Mexico FMM-E: Official Site, Free Online Form, Scam-Free Guide (2026)
Mexico's electronic entry permit is free. Here is the official INM site, every field it asks, and how to tell real from fake.
Mexico's electronic entry permit is free. Here is the official INM site, every field it asks, and how to tell real from fake.
The Forma Migratoria Múltiple (FMM) is Mexico’s foreign visitor permit. It is the document that says you are allowed to be in Mexico for up to 180 days as a tourist. Since 2020, Mexico’s immigration authority (INM) has offered it in electronic form, the FMM-E, filed in advance on the INM website.
It is free.
No one can charge you for it. The fee you sometimes see referenced, the DNI (Derecho de No Inmigrante), is a government fee collected separately on some entries, and it is already included in your airline ticket price for most air arrivals. It is not the FMM.
The only legal destination for your FMM-E is inm.gob.mx, a domain reserved for Mexican government entities under the .gob.mx suffix.
If you search Google for “Mexico FMM” or “Mexico tourist card” right now, several of the top results are paid ads from middlemen charging $25 to $49 to fill a free form. Some of them submit the real FMM on your behalf. Some of them do not.
Mexico’s INM has not been as publicly vocal as Thailand’s immigration bureau about naming these sites, but the commercial pattern is identical: open top-level domain, polished UI, fake urgency, payment required for a government service that costs nothing.
Check the address bar. The official site is inm.gob.mx/fmme/ and nothing else.
Anyone can register a .com, .org, or .net — sites like mexico-fmm.com, lookalike fmm-* domains, or any domain claiming to be “official” without ending in .gob.mx are not the INM. Only Mexican government entities can register .gob.mx.
Type your details below. We never send them anywhere. This runs 100% in your browser. View source to verify.
The rules changed in 2023 and are still catching travelers off guard. Here is the short version:
You need an FMM-E (either filed online beforehand or on arrival) if:
You may NOT need a separate FMM-E if:
If you are unsure, fill the FMM-E online. A filed FMM-E is never a problem at the border. Missing one when you needed it is.
The FMM-E has about 10 fields across 3 sections: traveler identity, trip, and stay in Mexico.
None of them require a photo upload.
None of them require payment at the INM site.
If a site asks for either, you are not on the official site.
For a field-by-field walkthrough with common errors, read our how to fill the FMM guide.
These sites all charge money for a free form. Some of them submit a real FMM on your behalf. Some of them do not.


Screenshots captured April 2026. Archived snapshots available via archive.org.
No. Filing the FMM-E on the INM site is free. The DNI fee (Derecho de No Inmigrante) is a separate government charge, not an FMM fee, and is already bundled into most airline tickets.
Yes. The INM site is mobile-friendly, though the layout is dense. A laptop makes it easier to avoid typos.
Any time before your arrival. The form accepts submissions up to 30 days out for most port-of-entry combinations. Earlier than that, it may reject.
Contact your credit card issuer and dispute the charge as “service not rendered” or “deceptive practice.” Success rates vary. Within 60 days of the charge, success is highest.
Check spam. The INM site emails the PDF with a reference number shortly after submission. If still missing after 2 hours, refile. Duplicate FMM-E submissions are resolved at the border by the officer picking the most recent.
The officer tears off part of the form and hands a stub back to you. Keep it. You surrender it when you exit Mexico. Losing it means a small replacement fee at exit.
This guide is maintained by entrycardguide. We have no affiliation with INM or any travel service. Our current affiliate revenue comes from clearly disclosed travel insurance links on eligible pages.
If you still need coverage for the trip, these links support entrycardguide without changing the price you pay.
Affiliate disclosure: if you buy through one of these links, we may earn a commission. We never accept money from visa middlemen, form-filing services, or companies that compete with the official government forms we point to.