Mexico's Diario Oficial de la Federación (the federal government gazette, known as DOF) published the Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios 2026 on 7 November 2025, doubling most residency-visa fees effective 1 January 2026 1. The one-year temporary residency fee rose from 5,328 to 11,140.74 Mexican pesos, a 109% increase. The four-year residency fee rose from 11,984 to 25,057.82 pesos. The Instituto Nacional de Migración (the federal immigration service, INM) has issued no operational guidance on the paper 50% reduction mechanism that is supposed to apply for family reunification, qualifying job offers, and certain invitation-based applicants.
The missing guidance is the part that matters. A 50% reduction that exists in the schedule but cannot be claimed at a consulate or INM office in practice is, for most applicants, a headline figure on a press release rather than an effective cost. Immigration lawyers working the Mexico nomad market have reported to English-language outlets that consular staff are quoting the full fee and declining to process reduction requests pending further instructions. The instructions have not come.
The fee rise sits alongside the Mexico City World Cup accommodation pressure as a second revenue move on the mobile-foreigner cohort. The politics are different. The fee schedule is federal and was drafted a year before the tournament; it is not a World Cup measure. Yet the combined effect, for a nomad assessing Mexico against Portugal, Bulgaria or Georgia, is that the arithmetic of year-one residency has shifted materially in a single budget cycle. For the specific population the Mexico residency visa has served, mid-income remote workers from the United States, Canada, Argentina and the United Kingdom, the increase lands above inflation and without a published justification for the scale.
The counter-case, from INM's supporting communications, is that the 2026 rates align Mexican residency fees more closely with peer countries in Latin America and the Caribbean and that the revenue funds enforcement and processing modernisation. That argument has not been audibly contested in Mexican parliamentary debate. What it does not explain is why the 50% reduction mechanism was announced in the schedule itself without the operational detail that would allow any applicant to use it. Until that detail is published, the fee doubling is the practical regime.
