Mexico Tourist Card - Air
Complete your Mexico Tourist Card - Air (FMM) online before departure — receive a printable confirmation (PDF/QR) with expert guidance and faster airport processing.
What Is the Mexico Tourist Card - Air?
The Mexico Tourist Card - Air is the electronic version of Mexico’s Multiple Immigration Form (FMM) for visitors arriving by air. Issued under authority of the Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM), the air FMM is the official entry card that records your visitor status and the length of stay granted by migration officers. The INM introduced electronic FMM options to streamline processing at international airports and to replace older paper-only procedures for many arriving passengers.
You apply through the INM’s FMM portal (inm.gob.mx/fmme) or via DoVisa for guided completion and document checks. On approval you receive a printable confirmation (PDF) and a reference code — many airports and airlines accept a printed FMM or digital copy with the reference number or QR when available. Keep the confirmation during your stay; migration officers may request it at arrival and departure.
The Mexico Tourist Card - Air does not replace a visa when one is required — it establishes your visitor status (usually up to 180 calendar days) and is separate from any visa or electronic authorisation some nationalities must obtain. Recent INM updates emphasise that payment or submission through the official INM payment portal may be required for certain land entries, and that the FMM remains the core migratory document for short tourist visits by air.
For full entry details see Mexico visa information and the official INM portal (inm.gob.mx/fmme). When you’re ready, apply for your FMM now to begin a guided application with document checks.
Who Needs the Mexico Tourist Card - Air?
Who Needs It
- Foreign nationals arriving by air as tourists, business visitors, or in transit who will clear Mexican immigration
- Visitors seeking visitor status for stays up to 180 days (single entry)
- Children and minors — a parent or guardian must apply on behalf of each child
- Travellers who do not hold a Mexican passport or permanent resident card
Who Is Exempt
- Mexican nationals
- Airline and vessel crew on active official duty
- Diplomatic and official passport holders on government business
- Transit passengers who remain in the international transit area and do not clear immigration
Mexico Entry Requirements & Restrictions
Passport Validity
Your passport must be a valid, unexpired travel document. The UK embassy and other official guidance recommend passports have at least 180 days validity because the typical tourist stay can be up to 180 days; always carry the passport you used to apply. See GOV.UK — Entry Requirements.
Vaccination & Health Advice
No specific vaccination certificate is required for routine entry. Travellers should be up to date on routine vaccines and consult the CDC Mexico page for region-specific advice including dengue and other vector-borne risks: CDC — Mexico.
Customs & Prohibited Items
Mexico prohibits importing narcotics and other expressly banned goods; recent customs reforms tightened penalties for prohibited imports. Check prohibited/restricted lists before travel and declare dutiable goods. See official guidance at Trade.gov — Mexico Prohibited Imports.
Entry Taxes & State Fees
Some states require an entry tax — for example, an entry fee for Quintana Roo (Cancún) can be paid online via Visitax. Keep proof of payment for presentation at the airport if required.
Travel Insurance & Funds
You may be asked to show a return/onward ticket, accommodation and proof of sufficient funds. Travel insurance is strongly recommended, especially for remote-area medical evacuation.
Travel Tips for Mexico Visitors
Mexico is a large country with diverse regions from deserts in the north to Caribbean beaches in the southeast. International flights arrive at several major gateways — plan transfers and local safety precautions before you travel.
- Currency: Mexican Peso (MXN). US dollars are widely accepted in tourist areas but you’ll get better rates using pesos (MXN).
- Language: Spanish is the official language; English is commonly spoken in major tourist zones and airports.
- Time zone: Mexico City (Central) is typically GMT-6 — check local time for your destination as zones vary.
- Main airports: Benito Juárez International Airport (Mexico City — MEX), Cancún International Airport (CUN), Guadalajara (GDL), Monterrey (MTY), Tijuana (TIJ), Los Cabos / San José del Cabo (SJD).
- Best time to visit: Dry season November–April for most regions; hurricane season runs June–November on coasts.
- Security: Follow local advisories; avoid certain states and areas flagged by official travel advice and register with your embassy if travelling to higher-risk regions.
- Transport: Use official taxis or ride-hailing in cities, and confirm airport transfer times for resort arrivals.
- Documents: Keep a printed or digital copy of your FMM and passport during your stay — you may need it when leaving Mexico.
"Needed the Mexico Tourist Card - Air before a family trip to Mexico City. Submitted details and got a printable confirmation within 45 minutes — immigration at Benito Juárez (MEX) stamped us without delay."
"Applied for the FMM online through DoVisa while at the airport. Airline checked my confirmation at departure and immigration in Cancún (CUN) scanned the reference number on arrival. Smooth process."
"Form was clear but I needed to re-upload my passport photo once — support helped quickly. The printed card and reference code were accepted at Guadalajara (GDL) immigration."
"For Copa flights I completed the Mexico Tourist Card - Air on my phone, received PDF confirmation and showed it at check-in. Immigration in Mexico City (MEX) went fast and we didn’t queue long."
"Good guidance on the return date field. Had to correct a date once via INM instructions but DoVisa support guided me through it — confirmation arrived before my flight."
"Helpful reminders about Visitax for Quintana Roo. The form required passport details and arrival flight info — everything went smoothly at CUN immigration."
"Completed the FMM during a layover. The PDF reference printed at check-in was accepted; recommend keeping both digital and printed copies."
"Minor delay — my confirmation arrived later than expected but still before departure. Support resolved it in time for check-in. Suggest applying a few hours earlier than planned."
"Booked last-minute and DoVisa helped secure the Mexico Tourist Card - Air quickly. The airline at Monterrey (MTY) checked the PDF and immigration stamped us without issues."
"Fast and reliable. The FMM PDF and reference number made airport entry straightforward — printed copy plus phone screenshot worked fine at SJD immigration."
"Needed the Mexico Tourist Card - Air before a family trip to Mexico City. Submitted details and got a printable confirmation within 45 minutes — immigration at Benito Juárez (MEX) stamped us without delay."
"Applied for the FMM online through DoVisa while at the airport. Airline checked my confirmation at departure and immigration in Cancún (CUN) scanned the reference number on arrival. Smooth process."
"Form was clear but I needed to re-upload my passport photo once — support helped quickly. The printed card and reference code were accepted at Guadalajara (GDL) immigration."
Mexico Tourist Card - Air: Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Apply for Your Mexico Tourist Card - Air?
Complete the FMM (air) in minutes with guided help. Get printable confirmation fast and 24/7 support if you need edits before departure.
Check Price & Apply NowSources & References
- INM — Multiple Immigration Form (FMM) — Official Portal
- INM — Portal de Servicios (payment and services)
- Mexican Consulate (UK) — Tourist Visa & Entry Guidance
- CDC — Mexico Traveler Health
- GOV.UK — Mexico: Entry requirements
- U.S. Department of State — Mexico Travel Advisory
- Government of Canada — Travel Advice: Mexico
- Trade.gov — Mexico Prohibited & Restricted Imports