The Paper Chase

Documents, Permits & Regulations (Updated 09/07)


Overview: My last entry into Mexico occurred about a month before this writing and I can say that the Mexican federal government has bent over backward to make the process of obtaining a "tourist card" and "motor vehicle temporary importation permit" as easy as possible. With those two documents you can visit the entire country for a period of up to 180 days (of course the clerk who fills out your forms must write "180" in the number of days allowed box, on each form.

TOURIST CARDS

TOURIST CARDS are not really a card at all but a flimsy three by seven inch carbon copy of a form that you must fill out at the office of "MIGRACION" which is usually very prominently placed within the complex that contains the CAR PERMIT office. In order to obtain a tourist card, you will need proof of citizenship which means either a valid passport or a birth certificate that is recognized by your state government agencies. A drivers license does not prove nationality although it is a valid form of identification. The Immigration officer inside the office is interested in two things: The first being proof of your nationality, the second being the correct identification linking your mug shot to the document of proof of nationality. Of course an unexpired passport does both.

Each person, needs a tourist card, even infants, if you venture further than the border zone or stay anywhere in Mexico for 72 hours or longer. BOTH PARENTS must be present when a child under 18 is issued a tourist card. If only one parent is present, then written notarized permission must be submitted by the absent parent. If one or both parents are deceased, a letter on a government agency&Mac226;s letterhead that specifies custody of the child will be accepted. Many grandparents have taken their grandchildren and had no problem without a letter of permission, but you never know. The most appropriate permission within a notarized letter specifies that it is OK for the child to enter Mexico and specifies the date of entry and exit, along with the names and driver license number of the adults involved.

I always ask for the maximum allowable time (180 days) even though I know that my stay will probably be shorter than that. My reasoning is that some unscrupulous official down the line could start to ask for a bribe in order to allow the full maximum allowable stay in Mexico.

Ask the immigration official if he can include your children on your tourist card (this new provision is supposed to take effect "soon"). Because each tourist card costs almost twenty five dollars, inclusion of children can save some money. In any event, the immigration official will either direct you to pay for the card immediately at a nearby bank, then return so that he can complete stamping the card and tearing off his copy, or, you will be instructed to pay the card fee at "any" bank so long as you do so before exiting the country. The bank will accept your Dollars or Pesos as payment, then affix a large rubber stamp imprint on the bottom of the form (no need to return to immigration until you turn the card in at the end of the trip). Note: Some immigration offices now require visitors to pay for their FMT at a nearby walk-to bank. If that is the case, then you must return to the immigration office to have your tourist card stamped by the official.

Keep your tourist card safe and clean. If you lose it you will have to go to the nearest office of immigration and apply for a duplicate. Keep in mind that you can remain in Mexico for a maximum of 180 days, then you must exit the country, and start all over again. You cannot apply for an extension if you have already stayed 180 days. Another point in favor of longer permission periods, if you stay less than 180 days and ask for an extension, it's going to cost another twenty five dollars. Many gringo "residents" exit for a few hours (Guatemala, Belize, or the USA) then re-enter Mexico. Technically this is illegal but it is commonly done. NOTE: Immigration officers on the southern border with Belize and Guatemala are under orders to issue SOLELY a 2-week tourist card, which means your car permit will also expire in 14 days. This means a fast trip to the US border. This kind of permit is known as a "Transmigrante" and you cannot get around it. You cannot extend it, change it to a regular tourist card or even be clever and obtain a "longer" tourist card in a Mexican Consulate in Belmopan Belize or Guatemala City. Border officials will sieze the card and issue the Transmigrante. If you retain your original tourist card as you cross the border into Guatemala or Belize it will retain it's original length of stay. Mexican Border officials at the Belize border insist on a one hundred peso payment for you to obtain yet another rubber stamp on your FMT that says "Doble Entrada (Multiple Entry).

Automobile Bonding

Mexico requires all "foreign" automobiles, motorcycles, streetable motorbikes, dune buggies, camper trucks, motor homes, and bus conversions to obtain a certificate of "temporary importation" along with a holographic decal that is affixed to the inside upper corner of the driver&Mac226;s side windshield. Basically the permit is a deterrent to guard against visitors from selling, giving away or abandoning their vehicle while in Mexico.

The maximum time limit for a motor vehicle to remain in Mexico is 180 days, and is usually keyed to the date and time limit as specified on the designated owner Tourist Card. For instance if your Tourist Card specifies a time limit of 90 days, then the motor vehicle permit will also specify 90 days. Note: Make sure that your driver license will not expire while you are on your trip. Car permits limit the number of days if your license should expire in less than 180 days.

