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Last updated: 18 May 2026 · Reading time: 13 minutes · Author: James Mitchell, CEO & Founder, MyJet24
TL;DR — Mexico FMM 2026
The Mexico FMM 2026 is a digital immigration form — officially the Forma Migratoria Múltiple Digital (FMMd) — that every foreign visitor entering Mexico by air must obtain. It replaces the paper tourist card at Mexico's major international airports as of 2026, costs nothing for air arrivals, permits stays up to 180 days, and is issued via a QR-code receipt through the official INM portal. For land crossings, the equivalent form is the FMMe, which costs $983 MXN for stays longer than seven days.
The Mexico FMM 2026 — Forma Migratoria Múltiple — is the official immigration form every foreign tourist needs to enter Mexico. It is not a visa. It is an entry permit that authorizes a temporary stay for tourism, transit, or short business visits of up to 180 days. The Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM), Mexico's federal immigration agency, issues the form under Article 52 of the Ley de Migración.
From January 2026, the form exists in three variants — but only two matter for travelers:
"The FMM is not optional. Mexico's Federal Law of Government Fees (Article 8) and Article 49 of the Ley de Migración make this document the legal proof of your authorized stay. Lose it and exiting Mexico becomes a paperwork problem at the airport."
— James Mitchell, CEO & Founder, MyJet24
The major change in 2026 is that airlines no longer distribute paper FMM cards on flights to most Mexican airports. Travelers are expected to either generate the FMMd online before departure or let the INM officer issue a passport stamp on arrival. The form, in either case, runs in the background — Mexican border systems treat the stamp and the FMMd as one and the same.
The single biggest source of FMM confusion is the FMMd-vs-FMMe split. The form you need depends on how you cross into Mexico, not on your nationality. Here is the definitive comparison:
| Attribute | FMMd (Air) | FMMe (Land) |
|---|---|---|
| When used | Arrivals by international flight | Driving, bus, or walking from the US, Belize, or Guatemala |
| Cost | Free (bundled into airline ticket taxes) | $983 MXN (~$57 USD) for >7 days; free ≤7 days |
| Where to file | inm.gob.mx/fmme online, any time within 60 days of arrival | Pre-fill online + stamp in person at INM kiosk at border |
| Output | PDF with QR code on your phone | Printed sheet stamped by INM officer |
| Max validity | Up to 180 days, single entry | Up to 180 days, single entry |
| Passport stamp | Auto-issued at passport control | Mandatory in-person at INM border kiosk |
| Refund possible? | No — no charge to refund | Yes, if unused within 30 days |
A practical scenario: if you fly from Los Angeles to Cancún for the World Cup, you need an FMMd — it is bundled in your ticket and the INM officer in CUN's Terminal 4 will stamp your passport with the days approved. If you drive from San Diego to Rosarito for a weekend in Baja, you do not need to pay for an FMMe because the trip is under seven days, but you still must register at the INM module at the San Ysidro border crossing.
Mexico operates one of the most open tourist policies in the Americas. Citizens of more than 60 countries can enter with only a passport plus the FMMd. The Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores (SRE) publishes the full list, but here is a clean three-tier breakdown:
| Tier | Examples | What you need |
|---|---|---|
| Visa-free | USA, Canada, UK, Schengen Area, Japan, South Korea, Australia, NZ, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Singapore, Israel | Passport + FMMd only |
| Electronic Authorization (SAE) | Russia, Turkey, Ukraine (currently suspended), select others | Pre-apply for SAE + passport + FMMd |
| Visa required | India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Philippines, Vietnam, most of Africa, Iran | Mexican consular visa + FMMd |
| Special exemptions | US LPR (Green Card), UK/Canada/Schengen/Japan/Korea valid multi-entry visa holders, APEC card | Passport + supporting card/visa + FMMd |
The exemption for travelers holding a valid US, Canadian, Schengen, Japanese, or South Korean multi-entry visa is widely used by passport holders from visa-required countries. If you hold an Indian passport plus a valid US B1/B2 visa, for example, you can enter Mexico without applying separately for a Mexican visa — the FMMd alone suffices. INM officers verify this electronically at the passport-control desk.
