“Ease your life in Mexico”
Services
Immigration Process
Mexican Citizenship
Business Service in Mexico
Government forms
About Jimena
“I consider myself a people person. I constantly work on establishing relationships, either professional, personal, or familial. I have a bachelor’s degree in engineering and am currently studying for a master’s in Law. I have worked for several construction and development companies over the past 15 years in administrative processes. Throughout all those years, I got involved with several government-related processes, from building permits, public health care, taxes, import laws, land regulations, and more. I acquired my English-speaking skills in my early years in elementary school, then at an exchange program in Vancouver, Canada, during university, and finally throughout my 9 years living in Baja Sur and working in the tourist industry. This experience has helped me understand the differences between each culture, the need for guidance when living in a different country, and to develop a guest service experience treatment for my clients. What I love the most about my work is hearing the different stories of my clients, feeling the excitement of starting a new chapter in their life. Being a small part of that chapter brings me enormous joy.”
Completed Process in the last 2 years
The values I give to my services
- Personalized attention: I prioritize tailoring the services to meet the unique needs and preferences of each individual client, ensuring a personalized experience.
- Understanding of challenges: I can empathize with the challenges that come with adapting to a new country, drawing from my own experience as an expat in other countries to better assist you.
- Informed decision-making: My primary objective is to provide accurate and comprehensive information to my clients, empowering them to make informed decisions that align with their goals and priorities.
Immigration process
Residency in México. This immigration status allows you to stay longer than 180 days in México. Being a Mexican resident allows you to have a driver’s license, purchase a car, to open bank accounts, register your kids in schools, to have access to medical services and any other government services. Having a Mexican resident card does not require you to stay in the country a certain amount of time.
Who should apply then?
- People who own property in Mexico.
- People who wish to stay in Mexico more than 180 days.
- People who have relatives in the first line which are either Mexican citizens or residents (ex. parents, spouse, children).
- People who wish to move to México in the near future.
These are currently the most popular ways to apply for Mexican Residency:
For 2024, the income requirement is around $4,100 American USD a month (amount varies from one Consulate to another). For this process you need to go to your home country Consulate to qualify first and then, after your pre-approved visa is issued to come to Mexico to finish the process at an Immigration office. For this process please visit the link to review the specifics of the consulate you will apply for.
If you are a Mexican resident and have offspring under 18 years old, they can become residents as well. If you have a Mexican child, you can become a resident in Mexico. If you are married to a Mexican or a Mexican resident, you can apply as well. The process is all done in Mexico
This program is valid only in certain cities in Mexico (Cabo and La Paz, being one of them). it started during Covid and it encourages people that are living in Mexico with a tourist visa to become residents. Specific criteria is needed:
- The foreign has been in Mexico in 2022 or prior to that date, and have stamps in its passport to prove an entry.
- You are currently in Mexico with time as a tourist expired, or you wait until it expires, OR if you are not currently in Mexico and you meet the first requirement above, you enter Mexico and at that time request and hope to get as little as 10 days as a tourist and let that time expire. This process does not require to show financials.
*this is a temporary program and may end at any time
Mexican Citizenship
After acquiring five years with a resident status, you can apply to Mexican Citizenship. The foreign Relations Department (SRE) is the office that issues the naturalization processes. This is a general guide of the most important aspects you need to keep in mind for this process.
- To prove that you have being living in Mexico for at least the past two years.
- To know the Spanish language (to pass an interview and a reading comprehension written test both in Spanish).
- History exam (people over 60 years are exempted to do the test).
Business Services.
If you want to start a business in Mexico this is a general guide on what to consider before making your decision. Whether you are an individual wanting to invest in México or an kind of business entity, there are some differences to consider
- Make sure your resident status has permit to work.
- Register yourself for a Tax ID number (RFC).
- Register yourself in the National Registration for Foreign Investments (RNIE).
- Other applications as business licenses, state tax registration, social security registration and more.
- Application for use of name of the business entity in the Economics Department (SE).
- Legalization of the company through a Notary public and then registration under the Public Registry of Commerce (RPC).
- Registration for a TAX ID number (RFC)
- Registration in the National Registration for Foreign Investments (RNIE).
- Other applications as business licenses, state tax registration, social security registration and more.
Representation and assistance in any government office
- Driver´s license
- Car Plates
- Temporary Import permit for vehicles
- Tax ID (RFC)
- Utilities contracts and change of name (CFE, TELMEX, water).
- Birth certificates
- Official Translations
- Apostilles
- Many others