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Study abroad in Mexico

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Mexico.

Capital

Ciudad de México (CDMX)

Languages

Español (y 68 lenguas indígenas reconocidas)

Academic Year

Generalmente Semestral: Agosto a Diciembre (Otoño) y Enero a Mayo (Primavera).

Population

129,000,000+

Typical Budget

USD 500 - 1,200/month

Overview

Vibrant, warm, and culturally rich. An incredibly affordable destination with world-class food, a strong university tradition, and a social culture that embraces foreigners.

Country Overview

What student life feels like in Mexico.

Mexico is not the dangerous stereotype portrayed in media. The major university cities (CDMX, Monterrey, Guadalajara) are cosmopolitan, culturally rich, and increasingly international.

The cost of living is remarkably low, the food is extraordinary (and a UNESCO Intangible Heritage), and Mexicans are among the most welcoming, warm people you will encounter. However, safety awareness is essential — stick to well-known neighborhoods, use Uber/DiDi instead of random taxis, and be street-smart.

Bureaucracy is slow but functional. Spanish is essential for daily life outside of international programs.

Country Framework

What shapes student life in Mexico.

Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.

Safety Snapshot

Complex but manageable. University areas and affluent neighborhoods in major cities are generally safe, but constant street awareness matters. Avoid intercity road travel at night and do not display valuables on the street.

Editorial view of Mexico

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

53

Crime Index

Moderate

World avg: 44.7

47

Safety Index

Be cautious

World avg: 55.3

43

Cost of Living

Moderate cost

USD 500 - 1,200/month

Crime factors measured

General perception of crime levels Perceived safety during daylight and nighttime Concerns about specific crimes (mugging, robbery, car theft, physical attacks, harassment, bias-motivated incidents) Property crime severity (burglary, theft, vandalism) Violent crime severity (assault, homicide, sexual offenses)

Big Cities vs Small Towns

Big Cities

  • Mexico City (CDMX) is one of the world's largest and most culturally rich capitals — UNAM (world top-100), incredible food, world-class museums, and a thriving arts scene.
  • Guadalajara is Mexico's tech capital (Silicon Valley of Mexico), with a strong university scene and lower costs than CDMX.
  • Both cities have well-developed infrastructure for international students; English spoken in business and academic settings.
  • CDMX is intense, overwhelming, and exhilarating — the sheer density of culture, food, and nightlife is unmatched in Latin America.

Small Towns

  • Oaxaca, San Cristóbal de las Casas, and Mérida are popular smaller cities for Spanish-language students — authentic, culturally rich, and very affordable.
  • Monterrey combines a strong industrial economy (proximity to US border) with a significant student population and lower costs than CDMX.
  • Smaller Mexican cities push Spanish language skills dramatically — English rarely functional outside tourist areas.
  • Oaxaca and San Cristóbal especially have large expat/language-school communities that can become social bubbles — worth being aware of.

Culture

Social Norms

  • Physical warmth is the default. Men greet men with a handshake that often transitions to a hug (abrazo) once friendship is established. Women greet everyone with a kiss on the right cheek. Don't pull back — it's not sexual or overly intimate, it's just Mexican greeting culture.
  • Hora mexicana is real but context-dependent. Social events run 30–60 minutes late without apology. University classes and professional meetings have stricter expectations — a student arriving 15 minutes late to a serious seminar will be noticed. Know which context you're in.
  • Family is structurally central to daily life. Many university students live at home, commute, and have family commitments that shape their schedule in ways that European students' don't. Don't read this as lack of independence — it's a different life architecture.
  • Mexicans are indirect about serious disagreements but direct about personal observations. Commenting on your weight ('estás gordo/a', 'estás delgado/a') or appearance is casual and affectionate, not rude. Don't be surprised by it.
  • Regional identity matters enormously and Mexicans don't all think of themselves as one homogeneous group. Someone from Oaxaca and someone from Monterrey have genuinely different cultural attitudes, food, and accents. Asking where someone is from is always appropriate.
  • Fiestas patrias (Independence Day Sept 15–16) and Día de Muertos (Oct 31–Nov 2) are not tourist events — they are deeply meaningful national and family traditions. Participating respectfully (not in costume) is appreciated; treating them as Instagram opportunities is noticed.
  • Street food and market food are safe and are how most people eat. Avoiding it entirely signals distrust of Mexican culture. Start with cooked foods (tacos de guisado, quesadillas) and build tolerance. The locals eat it daily.

