Residencia Temporal to Residencia Permanente Conversion in Mexico
The Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM) grants permanent resident status through a cambio de condición de estancia filing at an INM regional office in Mexico.
Article 54 of the Ley de Migración lists five operational routes — four-year continuous residente temporal, family unity, retirement or pension income, investment, and refugee or humanitarian protection. Conversion is never automatic: a formal application, biometric capture, two fee payments, and a positive INM resolution are all required.
Estimated time
Four to eight weeks at most regional offices when the file is filed complete: a published twenty-business-day resolution standard, several days for card printing, and additional weeks ahead of filing where foreign documents need apostille and translation
Cost
MX$1,847 for the application study fee on filing plus a card-issuance fee charged after a positive resolution; the card fee is set on the Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios schedule published by INM and may apply at a full rate or a reduced rate depending on the supporting documents presented
What You Need
Tap to check off items as you gather them
Additional Items
- The 2026 Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios schedule was published by INM with peso values denominated against the UMA 2026 daily value of MX$117.31. The Ley Federal de Derechos decree of 7 November 2025 set the fee adjustments at a force date of 1 January 2026, while the INEGI UMA vigencia runs from 1 February 2026 through 31 January 2027 — a one-month offset. For filings dated between 1 January and 1 February 2026, INM applies the UMA 2025 daily value of MX$108.57 to the underlying UMA-multiplier under the Ley Federal de Derechos UMA-indexation convention; from 1 February 2026 onwards the UMA 2026 daily value applies.
- Worked example — application study fee at MX$1,847 corresponds to MX$117.31 per UMA day multiplied by approximately 15.75 UMA days; card issuance MX$13,579 corresponds to MX$117.31 multiplied by approximately 115.75 UMA days at full rate. INM publishes only the peso totals in the schedule, with the UMA multiplier set in the underlying Ley Federal de Derechos.
- Retirement / pension threshold — under the retirement route, monthly income equivalent to five hundred days of UMA, free of liens, sustained over the last six months. At the UMA 2026 daily value of MX$117.31 this corresponds to a monthly minimum of approximately MX$58,655. Income from a foreign government, an international organisation, or a private employer for services rendered abroad qualifies.
- Investment route threshold — bank balance equivalent to approximately twenty-five thousand days of UMA over the last twelve months (average monthly balance) or comparable qualifying property or investment holdings. The investment route is described in the Reglamento de la Ley de Migración.
- Article 54 of the Ley de Migración enumerates the conditions for permanent residency in seven fractions, of which five are operational at filing — political asylum or refugee recognition or complementary protection or statelessness (fraction I); family unity under Article 55 (fraction II); retiree or pensioner with foreign-source income (fraction III); four years of residente temporal status (fraction V); and direct-line ascendants or descendants up to the second degree of a Mexican by birth or having Mexican children by birth (fractions VI and VII).
- The points-system route named in Article 54.IV and Article 57 of the Ley de Migración contemplates a scoring instrument administered by INM under Secretaría de Gobernación parameters, but the implementing regulations have not been issued and the route has been inoperative since the 2020 regulatory pause. Applicants pursue one of the five operational routes.
- Article 63 of the Reglamento de la Ley de Migración requires permanent residents to notify INM within ninety calendar days of any change to civil status, nationality, address, or place of work; failure can trigger sanctions including a financial penalty and, in repeated cases, residency cancellation.
- Article 17 of the Reglamento de la Ley de Migración sets a maximum twenty-business-day resolution window for migration trámites; the Centro de Atención Migratoria answers procedural questions and provides NUT-based case-status updates on 800 00 46264 (free-call within Mexico) and at [email protected].
Step-by-Step
- 1
Prepare documents and verify route eligibility
- Identify which of the five Article 54 routes applies to the case — four-year continuous, family unity, retirement or pension, investment, or refugee or humanitarian
- Compile the common-core document set plus the route-specific add-ons listed in the What You Need section
- Apostille or legalise foreign-issued civil-registry documents in the country of issue, then have them translated into Spanish by a perito traductor registered with the Mexican judiciary
💡 Tip: Allow three to six weeks for apostille and translation if relying on foreign documents — this is the most common source of filing delays on the family-unity and retirement routes.
