Familia) and acceptance of the assignment by the receiving State's Central Authority.
  • No fixed stay length: the holder may remain until the adoption resolution is executed, the child's birth certificate is registered, the Mexican passport is issued and documents guaranteeing the child's admission to the adoptive parent's country of residence are obtained.
  • Apply by appointment via the MiConsulado portal at a Mexican embassy/consulate; within 30 calendar days of entry the holder must obtain the tarjeta de visitante con fines de adopciĂłn from INM.
Apply here ↗

Working Holiday Visa (Visa de Vacaciones y Trabajo / Trabajo y Vacaciones) - Mexico-France

Allows young French nationals (aged 18-30) to holiday in Mexico for up to one year while undertaking incidental paid work to help fund the stay, under the reciprocal Mexico-France Vacaciones y Trabajo agreement.

365 daysmultiple entry
  • Reciprocal bilateral scheme, in force since 1 September 2016.
  • Reserved for French citizens (not third-country nationals resident in France), aged 18-30 inclusive at time of application; may be obtained only once in a lifetime.
  • Requires proof of funds of approximately EUR 2,500 and health/medical insurance covering the full stay.
  • Apply at the Embassy/Consulate of Mexico in France by appointment via the MiConsulado portal.
  • On arrival the holder registers with INM within 30 days to obtain a one-year Temporary Resident Card.
  • Both states may set an annual cap on beneficiaries.
Apply here ↗

Mexico visa for Papua New Guinean citizens - FAQ

Do Papua New Guinean citizens need a visa for Mexico?

Yes - Papua New Guinean citizens must apply for a visa in advance at a Mexico embassy, consulate, or official visa portal before travelling.

What documents do Papua New Guinean citizens need for Mexico?

A passport valid well beyond your planned stay (commonly three to six months, depending on the destination), proof of onward travel and funds, and any documents required for the specific Mexico visa category - check the official portal for the exact passport-validity rule.