Mexico Visa RequirementsFor Egypt passport holders

Egyptian citizens require a Mexican tourist visa (FMM). Apply at the Mexican Embassy in Cairo. Fee $50, valid 180 days.

Visa Required
180 days max stay
$50 visa cost
Mexico City
North America
MXN ($)
Spanish
UTC-6 to UTC-8

Egypt passport holders require a visa to enter Mexico.

Apply at the Mexican Embassy in Cairo. Required documents: valid Egyptian passport (6+ months validity), completed Mexican visa application form, 2 passport photos, round-trip flight itinerary, hotel or accommodation bookings, 3 months bank statements, employment/income proof, and Egyptian national ID. Fee: approximately $50 USD. Processing: 5-10 business days. Note: Mexico may allow Egyptian passport holders holding valid US or Canadian visas (or ESTA) to enter without a separate Mexican visa; confirm this exemption with the Mexican Embassy before travel as policies change.

Entry Requirements

Passport Validity

6 months beyond date of entry

Blank Pages

2 blank pages required

Multiple Entry

Single entry only

Work Permitted

No - requires work visa

Required Documents

Egyptian Passport

Valid for at least 6 months with sufficient blank pages

Passport Photos

2 recent passport photos per Mexican Embassy specification

Completed Visa Application Form

Mexican tourist visa form obtained at the Mexican Embassy in Cairo

Round-Trip Flight Itinerary

Confirmed or booked return flight reservation

Hotel or Accommodation Proof

Confirmation of accommodation for intended stay in Mexico

Bank Statements

3 months recent statements showing sufficient funds

Employment or Income Proof

Contract, payslips, or business documentation

Egyptian National ID

Copy of Egyptian National ID

Cover Letter Recommended

Letter explaining purpose of visit to Mexico and ties to Egypt

Current Travel Situation

Egypt to Mexico: What You Need to Know

Mexico is a vast and diverse North American destination combining ancient Mesoamerican civilizations (Teotihuacan, Chichen Itza, Palenque), Spanish colonial cities (Oaxaca, San Miguel de Allende, Merida), Pacific and Caribbean coastlines (Puerto Vallarta, Cancun, Playa del Carmen, Tulum), and a world-class food culture. Mexico City (CDMX) is one of the Western Hemisphere's most exciting metropolises: the historic Zocalo square and Aztec Templo Mayor ruins, Frida Kahlo Museum, the floating gardens of Xochimilco, and a dining scene regularly topping Latin America's best lists. Egyptian passport holders require a Mexican tourist visa (FM3/FMM), though Mexico occasionally allows those with valid US or Canadian visas to enter without a separate Mexican visa; verify current policy before applying.

How to Get There

Mexico to Cuba: direct flights from Cancun and Mexico City. Mexico to Guatemala: buses from Palenque or San Cristobal de las Casas. Mexico is the hub for Central America trips. Cancun to Belize City by bus 5h.

Money & Banking

Mexico uses the Mexican Peso (MXN). Cards increasingly accepted but carry cash for markets, street food, and smaller towns. Mexico is affordable: budget MXN 800-1,500/day ($45-85) for midrange travel. Mexico City has extraordinary affordable street food: tacos al pastor MXN 15-25 each, tortas MXN 50-80. Fresh juice (jugos) at mercados are cheap and excellent.

Practical Tips

Mexico City: Templo Mayor (Aztec ruins under the city center), Anthropology Museum (Museo Nacional de Antropologia, best in Latin America), Frida Kahlo Blue House, Lucha Libre wrestling show. Chichen Itza: fly to Cancun, then 3h by bus to the Mayan ruins. Tulum: beautiful cenotes and Mayan cliff ruins above the Caribbean. Oaxaca: mezcal distilleries, Monte Alban ruins, tlayuda (Oaxacan food staple). Cenotes (natural sinkholes): Ik Kil near Chichen Itza, Dos Ojos near Tulum for snorkeling. Mexican beaches: Cancun for party atmosphere; Tulum for eco-chic; Puerto Vallarta for year-round mild weather. Halal food is limited; fresh seafood and vegetarian Mexican food (bean tacos, quesadillas, guacamole) offer alternatives.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Egyptian passport holders need a visa for Mexico?

Yes. Egyptian citizens require a Mexican tourist visa. Apply at the Mexican Embassy in Cairo. Fee: approximately $50 USD. Processing: 5-10 business days. Note: Mexicans may allow entry to Egyptians holding valid US or Canadian visas without a separate Mexican visa; verify this current policy with the Mexican Embassy before travel.

What are the must-see archaeological sites in Mexico for Egyptian visitors interested in ancient civilizations?

