Bangladesh → Mexico: the Student Visa roadmap
Mexico's Student Temporary Resident Visa is the standard pathway for foreign nationals enrolled in a full-time program (over 180 days) at a Mexican educational institution. Applicants apply at a Mexican consulate with a school acceptance letter and proof of modest financial means (roughly US$650/month income or US$6,500 in savings in 2026, waived if holding a Mexican government scholarship), then exchange the visa for a residence card at INM within 30 days of arrival. Note: exact 2026 student solvency thresholds derive from the UMA formula (100x and 1,000x UMA) cross-referenced from reputable sources, as the official consular PDF pages are behind bot protection; figures are close estimates rather than consulate-published USD values.
Moving from Bangladesh
- You apply for the Student Visa at the Mexico consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Bangladesh, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Bangladesh usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Mexico's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Bangladesh documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Bangladesh passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Bangladesh to Mexico applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Mexico.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Hold a valid passport and an acceptance/enrollment letter from a Mexican educational institution for a course or program lasting more than 180 days
- Letter must state the student's full name, study level/grade, area of study, course start and end dates, tuition cost, and school contact details
- Prove economic solvency: ~US$650/month income or scholarship (100x UMA) over the last 3 months, OR ~US$6,500 in savings/investments (1,000x UMA)
- Financial proof is waived for holders of an official Mexican government scholarship
- Apply in person at the Mexican consulate covering your place of residence (appointment via the SRE/MiConsulado system)
- Intend to study, not work; student status does not authorize lucrative activity unless separately permitted by INM
Your step-by-step roadmap
Apply at the Mexican consulate
- Book a consular appointment through the SRE/MiConsulado (citas.sre.gob.mx) system
- Submit the application form, passport, photo, school acceptance letter, and proof of financial solvency or scholarship
- Attend the interview and pay the ~US$56 visa fee; receive the student visa sticker in your passport
Enter Mexico and exchange at INM
- Travel to Mexico within 180 days of visa issuance
- Within 30 calendar days of entry, file the canje (exchange) application at the INM office for your address
- Provide biometrics and pay the INM card fee to receive your temporary resident student card
Maintain and renew residency
- Keep the student residence card valid while enrolled; renew before expiry (cards issued for up to 1 year, renewable up to 4 years total)
- Report changes of address, school, or status to INM as required
- Pay the applicable INM card fee at each renewal
Transition to permanent residency
- After 4 years of continuous temporary residency, apply to convert to permanent residency
- Submit the conversion application and pay the permanent residency card fee at INM
Naturalize as a citizen
- After 5 years of legal residency, apply for naturalization with the SRE
- Pass the Spanish language oral exam and the Mexican history/culture exam
- Prove physical presence (at least 18 months in Mexico in the 2 years before applying)
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: From consular application to a residence card in hand typically takes a few weeks to a couple of months: the visa is usually decided within days to ~2 weeks, you then enter Mexico within 180 days, and you must complete the INM exchange within 30 days of arrival to receive the student residence card.
Citizenship: Permanent residency becomes available after 4 years of continuous temporary residency, and Mexican citizenship by naturalization after 5 years of legal residency (temporary and/or permanent), subject to Spanish language and Mexican history/culture exams and physical-presence rules.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.