- 2
Generate the Formato Básico and Hoja de Ayuda on the INM portal
- Open the INM trámites micrositio at inm.gob.mx/tramites/publico/estancia.html
- Select cambio de condición de estancia a residente permanente, complete the form, print, and sign
- Print the Hoja de Ayuda generated alongside the Formato Básico; it carries the payment reference the bank uses to identify the trámite
💡 Tip: Without the Hoja de Ayuda the bank window cannot identify the payment. Print a spare copy and store the PDF — generating a fresh sheet if the original is lost is straightforward but adds a visit to the trámites micrositio.
- 3
Pay the application study fee
- Take the Hoja de Ayuda to a participating bank window — most national banks process INM payments
- Alternatively, pay at an INM regional office using Visa or Mastercard at the Pin Pad terminal
- Keep the original receipt and a copy; INM matches the receipt to the file through the Hoja de Ayuda reference
⚠️ Watch out: Cash payments handed directly to INM personnel are prohibited. If a cashier or facilitator requests cash payment outside the bank window or the Pin Pad terminal, decline the request and report it to INM's Sistema Integral de Quejas y Denuncias at gob.mx/inm/denuncia.
- 4
File the application at the INM regional office in person
- Bring the original passport, current Tarjeta de Residente Temporal or FMM, completed Formato Básico, payment receipt for the application study, route-specific documents, and three passport-style photos
- Submit the file in person at the Oficina de Representación corresponding to the applicant's address in Mexico
- Receive the Numero Único de Trámite (NUT) printed on the acknowledgement receipt; the NUT is the case-tracking number used on the INM portal
💡 Tip: Did your filing at your regional INM office resolve within the twenty-business-day standard, or did it run longer? Congestion at the busier offices — Mexico City, Querétaro, Mérida, Guadalajara, and San Miguel de Allende — frequently extends actual wall-clock resolution time, particularly during the December-to-January peak.
- 5
Provide biometric data at the regional office
- INM captures the applicant's photograph, signature, and fingerprints for the Formato Básico as part of the in-person filing
- The biometric capture is a single visit alongside document submission — there is no separate biometric appointment
- Confirm at the counter that the file is logged as complete; an incomplete file does not start the twenty-business-day resolution clock
- 6
Await INM resolution and respond to any prevención
- Track the case on the INM portal using the NUT printed on the acknowledgement receipt
- If INM issues a prevención requesting additional documents or clarifications, respond within the prescribed window — typically ten business days
- The twenty-business-day resolution clock pauses while a prevención is open and resumes when the applicant's response is filed
⚠️ Watch out: Failure to respond to a prevención within the prescribed window closes the file, and the application study fee already paid is not refunded. The applicant would need to start a new cambio de condición de estancia from the beginning.
- 7
Pay the card-issuance fee
- After a positive resolution, INM notifies the applicant to pay the document-issuance fee
- Generate a fresh Hoja de Ayuda for the second payment and pay at a participating bank window or at the INM Pin Pad terminal
- Present supporting documents for the fifty-percent reduction at the time of payment — the reduction is not applied retroactively
- 8
Collect the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente and register CURP and RFC
- Present the original payment receipt for card issuance at the regional office along with proof of identity
- Receive the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente — the physical credential — typically printed within several days of payment
- Register a CURP at RENAPO if one is not already on file, and register or update the RFC at SAT where the holder will earn income subject to tax in Mexico
💡 Tip: Any subsequent change to civil status, nationality, address, or place of work must be notified to INM within ninety calendar days through the INM trámites micrositio.
Local Tips from the Community
- The thirty-day window before the current Tarjeta de Residente Temporal expires is the safe filing window for the conversion. Filing after expiry shifts the case to a regularización track with separate fees and timing.
- Foreign-issued birth and marriage certificates need apostille (or full legalisation for non-Hague-Convention countries) in the country of issue and translation by a perito traductor registered with the Mexican judiciary. The combined process commonly runs three to six weeks and is the most common source of filing delays.
