Destination guide · Mexico
Who can visit Mexico visa-free?
Mexico City, Cancun, Tulum — 180-day visa-free stay for many nationalities.
63 passports get visa-free entry, 0 can get a visa on arrival, and 0 can apply for an e-visa online. The remaining 132 nationalities need a full embassy visa.
63visa-free
0visa on arrival
0e-visa
132visa required
Visa-free to Mexico
Passport holders who can enter Mexico without any prior visa application.
- Andorra 180d
- Argentina 180d
- Australia 180d
- Austria 180d
- Bahamas 180d
- Barbados 180d
- Belgium 180d
- Belize 180d
- Bolivia 180d
- Bulgaria 180d
- Canada 180d
- Chile 180d
- Colombia 180d
- Costa Rica 180d
- Croatia 180d
- Cyprus 180d
- Czech Republic 180d
- Denmark 180d
- Estonia 180d
- Finland 180d
- France 180d
- Germany 180d
- Greece 180d
- Hong Kong 180d
- Hungary 180d
- Iceland 180d
- Ireland 180d
- Israel 180d
- Italy 180d
- Jamaica 180d
- Japan 180d
- Latvia 180d
- Liechtenstein 180d
- Lithuania 180d
- Luxembourg 180d
- Macao 180d
- Malaysia 180d
- Malta 180d
- Marshall Islands 180d
- Micronesia 180d
- Monaco 180d
- Netherlands 180d
- New Zealand 180d
- Norway 180d
- Palau 180d
- Panama 180d
- Paraguay 180d
- Poland 180d
- Portugal 180d
- Romania 180d
- San Marino 180d
- Singapore 180d
- Slovakia 180d
- Slovenia 180d
- South Korea 180d
- Spain 180d
- Sweden 180d
- Switzerland 180d
- Trinidad and Tobago 180d
- United Arab Emirates 180d
- United Kingdom 180d
- United States 180d
- Uruguay 180d
ETA required for Mexico
Electronic travel authorization — a lightweight pre-registration (usually minutes, cheaper than a visa).
Full visa required for Mexico
Passport holders who need to apply for a visa at a Mexico embassy before travel.
- Afghanistan
- Albania
- Algeria
- Angola
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Bahrain
- Bangladesh
- Belarus
- Benin
- Bhutan
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Brunei
- Burkina Faso
- Burundi
- Cambodia
- Cameroon
- Cape Verde
- Central African Republic
- Chad
- China
- Comoros
- Congo
- Cuba
- Djibouti
- Dominica
- Dominican Republic
- DR Congo
- Ecuador
- Egypt
- El Salvador
- Equatorial Guinea
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Fiji
- Gabon
- Gambia
- Georgia
- Ghana
- Grenada
- Guatemala
- Guinea
- Guinea-Bissau
- Guyana
- Haiti
- Honduras
- India
- Indonesia
- Iran
- Iraq
- Ivory Coast
- Jordan
- Kazakhstan
- Kenya
- Kiribati
- Kosovo
- Kuwait
- Kyrgyzstan
- Laos
- Lebanon
- Lesotho
- Liberia
- Libya
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Maldives
- Mali
- Mauritania
- Mauritius
- Moldova
- Mongolia
- Montenegro
- Morocco
- Mozambique
- Myanmar
- Namibia
- Nauru
- Nepal
- Nicaragua
- Niger
- Nigeria
- North Korea
- North Macedonia
- Oman
- Pakistan
- Palestine
- Papua New Guinea
- Peru
- Philippines
- Qatar
- Rwanda
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Saint Lucia
- Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
- Samoa
- Sao Tome and Principe
- Saudi Arabia
- Senegal
- Serbia
- Seychelles
- Sierra Leone
- Solomon Islands
- Somalia
- South Africa
- South Sudan
- Sri Lanka
- Sudan
- Suriname
- Swaziland
- Syria
- Taiwan
- Tajikistan
- Tanzania
- Thailand
- Timor-Leste
- Togo
- Tonga
- Tunisia
- Turkmenistan
- Tuvalu
- Uganda
- Uzbekistan
- Vanuatu
- Vatican
- Venezuela
- Vietnam
- Yemen
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
Frequently asked questions
Which passport holders can visit Mexico visa-free?
63 passports get visa-free access to Mexico, plus 0 more can enter with visa on arrival. See the full grouped lists above. Another 0 nationalities can apply for an e-visa online before travel.
Do I need a visa for Mexico?
It depends on your passport. Use the lists above to find yours, or try our interactive multi-passport checker if you also hold a residence permit (UAE, US Green Card, Schengen, UK, Canada) — those can unlock additional access.
What's the difference between visa-free, visa on arrival, and e-visa?
Visa-free = you walk through immigration with just your passport. Visa on arrival = you get the visa stamped at the airport / land border, usually for a small fee. e-Visa = you apply online before you travel, and receive an electronic authorization (usually within a few days). ETA = similar to e-visa but lighter-weight — a pre-registration that takes minutes.
How long can I stay in Mexico visa-free?
Day-limits vary by passport — common defaults are 30, 60, or 90 days. Where our data includes a specific day count, it's shown alongside the passport entry. Always double-check with the destination embassy, because day limits change more frequently than the visa-free status itself.
Can a residence permit help me enter Mexico?
Sometimes. Holders of UAE residence, US Green Card, Schengen residence, UK BRP, or Canadian PR can sometimes access additional countries regardless of their home passport. See our Green Card guide, Indian+UAE guide, and Schengen permit guide for details.
How accurate is this list?
Entries come from the community-maintained open-source Passport Index Dataset. It's a reasonable starting point but not individually verified — rules change frequently. Always confirm with the embassy before booking travel. For high-traffic passport-destination pairs, we re-verify against official gov sources (marked with a ✓ on individual passport pages).