Mexico's transition away from paper FMMs accelerated in 2024 and is essentially complete at every major hub by mid-2026. Airlines no longer hand out the paper card on flights into these airports — the INM officer simply stamps your passport with the days approved, and the FMMd record sits in the immigration database. Here is the current status:
| Airport (IATA) | Status (May 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cancún (CUN) | Fully digital | Paper eliminated end of 2024. e-gates at T3/T4. |
| Mexico City (MEX) | Fully digital | Both T1 and T2 paperless. INM staff direct first-timers. |
| Los Cabos (SJD) | Fully digital | Transition completed January 2025. |
| Guadalajara (GDL) | Fully digital | Will host World Cup matches in 2026. |
| Puerto Vallarta (PVR) | Fully digital | Paperless since mid-2025. |
| Monterrey (MTY) | Fully digital | Host city for the 2026 World Cup. |
| Tijuana (TIJ) | Hybrid | Paper FMMs still issued on some flights. CBX terminal is paperless. |
| Smaller regional (HMO, MID, etc.) | Paper still common | Carry a pen on board — expect to fill the form on the plane. |
If you land at a paperless airport and the officer hands you a stamp without a paper FMM, do not panic — the stamp is your authorization. Photograph it. If you ever need proof later (e.g. for an extension request), you can pull the matching FMMd record from the INM portal using your passport number.
You can technically board a flight to Mexico without pre-generating the FMMd — many travelers do, and the INM officer simply issues the stamp at the desk. But pre-filing is faster, lets you choose your accommodation details in advance, and avoids any kiosk queues at busy airports. Here is the official process:
"In our internal data, 72% of travelers who pre-file the FMMd clear Mexican passport control in under three minutes. Those who try to fill it out at airport kiosks average 11 minutes — and the queue can run 30 minutes at peak."
— MyJet24 traveler reports, Q1 2026
Mexico is the only nation to host the men's FIFA World Cup three times (1970, 1986, 2026). The 2026 tournament is jointly hosted with the USA and Canada — 16 host cities total, of which three are in Mexico. The country expects between 5.5 and 6.0 million international visitors during the tournament window of 11 June to 19 July 2026.
| Host city | Stadium | Nearest airport |
|---|---|---|
| Mexico City | Estadio Azteca (renamed Estadio Banorte for 2026) | MEX (Benito Juárez) |
| Guadalajara | Estadio Akron | GDL (Miguel Hidalgo) |
| Monterrey | Estadio BBVA | MTY (General Mariano Escobedo) |
Mexico has confirmed it will not introduce a separate "World Cup visa" or fast-track entry permit. The standard FMM rules apply — there is no FIFA-branded equivalent of the US "FIFA Pass" emerging at consular level. The FIFA Pass exists as a digital match-ticket bundle, but it does not affect immigration; you still need the FMMd to enter Mexico and an ESTA or B1/B2 visa for the US legs.
For fans crossing between Mexico and the US during the group stage, the FMMd lasts 180 days and is single-entry. That means each re-entry to Mexico — for example, after a US group-stage trip — requires a fresh FMMd. There is no penalty; the form is free for air arrivals, and INM systems handle multiple FMMds per traveler in a calendar year.
Mexico's primary inspection at passport control is fast — usually under a minute per traveler. But INM officers retain broad discretion under Article 37 of the Ley de Migración to ask supporting questions. Roughly one in four travelers gets a follow-up; one in twenty gets sent to secondary inspection. Here is what they look for, in descending frequency:
"You do not need to volunteer documents. Show what is asked. Answer briefly. Officers move 60–80 travelers per hour at MEX. Long stories are a red flag."
— Direct guidance from a former INM supervisor at Mexico City Terminal 2 (off-record interview, 2026)
Mexico does not formally require proof of onward travel for tourists from visa-free countries. However, two real-world dynamics push the number of travelers who get asked far above zero:
If you have not booked your departure flight yet — common for backpackers, digital nomads, or fans planning to chase matches across host cities — a free flight reservation PDF satisfies the airline-side check. MyJet24's free dummy ticket generator produces a Mexican-airline format reservation in 30 seconds with a real booking reference. We also publish a deeper analysis in Can Airlines Deny Boarding Without Proof of Onward Travel? for travelers who want the 2026 enforcement picture.
The 2026 World Cup is the first tournament split across three host nations, which means most international fans will move between at least two countries. The documentation stack is different in each. Here is the canonical sequence for a visa-exempt fan (UK, EU, Japan, Australia, etc.) following matches through the group stage:
| Country | Document needed | Cost | Apply |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA | ESTA (Visa Waiver Program) | $21 USD | esta.cbp.dhs.gov ≥ 72 h before flight |
| Mexico | FMMd | Free (bundled in ticket) | inm.gob.mx within 60 days of arrival |
| Canada | eTA | CAD $7 (or CAD $16 from Feb 2026) | canada.ca/eta minutes-hours processing |
Plan the documents in this order: apply for the Canada eTA first because it is the cheapest and longest-validity (5 years); next apply for the US ESTA, which lasts two years and requires more scrutiny; finally the Mexico FMMd, which is free but tied to a specific flight. Our individual deep dives — Canada eTA 2026, USA ESTA for the World Cup — cover the country-specific quirks.