- Cash payments to INM personnel are explicitly prohibited — all fees pay through a participating bank window using the Hoja de Ayuda or through INM's authorised Pin Pad terminal at the office. Any request for cash outside these channels is irregular; INM's Sistema Integral de Quejas y Denuncias receives complaints at gob.mx/inm/denuncia.
- The fifty-percent reduced rate on the card-issuance fee is not automatic. It applies where the application documents one of three qualifying conditions — family unity with a Mexican national or permanent resident, a formal job offer from an INM-registered employer, or an invitation from a public or private non-profit organisation — and the supporting documents must be presented at the time of the second payment, not the filing date.
- INM's Centro de Atención Migratoria receives procedural questions and case-status updates on 800 00 46264 (free-call within Mexico) and at [email protected].
What Could Go Wrong
Identify the correct Article 54 route: Applicant holds a student residente temporal and tries to file directly for permanente
Recovery: Student residente temporal is non-convertible to permanent residency directly. The corrective sequence is to file a cambio de condición de estancia to a non-student residente temporal first, then accrue continuous-residency time under that condition before filing the conversion to residente permanente. The four-year continuous route does not count student-residency time.
Pay the first fee: Bank window cannot identify the payment because the Hoja de Ayuda was lost or not printed
Recovery: Generate a fresh Hoja de Ayuda on the INM trámites micrositio using the same Formato Básico reference, then present the new sheet at the bank window. INM pairs the receipt to the file by the payment reference printed on the Hoja de Ayuda; the bank cannot identify the payment without it.
File the application at the INM regional office: Tarjeta de Residente Temporal has expired before the file is opened
Recovery: An expired Tarjeta de Residente Temporal invalidates the conversion filing. The applicant is routed onto a regularización trámite, which carries separate fees, separate documentation, and longer timing than a conversion. Where possible, file the conversion inside the thirty-day window before the current Tarjeta expires; if expiry has occurred, request the regularización-route information at the INM office in the same visit.
Pay the second fee for card issuance: Reduced-rate documentation is not presented at the time of the second payment
Recovery: The fifty-percent reduction is not applied retroactively. Present supporting documents — family-unity proof with a Mexican national or permanent resident, a formal job offer from an INM-registered employer, or an invitation from a public or private non-profit organisation — at the second payment. If the documents become available later, the full fee is charged and the difference is not refunded.
Costs
| Item | Amount | Payment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application study — cambio de condición de estancia (first payment) | MX$1,847 | Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal | Paid when the file is opened, regardless of route. Cash payments to INM personnel are prohibited. |
| Issuance of the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente — full rate | MX$13,579 | Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal | Charged when the supporting documents for the fifty-percent reduction are not presented. |
| Issuance of the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente — reduced rate (Optional) | MX$6,789 | Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal | Documentation supporting the qualifying condition must accompany the second payment; the reduction is not applied retroactively. Waived if: Family unity with a Mexican national or permanent resident; formal job offer from an INM-registered employer; or invitation from a public or private non-profit organisation |
| Canje — exchange of FMM for a Tarjeta de Residente Permanente for holders of an INM-issued permanent-residency visa (Optional) | MX$4,828 | Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal | Applies only to applicants entering Mexico on an INM-issued residencia-permanente visa from a Mexican consulate abroad; same-day issuance is possible when all requirements are presented complete. |
| Apostille and certified translation of foreign documents (Optional) | MX$0 | Apostille fees set by the issuing country; perito traductor fees set by the translator | Not paid to INM. Most common indirect cost on the family-unity and retirement routes; budget several weeks for the combined process. |
- Payment:
- Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal
- Notes:
- Paid when the file is opened, regardless of route. Cash payments to INM personnel are prohibited.
- Payment:
- Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal
- Notes:
- Charged when the supporting documents for the fifty-percent reduction are not presented.
- Payment:
- Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal
- Notes:
- Documentation supporting the qualifying condition must accompany the second payment; the reduction is not applied retroactively.
