Video Briefing

Goodlife Investor: How I Got the World’s Fastest Permanent Residency (In 30 Minutes)

Apr 1, 2026Video Briefing17:19Watch on YouTube

Mexico offers a permanent residency (PR) card that grants lifelong entry without an expiration date. The card is issued after a short in‑person appointment and does not require ongoing physical presence in the country, making it a popular option for long‑term expatriates.

How to Obtain the Permanent Residency Card

  1. Arrival and accommodation

    • Fly into Mexico City International Airport (or another major airport).
    • Stay at a hotel within a 10–15 minute walk of the immigration office (INM).
  2. Appointment scheduling

    • An attorney or immigration specialist arranges an INM appointment, typically selecting preferred dates and confirming required documents.
    • The Mexico City office processes applications fastest, handling 50–100 cases daily; smaller offices (Playa del Carmen, Mérida, San Miguel) handle fewer cases and may be slower.
  3. In‑office interview

    • The interview lasts about 30–35 minutes.
    • The attorney guides the applicant through the paperwork and submits it to the INM officer.
  4. Card issuance

    • The PR card is printed on the spot and has no expiration date.
    • Because it never expires, it functions as a lifelong entry document, unlike a passport that must be renewed every ten years.

Core Requirements

Category Documentation Notes
Family‑based Proof of Mexican parent, spouse, or child. Direct eligibility; no visa required if a close family member already holds Mexican residency.
Economic solvency 6–12 months of bank statements (certified or apostilled) from the applicant’s home country, or a work contract. Typical income threshold: US $7,000–$8,000 per month. Requirements may vary by consulate.
Other Valid passport, completed application forms, proof of address in Mexico. No ongoing physical presence required after the card is issued, though occasional visits (e.g., yearly) are advisable.

Updating the Card

  • If the holder acquires a new passport (e.g., through citizenship‑by‑investment) or changes name after marriage, the card can be re‑issued within a day.
  • The new passport must match the name exactly as it appears on the original documentation; otherwise, the INM will reject the update.

Path from Permanent Residency to Mexican Citizenship

  1. Residency duration

    • Standard route: 5 years of residency, with at least 18 months of physical presence in the final 2 years.
    • Family‑linked route: 2 years if married to a Mexican citizen or if the applicant has a Mexican child; still requires 18 months of presence.
  2. Tax identification

    • A Mexican tax ID (RFC) is not mandatory for citizenship, but it is needed for activities such as renting property, buying a car, or opening a bank account.
  3. Citizenship exam

    • Language: Basic conversational Spanish is sufficient; the oral component is a short interview, not a formal language test.
    • History & civics: Multiple‑choice test covering roughly 600 possible questions; on exam day only about 10 questions are asked.
    • Applicants over 60 years old are exempt from the history portion but still take the Spanish interview.
  4. Processing time

    • Approx. 6 months from application to issuance, assuming all documents are correct and the exam is passed.
  5. Exceptional citizenship

    • A fast‑track (2‑year) route exists for individuals who provide “exceptional services” to Mexico, typically requiring the establishment of a significant business or other notable contribution.
    • The process is stringent and generally not recommended for most applicants.

Real‑Estate Purchases with Cash

  • Cash transactions are permitted, but notional limits apply; notaries may reject purchases exceeding those limits.
  • Using bank‑held cash (rather than physical currency) is advisable to avoid regulatory flags.

Key takeaways:

  • The Mexican PR card is a non‑expiring entry document obtained in a single, brief INM appointment.
  • Eligibility hinges on family ties or proven economic solvency (≈ US $7–8 k monthly income).
  • After obtaining PR, citizenship can be pursued after 2–5 years, with modest language and civics requirements.
  • Updating the card for a new passport or name is straightforward, and cash real‑estate purchases are possible within regulated limits.