Most travelers clear Mexican immigration without incident. The ones who get pulled into secondary inspection tend to make the same mistakes — and most of them are avoidable:
The FMMd authorizes a maximum of 180 days. Officers commonly stamp fewer — typical World Cup fans receive 30 to 90 days depending on declared purpose. There are two ways to legally stay longer:
Overstaying triggers Article 144 of the Ley de Migración. The fine scales with the duration:
| Overstay length | Fine (approx 2026) | Future-entry risk |
|---|---|---|
| 1–30 days | $30–$50 USD | Low — paid and forgotten |
| 31–90 days | $50–$130 USD | Recorded in SIOM, scrutinized next entry |
| 91–180 days | $130–$300 USD | Possible 1–5 year entry ban |
| >180 days | $300+ USD | Likely deportation + multi-year ban |
If you have overstayed, do not try to leave without paying. The exit officer at MEX/CUN/GDL will detect it from your SIOM record and force you to settle the fine at the INM desk before boarding — often a 60-90 minute delay you cannot afford. Pay voluntarily at any INM office in the country before you leave; processing is faster and the record reads "voluntary regularization."
No. The FMMd is fully digital — the QR code on your phone is what INM officers scan. Save the PDF to your device and keep it accessible offline. A printout is acceptable if you prefer paper, but it is never required.
It is instant. The INM portal generates the PDF within seconds of submission and emails it to the address you provided. There is no manual review for visa-free nationalities. If you do not receive the email, check spam, then re-download using your confirmation number at the portal.
Yes. At paperless airports (CUN, MEX, GDL, SJD, PVR, MTY), the INM officer can issue the stamp directly without a pre-filed FMMd. Pre-filing is faster and lets you control the accommodation details, but it is not strictly mandatory.
Yes — completely free if you arrive by air. The Article 8 fee (around $983 MXN) is bundled into your airline ticket as part of the tax line and you never pay it separately. The only paid version is the FMMe for land crossings exceeding seven days.
Visit any INM office in Mexico with your passport. They can re-issue a duplicate ("reposición de FMM") for around $700 MXN. You can also re-download the digital version from the INM portal if you saved your confirmation number. Do not attempt to leave Mexico without one — exit immigration will refuse boarding.
No. Each country's authorization is independent. The FMMd applies only inside Mexico; you cannot use it for US re-entry from a Mexican border crossing. Carry your ESTA confirmation (USA) and eTA approval (Canada) separately.
No. Every traveler — including infants — needs their own FMMd. You file one form per passport. There is no family-bundled version. Children traveling with one parent should also carry a signed notarized consent from the absent parent under SRE rules.
No. The FMM is always single-entry. Every time you re-enter Mexico, you receive a new FMMd. For frequent travel — for example, attending multiple World Cup matches in different host cities and re-entering Mexico between them — this is a non-issue since the FMMd is free and instant.
Mexico requires your passport to be valid for the duration of your intended stay only — there is no six-month rule on the Mexican side. Airlines, however, may require six months of remaining validity at boarding due to their internal risk policies. Renew if you have less than six months left.
Mexican INM does not share visa-overstay data with US CBP and rarely asks about US immigration history. They check Mexico's own SIOM database. A clean Mexican record is what matters at MEX, CUN, or any land border.
Mexico's 2026 entry system is one of the simpler tourist regimes in the Americas: a free digital form, an immigration stamp at the desk, and a 180-day window to enjoy the country — World Cup or otherwise. The biggest practical risks are not bureaucratic; they are airline boarding refusals when you cannot produce an onward ticket, and INM secondary inspection when your documents do not line up.
If you are heading to Mexico for the World Cup or any 2026 trip, lock down three things before you board:
Generate a free professional flight reservation PDF in 30 seconds. Real airline format, real PNR code, accepted by Mexican INM and US/EU airlines for proof of onward travel. No credit card. No registration.
Generate Free Reservation →James Mitchell
CEO & Founder, MyJet24 · 14+ years aviation industry · Former corporate travel manager
James founded MyJet24 in 2019 after a decade running corporate-travel operations for two Fortune 500 logistics firms, where he managed visa documentation for over 300 staff annually across 45 countries. He writes about visa policy, airline boarding rules, and immigration enforcement based on direct experience and traveller field reports.
Last updated: 18 May 2026 — based on INM portal records, Fragomen FIFA 2026 immigration guidance, and U.S. Embassy Mexico City advisories.
CEO & Founder of MyJet24
James Mitchell is the CEO and Founder of MyJet24 — the all-in-one travel tools platform helping travelers worldwide with visa requirements, dummy tickets, embassy information and travel documentation. Based in Dubai, James brings deep expertise in international travel, visa processing and digital travel solutions.