- Waived if:
- Family unity with a Mexican national or permanent resident; formal job offer from an INM-registered employer; or invitation from a public or private non-profit organisation
- Payment:
- Hoja de Ayuda paid at a participating bank window, or Visa or Mastercard at an INM Pin Pad terminal
- Notes:
- Applies only to applicants entering Mexico on an INM-issued residencia-permanente visa from a Mexican consulate abroad; same-day issuance is possible when all requirements are presented complete.
- Payment:
- Apostille fees set by the issuing country; perito traductor fees set by the translator
- Notes:
- Not paid to INM. Most common indirect cost on the family-unity and retirement routes; budget several weeks for the combined process.
FAQ
General
Does my four-year temporary residency automatically become permanent?
No. Completing four years of residente temporal does not convert the holder to residente permanente. A formal cambio de condición de estancia application is required, with the Formato Básico, biometric capture at the regional office, payment of the two fees, and a positive INM resolution. INM does not initiate the conversion on the applicant's behalf — the filing window is the thirty calendar days before the current Tarjeta de Residente Temporal expires.
My spouse is a Mexican citizen by birth. Do I qualify for permanent residency directly?
Yes, through the family-unity route under Article 55 of the Ley de Migración. With a Mexican-national spouse by birth, the foreign spouse converts directly from visitor or residente temporal without serving any minimum temporal-residency period. Documentation of the marriage — apostilled and translated by a perito traductor if issued abroad — is the load-bearing element. The sponsor presents original identification (passport or INE voter card) alongside the marriage certificate.
My spouse is a foreign permanent resident in Mexico. Same path?
No. Article 55 of the Ley de Migración requires that the foreign spouse of a foreign permanent resident first hold residente temporal for two years; only after that two-year period can the conversion to residente permanente be filed. Confusing the two tracks at filing leads to a prevención or a denial. The two-year period runs from the date the residente temporal status was first granted.
Does my student temporary residency time count toward the four-year continuous route?
No. Student residente temporal is excluded from the four-year continuous route and is explicitly non-convertible to permanent residency directly. A student holder must first change to a non-student residente temporal condition and then begin accruing time toward the four-year route. The INM trámite description for student conversion handles the intermediate step.
Can I qualify on retirement income alone?
Yes, if you can document monthly income equivalent to five hundred days of UMA free of liens, sustained over the last six months. At the UMA 2026 daily value of MX$117.31, that corresponds to a monthly minimum of approximately MX$58,655. Pension statements, bank statements, or annuity certificates from a regulated institution are the standard documentation. Foreign-bank documents must be apostilled and translated.
Is the fifty-percent reduced fee guaranteed if I qualify via family unity?
No. The reduction is not automatic. You must present documentary proof of the qualifying condition — family unity with a Mexican national or permanent resident, a formal job offer from an INM-registered employer, or an invitation from a public or private non-profit organisation — at the time of the second payment. Without supporting documents at that moment, INM charges the full fee. The qualifying-conditions list follows the INM 2026 announcement and the Ley Federal de Derechos fifty-percent reduction provision.
Can I work as soon as I receive my Tarjeta de Residente Permanente?
Yes. Permanent residency carries an unrestricted right to work in Mexico; no separate Permiso de Actividades Remuneradas is needed once the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente is in hand. You may also register an RFC with SAT for tax-resident income purposes; the CURP follows automatically once the new card issues.
What happens if INM issues a prevención?
A prevención is a request for additional documents or clarifications. The applicant typically has ten business days to respond. The twenty-business-day resolution clock pauses while the prevención is open. Failure to respond within the prescribed window closes the file, and fees already paid are not refunded. The notification reaches the applicant through the INM regional office and is tracked on the NUT-status page.
Can I file the conversion at any INM regional office, or only the one for my address?
INM trámites are filed at the Oficina de Representación corresponding to the applicant's address in Mexico — where the applicant has established residence — or at the office of the port of entry where the case was opened on arrival. Filing at a non-jurisdictional office triggers internal transfer delays. The Oficinas de Representación operate in every state capital and in the busier port-of-entry cities.