Only one motor vehicle of any type can be bonded by any one driver within any given period of authorization. A driver can not bond more than one vehicle at a time. If a solo person arrives driving a motor home with dune buggy in tow, he can bond but one of the two but not both. Motorcycles less than 500 cc. do not need to be bonded but they may or may not be listed as "accessories" to exit along with your car. ATV's require bonding.

If you are driving a financed motor vehicle, you must present (To the Mexican Card Bonding Agent) a letter of authorization issued by the (legal owner) lender authorizing you, the registered owner to take the motor vehicle into Mexico. The letter must be written on stationary with the lender&Mac226;s letterhead, must list the vehicle physical description, the license plate and the VIN number. The letter seems to be more authoritative if sealed by a notary public.

Step up to the Car Bonding Window, and lay these documents down for the clerk to review:

1. Your freshly obtained Tourist Card

2. Your valid driver license (must not expire while you are in Mexico)

3. The current registration form or vehicle title for the vehicle to be bonded

4. NOTE: You may be asked to submit photocopies of numbers one through three above. In that case, there will be a handy booth nearby that performs that service for a very modest fee.
5. Official ownership receipts for motorbike, ATV, etc.

After reviewing your documents and copies, the car bonding clerk will enter your personal data into his computer. Then he will ask you for a valid Big-3 credit card (VISA, Master Card, or American Express) or VISA or Master Card logo, ATM, check card.

Important Note: The Car bonding fee can only be paid on-the-spot by a valid credit card or valid ATM Check Card which displays a VISA or Master Card logo. CASH IS NOT ACCEPTED, only these cards will work.

The clerk will ask you "Credit Card or ATM Card"? He will subsequently check the method of payment into the appropriate box on the bottom of the form. Specifically this new wrinkle means that ATM cards with the VISA or Master Card logo are now officially accepted by the car bonding folks. You may have read somewhere that the cards "Look similar to a credit card so they were confused and accepted like one". This is no longer the case. ATM cards are officially accepted.

The motor vehicle under bond must exit Mexico before the 180 day period expires or the vehicle can be confiscated and hefty fines assessed. The entire vehicle bonding process is computerized and the data base keeps an extremely reliable record whether the vehicle has been properly taken out of the country.

To exit Mexico correctly with a motor vehicle you must stop on the way out, and present both your original certificate of bonding along with the scraped-off holographic decal from your windshield. You will be issued an official receipt showing that you complied with the law (keep this document safe, you will understand shortly).

If you fail to exit Mexico, or fail to stop at the border bonding station and return the paperwork and decal, the computer will after 180 days from initial date issuance of permit "blacklist" the owner so that he can not take a subsequent motor vehicle into Mexico. Few things in Mexico work as diligently as this computer program. If you violate the terms of the temporary import agreement you will be denied subsequent entry ; you can bank on it.

NOTE ON "FINES" AGAINST YOUR CREDIT CARD" IF YOU VIOLATE THE CAR BOND AGREEMENT

In a nut shell this widely believed hogwash is pure baloney and I researched the issue to my satisfaction that it was nothing more than such.

The entire car bonding program was instituted not for the benefit of Americans and Canadians, but rather the owners of specially licensed "Frontera" automobiles in the Mexican border zone states that parallel the US. There are two general classes of license plates in these areas, the first is "National Plates" that allow the car to be taken, even sold anywhere in Mexico, and then there are "Frontera Plates" meaning the car was purchased and imported from the USA, and the owner is paying a special higher Mexican State license fee. Used cars are very expensive especially with "National Plates".

Cars with Mexican Frontera Plates must undergo exactly the same car bonding fee with credit card as do American and Canadian motor vehicles. But here's the hitch: Whereas Mexico cannot touch American or Canadian credit cards for one red centavo above the official bonding fee (Currently around twenty four dollars US), Mexicans with Frontera plates can have their Mexican Credit card "debited" automatically. I checked with the "Big-3" companies and they all emphatically stated that Americans and Canadians would first have to sign a contract wholly apart and separate from the card bonding agreement before any type of "automatic fine" could be assessed. "This amounts to a contract" spokespersons agreed, and it would have to meet our criteria and our criteria is strict about identifying an instrument such as what you are describing". ŒNuff said, Mexico cannot touch a credit card or ATM card without the owner's approval!

But, make darn sure that you turn in your hologram decal and car permit certificate as you exit Mexico for the last time. Only the Nogales Banjercito has an easy to turn in your permit facility. Before you start home, ask fellow RV'ers if they are familiar with the route that you plan to use to exit Mexico, and detailed information about how to go about turning in the car permit. It is no fun at all to have to turn around after crossing into the USA, to turn in your car permit. All of the vehicles and accessories as listed on your car permit must be present as the official cancels your car permit and issues a document that states that you have met all of the provisions of returning to the border.

Mexico enforces the law about not allowing either the bonded vehicle or owner to return to Mexico if a car permit law is violated.


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