Daily Rhythm

Local pace

07:00–10:00

Morning

Desayuno is important — chilaquiles, tamales, huevos, or a torta from a market stall. Universities start early (07:00 in some faculties). Traffic in CDMX is severe from 07:30.

14:00–16:00

Midday

La comida (the main meal) happens between 14:00–16:00, not at noon. Comida corrida (3-course set lunch) at local restaurants is the student staple — cheap and filling.

16:00–20:00

Afternoon

Post-comida energy dip. Late afternoon classes common. Mercados and tianguis (street markets) peak at 17:00–19:00.

20:00–22:00

Evening

Light cena (dinner) or taco run at 21:00. Mexico City's taquería culture peaks at night — the best tacos are served 22:00–02:00.

22:00–04:00

Night

CDMX nightlife starts after 23:00. Zona Rosa and Condesa neighbourhoods active Thursday–Saturday. Student bars in Coyoacán cheaper and lively earlier (21:00+).

Food Culture

Tacos al Pastor

Tacos al Pastor

MXN 15-25 por taco

The king of Mexican street food and a classic after a night out.

Student hack:

Ve a las taquerías donde haya mucha gente, es garantía de que la comida circula y es segura.

Comida Corrida / Menú del día

Comida Corrida / Menú del día

MXN 60-120

Comida completa (sopa, guisado, arroz, agua de sabor) en mercados o cocinas económicas.

Student hack:

One of the best ways to eat home-style, cheap, filling food during the class week.

Tamales

Tamales

MXN 20–50 / EUR 1–2.50

Corn masa dough filled with meat, cheese, or chilli, wrapped in a corn husk or banana leaf and steamed. Sold from street carts in the morning and for major holidays.

Student hack:

Morning tamalero carts near metro stations and campuses offer two tamales and an atole for under MXN 50 — the best-value cooked breakfast in Mexico.

Enchiladas

Enchiladas

MXN 60–130 / EUR 3–6.50

Corn tortillas rolled around a filling of chicken, cheese, or beans and smothered in red or green chilli sauce, topped with cream and cheese. A staple Mexican restaurant dish.

Student hack:

Comida corrida menus near universities serve enchiladas as the daily plate at 30–40% below the à la carte price.

Guacamole

Guacamole

MXN 40–90 / EUR 2–4.50

Fresh mashed avocado seasoned with lime, coriander, onion, and chilli, served with tortilla chips. One of Mexico's most globally recognised dishes and an everyday student snack.

Student hack:

Making guacamole at home is extremely cheap in Mexico — avocados, limes, and coriander are among the cheapest groceries in the country.

Pozole

Pozole

MXN 70–150 / EUR 3.50–7.50

Thick hominy corn soup with pork or chicken, garnished with shredded cabbage, radish, lime, and dried chilli. A deeply traditional dish tied to Mexican celebrations and Sunday family meals.

Student hack:

Pozole restaurants often serve only on weekends — find a traditional family spot and go on Sunday for the full experience at a fraction of restaurant prices.

Dos and Don'ts

Do

  • Greet with a kiss on the right cheek in social settings — pulling back is awkward

  • Learn basic Mexican Spanish slang — 'órale', 'wey', 'chido' go a long way

  • Try street food — it's safe, delicious, and central to daily life

  • Accept invitations to family events if offered — a rare privilege for foreigners

  • Negotiate prices politely at markets — it's expected

  • Be patient with bureaucracy and adapt when plans change

  • Acknowledge Day of the Dead with respect — it's not Halloween

Don't

  • Don't confuse Mexican culture with stereotypes from TV or US-Mexican border culture

  • Don't make jokes about cartels or drug violence with people you've just met

  • Don't assume 'Mexican food' means Tex-Mex — regional Mexican cuisine varies enormously

  • Don't flash expensive items (laptop, camera, jewellery) in crowded markets or bus stations

  • Don't take photos of people without asking — especially indigenous vendors and communities

  • Don't be loudly critical of Mexican institutions or governance with people you don't know well

  • Don't drink tap water outside of known safe areas — ask locals, use filtered water

Lifestyle & Travel

Teotihuacan pyramids

Teotihuacan pyramids

Teotihuacan, 50km from Mexico City Oct-Apr (dry season, less hot)

Pyramid of the Sun is the third-largest pyramid in the world. Student entry MXN 90 (with INSEN). Bus from Terminal Norte 1h. Sunrise visits avoid crowds and heat.

Learn more
Cenote swimming

Cenote swimming

Valladolid or Tulum, Yucatan Peninsula Year-round

Natural sinkholes with crystal-clear groundwater. Cenote Ik Kil (near Chichen Itza) MXN 100. Self-guided cenotes near Valladolid from MXN 50. Unmissable natural experience.