What about the points system named in Article 54 of the Ley de Migración?
Article 54.IV and Article 57 of the Ley de Migración contemplate a scoring instrument administered by INM under Secretaría de Gobernación parameters, but the Secretaría de Gobernación has not issued the operating regulations and INM has not accepted point-system filings since the 2020 regulatory pause. Applicants pursue one of the five operational routes — four-year continuous, family unity, retirement or pension, investment, or refugee or humanitarian.
After This Process
- → CURP (Clave Única de Registro de Población) — register at RENAPO if a CURP is not already on file; the CURP is the universal Mexican population identifier and is needed for downstream administrative trámites
- → RFC (Registro Federal de Contribuyentes) — register or update at SAT where the holder will earn income subject to tax in Mexico
- → Notify INM of any change to civil status, nationality, address, or place of work within ninety calendar days through the INM trámites micrositio
- → Renew the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente plastic card on the schedule INM publishes for residencia-permanente card renewals; the underlying permanent-residency status is indefinite
Sources
- INM — landing page (gob.mx ↗)
- INM — Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios announcement (gob.mx ↗)
- INM — permanent-residency overview (gob.mx ↗)
- INM — canje FAQ (gob.mx ↗)
- Ley de Migración — Cámara de Diputados statutory PDF (diputados.gob.mx ↗)
- Reglamento de la Ley de Migración — Cámara de Diputados statutory PDF (diputados.gob.mx ↗)
- INEGI — UMA press communiqué (inegi.org.mx ↗)
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More in Mexico
10 sources cited last accessed 2026-05-21
T1 official portal · T2 embassy/consulate · T3 news · T4 community — higher tier wins on conflict. methodology →
- T1Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM) 2026-05-21
INM is the federal authority responsible for migration trámites in Mexico, including the cambio de condición de estancia a residente permanente. INM is a deconcentrated body of the Secretaría de Gobernación; trámites are filed at Oficinas de Representación in state capitals and busier port-of-entry cities. The Centro de Atención Migratoria handles procedural questions and NUT-based case-status updates at 800 00 46264 (free-call within Mexico) and at [email protected].
gob.mx - T1INM — permanent-residency overview article 2026-05-21
INM's permanent-residency overview confirms the four-year continuous route and the retirement / pension route, the in-person filing requirement at the regional office with the applicant's valid passport (or identity and travel document for stateless applicants) presented at the counter, biometric capture for the Formato Básico, payment via Visa or Mastercard at INM Pin Pad terminals or at participating banks using the Hoja de Ayuda, the prohibition on cash payments handed directly to INM personnel, and the Centro de Atención Migratoria contact channels. The overview describes the Tarjeta de Residente Permanente as the physical credential issued after a positive resolution and the second payment.
gob.mx - T1INM — Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios 2026 announcement 2026-05-21
INM published the 2026 Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios with a 1 January 2026 force date set by the Ley Federal de Derechos decree of 7 November 2025. The schedule denominates fees in Mexican pesos against the UMA 2026 daily value of MX$117.31 (INEGI vigencia 1 February 2026 to 31 January 2027). For filings dated 1 January through 1 February 2026, INM applies the UMA 2025 daily value of MX$108.57 to the UMA-multiplier under the Ley Federal de Derechos indexation convention; from 1 February 2026 the UMA 2026 daily value applies. The fifty-percent reduction on residency fees applies under three documented qualifying conditions: family unity, formal job offer from an INM-registered employer, or non-profit-organisation invitation.
gob.mx - T1INM — canje FAQ 2026-05-21
The INM canje FAQ sets the canje fee for residente permanente at MX$4,828, the photograph specification (tres fotografías tipo infantil 2.5 cm × 3 cm — two front-facing, one in profile) carried across cambio de condición de estancia trámites, the trámite identifier INM811 for canje, and the possibility of same-day issuance where all requirements are presented complete. The FAQ also confirms the canje series for residente temporal (1, 2, 3, 4 años) and visitante exchange amounts.