Mexico's pre-Columbian civilizations rival Egypt's antiquity in sophistication and scale. Teotihuacan (45 min from Mexico City): the Pyramid of the Sun is the third-largest pyramid in the world (225m base, 66m tall), and the Pyramid of the Moon face a 2km ceremonial Avenue of the Dead. Chichen Itza (Yucatan): the Mayan pyramid El Castillo, the Observatory (Caracol), and the Sacred Cenote where humans were sacrificed. The site is a UNESCO World Heritage and one of the New Seven Wonders. Palenque (Chiapas): a Mayan jungle city with Temple of the Inscriptions holding Pakal the Great's sarcophagus. Monte Alban (Oaxaca): the Zapotec capital with 2,500-year-old ceremonial plaza carved from a mountaintop.

What are the best beaches in Mexico?

Tulum (Quintana Roo): Mayan cliff ruins above turquoise Caribbean water, beautiful eco-chic beach town, cenote swimming. Cancun: resort city with world-class hotels and nightlife on a 20km barrier island. Playa del Carmen: the Riviera Maya's most atmospheric beach town with palm-lined 5th Avenue pedestrian strip. Holbox Island (Quintana Roo): no cars, white sand, whale shark snorkeling (June-September). Puerto Vallarta (Pacific): bohemian arts town with Malecon waterfront. Los Cabos (Baja California): dramatic desert meets Pacific, famous for sport fishing, whale watching (January-March), and luxury resorts.

What documents are needed for a Mexican visa from Egypt?

Required: valid Egyptian passport (6+ months validity), completed Mexican visa application form (obtain from the Mexican Embassy in Cairo), 2 passport photos, round-trip flight itinerary, hotel or accommodation bookings, 3 months bank statements, employment/income documentation (contract, payslips), Egyptian national ID, and a cover letter explaining purpose of visit and ties to Egypt. Fee: approximately $50 USD. Submit in person at the Mexican Embassy in Cairo.

What is Mexico City like for Egyptian tourists?

Mexico City (CDMX) is one of the Western Hemisphere's most exciting and historically layered cities, built directly on top of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan. The Zocalo (main plaza) has the Metropolitan Cathedral (built 1573-1813) and the Templo Mayor, the main Aztec temple excavated in 1978 and now an outstanding museum. Chapultepec Park (the city's green lung) contains the National Museum of Anthropology (the best museum in the Americas for pre-Columbian civilizations), Chapultepec Castle (with stunning city views), and three other major museums. The Frida Kahlo Museum in Coyoacan is a pilgrimage site for art lovers. Mexico City's restaurant scene consistently tops Latin America's 50 Best lists.

Is halal food available in Mexico?

Mexico has a small but growing Muslim community, primarily converts and immigrants in Mexico City and Guadalajara. Halal food options are limited in most tourist areas: Mexican cuisine uses pork heavily (carnitas, al pastor pork spit, chicharron pork rind), and most restaurant staff may not understand halal requirements. Practical alternatives: fresh seafood (ceviche, grilled fish, shrimp tacos), vegetarian options (cheese quesadillas, bean tacos, guacamole, rice dishes), and international restaurants in tourist areas. Mexico City has some halal Lebanese and Middle Eastern restaurants in Polanco and Lomas de Chapultepec. The website halalfoodfinder.io includes some Mexican listings.

What are cenotes and why are they special?

Cenotes are natural sinkholes formed by the collapse of limestone bedrock, creating pools of extraordinarily clear fresh water connected to an underground river system across the Yucatan Peninsula. The ancient Maya considered cenotes sacred portals to the underworld and performed religious ceremonies at them. For tourists, cenotes offer magical swimming, snorkeling, and diving experiences in crystal-clear water surrounded by stalactites and jungle vegetation. Famous cenotes: Ik Kil (near Chichen Itza, Instagram-famous with hanging vines), Dos Ojos (near Tulum, for snorkeling and scuba diving the underwater cave system), Gran Cenote (near Tulum, family-friendly), and Cenote Suytun (photogenic pillar in center). Entry: MXN 200-400/person.

How do I get from Cairo to Mexico?

Cairo to Mexico City: no direct flights; connect via Amsterdam, Paris, London, Madrid, or New York. Journey time: 15-20 hours total including layover. Return fares typically $700-1,200. Best connections: Amsterdam (KLM + Aeromexico direct Mexico City), Paris (Air France + Aeromexico), Madrid (Iberia + Aeromexico). Budget option: fly to a US hub (New York or Miami) and connect domestically; requires US transit visa for some. Aeromexico, United, and American Airlines all fly Mexico City nonstop from major US hubs.