Learn more
Chichen Itza and Merida

Chichen Itza and Merida

Chichen Itza, Yucatan (2h from Merida) Oct-Apr

UNESCO Maya pyramid — free with ISIC on first Sunday of month, otherwise MXN 590. Merida is Mexico most liveable city with excellent food markets. Budget base for Yucatan.

Learn more
Mexico City food tour

Mexico City food tour

Roma Norte, Condesa, and Mercado Jamaica — Mexico City Year-round

Tacos al pastor MXN 20-25, tlayudas MXN 60, memelas MXN 15. Mexico City has more restaurants per capita than New York. Budget dinner: MXN 80.

Learn more
Oaxacan mezcal and food culture

Oaxacan mezcal and food culture

Oaxaca city and surrounding villages Oct-Apr

Oaxaca is Mexico culinary capital. Mole negro, tlayudas, grasshopper tacos (chapulines). Mezcal distillery tours from MXN 150. Hierve el Agua mineral springs nearby.

Learn more
Copper Canyon train journey

Copper Canyon train journey

El Chepe train: Los Mochis to Chihuahua City, Chihuahua Oct-Apr

The El Chepe railway through Copper Canyon is deeper than the Grand Canyon. Economy class ticket MXN 800. One of the great rail journeys in the Americas.

Learn more
Tulum ruins and beach

Tulum ruins and beach

Tulum, Quintana Roo Nov-Apr

The only Maya city built directly overlooking the Caribbean Sea. Entry MXN 95. Beach below the ruins accessible (free). Combine with cenote swim and evening cenote.

Learn more
Lucha libre wrestling match

Lucha libre wrestling match

Arena Mexico or Arena Coliseo, Mexico City Year-round (weekly events)

Lucha libre is a uniquely Mexican cultural spectacle. Ring-side tickets MXN 250-400. Matches every Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday at Arena Mexico. Masks, acrobatics, crowd energy.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Grito de Independencia
hype

15 de Septiembre

Grito de Independencia

Cualquier plaza pública (Zócalo)

culture students iconic

Fiesta patria nacional con mariachis, pozole, tequila y fuegos artificiales.

University welcome weeks
medium

Start of semester

University welcome weeks

UNAM, Tec, UDG, ITESO, UANL and other campuses

culture indigenous students

Use this week to find faculty groups, housing leads, exchange student chats, and local mentors before social life fragments.

Festival Internacional Cervantino
medium

October (3 weeks)

Festival Internacional Cervantino

Guanajuato

art culture students

One of Latin America most important arts festivals. Theatre, dance, music in UNESCO colonial city. Student tickets from MXN 100; many free outdoor shows.

Vive Latino
hype

March

Vive Latino

Mexico City (Foro Sol and Autodromo)

music students rock

Largest Latin rock and indie festival in Mexico. 2-day pass from MXN 1,800. 80+ acts, strong Mexican and international lineup. Student crowd.

Merida Fest
chill

January

Merida Fest

Merida, Yucatan

culture free students

Month-long cultural festival in Mexico most liveable city. Daily free concerts, street performances, and food events across the historic city centre.

Travel Tips

  • Metro CDMX single trip MXN 5 — cheapest metro in the world for a capital city. Safe during day, avoid rush hour with luggage.
  • Boletopolis.com and Ticketmaster.com.mx for event tickets. Buy in advance; popular events sell out fast.
  • INSEN student card (Mexican equivalent of ISIC) gets free/discounted entry at most INAH archaeological sites. Apply at your university.
  • Flixbus and ADO are main long-distance bus companies. ADO is safer for overnight trips. Book online for best prices.
  • MXN (Mexican peso) — avoid airport exchange kiosks. Banco de Mexico ATMs and Oxxo (convenience store) ATMs have reasonable rates.

Benefits & Scholarships

Personalize this layer

Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.

Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.

Useful either way

Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.

Descuento en autobuses

During official holiday periods (Semana Santa, summer and December), students can get 50% off bus tickets by showing a valid student ID.

SCT / Líneas de autobuses

Low-cost public universities

UNAM, UDG, and other public universities are the strongest academic value route. Exchange students usually pay home-university fees, but local campus services are very affordable.

Public universities

Official source

Student cultural discounts

Museums, cinemas, galleries, buses, and some historic sites often recognise Mexican student cards. Carry your host-university ID and ask before paying full price.