gob.mx - T1Cámara de Diputados — Ley de Migración statutory PDF 2026-05-21
Article 54 of the Ley de Migración enumerates the conditions for permanent residency — political asylum or refugee status recognition or complementary protection or statelessness determination (I); right to preserve family unity under Article 55 (II); retiree or pensioner with foreign-source income sufficient to reside in Mexico (III); INM decision under the points system established in Article 57 (IV); four years having elapsed since the foreign national held residente temporal status (V); having Mexican children by birth (VI); and being a direct-line ascendant or descendant up to the second degree of a Mexican by birth (VII). Article 55 lists the qualifying family members for the family-unity route — spouse granted residente temporal for two years before converting where the marriage bond subsists, applicant's own children and children of the spouse where minors and unmarried, and direct-line ascendants or descendants up to the second degree of a Mexican by birth. Statutory text corroborated against the Cámara de Diputados official PDF via the leyes-mx.com mirror.
diputados.gob.mx - T1Cámara de Diputados — Reglamento de la Ley de Migración statutory PDF 2026-05-21
Article 17 of the Reglamento de la Ley de Migración sets INM's resolution standard for cambio de condición de estancia at up to twenty business days from receipt of the complete file. Where INM issues a prevención requesting additional documents or clarifications, the resolution period pauses until the applicant responds within the prescribed window. The Reglamento operationalises the investment route described under Article 54.III of the Ley de Migración — qualifying applicants document a bank balance equivalent to approximately twenty-five thousand days of UMA over the last twelve months (average monthly balance), or comparable qualifying property deeds or company-participation documents. Article 63 of the Reglamento requires permanent residents to notify INM within ninety calendar days of any change to civil status, nationality, address, or place of work, with sanctions on non-compliance.
diputados.gob.mx - T1Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (INEGI) — UMA press communiqué 1/26 2026-05-21
INEGI press communiqué 1/26 announces UMA 2026 daily value MX$117.31, monthly MX$3,566.22, annual MX$42,794.64, with a 3.69 percent increase versus UMA 2025 (MX$108.57 daily). The UMA vigencia under the INEGI norm runs from 1 February 2026 through 31 January 2027. The Diario Oficial de la Federación published the formal UMA 2026 values on 9 January 2026.
inegi.org.mx - T2Embajada de México en España (SRE) — visa de residente permanente jubilado / pensionado page 2026-05-21
Consular page corroborating the retirement / pension route income threshold of monthly income equivalent to at least five hundred days of UMA, sustained over the last six months and free of liens, with bank statements, pension statements, or annuity certificates accepted as evidence. The consular page also lists the family-unity documentation requirements where the application starts at the Mexican consulate abroad before in-Mexico conversion.
embamex.sre.gob.mx - T2Migralaw — 2026 fee table mirror 2026-05-21
Migralaw mirrors the 2026 Tarifas de Derechos Migratorios peso amounts for residencia temporal (1 / 2 / 3 / 4 años at MX$11,141 / MX$16,693 / MX$21,143 / MX$25,058 full rate; half rate at MX$5,570 / MX$8,347 / MX$10,571 / MX$12,529), residencia permanente MX$13,579 full / MX$6,789 reduced, cambio de condición migratoria (application study) MX$1,847, permiso de actividades remuneradas MX$4,341, and regularización migratoria MX$1,847. The mirror confirms the three documented qualifying conditions for the fifty-percent reduction (family unity, formal job offer from an INM-registered employer, non-profit-organisation invitation).
migralaw.com.mx - T2Garrigues — INM 2026 fees legal commentary 2026-05-21
Garrigues legal commentary corroborates the dual-tier fee structure (full rate and fifty-percent reduced rate), the Ley Federal de Derechos Article 8 fifty-percent reduction provision, the 7 November 2025 decree publication setting the 2026 fee adjustments, and the enforcement note that INM verifies the qualifying documents at the time of payment rather than retroactively. The commentary positions the 2026 fee adjustment against the underlying UMA 2026 daily value indexation.
garrigues.com