Cultural venues and transport operators

Official source

Visa Requirements

Difficulty: Easy
All nationalities Up to 180 days
Official source

Turista / Visitante (FMM)

Single-semester exchange students staying less than 180 days can usually study as visitors without a student visa if their passport does not require a visa to enter Mexico.

Fee: MXN 0 A la llegada (si el país está exento) 180 días
All nationalities Over 180 days
Official source

Visa de Residente Temporal Estudiante

Obligatoria para programas anuales o carreras completas. Debe tramitarse en el consulado mexicano del país de origen ANTES de viajar.

Fee: USD 53 2-4 semanas Un año, renovable

Application Checklist

4 steps
  1. 1
    Si tu programa es de 1 semestre, verifica si tu pasaporte requiere visa de turista para entrar a México. Si no, solo necesitas la carta de aceptación.
  2. 2
    For the Student Resident Visa (>180 days), book a 'Mi Consulado' appointment several months in advance.
  3. 3
    Demostrar solvencia económica mediante estados de cuenta bancarios o beca.
  4. 4
    Once in Mexico with a student visa, you have 30 days to process your residence card at INM (Instituto Nacional de Migración).

Health & Healthcare

Emergency: 911
Avg GP visit: MXN 200–600
IMSS: Via some universities
Tip: Intl. insurance advised

How It Works

Mexico has a public healthcare system (IMSS — Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social and ISSSTE) but international exchange students are not enrolled in it and must rely on private insurance or university-designated coverage. All major Mexican universities (UNAM, Tec de Monterrey, UDG) require proof of international health insurance with major medical expenses coverage (gastos médicos mayores) and repatriation as part of the enrollment process. Private hospitals in major cities (Hospital Ángeles, Star Médica, Hospital ABC in CDMX; Clínica Muguerza in Monterrey) offer high-quality care comparable to North American standards, but without insurance costs are very high — USD 200–500 per consultation, USD 1,000+ per hospitalisation night.

Student Needs

Arrange comprehensive international health insurance with major medical expenses and repatriation coverage before departure — your home university's mandatory insurance typically covers this minimum. Keep your insurance card and policy number accessible at all times. For minor issues (colds, infections, stomach problems), use the Consultorio Médico at Farmacias Similares, Farmacias del Ahorro, or Farmacia Benavides — a general practitioner consultation costs approximately MXN 40–60 (USD 2–3) with discounted prescriptions. For campus health services, register at your university's CEAPS or equivalent health center in the first week.

Emergency vs Clinic

Call 911 for all emergencies (unified emergency number across Mexico since 2017). For non-critical urgent care, go to an IMSS urgencias department if you have a Mexican SIM and residency card, or directly to a private hospital emergency (urgencias) where your international insurance will operate. Ambulance response times vary by city — in CDMX, Cruz Roja (Red Cross) ambulances can also be reached on 065. Always notify your insurance provider within 24 hours of any hospitalisation.

Public Coverage Notes

  • IMSS public healthcare is not accessible to most short-stay exchange students — international private insurance is the standard and a university enrollment requirement.

  • Farmacia consultories (Farmacias Similares, Farmacias del Ahorro): approximately USD 2–3 per GP consultation — the most cost-effective option for non-serious issues.

  • Budget USD 300–600/year for a comprehensive international health insurance policy covering Mexico; verify major medical expenses, hospitalisation, and repatriation are explicitly included.

Emergency

911

EXTRA: Culture Shock & Apps

Moderate Culture Shock Expected

This destination may feel different from Western campus routines. The apps and advice below are high-impact setup items for everyday student life.

Uber
Critical

Much safer than street taxis. Works excellently in all major Mexican cities.

Tip: Your international account and card work directly.
Rappi
Recommended

Latin America's super-delivery app. Food, groceries, pharmacy, cash withdrawal — all delivered to your door.

Tip: Get RappiPrime for free delivery.
DiDi
Recommended

Often cheaper than Uber in Mexico. Strong presence in CDMX and Guadalajara.

Tip: Compare prices with Uber for each ride.

Cities to Explore

Guadalajara

Guadalajara

Mexico's cultural heart and tech hub. Birthplace of mariachi and tequila, with a booming startup scene.

Open City Guide
Mexico City (CDMX)

Mexico City (CDMX)

One of the world's great megacities. Unbeatable food, world-class museums, and a thriving student scene at a fraction of European costs.

Open City Guide
Monterrey

Monterrey

Mexico's industrial powerhouse and business capital. Modern, wealthy, and home to the prestigious Tec de Monterrey.

Open City Guide